What Humans MUST DO To Adapt & Avoid the COLLAPSE of Civilization | Bret Weinstein & Heather Heying

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[Music] heather heing brett weinstein welcome back to the show previously apart now together i'm super excited to have you guys thank you tom for having us thanks for having us glad to be back dude the new book a hunter-gatherer's guide to the 21st century i loved it uh it is absolutely extraordinary and i want to begin with a quote from the book that is quite ominous and then i want to see what you guys have to say about this bad boy so here we go this is literally a direct quote from the book towards the end but and i quote we are headed for collapse civilization is becoming incoherent around us i'd love to know what you guys mean by that and if that to you is a big part of the thread through the book because it was for me well the first thing to say is that you skipped the warning in the front of the book that it should only be read while sitting down so fall over and injure themselves um yeah well we are headed for collapse that's really not even an extraordinary claim if you just simply extrapolate out from where we are we are outstripping the planet's capacity to house us and we don't appear to have a plan for shifting gears so it's really a factual statement now the question really is why and the the bitter pill is that the very thing that made us so successful as a species is now setting us up for disaster that is to say our evolutionary capacity to solve problems has uh outstripped our capacity to adapt to the new world that we've created for ourselves and so we've become psychologically and socially and physiologically and politically unhealthy and our civilization isn't any better that said if any species could get us out of this mess it's us like you know it's exactly as brett said we are the most labile the most adaptable the most generalist species on the planet and born with the most potential to become anything else previously unimagined so i do feel like in the end the message of the book which is explicitly and consistently evolutionary in all of its different instantiations is hopeful and yes that that quote that you read is ominous and i think as brett said you know factual statement but we can do this we we have we have to do it and uh we need to try and in fact in evolutionary biology we recognize something we call adaptive peaks and adaptive valleys and it would have to be true that to shift gears to something much better something that that gave humans more of what it is that we all value we would have to go through an adaptive valley and it would look frightening and in fact they are dangerous places to be but it's part and parcel of shifting from one mode of existence to another all right i think an idea that's going to be really important to get across and this is something as a guy that only ever thought i would talk about business and then in trying to explain how to get good at business i kept having to come back to mindset and then trying to explain mindset i keep having to go to evolution it's like that we're having a biological experience that your brain is an organ it comes you guys said that we are not a blank slate but we are the blankest of slates which i think is a phenomenal way to put this idea and i want to tie that to the title and get your guys take so it's a hunter-gatherer's guide to the 21st century and so the way that i take that is that notion you have to understand that you're a product of evolution that your brain is a product of evolution and then once you understand the forces of evolution and how we got here then maybe just maybe we can find our way out of it so what are the key elements to being a product of evolution that you think people miss that we must understand if we're going to navigate our way well out of this valley of evolution let me say first that the the title a hunter-gatherer's guide to the 21st century uh evokes that sort of romanticized hunter-gatherer on the african savannah of the paleolithic which of course is a part of our human history and does have many lessons in it to teach us about who we are now and who we can become but as we say in the book we are all parts of our history like we are not just hunter-gatherers we are also right now post-industrialists and there are evolutionary implications of that go a little farther back a lot farther back depending on your framing and we are agriculturalists go farther back we're hunter-gatherers go farther back with primates where mammals were fish all of these moments of our evolutionary history have left their mark in us and have something to teach us about both what our capacities are and what our weaknesses are and what we can do going forward and i would add the lessons from evolution are both good and bad here one thing that we realized that our students over the course of many years of teaching this material realized was that everything about our experience as human beings is shaped by our evolutionary nature and that has a very disturbing upshot because we are fantastic creatures with an utterly mundane mission the very same mission that every other evolved creature has to lodge its genes in the future and that this actually explains the nature not only of our physical beings but of our culture and our perception of the world so understanding that all of that marvelous architecture is built for an utterly mind-numbing purpose is an important first step in seeing where to go but the other thing to realize and you referenced our our assertion that we are the blankest slate that has ever existed or has ever been produced by evolution and what this means is that we actually have an arbitrary map of what we can change that to the extent that our genomes have offloaded much of the evolutionary adaptive work to the software layer that means we are actually capable of changing that layer because that layer is built for change but not everything exists in that layer so some things about what we are are very difficult to change some things are actually trivial easily changed and knowing which is which is a matter of sorting out where the information is housed but it's all there for the same reason it's exactly it's all there for the same reason it's all evolutionary be it genetic or cultural or anything else can you guys give us an example of and i found this very provocative in the book and it certainly rings true to me but that to say that we are in some ways fish from an evolutionary standpoint that we are you know in some ways primates from an evolutionary standpoint what does that mean exactly again it's a factual claim one that once you've seen the picture standing from the right place is uncontroversial when we say you know is a platypus warm-blooded we are not asking a question about its phylogeny right we're asking about how it works right when we ask is a whale a mammal we are asking a question about phylogeny so when we ask the question are humans fish if we're asking a functional question then maybe not but if we're actually asking a question akin to is a mouse a mammal right then we are asking a question about the evolutionary relatedness of that creature to everything else and the key thing you need to understand is that a group a good evolutionary group like mammal or primate or ape is a group that if you imagine the tree of life falls from the tree of life with a single clip right if you clip the tree of life at a particular place all of the apes fall together if you clip it lower down all of the primates fall together and the claim that we are fish is a simple matter of if we agree that a shark is a fish and we agree that a guppy is a fish if you clip the tree of life such that you capture those two uh species you will inherently capture all the tetrapods which is to say creatures like us um so we are fish as a factual matter if the question is one of evolutionary relatedness so let me um if i may just say um say that in in slightly