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Themes for 2009-2010
Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences
A broad category of special interest is any research (basic or
policy-oriented) that addresses the critical issues of our time. The majority of the Center's fellowship awards are
uncategorized by specific research topic; however for the academic year 2009-2010, there will be two general themes.
Please note that while scholars from any discipline or
interdisciplinary area may indicate interest in these themes, theme interest is not used as a selection criterion.
In the United States, we have seen a near doubling of life
expectancy in the past century; the same phenomenon is even stronger in
other countries. Such a dramatic increase in life expectancy has
implications for everything from timing of work life to brain
development with increased years of accumulating knowledge and
experience, to evolution with the emergence of multiple living
generations. The dramatic extension of life will also affect
expectations for all earlier periods of life. Scientists and scholars
are just beginning to consider all the implications.
Scientists/scholars with an interest in this area, and who prefer to participate in a fellowship class in which there are scholars with similar interests,
might have questions that include any of the following (and surely
others):
- What are the personal, institutional, and national implications of
increased life expectancy, on decision making at each of these levels?
- What are the political implications of more voters of older age?
- Given that many biographies are written later in life, what effect
might increased life expectancy have on biographies, and literature
more generally?
- What are the legal implications for ageism, inheritance, estate law, and related legal issues?
- What is the evolutionary significance of multiple living generations?
- What effects on brain development might emerge with a doubling of life span?
- What can historical research tell us about societies or times of longer versus shorter life span?
- What implications might there be for childhood and youth, with
longer life expectancies? How might parent behavior change in their
role of preparing their young for very long adult lives?
- What possibilities exist for changing work patterns for those
entering the workforce as well as for those leaving it, given longer
anticipated productive work years?
- Given that the reproductive years have not expanded to the same
extent as the productive work life, what opportunities exist for
changing expectations about support for young families relative to
timing of launching work careers? Currently young couples are often
starting families and career simultaneously; might there be more
opportunity to reduce stress by shifting later the career launch of the
young, with older adults picking up increased work responsibilities?
- What implications exist for aesthetics and images of health with
longer life spans? What effects will these have on the arts, sports,
and other activities?
- What are some likely economic implications of longer life span?
Effects on Social Security and health care are already in the news;
what other effects have not yet been considered?
- Dramatic increases in longevity in some countries with continued
high infant mortality, war, and resulting shorter lifespans in other
countries would likely exacerbate increasing differences among
countries of the world. What implications would likely result from this
additional divide among nations?
Science and Scholarship on Invisible Forces
Scientific discoveries have revealed information on invisible
forces ranging from gravity to effects of social relationships on gene
transcription. Invisible forces may include physical forces,
psychosocial forces, and biological forces. People also report effects
of spiritual forces. Humanists have studied invisible force phenomena
for centuries.
Scholars/scientists with an interest in such phenomena, and who prefer
to participate in a fellowship class in which there are scholars with similar interests,
might have questions that include any of the following (and surely
others):
- What have studies of literature, history, and religion concluded
about important human invisible forces? What have been the beliefs
about these? What evidence exists?
- What has neuroscience discovered about hope? About love? About
compassion? About communal activities compared with individual
activities?
- What is known about the health and wellbeing implications of
practice related to important human invisible forces? Which practices
are more healthy versus stressful to humans?
- What role might important invisible forces play in economic behavior, for
example, in motivating philanthropic contributions? It has long been
the case that individual philanthropy in the US has constituted the
majority of philanthropic gifts, and the majority of these have been
directed to religious groups. What other areas of economic behavior
might be related to important invisible forces?
- Political behavior is also likely influenced by important invisible
forces. Sociopolitical movements throughout history have been motivated
by beliefs in invisible forces. Fear has long been believed to be the
prime motivator for political movements, but one presidential candidate
in the US election is motivating voters with hope. What are the
implications of recent scientific advances in invisible forces for
understanding of political behavior?
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