Monthly Archives: July 2021

Beyond game theory

A board game with a small human illustrates how much emotions influence our decisions The other day, Jenny and I played a game of Ludo with Luka. Its rules are simple enough to make it quite suitable for a five-year-old, … Continue reading

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No such thing as a free dinner

(featured image: UNC Greensboro/Flickr CC BY NC-ND 2.0) One of our more intriguing and widespread beliefs is that when others appear to pay for something, it is actually free to us. But looks can be deceptive… Imagine that you are … Continue reading

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The asymmetrical price of friendship

(featured image: geralt via Pixabay) If you buy something from a friend, you might ask them for a discount – but if you are selling them something, would you ask them for a higher price? Humans are social animals. Our … Continue reading

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The problem with football

(featured image credit: J Brandt/Flickr) Football (or soccer), for many, produces such a powerful imagery and symbolism that we cannot help seeing it as a representation for bigger things – and that is what it is, warts and all Let … Continue reading

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The difference (or why utilitarians have a harder time)

(featured image via the author) What difference does our ethics framework make to anything, and what difference can we ourselves make to anything? It was already past dinner time on this warm late spring day, but my friend and I … Continue reading

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