different words there are at least two main ways to be similar right you can be similar because you have shared history and you can be similar because you've converged on some solution and so dragonflies and swans both fly not because the most recent common ancestor of dragonflies and swans flew but because in each of their environments flight was an adaptive response and that means that flying flyingness is not a phylogenetic it's not a historical representation of what those two things are whereas if you say well both both whales and humans lactate in order to feed their babies that is a description of of something that they both inherited from a shared ancestor right so the earliest mammal lactated to feed its young if any any organism on the planet today that is descendant of that first mammal that lactated to to feed its young is a mammal even if some future mammal went a different way and lost the ability to lactate it would still be a mammal so you know brett mentioned tetrapods uh tetrapods came you know with the fish that came out onto land with you know four feet and started moving around and it's the amphibians and the reptiles and the birds and the mammals but snakes are tetrapods not because they still have four feet because they don't but because they're a member of those that group so it's it's a historical description of group membership as opposed to like an ecological description of what we're doing so we're not aquatic like most fish are but we're fish because we belong to a group that includes all the fish this episode is sponsored by nutrasense for 50 off go to try nutrasense.com forward slash impact and use code impact enjoy the episode now i'm gonna say why i think that matters and why i think you guys put that at the beginning of a book that sort of has this punch line of like hey we're really headed towards disaster and we have to be very thoughtful and here are some solutions so the reason why in business you end up having to talk about evolution is because i need a business owner to understand you cannot trust your impulses because your impulses may not have the growth of your business in mind it may not reflect an understanding of consumer behavior it may simply be something from our evolutionary past that was like um akin to it's better to jump away from the garden hose thinking that it might be a snake than it is to think that it might be a garden hose and it really is a snake and once you understand okay my mind is structured in a certain way it has these insane biases it tends me towards certain things like the one that bothers me the absolute most is that when people have a feeling it feels so real it and you never translate it into logic so you're like that thing makes me angry therefore it is bad and it must be attacked assailed whatever and if you run a business like that if you cannot divorce yourself from i have an impulse stop that insert conscious control and then figure out sort of what the first principles logical buildup is you can't solve a novel problem and until you can solve a novel problem in an environment that changes as rapidly as our current world you guys call it hyper novelty if i remember correctly you you get into these crazy making scenarios and so while it seems almost absurd to say that in some way we are fish the the key point that i take away from your book and that just seems so powerful to recognize to me is that you have to understand that you it wasn't a perfect construction at least not towards modern goals does that make sense to you guys absolutely absolutely now there are um there are really two upshots to this claim that you are a fish right it's very hard for people to wrap their minds around it the first time but once you realize that this is what we mean when we say you know a whale is a mammal that we are making a claim about the tree of life then you can actually teach yourself how adaptive evolution works just by simply recognizing that snakes are the most uh specious clade of legless lizards snakes are lizards right you don't think of it that way but they are um seals are bears that have returned to the sea right so once you understand that all you have to do is say actually this is a that it's unambiguous and that means that adaptive evolution is the kind of process that can turn a bear into an aquatic uh creature like a seal right so that's one into a snake right or a lizard into a snake um the other thing that you mention and you're right on the money which is that if you use your intuitive honed instincts in order to sort through novel problems you will constantly upend yourself because those instincts aren't built with those problems in mind now the thing that's special for us humans is that we have an alternative and the alternative we argue in the second to last chapter of the book is consciousness that the correct tool for approaching novel problems is to promote whatever the underlying issue is to consciousness to share it between individuals who likely have different experience we'll see different components of it clearly and to come to an emergent understanding of what the meaning of the problem is and what the most likely useful solution may be so in some sense really what you're saying is in this context you're trying to get people to get into their conscious mind and process this as a team activity rather than go with their gut which is very likely wrong absolutely and you know our capacity as humans but that includes as a modern human who is you know trying to engage in business with people to oscillate between this conscious state and a cultural state which is one in which actually maybe change isn't happening so rapidly maybe the rules that we've got are good for the current situation let's just do this let's do a set and forget on this set of things over here and not not constantly renegotiate whereas in this other part of the landscape we actually do need to stay in our conscious minds and yes we need to tamp down the emotion and tamp down the you know the quick gut response but engage with one another and recognize that you know it's not satan on the other side of the interaction it's another human being with all the same kinds of strengths and weaknesses as each of us has yeah there's a really interesting thing that happens when you have um a team around you whether they're employees or otherwise where um the ju literally just the other day i said something to my team and several of them misconstrued it and i could see they were having a big emotional response and i said okay tell me your objection in a single sentence with no commas no run-ons no parentheticals and what you find is that old einstein quote of if you can't explain it simply you probably don't understand it very well and so people have this emotional reaction but they and they then enact out in the world that emotional reaction but they don't actually stop to take the time to be able to say it in a single sentence and so you end up in what my my wife and business partner and i call you end up having to chase them because you'll solve the they'll say here's my problem you'll solve it say cool so if i do something that addresses that and they'll be like well it's not quite that it's it's this and then you solve that and they're like well it's not and it's like when you force people to say something really simply it forces them to interpret that emotion to bring it into the conscious mind and then to actually deal with it which i find utterly fascinating do you guys have a method by which you do that in your own lives or that you've taught other people to do it yeah i would say there's a first go-to move which is let's figure out what we actually disagree about and very frequently um you can cover half the distance or more just simply by separating an issue into two different ones so for example if i talk to a conservative audience i know we're going to disagree about climate change but i also know from experience that i can get a conservative audience to agree