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Category: Psychology

Woe Unto the Zealots

Woe Unto the Zealots

The following comes from my book, The Triple Path (available as a free download in PDF or ebook formats, or for sale in hard copy and ebook formats wherever books are sold–the book lists  references for the e sources for this passage). My posts from recent days have been about the new religion of Wokism. I will be posting more in coming days on the subject. This passage from The Triple Path (Virtue 4) is particularly relevant: Beware the zealots,…

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The Church of Woke

The Church of Woke

Note: This is a re-post of a post originally from September 24, 2017. I am reposting because it is more relevant than ever. I will be posting more on this subject. I’ve said it before: religion is an innate part of human nature. Someone can give up on organized religion, but he can’t give up on being human, so religiosity will still be a part of his character. Those who give up on church just transfer their religiosity to other…

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Morality and ethics – Part 7: Unity, Diversity, and Identity

Morality and ethics – Part 7: Unity, Diversity, and Identity

Note: This is part 7 of a series on morality and ethics. Here are the other parts: part 1, part 2, part 3, part 4, part 5, and part 6 (plus additional posts on hypocrisy and free will). The entire series makes up the fourth chapter of my book, The Triple Path, which can be downloaded for free here in PDF and eReader formats or purchased at all major book retailers (in print and eReader formats). The history of religious…

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Read my new book

Read my new book

I’ve written a book summarizing my thoughts on life, truth, morality, and religion. About one-quarter of the book contains material from this blog (revised, re-written, and greatly improved), while the rest is new material never released before. The book is called The Triple Path. You can download it here (currently available in PDF, ePub, and Kindle formats (MOBI and AZW3)).

Judging by appearances: sometimes it works

Judging by appearances: sometimes it works

We’ve all heard that you shouldn’t judge a book by its cover. But a recent psychology study indicates that we may be able to make accurate judgments about certain aspects of people’s character “after minimal exposure to [their] physical appearance.” The study is titled “The Accuracy of Inferences About Criminality Based on Facial Appearance”1 and was performed by Jeffrey M. Valla, Stephen J. Ceci, and Wendy M. Williams of Cornell University and published in the Journal of Social, Evolutionary, and…

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