jrtom: (Default)
http://www.nytimes.com/2010/05/16/magazine/16Sunstein-t.html?pagewanted=print


Sunstein saw in the housing collapse, he told me, a “cascadelike process.” People thought they could handle more risk than they really could, and the regulatory system permitted too much systemic risk. Some of these errors were a result of legislation, but many were caused more quietly, by tiny rules issued by federal agencies — the kinds of regulations over which Sunstein now has some authority.

If you think about it — and Sunstein certainly has — you can see a similar problem in one of the fields OIRA deals with often: the environment. The small risks that people or companies take (in adding increments of carbon to the atmosphere or — as in the case of the recent Gulf Coast oil spill — maintaining drilling rigs) sometimes threaten to cascade into a catastrophe. So how can the government change the framework of choices that particular people are faced with so that their own small errors in risk perception don’t expose the whole of society?
jrtom: (Default)
http://www.newsweek.com/id/151758

I've asked my father (who's been a pediatrician longer than I've been alive) what he thinks about this.

I think that this is one of those cases in which a little knowledge (in this case, knowing that such studies exist, without knowing whether (and how) they apply to people you know, especially your children) is a dangerous thing. It seems like it would be very tempting to assume that certain behavioral tendencies were genetically driven--not because you have evidence, but because you know it's possible and because it can be comforting to believe that it's Not Your Fault. (Whatever it is.)

I think that it's entirely possible that our children will be the first generation for which most will have fairly comprehensive knowledge of, and possibly limited manipulation of, their own children's genetic makeup. This is not entirely reassuring: the makers of GATTACA made sure of that.

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