that if they believed that human activity was causing substantial change to the climate and that that was going to destabilize systems on which we were dependent that they would be enthusiastic about doing something about it and so what we really disagree about is whether or not we are causing something sufficient that we need to take that action right that's half the distance covered in a matter of just simply dividing it into two puzzles and you'd be amazed almost everything that we have fierce disagreements about look like this where you just sort of assume the other side has every defect rather than realizing we agree to a point at which point we we differ yeah no and this is um this is different from what we were just talking about right with regard to you know you're having an emotional or an analytical response this is a question of okay we think we're talking about the same thing but probably we are using the same words for different categories in our yes and can we can we figure out how many subcategories there are and you know say i've got five in my thing you've got five but maybe there's only two that overlap so maybe we focus on those two but maybe there's also maybe that you know the devil in the details is in one of those one of those other six that is only in one of the people's brains and when it's revealed to be like actually you think i believe that thing and i don't like that's not something we share between us so yeah having the capability to go in and like zoom in and out on problems and say actually the problem can be smaller than you think and and also it is larger than you think and then i think and let's constantly re-re-evaluate the the framing and the scale at which we're doing analysis you guys talk in the book about theory of mind and heather i know you've either started writing have written or have threatened to write a science fiction novel which you know i desperately want you to do and publish but i've started doing a game when i find myself in that situation where and i learned this in my previous company where both of my partners were really smart guys but every now and then we'd get in an argument and i'd be like i think they're an idiot but i know they're not an idiot and they think i'm an idiot but i'm not an idiot and so i started approaching it as a writer and saying okay if i were writing this character in this scene what would have to be true for them to be acting this way what would they have to believe be thinking whatever and in my marriage this has become an extraordinary tool of saying for you to be reacting this way you would have to think that i believe xyz is that the issue and then by getting to that what i call base assumptions you can really begin to facilitate that you guys must have encountered this a bazillion times with students how do you unearth that like what's the process of of uncovering that especially in fact it is so weird to me that you two have become like the most attacked people on planet earth i i will never quite understand how this has happened but how do you guys tease out and not just go ah they're evil how do you find those underlying issues well first of all i think we're we're attacked because we we look like villains so much so right exactly um well you you hinted an important issue here that i think is actually quite modern so if you lived any sort of normal existence from an ancestor you know even just a couple hundred years before the present you would find that they pretty much grew up around the people that they ended up interacting with as adults they didn't stray very far from home everything would be incredibly familiar and the language that they used to interact with everybody they were encountering would have been shared because it would have been picked up from an immediate group of ancestors that they both knew right when we use english to talk to someone else we have an incredibly blunt tool because the ancestor from which we picked up that shared language is quite distant and what this does you know you really have two kinds of people in the world you've got people who more or less use the tool like english as it was handed to them and they don't question it and you have people who are trying to break new ground and what is true for everybody who breaks new ground is that they end up building a personal toolkit they will redefine words so that they become sharper and more refined and more useful and then when you put two such people together they will talk right past each other because they don't remember that they redefined things so one thing that is essential if you're going to team up with someone else who's generative and done their own work and arrived at some interesting conclusion you need time it's weeks of talking to each other before you even understand how they use language once you do that you can have an incredible conversation but if you think you're going to sit down with them and immediately pool what you know and get somewhere you've got another thing coming because at first they're going to sound like they don't know what they're talking about right you've got to find those definitions and figure out what they mean and it's actually if once you realize that this is the job it's very pleasurable and it's it's really an honor when somebody lets you look through their eyes you say oh that's how you see the world and now i get a chance to see it that way and then let me show you what i'm seeing and you really can get somewhere but there's no shortcut about the time necessary to learn each other's language that's right and that that really is a parallel for what we were doing in the classroom as well you know we didn't you know if we were teaching 18 year olds we were teaching freshmen we didn't assume that they all came in as experts obviously um and yet the same logic applies that everyone has you know i i wouldn't say actually i i don't think i really agree that you know regardless of what language you're speaking you either you know take it on on faith as as you have received it or you act decisively to change it i think teenagers tend to be modifying language pretty actively and so especially when you um you know find yourself in a room full of you know relatively young people in a college classroom you have a lot of people here using language differently um than you the professor does and then you're also in the business of introducing to them um you know a set of tools some of which has specialized language associated with it um associated with you know whatever it is that you're teaching and finding the common ground between these like okay actually all of us modify language some and let's figure out how to use language that we can all agree on and understand and um you know for for the purposes of communication as opposed to for the purposes of displaying group membership yeah because that's because that's what jargon is often is about group membership displays and that's what um you know memes and especially um well a lot of them a lot of the very rapidly changing language um that doesn't happen in technical space is really about demonstrating that you're on the inside of some some joke well actually this is a perfect case uh of a personal definition that must be shared otherwise you can't talk right because uh i at least distinguish between terms of art and jargon most people will use the term jargon for both things but the point is terms of art are a necessary evil right you have to add some special term because the language that you're handed the general language doesn't cover it and so you need a special term to describe something and that means that somebody walking into the conversation isn't necessarily aware of what's being said until they've learned that term jargon is the pathological version of this jargon is the use of these specially defined terms to exclude people from a conversation that they probably could understand and that they might even realize you didn't know what you were talking