http://bit.ly/cX9uyY
There have been a couple of reviews/accounts about The Hidden Brain that mention my thoughts about George Allen’s infamous “macaca” moment — Allen repeatedly referred to a young Indian-American as “macaca” — comments which contributed to Allen’s losing his Senate race, and the Republicans losing control of the U.S. Senate in 2006. The section of the [...]
George Allen’s “macaca” comment: Does he deserve compassion or censure?
The Diane Rehm Show featured The Hidden Brain — Disasters, the Criminal Justice System, and naked Visigoths
http://bit.ly/cc8JWl
Listen to an interview about The Hidden Brain conducted by the Diane Rehm show. The show was guest-hosted by the immensely talented Susan Page of USA Today, and featured a discussion that ranged from how to reform our criminal justice system to same-sex attraction among Visigoths. Sorry, I can’t say more. You’ll just have to [...]
Morning Edition — NPR interview with Shankar Vedantam about The Hidden Brain
http://bit.ly/7nHMRL
NPR’s flagship news program, MORNING EDITION, has featured The Hidden Brain in an interview.
You can read about it and listen to the interview using this link.
If you have trouble accessing the site, you can download an MP3 file of the interview here.
The Supreme Court and the hidden brain — new ruling on campaigns and speech
http://bit.ly/8eG4k7
The Supreme Court recently lifted limits on private organizations creating campaign ads, and argued that such restrictions infringed on the First Amendment rights of individuals and organizations.
Much of the ruling’s rationale is based on the idea that humans do much or all of their thinking consciously. At a conscious level, it makes sense that more [...]
Haiti: Natural Disasters and Religious Belief
http://bit.ly/8xAasp
One of the things I always find striking after a major natural disaster such as the recent earthquake in Haiti is how religious believers and non-believers quickly reach diametrically opposing conclusions about the implications of the disaster. For non-believers, natural disasters are evidence that God does not exist — for what kind of benevolent, just [...]
Washington Post: The Hidden Brain and Moral Judgment
http://bit.ly/8sXvEd
The Washington Post organized an online chat to discuss an excerpt from The Hidden Brain that was published in the Sunday magazine. The excerpt was drawn from the final chapter of my book, and it explores several paradoxes in our ability to make good moral judgments. The central paradox is that people seem predisposed to [...]
Salon: “A wide array of vivid true stories”
http://bit.ly/8jsVsX
Salon.com features an interview about The Hidden Brain.
“Of the many viral-video meltdowns pop culture has endured, few are as viscerally disturbing, as painful to watch, as Michael Richards’ racist rant during a 2006 stand-up appearance. As you’ll no doubt remember, the man better known as Kramer lashed out at a heckler in his audience with [...]
New York Times oped: The Hidden Brain and colorism
http://bit.ly/72zWWP
See PDF
I have an oped in the New York Times today discussing an issue that I explore at length in the book — the problem of colorism. Most people think about racial prejudice as being merely about how whites think about blacks, but the reality is far more complicated and nuanced. The issue is not [...]
New York Times Review: An “entertaining romp through the unconscious mind”
http://bit.ly/4Gnowf
The New York Times review of The Hidden Brain appears this weekend. You can read it here. Here is how it begins:
Invisible forces that control our behavior have inspired our best storytellers, from Euripides to Steven Spielberg. Whether we’re yanked around by jealous gods, Oedipal urges or poltergeists, the idea that we feel powerless to [...]
Haiti: Moral Judgment and Mass Suffering
http://bit.ly/56JsW9
The Washington Post runs an excerpt from The Hidden Brain this weekend, and the excerpt should be available online starting sometime Friday.
The excerpt is drawn from the final chapter of the book, and explores the biases that affect human judgment in the realm of moral decision-making. The ideas in the excerpt are especially relevant right [...]


