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STEM

Anchoring Safety to Objects

April 9, 2018 by Dr Rob Long Leave a Comment

Anchoring Safety to Objects

imageAnchoring refers to a human bias that ‘holds’ to a view or position based upon how it was introduced and ‘sunk-cost’ associated with commitment to that position. Anchoring acts as a ‘fast and efficient’ heuristic that short cuts any need for … Learn more >>>>>

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Filed Under: Robert Long, Social Psychology of Risk Tagged With: anchoring, STEM, sunk cost

Safety Surveying What You Already Know

April 8, 2018 by Dr Rob Long Leave a Comment

Safety Surveying What You Already Know

imageI received a post this week from someone who had conducted the typical orthodox safety survey. There are many such surveys on the market, all infused with STEM-only assumptions about materialist-rationalist safety. As I looked through the survey results … Learn more >>>>>

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Filed Under: Robert Long, Safety Culture, Social Psychology of Risk Tagged With: culture cloud, Safety Surveys, STEM

Transdisciplinary Safety

March 31, 2018 by Dr Rob Long Leave a Comment

Transdisciplinary Safety

In the latest issue of The Risk Magazine  in the Future of Risk Edition (No. 3 March 2018, p.44) I argued that the future of risk must embrace transdisciplinarity (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transdisciplinarity ).

It is interesting that the binary view that currently dominates safety … Learn more >>>>>

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Filed Under: Robert Long, Safety Leadership, Social Psychology of Risk Tagged With: safety culture, SPoR, STEM

Making the World fit the Safety Worldview

May 7, 2017 by Dr Rob Long 5 Comments

world protection Making the World fit the Safety Worldview

One of the drivers of the work of Martin Heidegger  was his reaction to the determinist and reductionist view of Rene Descartes . The Cartesian worldview understands the world in an atomistic way, reducing certainty down to first … Learn more >>>>>

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Filed Under: Robert Long, Social Psychology of Risk Tagged With: injury data, matrix, mental health, STEM, world view

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