about if they could understand the words that you were using so you use those words to protect yourself and um until somebody gets that when you say jargon you're not talking about specialist language you're talking about a competitive strategy they won't know what you're saying so and you know the difference as heather points out is in a room full of 18 year olds especially when you're the professor at some level you can say look here are the terms that we need in order to have this conversation and more or less people will adopt them because that's the natural state of things rather than two peers getting together where you have to you know my my rule is i don't care whether the definition ends up being the one that i came up with or your set of definitions it doesn't matter to me what i need is a term for everything that needs to be distinguished and we both need to know what those terms are in order to have the conversation but whose terms they are doesn't matter well and yet um you know as as i think we say in the book our undergraduate advisor bob trivers an extraordinary evolutionary biologist when we were leaving college and applying to grad school he gave us a piece of advice about what kinds of jobs we might ultimately want if we were to stay in academia and he said do not accept a job in which you are not exposed to undergraduates because teaching undergraduates means exposing yourself and the thinking that you are presenting to to naive minds who will throw curveballs at you and some of those curveballs are going to be nuisances and maybe they'll waste your time but some of them are likely to reveal to you the frailty in your own thinking or in the thinking of the field and that is the way the progress is made and so you know whom we call peers is uh up for discussion and recognizing that we can we can all learn from almost every person that we interact with is a remarkable way forward yeah the corollary to that is uh there's a lot of pressure not to reveal what you don't know by asking questions that will establish the boundaries of your knowledge and being courageous about actually acknowledging what you don't know often leads to the best conversations right you guys do talk about that in the book and i think that this is such an important idea i'd love to tie it to something else you talk about which is what is science like you guys have a pretty unique take on what science is that it could be done with a machete and a pair of boots out in the jungle it can be done in a laboratory um yeah what is science science is a method for correcting for bias and that method is pretty well known it has had a few updates along the way but the the basic idea is it is a slightly cumbersome mechanism for correcting for human bias and the result is that it produces a set of models and a a scope of knowledge that improves over time and what improves means is it explains more while assuming less and and fits with all of the other things that we think are true maximally right ultimately all true narratives must reconcile and that includes the scientific narratives that we tell at different scales right the nanoscale has to fit with the macroscopic scale even if we don't understand how they fit together yet so ultimately we're sort of filling in from both sides what we understand and what we expect is that they will meet in the middle like a bridge and if they don't it means we got something wrong somewhere yeah so science is not the methods of science it's not the glassware and the expensive instrumentation and it's not the indicators that you're a scientist because you're wearing these things you know it's not the lab coat and it's not the conclusions of science it's not the things that we think we know many of which things are actually true and some of which aren't science is the process and all those other things are sort of hallmarks that may or may not be accurate proxies when you're trying to figure out is that person doing science is this science over here but what science is is actually the process and it's worth saying that you don't need it for realms that are not counterintuitive right you don't need to do science in order to figure out where the desk chair is before you sit down right it is apparent to you where the desk chair is because you're built to perceive it directly now every so often we all have the experience of looking at something and not being able to figure out what we're seeing there's some optical illusion the way we are sitting where we are in relation to the object we're looking at and then you will go through a scientific process you know if that is a so-and-so that also suggests this and i can see that that's not true so what could it be right that that process is scientific but by and large the direct perception of objects around you because it is intuitive because it's built to be intuitive your system is built to understand it in a way that makes it intuitive doesn't require this so we need science where things are sufficiently difficult to observe or counter-intuitive so you need a process to correct for your expectations what drives all this to me and that gets missed even though it's sitting in plain sight is to make progress you must hunger to know where you are wrong and if you can derive and again i commit everything from a business lens in business if you can derive tremendous pleasure and quite frankly self-esteem from your willingness to seek out the imperfections in your thinking you'll actually make it if you don't and it's an ego protective game for you and your ego is built around being right then you're you're going under and to your point about exposing yourself to undergrads some of the most phenomenal like incisive questions challenging my leadership have come from like interns who just they've never had a job before and so they're like oh why are we doing xyz and you're like why are we doing that and if in that moment you're like i must you know present myself and have a reason for why we are doing that you actually talk yourself into something and because the market much like evolution or reality which is something i want definitely want to talk about how there's a weirdness that we're living through now where people feel like if they can convince you through language of something that it actually somehow affects the underlying truth but in business the market does not care like you can convince your team that you're right but if the market doesn't embrace it you're going to fail and there's something wonderful about that well i want to i want to push back slightly admittedly this is not an area of expertise but it seems to me that there are two things that business needs to be divided into two things in order to really understand what you're getting at the business where the market is actually uh in a position to test your understanding of what is true and what will work and what people want and things like that is one thing that's real business and then there's a kind of rent seeking in which it may be about uh you know a company that does not have a functional product that is selling the idea that it will have a product that no one else will have and its stock price rises uh as a matter of speculation that may well be a realm in which it is uh it is deception and in fact this this is beyond the scope of the book but wherever perception is the mediator of success you have deception as an important evolutionary force where physics dictates whether you've succeeded or failed you don't have that problem you can't fool physics so i don't know what the two words for the two kinds of business are but the rent seeking part of business and the actual production of superior goods or the same goods at a cheaper price that's a different kind of business structure well here's what's interesting i really fast on that point i think that they do fall under the same category so when i say that the market decides so if your pitch is hey boys and girls we have to deceive the market and