Monday, July 18, 2011

Baby Makes it to Low-Lying Tree

by Rebecca Abel Worple

A close escape from a black snake, which had been lying in wait.  In the Floating Boathouse (see Canada on this blog).  So a fishing net and cupped hands relocated the bird as shown.  Not sure what happened to the other three babies.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Do it!

Go to "Rebecca Worple" at the bottom of this blog.
Click on it.
Then "galeries"
Then "when I grow up"

Do it!

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Yesterday Morning at Pte au Baril, Ontario

by Rebecca Abel Worple

Sunday, July 10, 2011

Brooks -- The Unexamined Society

Op-Ed Columnist


The Unexamined Society

By DAVID BROOKS

Published: July 7, 2011

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/08/opinion/08brooks.html




Over the past 50 years, we’ve seen a number of gigantic policies produce disappointing results — policies to reduce poverty, homelessness, dropout rates, single-parenting and drug addiction. Many of these policies failed because they were based on an overly simplistic view of human nature. They assumed that people responded in straightforward ways to incentives. Often, they assumed that money could cure behavior problems.

The intellectual, cultural and scientific findings that land on the columnist’s desk nearly every day.

Fortunately, today we are in the middle of a golden age of behavioral research. Thousands of researchers are studying the way actual behavior differs from the way we assume people behave. They are coming up with more accurate theories of who we are, and scores of real-world applications. Here’s one simple example:

When you renew your driver’s license, you have a chance to enroll in an organ donation program. In countries like Germany and the U.S., you have to check a box if you want to opt in. Roughly 14 percent of people do. But behavioral scientists have discovered that how you set the defaults is really important. So in other countries, like Poland or France, you have to check a box if you want to opt out. In these countries, more than 90 percent of people participate.

This is a gigantic behavior difference cued by one tiny and costless change in procedure.

Yet in the middle of this golden age of behavioral research, there is a bill working through Congress that would eliminate the National Science Foundation’s Directorate for Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences. This is exactly how budgets should not be balanced — by cutting cheap things that produce enormous future benefits.

Let’s say you want to reduce poverty. We have two traditional understandings of poverty. The first presumes people are rational. They are pursuing their goals effectively and don’t need much help in changing their behavior. The second presumes that the poor are afflicted by cultural or psychological dysfunctions that sometimes lead them to behave in shortsighted ways. Neither of these theories has produced much in the way of effective policies.

Eldar Shafir of Princeton and Sendhil Mullainathan of Harvard have recently, with federal help, been exploring a third theory, that scarcity produces its own cognitive traits.

A quick question: What is the starting taxi fare in your city? If you are like most upper-middle-class people, you don’t know. If you are like many struggling people, you do know. Poorer people have to think hard about a million things that affluent people don’t. They have to make complicated trade-offs when buying a carton of milk: If I buy milk, I can’t afford orange juice. They have to decide which utility not to pay.

These questions impose enormous cognitive demands. The brain has limited capacities. If you increase demands on one sort of question, it performs less well on other sorts of questions.

Shafir and Mullainathan gave batteries of tests to Indian sugar farmers. After they sell their harvest, they live in relative prosperity. During this season, the farmers do well on the I.Q. and other tests. But before the harvest, they live amid scarcity and have to think hard about a thousand daily decisions. During these seasons, these same farmers do much worse on the tests. They appear to have lower I.Q.’s. They have more trouble controlling their attention. They are more shortsighted. Scarcity creates its own psychology.

Princeton students don’t usually face extreme financial scarcity, but they do face time scarcity. In one game, they had to answer questions in a series of timed rounds, but they could borrow time from future rounds. When they were scrambling amid time scarcity, they were quick to borrow time, and they were nearly oblivious to the usurious interest rates the game organizers were charging. These brilliant Princeton kids were rushing to the equivalent of payday lenders, to their own long-term detriment.

Shafir and Mullainathan have a book coming out next year, exploring how scarcity — whether of time, money or calories (while dieting) — affects your psychology. They are also studying how poor people’s self-perceptions shape behavior. Many people don’t sign up for the welfare benefits because they are intimidated by the forms. Shafir and Mullainathan asked some people at a Trenton soup kitchen to relive a moment when they felt competent and others to recount a neutral experience. Nearly half of the self-affirming group picked up an available benefits package afterward. Only 16 percent of the neutral group did.

People are complicated. We each have multiple selves, which emerge or don’t depending on context. If we’re going to address problems, we need to understand the contexts and how these tendencies emerge or don’t emerge. We need to design policies around that knowledge. Cutting off financing for this sort of research now is like cutting off navigation financing just as Christopher Columbus hit the shoreline of the New World.

A version of this op-ed appeared in print on July 8, 2011, on page A23 of the New York edition with the headline: The Unexamined Society.


Comment 119:

Thank you David Brooks. In the spirit of this wonderful Op Ed piece, I submit this and hope this works: Read "The Beggar" submitted by Lisa B. Youngclaus for the Yale 50th Reunion Book "1000 Voices" a month ago. This written by her husband Bill Youngclaus III, class of '61, whose career was in advertising, a month before his death in 2006.



A black man tugged at my sleeve,

       asking for some change

I was startled to be so close to him, a man

       I had rejected many time before, but

from a distance.

       I had always shrugged no, implying

that I had no change

       Which of course we both knew was a lie.

But this time this close, I could see he

       was not so old,

And his smell, while not fresh was clean.

       His eyes caught mine while I fumbled

In my own crumpled pocket.

       My eyes stuck to his, seeing a time

when he was cared for by another's

       caution:

don't do that my love, watch out my

       darling.

And he would laugh oh so hard know-

       ing he was loved,

Attended to, and he would slap his

       mamma's face

In mock discord, waiting for the hug

       that would

Surely come. And then, and then...I

       don't know.

Something painful probably happened

       followed

By worse, and then worse even still,

       until he arrived

Here to tread on other's mercy, his only

       hope

That I, and others, change their minds.

Recommended by 4 Readers

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Dan Kucera and His Waterlawg Blog

A good friend, classmate at college and law school, and one of the funniest writers, Dan Kucera, was at our 50th reunion.  I discovered he has a blog http://www.waterlawg.blogspot.com/. It is well written and humorous.  I have added it to my short list of worthwhile blogs.

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