Bipartisanship, Dominance, Shakespeare, Middle East
Top of Mind with Julie Rose - Season 1, Episode 63
- May 14, 2015 6:00 am
- 1:43:24 mins
Bipartisanship in Congress (1:04) Guest: Jeff Flake, fifth-generation Arizonan and has served in the US Senate for the last two years. Prior to that, he served for 12 years in the US House of Representatives Politicians and pundits alike bemoan the death of bipartisanship in Washington. Cross-party collaboration on big issues is rare. It’s even rarer to see Republicans and Democrats spending quality time together, let alone breaking bread. But Republican Senator Jeff Flake from Arizona thinks the benefits of face-time with the opposition are worth the possibility of a little partisan indigestion. He and fellow Senator Martin Heinrich -- a Democrat from New Mexico -- recently organized a rare bi-partisan lunch in the Senate. They hatched the idea while doing something even more hard-to-believe in this partisan political climate—they spent a week together on a deserted island proving that even opponents can work together when they want to. Cost of Dominance (17:15) Guest: Timothy W. Smith, professor of psychology at the University of Utah. His research looks at how personality and social style affect cardiovascular health There’s more than one way to climb the social ladder. You can do it aggressively—always in competition with the people you pass up. Or you can do it in what University of Utah psychologist Tim Smith calls the “warm-dominant style,” which leaves the people around you happy to see you passing them on your way up. Shakespeare and Text Analysis (30:48) Guests: James W. Pennebaker, Professor of Psychology at the University of Texas, Austin Ryan Boyd, doctoral candidate UT Austin and principle investigator of the paper: “Did Shakespeare Write Double Falsehood?: Identifying Individuals by Creating Psychological Signatures With Text Analysis” The paper was published in the journal Psychological Science. Double Falsehood was first published in 1728 and purported by the publisher to be a “lost play” by William Shakespeare. Scholars have long debated whether it really is. Now two psychologists from