THE PROBLEM IS NOT THAT PEOPLE DON’T CARE. IT IS THAT OUR CIRCLE OF REGARD FOR TRUTH IS IRRATIONALLY SMALL
It is often said that “people don’t care about truth”. But is this really the case? Imagine you are falsely accused of cheating in a test:...
When we talk, we follow certain ground rules, which are set out in what philosophers call “language games”. Each game has its own set of rules - but problems arise when not everyone is clear which game is being played.
Perhaps most important is the informing...
Science can’t exist without telling a story. The question is not whether we should use it, but how we should use it best
Image: ‘Even if an exemplary scientist has trained herself to be utterly objective, her audience will always bring their biased, story-gobbling minds’ Photograph: ijeab/Getty...
21 May 2018
A good number of Australians hate it when people refer to the letter "h" as “haitch”. They hate it with a passion.
While the “haitch” pronunciation is often linked to Irish Catholic education in times when Australian society was divided along sectarian lines, no...
Q and A
A public lecture delivered at the Nanyang Technology University
Date: 11 December 2017
Time: 2:00pm - 5:30pm
Venue: Discovery Theatrette, Level 4, Matrix Building at Biopolis
Address: 30 Biopolis Street, Singapore 138671
Jointly organised by:
...
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What are the moral obligations of a casual chat?
Why is there value in every 'ummm', 'mm-hmmm', and 'like'?
And does the country you grew up in make a difference in how quickly you reply to a question?
Nick Enfield is the author of a new book,...
In our new normal, experts are dismissed and alternative facts flagrantly offered. This suspicion of specialists is part of a bigger problem
Image: March For Science In New York City, 22 April 2017. Photograph: Erik McGregor/Pacific/Barcroft
We often defer to others’ expertise, and for good reason. The...
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Language loss is a silent phenomenon - creeping and incremental like erosion.
But what precisely do we lose when a language is no longer spoken?
Perhaps we should be asking: what do we keep when linguistic diversity is maintained?
Professor of Linguistics at the University of Sydney,...
Image: Public anxiety about the post-truth era inspired a New York Times advertising campaign.
Nick Enfield, University of Sydney
This article is the first in a series from the Post-Truth Initiative, a Strategic Research Excellence Initiative at the University of Sydney. The series examines today’s post-truth problem...
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Do dolphins say ‘Huh?’ Do gorillas point out dropped bananas to other gorillas? Do ants quote one another?
Human language is a a uniquely complex combination of social and cognitive capacities.
Professor Nick Enfield explains the latest research on what distinguishes human language, from its cooperative...