January 29, 2020 Meeting:
Topic: What is Evolutionary Psychology …and Why Should We Care?
Dr. Debra Lieberman is an Associate Professor in the Department of Psychology at the University of Miami. Her research aims to understand how evolution has shaped the social mind. To this end Dr. Lieberman applies theoretical tools from evolutionary biology to develop hypotheses regarding function, generates information-processing models that specify how the functional mechanism operates, and then empirically tests the validity of these models. Dr. Lieberman studies a range of phenomena including kinship, altruism, sexuality, disgust, morality, and, gratitude.

Dr. Russell S. Sobel is a Professor of Economics & Entrepreneurship at The Citadel in the Baker School of Business, and a Visiting Fellow at the South Carolina Policy Council. Dr. Sobel has authored or co-authored over 200 books and articles, including a nationally-best-selling college Principles of Economics textbook. His research has been featured in the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, US News and World Report, Investor’s Business Daily, and The Economist Magazine, and he has appeared on CNBC, Fox News, CSPAN, NPR, and the CBS Evening News.
Ted’s knowledge of finance, policy and government stems from his 16-year overseas career in finance and management. As the Head of Corporate Banking and a management member of Citibank Handlowy in Poland, he advised the government on financial restructurings that continued the liberalization of the nation’s economy. In his Treasury roles in both Poland and Mexico, Ted managed multi-billion dollar balance sheets and Sales and Trading businesses, which gave him hands-on experience in budgeting and crisis management.
Romina Boccia, a leading fiscal and economic expert at The Heritage Foundation, is director of the think tank’s Grover M. Hermann Center for the Federal Budget. Boccia leads a team of experts covering fiscal policy, Social Security, pension reform, and workforce issues such as the gender wage gap and workplace benefits policy. She often advises members of Congress, the administration and their staffs on economic and fiscal policy issues, and she has testified before congressional committees in the House and Senate. She’s the editor of Heritage’s flagship budget proposal, The Blueprint for Balance and leads the organization’s project on the future of work.
Jody W. Lipford is Professor of Economics at Presbyterian College in Clinton, SC. His research interests span from environmental economics to public finance to sports economics, and he has published in the journals Public Finance Review, The Independent Review, The Journal of Sport, and Political Economy in the Carolinas. In 2008 he won the Templeton prize for Article of the Year in The Journal of Private Enterprise, and in 2012 he won Presbyterian College’s award for Faculty Scholarship. He served as visiting scholar at the Property and Environmental Research Center in 2003, and he conducted the research for this presentation while visiting scholar at the Center for the Study of Free Enterprise at Western Carolina University.
T.K. Coleman is the Co-Founder & Education Director of Praxis. He is a prolific writer and speaker with a singular mission: to awaken people to their own creative power. T.K. describes himself as an entrepreneur first and a motivator second. He’s a strong believer in the idea that he has a responsibility to face the everyday challenges of creating value in the free market if he’s going to spend his life trying to get other people to believe in free markets.
Robert L. Bradley Jr., is founder and CEO of the Institute for Energy Research (IER) of Washington, DC and Houston, Texas. He has authored eight books, the most recent of which focus on business strategies and practices in the modern US mixed economy with particular reference to energy.
Robin Dale Hanson is an associate professor of economics at George Mason University and a research associate at the Future of Humanity Institute of Oxford University. He is known as an expert on idea futures and markets, and he was involved in the creation of the Foresight Institute’s Foresight Exchange and DARPA’s FutureMAP project. He invented market scoring rules like LMSR (Logarithmic Market Scoring Rule) used by prediction markets such as Consensus Point (where Hanson is Chief Scientist), and has conducted research on signaling.
All club members and the guests at this meeting were given signed copies of The Elephant in the Brain. The club was able to get these books for the members from a grant from AIER.