we have to you know game it and here's how we game it and so everything is a function of your goal so if your goal is to deceive and to you know create a pump in your stock price there is a way to do that that will work and there is a way to do that that won't work and now getting into honorable goals versus you know dishonorable goals that that is really fascinating um but i think that they they do fall into the same category of either the thing you do moves you towards your goals or it does not yep i mean i still think there's room for division because there is uh you know the mythology of the market is that it pays for value and rent seeking violates that rent seeking effectively is a failure of the market and so i don't know i don't know where the definitional split needs to be but it does seem to me that although you're right the the you know whether whether what you are doing is uh assessing what you believe the psychology of the market to be or whether you are assessing what might be physically possible in terms of a product those are both real systems that you are either correct about or not um but there does seem to me to be a distinction between rent seeking and and the production of actual value and there's a perfect analogy to be made um to academic science of course and so in academia if you are a scientist you are supposed to be seeking an understanding of reality but the way that modern science is done uh involves a lot of requesting of grants from most of the federal government and um just as i imagine in business although definitely not my area of expertise the bigger you are the harder it is to change course and in academia in part that means the later in your career you are the harder it is to change course and therefore the harder it's going to be to do something like embrace that you were wrong and you know actual honorable good scientists will always will always fess up and talk publicly about when they were wrong but if your entire lab is contingent on a model of the universe that is turning out to look ever less likely it's going to be much more difficult for you to do that for you to embrace the wrongness of you know what might be the livelihoods of not just you but many of the people who are working under you how would you handle it well you have to restructure things so that uh what actually matters is being right in the long term what we have is an epidemic of corruption inside of science which has more or less been spotted first with respect to psychology and psychology is difficult to do because you're inherently looking into the mind and you don't have a direct ability to measure most of what's there but the p hacking crisis basically the abuse of statistics to create the impression of discovery which then resulted in the inability to reproduce a large fraction of the results in psychology is actually the tip of a much larger iceberg that basically science as a process is um excellent but science as a social environment is defective and especially defective where we have plugged it very directly into market incentives and we've put scientists at an unnatural level of competition for a tiny number of jobs we produce huge numbers of applicants which means that the incentive to cheat is tremendous and those who stick to the rules probably don't succeed very well so basically what we have is a uh a race to discover who is best at appearing scientific and delivering those things that um that the field wants to believe rather than those things that the field needs to know so the short answer to your question which isn't especially operationalizable is you need to put a firewall between market forces and the scientific endeavor because although science is an incredibly powerful process it is also a fragile process that needs insulation from market forces or it cannot work so i would say just in brief again not particularly operationalizable but um reward public error correction right um you know no matter no matter at what stage you are and what the nature of the error was um unless there was intentional fraud which of course does exist um public error correction should be rewarded uh without shaming uh without you know loss of of priority in other things and the ability to do science because not only do we need people to be able to um see that they've made mistakes and and actually course correct but we need people to be taking enough risks early on that they are likely to sometimes make errors and so in the current environment where any error it can be considered like the death knell for a career we have ever more timid scientists and um that is making us less good at science as a society and in fact it almost seems implausible that people would go around acknowledging their errors but it wasn't so long ago that this was fairly common in fact i used to study bats and there's a famous example of this not so long ago uh a guy named pettigrew had advanced a radical hypothesis that suggested that the old world fruit bats the so-called flying foxes were in fact not part of the same evolutionary history as the bats that we see here in the new world for example the microbats he argued that they were in fact flying primates which was a fascinating argument it was based on their neurobiology looking more like uh monkey neurobiology than it does like bat neurobiology which turned out to be the result of the fact that they used their eyes rather than echolocation um so it was wrong and what he said at the point that it was revealed by the genes that he had been wrong was if it is a wrong hypothesis it has been a most fruitful wrong hypothesis which was absolutely right the work that was done to sort that out was tremendously valuable and so anyway nobody who has had to course correct and admit an error finds it pleasant but we have to restore the rules of the game where the longer you wait the worse it is so that the incentive is as soon as you know you're wrong owning up to it so that you are on the right side of the puzzle as quickly as possible that that has to be the objective as you guys look at society and where we're at now so one problem you've obviously just very eloquently laid out you've got incentives around admitting that you're wrong is uh it could be the death knell of your career what else is going on that makes you guys have that um quote that we started the the episode with around you know sort of the you didn't use the word disintegrating but that there's to put my own words to it there's a crazy making that's happening at the societal level what has led to that like what are three or four factors that are causing that breakdown well um you know in part you know the the bias that we have as evolutionary biologists is that we see a failure to understand what we are as uh producing short-term reductionist metric-heavy pseudo-quantitative answers to questions that uh warrant a much more holistic and emergent approach and so what are some of the the things that modern humans have embraced or have been told to embrace and some of us have and some of us haven't um that have helped produce uh problems for for modern people uh this is not this is not new with us but um the ubiquity of screens the change in parenting styles to protect children from risk and unstructured play and the drugging of children legally with anti-anxiety and anti-depression meds more likely if they're girls and the speed if they're boys those three things in combination all of which were sort of on the rise in the 90s and hit fever pitch in the in the odds and early teens helped reduce a generation that became embody adults um but with minds that had not had a chance yet uh to actually learn what it is to be human and some of that is reversible and you know really we just by by chance we were college professors we were college professors for basically the entire period of time um during which millennials were in college so we taught millennials from from beginning to end and almost to a person our students were amazing