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Posts by Toby Handfield

Oh cool, thanks for this - I'd never heard of it!

3 months ago 1 0 0 0
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The evolution of scientific credit: when authorship norms impede collaboration Abstract. Scientific authorship norms vary dramatically across disciplines, from contribution-sensitive systems where first author is the greatest contribu

Some fields list authors alphabetically. Others use norms like "senior last". Others use order to signify relative contributions. In a new paper with @kevinzollman.com, we model the evolution of these norms, and then look at which type of norm is best for science. doi.org/10.1098/rsos...

3 months ago 29 13 2 1

Highly highly recommended! The place is great and @cmolho.bsky.social is fabulous to work with!

4 months ago 1 2 0 0
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Toulouse Summer School in Quantitative Social Sciences Application Application to the Toulouse Summer School in Quantitative Social Sciences taking place from May 25th to June 19th, 2026 in Toulouse, France Application deadline: December 15th, 2025 Applicants will be...

Happy #WplusEBSWednesday, folks!

This week, we're spotlighting the Toulouse Summer School in Quantitative Social Sciences (May 26–June 19), hosted by @tse-fr.eu and @iast.fr .

Applications due Dec. 15!

Great opportunity for PhD students - check it out at the link :)
www.tse-fr.eu/toulouse-sum...

5 months ago 6 9 1 0
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Max Noichl | Philosophical Easter Eggs Some eggsamples from the recent philosophical literature.

Some philosophical easter eggs... 🌷🌼🐇https://www.maxnoichl.eu/blog/2025/easter-eggs/

1 year ago 0 1 0 0
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Reluctant Altruism: Underlying Mechanisms and Global Variations Altruistic decisions are central to civic engagement and humanitarian efforts. However, altruistic behavior is often context-dependent rather than con…

"reluctant altruism represents a fundamental aspect of human social behavior... the evidence points to reluctant altruism being guilt-driven"

9 months ago 1 1 0 0

“widely adopted practices like senior-last positioning and alphabetical ordering may function as institutional frictions that impede valuable scientific collaborations rather than neutral organizational conventions, potentially reducing overall scientific productivity across affected disciplines”

9 months ago 4 4 0 0
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The Evolution of Scientific Credit: When Authorship Norms Impede Collaboration Scientific authorship norms vary dramatically across disciplines, from contribution-sensitive systems where first author is the greatest contributor and subsequent author order reflects relative input...

New preprint from @tobyhandfield.bsky.social and me!

We analyze authorship order norms from two perspectives: (1) why do disciplines have different norms and (2) do those different norms affect what kinds of collaborations take place.

arxiv.org/abs/2507.07364

9 months ago 39 17 3 4
Studying Philosophy Does Make People Better Thinkers | Journal of the American Philosophical Association | Cambridge Core Studying Philosophy Does Make People Better Thinkers

Big iff true.

www.cambridge.org/core/journal...

9 months ago 2 0 0 0
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The Evolution of Scientific Credit: When Authorship Norms Impede Collaboration Scientific authorship norms vary dramatically across disciplines, from contribution-sensitive systems where first author is the greatest contributor and subsequent author order reflects relative input...

Here's the aforementioned paper.

arxiv.org/abs/2507.07364

9 months ago 2 0 0 0
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Dave Chalmers and the best argument for dualism #ASSC28

9 months ago 63 12 8 2

Here's a start to a mathematical philosophers starter pack. I'm having a hard time keeping track of who is here these days. Apologies if I missed you. Let me know if you want to be added or removed, or if you know anyone else who should be on here.

1 year ago 158 48 26 3
LPS Summer Development Program – August 11th to 15th, 2025

Undergrads interested in philosophy of science? Please share that applications are open for our summer development program! lpssdp.com?fbclid=IwY2x...

1 year ago 21 25 0 0
Abstract: There is by now a considerable amount of theoretical research on the evolutionary foundations of human motivation, or preferences. In the first part of this talk I will present a result which points to a particular class of preferences, which under general conditions combines a certain kind of pro-social concern (a Kantian moral concern) with a certain kind of anti-social concern (spite). The result further suggests that these two motivations go hand in hand. In the second part I will present experimental evidence based on simple designs that enable disentangling these motivations.

Abstract: There is by now a considerable amount of theoretical research on the evolutionary foundations of human motivation, or preferences. In the first part of this talk I will present a result which points to a particular class of preferences, which under general conditions combines a certain kind of pro-social concern (a Kantian moral concern) with a certain kind of anti-social concern (spite). The result further suggests that these two motivations go hand in hand. In the second part I will present experimental evidence based on simple designs that enable disentangling these motivations.

Cooperation Colloquium this week:

Ingela Alger (@ingelaalger.bsky.social)

On the co-existence of morality and spite: Evolutionary theory and experimental evidence

Friday Feb 28, 15:00 UTC+1 (Vienna) / 9 am NYC

Sign up: list.ku.dk/postorius/li...

1 year ago 4 3 0 1

"Sure, the last 1000 grad students failed to solve the problem of induction, but that's no reason to think I can't do it."

1 year ago 34 12 3 2

Ever the cheery one! 😉

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

Here is my start! I'm having a hard time keeping track of who is here these days. Apologies if I missed you. Let me know if you want to be added or removed, or if you know anyone else who should be on here.

1 year ago 47 13 9 0