Disgusting decision-making with Yoel Inbar
Listen now
Description
In this episode of the Decision Corner, Brooke speaks with Yoel Inbar - professor of psychology at the University of Toronto and expert in how the feeling of disgust influences human judgment and decision-making. Together they define what it really means to feel a sense of disgust and its evolutionary purpose as a means of preventing risk or harm (like stopping us from eating rotten food!). On the flip-side, we hear about the negative consequences of disgust and why it can lead to biased or flawed judgements. Some of the things discussed include: - What is disgust and what purpose does it serve from a biological or evolutionary perspective? - Why justifying our disgust with moral reasoning, i.e. “It disgusts me so it must be wrong!” can be troublesome. - Descriptive versus normative beliefs, and how disgust affects both in different ways. - Does disgust affect people differently, and do some people get more ‘grossed out’ by things than others? - Strategies to acknowledge our disgust, and allow us to question whether it’s serving us effectively or not.
More Episodes
In this episode of The Decision Corner, Brooke discusses disagreement with Julia Minson, an Associate Professor of Public Policy at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and former lecturer at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania. Her research explores the psychology...
Published 10/11/22
Published 10/11/22
In this episode of The Decision Corner, Brooke is joined by Grace Lordan, an associate professor of Behavioral Science at LSE and author of Think Big, Take Small Steps and Build the Future You Want. Together they discuss the importance of narratives in the workplace, and how the stories that we...
Published 09/06/22