and receptive and creative and incapable and if you you know when when we talk about the generation of millennials it's those people who were drugged and screened and helicopter and snowplow parented right so with individual attention people can be pulled out of the tailspin but at a societal level that's exactly what we're in as a tailspin what is the tailspin exactly though what is it about those things that what does it create in people i want to address that as part of a a slight reorientation of the question so one of the things that is causing the dysfunction is you know it's not just the fact of the screens but it's what they imply that virtually everything that people know is coming through a social channel right so it is all open to manipulation augmentation distortion and what people generally do not pick up in the normal course of an education even what we consider to be a high quality education is interaction with systems that allow you to check whether or not that which sounds right actually comports with logic so for example if you interact with an engine you can't fool an engine into starting you either figure out why it isn't starting or you don't and so we advocated for students that they dedicate some large fraction of their education to systems that are not socially mediated in which success or failure is dictated by a physical system that tells you whether or not you've understood or failed to understand and i mean this can be mechanics or carpentry but it also can be you know baking frankly or learning to play the guitar right or or parkour anything where success or failure is non-arbitrary what you don't want is an education built entirely of i succeeded when the person at the front of the room told me i got it because if the person at the front of the room is a dope which unfortunately happens too often you may pick up wrong ideas and feel rewarded for believing in them and that can result in tremendous confusion i would just finally say that the book really is about what we have informally called an evolutionary toolkit and that evolutionary toolkit the beauty of it what we saw and what students reported to us in their picking it up that toolkit allows with a very small set of assumptions the understanding of a large fraction of the phenomena that we care about almost everything we care about as humans is evolutionarily impacted and the ability to go through what you are told about your psychology or your teeth or anything like that and say does that make sense given the highest quality darwinism that we've got does it make sense to be told that our genomes suddenly went haywire and that's why an ever-increasing fraction of young people need orthodoxy nope not for a moment does it make sense that we have a piece of our intestine called the appendix that is no longer of any value and yet a huge number of people have uh this thing become inflamed and burst so that their lives are placed in jeopardy nope it does not the ability to check what you're being told against a set of law a a toolkit for logic that is so robust that you can instantly spot nonsense is a very powerful enhancement and it does not involve knowing more it involves knowing less and having that little bit that you know be really robust that's terrific i would just say it doesn't necessarily involve you knowing less but being certain of less it requires that you rest what you know on less the foundation is more robust and less elaborate do you run out of energy immediately after lunch or wonder why you can't lose weight everybody's biochemical makeup is unique from genetics to lifestyle there is no one answer for why you may be facing all of these challenges that's why i'm 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week he's already learning about how his body reacts to his morning workouts and even how eating before bed can affect his sleep and nutrisense takes care of all the logistics so that the cgm simply arrives at your door ready to go just visit try nutrasense.com impact and use code impact for fifty dollars off your neutral sense cgm that's tri forward nutrasense.com impact and again use code impact for fifty dollars off your nutrisense continuous glucose monitor all right guys take care and be legendary i was just about to ask what it means to know less so thank you for that um yeah that is very interesting when i think about uh i forget the exact quote but as the island of your knowledge grows the shore of your ignorance grows too you know whatever the the famous quote but it's a really interesting dichotomy so all right we've got this generation that's growing up they're looking at screens you guys make a pretty interesting assertion in the book about what screens do in terms of you're getting emotional cues from a non-human entity and that it may play a part in the rise in autism i found that incredibly interesting what i want to better understand is what's going on in our brains that so helicopter parenting or snow plow parenting for instance like why does that trap us in a perpetual childhood you guys talk about rites of passage in the book i'd be very curious to to hear like how do we begin to deal with some of these things whether it's screens whether it's snowplow parenting you know if i find myself a 19 year old and i realize i've been done dirty i've been on drugs for ages i was raised essentially by a screen i'm you know having trouble connecting having trouble relating and my parents have taken care of everything for me what are the symptoms i need to look out for and then how do i push forward well in terms of symptoms this is more or less a it's a self-diagnosing problem you either none of us feel perfectly at home in modernity because in fact we are not at home we can't be even you know the the world that we live in is not the world of our grandparents it's not even the world that we were born into we live as adults in a world that uh just literally didn't exist when we were born and it's about the world even that our children are born into unless they were literally born yesterday right exactly it's changing so fast it can't be but that said you either are feeling constantly confused about what you're seeing and hearing and you don't know what to think or you've found something that allows you to move forward and even if you can't fully manage what it is you're confronting it should surprise you less and less and so we provide a couple of tools in the book we talk about the precautionary principle and we talk about chesterton's fence which are really two sides of the same coin and if your life has been built around the idea that whatever the newest thing is the you know the latest wisdom is what you uh were brought up on then in all likelihood you are you know taking various drugs to correct for various things which may very well be the symptoms of the last drugs you you took uh you you know you may be engaging in all kinds of behaviors to fix mysterious problems maybe you can't sleep and you know so you're you're uh taking some aggressive mechanism to deal with that the basic point is back away from that which is novel and untested and in the direction of that which is time tested and it will result in a decrease in anxiety an increase in your control over your own life and the way you'll tell is that you will feel less confused more of the time can you guys define chesterton's fence i thought that was a really great part of the book yeah um so gk chesterton was a 20th century political philosopher maybe i'm not sure exactly how he would have defined himself but um of of the many contributions that he made um to you know i think he was a conservative um but of one of the many contributions that he made was imagining two people on a walk together and coming across a fence that appeared to be in their way and person a says let's get rid of the fence and person b says well what's it here for person a says i don't care it doesn't matter i just want it gone and person b or chesterton i suppose in my