FORA TV: Personal Technology, Ep. 8 "Battle of Ideas: My Brain Made Me Do It"

Battle of Ideas: My Brain Made Me Do It at the 2007 Battle of Ideas conference hosted by the Institute of Ideas. With the politics of behaviour in the ascendancy, there is increasing interest in what science can tell us about why people behave the way they do. The British ... government is funding the creation of the National Academy for Parenting Practitioners, with the express aim of training a 'parenting workforce' to provide science-based child-rearing advice to parents. In the USA, the MRI scanner and the neuroscientific community are entering the court room to give evidence about whether defendants can be regarded as being responsible for their alleged crimes. UK policymakers cite scientific 'evidence' to explain new interventions on everything from early years' education to the alleged impact of school dinners on academic performance. The science of nutrition now informs earnest discussions about how children's diets improve their classroom behaviour, in order to justify policing lunchboxes and putting school meals at the top of the political agenda. Studies of teenage brain development now regularly inform social debates about the impact of new technologies on young people. But how much can science tell us about behaviour? Do scientific findings justify the government's many interventions into the early years of children's lives? Should neuroscience enjoy an exalted place in the courtroom? Are policies being developed because of genuine advances in scientific knowled...
  • Starring: Steve Yearley, Raymond Tallis
  • Runtime: 1 hour 35 minutes
  • Original air date: October 28, 2007
  • Network: ForaTV
 
 
 
 

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  Episode   Original Air Date
Synopsis
    Price  
 
1. Taming Gaming in Your Home
  April 19, 2007
Taming Gaming in Your Home: Honest Guide to Today's Video GamesVideo and computer games are becoming the entertainment choice of many children as well as adults. Parents are concerned about the amount of time their children spend with games as well as the appropriateness of the content.Parents should play an important role in guiding their children's video game playing habits, and playing computer and video games can be a positive family experience. Our expert panel covers issues of content rating systems, parental controls in consoles and PCs, advice for checking in and better understanding your family's gaming habits, and how to participate - The Commonwealth ClubThe event is part of Digital Crossroads: Where Technology Meets our Daily Lives, a new Silicon Valley forum dedicated to informing the public about important technology issues in our personal lives. It is presented by The Commonwealth Club, The Computer History Museum, and Microsoft.
  FREE  
 
3. Steven Johnson and The Long Zoom
  May 11, 2007
The Long Zoom with Steven Johnson speaking at a seminar hosted by The Long Now Foundation.Steven Johnson began his long zoom survey with the "prior art" of Joyce's Stephen Daedalus locating himself in himself, his neighborhood, Dublin, on out to the universe. The value of a long zoom is in identifying and employing every scale between the very large and very small, noticing how they change each other when held in the mind at the same time.Johnson's core story (and current book) concerned London in 1854, when it was the largest city in the world and in history with 2.5 million people. London famously stank. Cess pools filled basements, slaughter houses were anywhere, garbage piled up.Medicine at the time held that disease was caused by "miasma," foul air, noxious vapors. "All smell is disease," declared a Doctor Chadwick. The authorities decided that the way to cure the frequent cholera epidemics in London was to get rid of the bad odor - pump the sewage into the Thames, which people drank. The cholera got worse.Johnson's goal with his book, THE GHOST MAP, was to figure out why the wrong theory of disease lingered so long, and what it took to correct it. The answer, he proposes, is in the perspective of the long zoom - Stewart Brand blog excerpt, The Long Now Foundation
  FREE  
 
4. MoM: New Technologies & Designs for Vehicles
  September 13, 2007
Meeting of the Minds Conference: The Innovations We Need for More Sustainable CitiesNew Technologies and New Designs for Vehicles and for Infrastructure with speaker Bill Reinert, National Manager, Advanced Technology Group, Toyota Motor Sales (USA).The presentation is followed by a Q&A session.Meeting of the Minds is a two-day leadership conference convened by the University of California, Berkeley College of Environmental Design, with the support of Toyota. The conference focus is on the new technologies, emerging urban designs and cleaner fuels.
  FREE  
 
5. From Pictures to 3D Worlds - Photosynth
  September 26, 2007
From Pictures to 3D Worlds - Photosynth with co-creator Blaise Aguera y ArcasUsing photos of subjects gathered from around the Web, Photosynth creates breathtaking multidimensional spaces with zoom and navigation features that outstrip all expectation. Imagine hundreds of photos of the same building being seamlessly stitched together to create an experience where the user can follow their own path... Photosynth might utterly transform the way we manipulate and experience digital images. - PICNIC
  FREE  
 
7. Creating New Worlds
  September 27, 2007
Creating New Worlds featuring panelists Peter Frankfurt, Paul Pope and Danny Yount.This session is dedicated to the creative processes involved in building new worlds. Three leading creators discuss what it means to make a reality out of whole cloth - for personal reasons or on behalf of a client - and to work in an existing world made by someone else - PICNIC
  FREE  
8. Battle of Ideas: My Brain Made Me Do It
  October 28, 2007
Battle of Ideas: My Brain Made Me Do It at the 2007 Battle of Ideas conference hosted by the Institute of Ideas. With the politics of behaviour in the ascendancy, there is increasing interest in what science can tell us about why people behave the way they do. The British government is funding the creation of the National Academy for Parenting Practitioners, with the express aim of training a 'parenting workforce' to provide science-based child-rearing advice to parents. In the USA, the MRI scanner and the neuroscientific community are entering the court room to give evidence about whether defendants can be regarded as being responsible for their alleged crimes. UK policymakers cite scientific 'evidence' to explain new interventions on everything from early years' education to the alleged impact of school dinners on academic performance. The science of nutrition now informs earnest discussions about how children's diets improve their classroom behaviour, in order to justify policing lunchboxes and putting school meals at the top of the political agenda. Studies of teenage brain development now regularly inform social debates about the impact of new technologies on young people. But how much can science tell us about behaviour? Do scientific findings justify the government's many interventions into the early years of children's lives? Should neuroscience enjoy an exalted place in the courtroom? Are policies being developed because of genuine advances in scientific knowled...
 
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Episode 8, "Battle of Ideas: My Brain Made Me Do It"
Synopsis: Battle of Ideas: My Brain Made Me Do It at the 2007 Battle of Ideas conference hosted by the Institute of Ideas. With the politics of behaviour in the ascendancy, there is increasing interest in what science can tell us about why people behave the way they do. The British government is funding the creation of the National Academy for Parenting Practitioners, with the express aim of training a 'parenting workforce' to provide science-based child-rearing advice to parents. In the USA, the MRI scanner and the neuroscientific community are entering the court room to give evidence about whether defendants can be regarded as being responsible for their alleged crimes. UK policymakers cite scientific 'evidence' to explain new interventions on everything from early years' education to the alleged impact of school dinners on academic performance. The science of nutrition now informs earnest discussions about how children's diets improve their classroom behaviour, in order to justify policing lunchboxes and putting school meals at the top of the political agenda. Studies of teenage brain development now regularly inform social debates about the impact of new technologies on young people. But how much can science tell us about behaviour? Do scientific findings justify the government's many interventions into the early years of children's lives? Should neuroscience enjoy an exalted place in the courtroom? Are policies being developed because of genuine advances in scientific knowled...
Original air date: October 28, 2007
Runtime: 1 hour 35 minutes
ASIN: B001DD5VQ6
Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #307,400 in Movies & TV (See Top 100 in Movies & TV)
FORA TV: Personal Technology Season 3
Synopsis: Videos covering today's top social, political, and Tech Issues.
Season year: 2007
Network: ForaTV
ASIN: B001DD7U0G
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