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DeScioli
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This document is a page (p. 311) from an academic text titled 'Morality Games,' discussing psychological and economic theories of reciprocity, self-image, framing effects, and anonymous giving. It bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, indicating it was part of a government investigation, likely collected due to the citation '(Rand & Epstein, 2014)' regarding altruism. The text analyzes why humans perform pro-social acts even when no reciprocation is possible, citing various evolutionary psychology studies.
This document is page 302 of an academic paper authored by M. Hoffman et al., discussing moral psychology, game theory (Nash equilibrium), and the distinction between harm as a 'means' versus a 'by-product.' It cites various studies (Cushman, Greene, DeScioli) and uses examples involving Israel/Hamas, the US drone policy, and Bashar al-Assad's use of chemical weapons to illustrate theories on coordinated punishment and moral intuitions. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, suggesting it was included in a document production to the US House Oversight Committee, though the text itself contains no direct references to Jeffrey Epstein.
This document appears to be page 299 of an academic text titled 'Morality Games,' likely included in evidence files. It discusses the moral philosophy of omission versus commission, using the historical tragedy of the ship *Struma* (1942) as an example. The text further explores this distinction using game theory models (Nash equilibria, Coordination Game) based on research by DeScioli, Bruening, and Kurzban.
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