Presented by Stuart Vyse, Contributing Editor, "Skeptical Inquirer"
    
    Saturday, June 4, 2022, 1:30 pm
    B-CC Regional Services Center
    4805 Edgemoor Lane 2nd Floor (West Room)
    Bethesda, MD
    Directions: http://tinyurl.com/bcccenter
    
    Join us for the last in-person NCAS talk until the fall!  And if you
    can't join us in person, watch the live stream at
    https://youtu.be/t1-1fof15U8 .
    
    Although reason and rationality are our friends in almost all
    contexts, in some cases people are better off putting reason aside.
    In a number of very important situations, we benefit by not seeing
    the world as it is, and by not behaving like logic-driven machines.
    Sometimes we know we aren’t making sense, and yet we are compelled
    to act against reason; in other cases, our delusions are so much a
    part of normal human experience that we are unaware of them. As
    intelligent as we are, much of what has helped humans succeed as a
    species is not our prodigious brain power but something much more
    basic.
    
    In behavioral scientist Stuart Vyse’s new book, "THE USES OF
    DELUSION: Why It’s Not Always Rational to be Rational"  he looks at
    the aspects of human nature that are not altogether rational but,
    nonetheless, help us achieve our social and personal goals. 
    
  
  Stuart Vyse, PhD, is a behavioral scientist, teacher, and writer. He
    taught at Providence College, the University of Rhode Island, and
    Connecticut College. Vyse’s book "Believing in Magic: The Psychology
    of Superstition" won the 1999 William James Book Award of the
    American Psychological Association. He is a contributing editor of
    Skeptical Inquirer magazine, where he writes the “Behavior &
    Belief” column, and a Fellow of the Association for Psychological
    Science and of the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry
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