More Infant and Toddler Advice

More Infant and Toddler Advice

Following the last post, here are some insights from Erica Komisar’s book Being There: Why Prioritizing Motherhood in the First Three Years Matters (Penguin Random House, 2017). Read her book for more context, evidence, insight, and advice. As with the preceding post, this summary is not intended to make readers feel bad about their parenting decisions. Corroborate these views with other sources of evidence and expertise before acting on them. Fundamentals For infants and toddlers, physical and emotional presence trump…

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Is Daycare Bad for Infants and Toddlers?

Is Daycare Bad for Infants and Toddlers?

This is a summary of Steven Bartlett’s interview with Erica Komisar, a parenting expert and psychoanalyst who uses over 30 years of research to challenge societal norms on parenting and early child development. The discussion is not intended to make parents feel bad about their parenting decisions. Corroborate these views with other sources of evidence and expertise before acting on them. For children to be mentally healthy, parents should be physically and emotionally present for them throughout childhood, particularly in…

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Science and Religion Archives: Evolutionary and Theological Ethics (Part 4)

Science and Religion Archives: Evolutionary and Theological Ethics (Part 4)

Being a religious leader is hard: Having the authority to tell people (of the same faith traditions) what should be considered right and wrong is always going to rile some up. We feel strongly about our values. Likewise, trying to explore consonances between evolutionary and theological ethics won’t sit well with some religious folk. I hope that if the dissertation is read in its entirety, such individuals might at least understand the intent behind it and appreciate the pains taken…

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Science and Religion Archives: Evolutionary and Theological Ethics (Part 3)

Science and Religion Archives: Evolutionary and Theological Ethics (Part 3)

Researching this portion of the dissertation acquainted me with the writings of Tim Lewens, philosophy professor at the HPS department in the University of Cambridge. He became my MPhil supervisor when I went there to further my graduate studies (2016-2017). One more main part to go before the conclusion. 4. Assessing the Levels of Certainty Required for Science The literature on the broad topic of evolutionary ethics is vast. The debates concerning the legitimacy of the enterprise stretch back to…

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Science and Religion Archives: Evolutionary and Theological Ethics (Part 2)

Science and Religion Archives: Evolutionary and Theological Ethics (Part 2)

For context, read the description in Part 1. In this part, we move on to the second part of the dissertation, which is about meta-ethics and some philosophy of biology. Researching this portion of the dissertation stoked my interest in philosophy of biology and planted the seeds for my eventual move to the History and Philosophy of Science (HPS) department at the University of Cambridge to further my graduate studies in 2017. Researching this and the next part of the…

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Science and Religion Archives: Evolutionary and Theological Ethics (Part 1)

Science and Religion Archives: Evolutionary and Theological Ethics (Part 1)

The components of the master’s degree at the University of Oxford include two essays (one on Edward Wilson and the other on Intellectual Humility), one dissertation (which will be included in these forthcoming series of posts), a written exam that cannot be reproduced here, and one oral defense of any aspect of the above essays. The master’s dissertation that I’m posting here is about the potential synergistic relationship between evolutionary and theological ethics. Sounds abstruse, but if you invest effort…

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A Real Discussion About Artificial Intelligence

A Real Discussion About Artificial Intelligence

Artificial Intelligence is a broad term that could do with some definitions. With the arrival of OpenAI’s ChatGPT in November 2022, AI has exploded in the popular consciousness, promising to revolutionize everything, and fraudulent actors have taken advantage of the term’s nebulousness to mislead the masses for their ends. This article summarizes and adds to a recent book by Arvind Narayanan and Sayash Kapoor titled AI Snake Oil (Princeton University Press, 2024) offering tools to separate the AI wheat from…

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Science and Religion Archives: Intellectual Humility

Science and Religion Archives: Intellectual Humility

Intellectual humility (and related concepts) entered the public consciousness following several public intellectuals’ coverage if it in the latter half of the last decade. They include Adam Grant’s Think Again, Julia Galef’s Scout Mindset, David Robson’s Intelligence Trap, and Steve Pinker’s book on rationality. The foregrounding work, which included conceptualizing the term and ensuring construct validity happened earlier. It was at this time that intellectual humility was the subject of my essay on its relationship with religious belief (i.e., American…

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Science and Religion Archives: Edward O. Wilson

Science and Religion Archives: Edward O. Wilson

Having extensively researched aspects of evolutionary theory, including the work of Edward O. Wilson, for my Durham master’s thesis, I chose to devote my first assessable essay for the MSt in Science and Religion at the University of Oxford (2016) to making an original contribution to understanding Wilson’s intellectual biography. An important figure in evolutionary theory, Wilson was among the first to apply evolutionary theory to social and cultural contexts without degenerating into social Darwinism. People know him as the…

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Studying at the University of Oxford

Studying at the University of Oxford

After completing the master’s in theology and religion at Durham University (2014-2015), I moved to the University of Oxford to pursue a specialization in science and religion with the Faculty of Divinity’s (now called Theology and Religion) science and religion MSt program (2015-2016).   Oxford was the first (and only) place I encountered individuals who possessed unparalleled such raw intelligence (processing speed) and capacity for abstraction (in undergraduate philosophy classes) that I wondered if we were the same species. In…

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