telling here says there's no way that i should let you get rid of the fence until and unless you can tell me what its function is if you can tell me what its function is or was originally here for then maybe we can talk about whether or not it's time for it to go but until you can explain to me what the function is or was then there's no way that i should allow you to get rid of it simply because you see it as an inconvenience so you know the appendix that brett already mentioned um is is a perfect example of this and we talk about in the book things like you know chesterton's breast milk you know we should you know we should we should be abandoning breastfeeding um you know we are abandoning breastfeeding to the degree that we're doing so at our peril uh chesterton's play not letting children have long periods of unstructured play in which adults are not monitoring them and are not telling them not to bully each other even though bullying is bad yes but allowing children to figure out for themselves in mixed age groups how it is to navigate risk themselves that is how those children will grow into competent young people and you know if you do arrive at 19 having been drugged into submission and having had your parents clear all of the hazards out of the way for you the thing you can do is start exposing yourself to risk and risk is risky you know this is you know this is both a tautology and also shocking to people because you know wait you're telling me i need to expose my children to risk well if you want to guarantee that your child will make it to their 18th birthday alive then sure put them in a cocoon right that's the way to make sure that their body will get to 18 is to reduce all risk from their lives and protect them from everything but will they have the mind of an 18 year old at that point no they will not so you trade a little bit of security that your child will survive and you know ev every time i say anything like that i get chills you know we have children they're teenagers now and the idea that one of them would die and that they would die taking a risk that we had implicitly or explicitly encouraged i don't know how you go on right and your parents do but i don't know how you go on but the bigger risk is that they get to 18 and they're incompetent and that they can't think and they don't know how to navigate the world especially now where the world and the future will look nothing like it did in the past they need to be able to problem solve and the way to do that is to be exposed to as many situations in which they are navigating on their own as early as possible selection has really given parents a the job of both managing risk and not fully managing risk in other words it's not that you don't protect your children but you want to protect them at a level where they do make mistakes and those mistakes do come back to haunt them and it causes them to be wise adults who are capable of managing risk when the risks when the stakes are much higher and that's really the question it's not do you want your child to be safe of course you do but you want them to be safe across their entire life and if you protect them too much when they are young they will not be able to do it when they are older and the risks are frankly much larger yeah one of the things that i find most intoxicating about you guys your book your podcast is nuance complexity like recognizing that by being reductionist by boiling things down to you know make them simple but no no further whatever the quote is that there is a point at which you can reduce something so far that you lose what's really going on um and finding our way through all of this complexity though is incredibly difficult so as it comes to your own parenting style how have you guys employed this the idea that i'm most interested of yours is is the idea that the magic happens in the friction so whether it's male female whether it's right left it's understanding or safety and risk it's understanding that it's either side is problematic how have you guys navigated that complexity well we gambled with neither of us knew particularly much about rearing children at the point where we ended up with them and we more or less gambled on the other surprise to me at the point that we ended up with them no no that carried them no no certainly we knew they were coming for many months but um but from the point of view of what one does to raise children well we hadn't had a lot of experience with young kids they just hadn't been in our lives and we gambled on an idea that i still think it's not entirely obvious why it works at all but if you treat your children more or less at least cognitively you just shoot way over their heads right you talk to them like like adults from very early on and they cannot respond in kind but they get much more than you would think based on what they can say in response and so we have been extremely open with our children about the hazards in the world that they face and the hazards in our family have been frankly greater than than most children would be confronted with at least in the weird world now um we have been honest with them we you know we have an explicit rule in our household and the children could recite it uh without thought right you are allowed to break your arm or your leg you are not allowed to damage your eyes you're not allowed to damage your skull you're not allowed to damage your neck or your back right now when you say that to a kid and they realize actually it's not that i'm being told no no no no no i'm being told i am actually allowed to break my arm and nobody is going to necessarily you know be concerned you know yes we'll take care of you no matter what and if you damage your eyes we'll take care of you then too but the basic point is there's just a fundamental distinction between damaging things which repair pretty well and damaging things which don't and that ought to exist in your mind you know every time you leave the house understanding that there are certain things you know that it's not that you want to avoid bad things and uh go towards good things it's that there's a whole spectrum of bad and you may need in an instant to navigate you know if you're driving down the highway yes the first job is don't crash right don't crash is a good rule but you can't always not crash and sometimes you've got a choice about what you crash into or how you crash and you know if you've just got everything filed as a binary then you're you're in much more danger so being clear with kids about the subtleties and the nuance and frankly about the bind that you're in our children know that we have made a conscious decision that in order that they can manage risk as adults they have to face risks as children that could potentially cost them their lives you know we took our kids into the amazon for example that's not a safe place to be but they're also the kind of kids who can handle it now so one of the things uh that was very important to us was that our children literally learn how to fall that when they were climbing up on things on trees or in jungle gyms that they would launch themselves intentionally so they would learn how to fall safely but metaphorically learning how to fall is the other thing that you learn once you are engaged in literally learning how to fall and maybe maybe that is the kind of risk that we are in fact trying to prepare our children for and that we are arguing that parents everywhere should be preparing their children for how to fall safely so that you get up and can live to maybe not fall again but if you do fall again live to get up again another day yeah actually it occurs to me right now that engineers know this backwards and forwards right fail safe that's what you want a system that fails safely and building that into your kids is is an essential and essential skill so one of the things you talked about in the book that i was like whoa was when your son broke his arm i think he was older because i know when the