| Date | Event Type | Description | Location | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2012-01-01 | N/A | Field experiment regarding door-to-door solicitors (DellaVigna et al.) | Residential homes | View |
This document is page 309 from an academic text or book titled 'Morality Games,' bearing a House Oversight Committee evidence stamp. The text discusses behavioral economics and evolutionary psychology, specifically analyzing 'Explicit Requests' for donations and human tendencies to 'Avoid Situations in Which We Are Expected to Give.' It cites various academic studies (Andreoni et al., DellaVigna et al., Dana et al.) regarding the Salvation Army and the 'dictator game' to explain pro-social behavior and reputation management.
This document appears to be a page (page 297) from an academic text or book titled 'Morality Games,' stamped with 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015509,' indicating it is part of an investigative evidence file. The text discusses psychological and philosophical concepts of altruism, the 'Envelope Game,' strategic vs. principled behavior, and Kantian ethics, utilizing examples ranging from religious figures to modern politicians like John Kerry. While it does not contain direct communications or flight logs, its inclusion in the Oversight files suggests it may have been part of the materials (likely scientific literature) exchanged within the Epstein network, known for its interest in evolutionary psychology and game theory.
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