A slice of the ‘net, vol. 1
Posted: December 13th, 2010 | Author: David Dreshfield | Filed under: Education, Politics, Tech | Tags: decision-making, entrepreneurship, existentialism, neuropsychology, New York Times, North Korea, Philip Zimbardo, R.D. Laing, Saudi Arabia, South Korea, time | No Comments »Here are a few things that have piqued my interest of late.
How Perception of Time Relates to Decision-Making
This lecture by Professor Philip Zimbardo, he of the infamous Stanford prison experiment, is absolutely fascinating. The video is well worth the ten minutes of your time it’ll take. I couldn’t help but think of my own time-perception leanings — I’m past-positive and present-hedonistic, primarily — as well as nod in agreement/self-recognition in the segment about how education must change in the face of an increasingly digitalized generation. What’s your perception of time, and how has it affected the way you live your life?
Saudi Arabia’s Creeping Liberalization
Or so we can hope. It’s actually kind of exciting to see this move forward, as I wrote briefly about the unveiling three years ago of the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (mentioned in the article). The article does an excellent job of portraying Saudi Arabia as on a precipice of sorts — either this newest liberalization initiative will succeed and open the door for future efforts, or it could backfire horrifically and give broad political cover for the religious hardliners in the political establishment.
Want a Job? Give Yourself One
The New York Times examines a growing trend, and one I might very well be joining myself: recent college grads starting up their own businesses rather than shopping their résumés around hundreds of times to no avail.