Hi there!
My name is Cyrus! I'm a master's student (M.Sc.) at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland, where I'm currently wrapping up my degree in Statistics with Data Science! In September, I'll be moving back to the United States and starting my Master of Public Policy (M.P.P.) at the University of Chicago!
Originally, I'm from Cape Cod. Well, that's not completely true. I moved around a lot growing up, and at some point or another I've lived in St. Louis, Chattanooga, New York, Hartford, and New Jersey suburbs. But I moved to the Cape when I was 10, so that's the place I call home.
From 2o16 to 2020, I studied at Nauset Regional High School and from 2020 to 2024, I went to Northeastern University in Boston, where I earned my bachelor's degree (B.S.) in Mathematics, Philosophy, and History with minors in Economics and English. (If you can't tell, I've always had a lot of interests.)
Outside the classroom, I'm a major classical music enthusiast, ice cream lover, amateur philosopher, part-time waiter, tea (and milk) drinker, long-distance walker, on-and-off Marvel fan, and surely half a dozen other things it's hard to recollect.
But if you'd like to reach out to me and ask a question, feel free! My email is cyrusseyrafi.edu@gmail.com.
Academic and professional references are available upon request. Please email me at seyrafi.c@northeastern.edu.
Honors Interdisciplinary Thesis in Philosophy and Economics, Northeastern University
Abstract
This paper formalizes John Stuart Mill’s utilitarianism, Immanuel Kant’s deontology, and Adam Smith’s sympathy-based ethics as transformations of material payoff functions in rational choice theory, and subjects them to evolutionary game-theoretic replicator dynamics against the homo economicus to test their respective evolutionary fitness and intergenerational stability. Building on Alger (2013), which first formalized Kantian morality against the homo economicus, this work employs a Python simulation to determine long-run dominant or stable moral strategies in all configurations of the Prisoner’s Dilemma and the Hawk-Dove Game.
Senior Capstone in History, Northeastern University
Abstract
This paper examines the impact of American romantic ideals on the evolution of love-based marriage in the Islamic world from the late 19th century to the present. It explores how American feminist and cultural values, especially through media like Disney, shaped perceptions of love and marriage in the Middle East. Key figures like Egyptian philosopher Qasim Amin merged Western feminist thought with local values, advocating for women's rights. Contemporary perspectives, revealed through surveys and interviews, highlight a generational divide influenced by globalization. The study concludes that while American ideals play a significant role, traditional and modern views on marriage coexist in a complex dialogue.