ones broke it going down the stairs that one required immediate medical attention uh but there was a time where he broke his arm and it was like a couple days i think before you actually went and had it looked at um and there's like an actual principle behind strengthening the bone that you guys go through and i was very impressed um talk about that including the notion that as this is like you guys have overcome one of the reasons that i didn't become a father was it seemed so self-evident to me that you had to do things like let your kids take risks you know within confines that you had to make things hard for them within confines and i wasn't sure that i would enjoy that process so it was obvious i would have to do it and not obvious that i would enjoy it and when you guys talked about like how we sort of over cuddle things which i could immediately empathize with i get why people do it why you want to wrap a broken arm in the thickest cast you can possibly find but that even that isn't always the right answer yeah no it's it's really not that we our brains are anti-fragile and our bones are anti-fragile and they they become stronger with stressors and society seems to be imagining that what we all are is fragile and by imagining that we're fragile by creating conditions that imagine that we're fragile that becomes the reality we become more and more fragile and less anti-fragile so uh in the case of our our older son or it was our younger son but when he was older uh who broke his arm in the last day of camp we did get him to um to an emergency room that day it was several hours but it was that day and they told us that at the point that we got back home to portland which was um a several several hour drive and it was going to be many days before we got there that we should go see an orthopedist and to have a cast put on to have a cast put on so we spent several days um splinted he split he spent several days splinted and with some uh with some pain medication um before we ended up going home to portland and where we did not get a cast but the important thing is this is not an experiment we were ran on our child before i had run it on myself right so evolutionarily speaking uh there is a logic to what one does with broken bones and it's a very different logic lots of creatures don't heal so well horses famously don't heal very well and the reason for this is fairly obvious a horse a wild ancestral horse that had a broken limb wasn't going to recover that is to say once an animal was hobbled by a broken limb it was going to be picked off by a predator so the selection that creates the capacity to repair wasn't there on the other hand sloths which fall out of trees fairly regularly but don't depend on their ability to get away from predators through speed actually survive very frequently and when we look at sloth carcasses they very regularly have breaks that have healed so creatures that can heal have that capacity our arms and humans are such creatures we are such creatures so one wants to be very careful right if a bone is misaligned you then want to utilize medicine in order to get the healing process to work correctly so it doesn't heal in a misaligned way but if you've got a fracture and you haven't misaligned something there's a whole other logic that takes over immobilizing the arm isn't what we're built for in fact what you're built for is to have pain and inflammation do the job and the result when i broke my arm and i just said you know what i've thought for my whole life why is it that we rush to get a doctor to um to immobilize this and then we atrophy and have it removed and we have to rebuild our strength maybe that's not how it's supposed to be logically evolution has prepared us for this let's see what happens when i broke my arm and i was certain that it was not misaligned and i let it go what i found out was a one has to be very careful for the first day or two until you learn what it is that you're capable of doing but your capacity begins to return very very quickly and the degree to which i was better off the time that i broke my arm that i fractured my arm and did nothing medical than the time that i fractured my arm and did the standard medical thing and had the cast was night and day different and the fact is we talked to toby our younger son when he broke his arm and we told him what we were thinking and he had watched me go through the experiment and he elected to go through it himself and lo and behold the same logic applied in his case yeah that's really interesting and feels like there's a lot that we can extrapolate from that in terms of our real lives one idea that i find really enticing and i'm sad that i didn't go through it when i was a kid are rights of passage do you guys think about that all the time uh we have dispensed so this is a classic chesterton's fence issue where it used to be that there were these you know hallmarks of having passed through a certain developmental state and at some point i think people started to feel that these things were primitive and they dispensed with all of them and much to our peril because it you know what you are is a creature that starts out utterly helpless and ends up incredibly capable but there are moments at which you take on new responsibility right now it's arbitrary is an 18 year old really an adult in many ways yes in some ways no it's not really a moment at which you become an adult but you do need a moment at which we say actually at this point these responsibilities are ones we believe you can handle and going forward that's what they are and the ceremony itself instantiates it the ceremony helps make it real and maybe it's at 18 maybe it's at 15 maybe it's at 13 depending on the tradition maybe it's counting in a different way in cases um where perhaps adherence to the calendar is not the thing but you know the moment now you are a man now you are a woman uh is has got to be an empowering one and it's one of the things that is almost universally lost for us us weird people and you know it may well be the case just as is the case with something like follow-through in sport what you do after you hit the ball actually does not matter but it is very important that you intend to follow through and in that same way going through your life knowing that at this moment i'm going to be expected to do this thing whether it's a vision quest or or whatever it may be knowing that that moment is coming and that on the far side of it you will be a different person is a developmental process in and of itself so it's very likely the thing that happens as you anticipate this uh rite of passage that is really the important developmental thing but we've just dispensed with them all so we've talked a lot about uh evolution and all the different things and ways that it manifests in our life and i want to bring now people back to where we started in the book that you know we're we're at if if instead of a nuclear clock coming towards 12 you guys would say that from just a societal uh standpoint we're edging up somewhere in there talk to us about the fourth frontier but to understand the fourth frontier i think we have to understand the first three frontiers so if you can walk us through that it was a really interesting idea it was the part of your book that i had to read twice because i was like whoa there's really something fascinating here and it it hints at a very complex answer to a very complex problem was entirely novel for me i've never heard this idea explored before and i think that it'll be really helpful for people to see that you've thought not just through the problem but through potential solutions well the first thing to realize is that all evolved creatures are effectively in a search for opportunity and that opportunity looks like for an average creature under average circumstances if it's a sexually reproducing creature the average number of offspring that it will produce that reaches reproductive maturity themselves will be two it doesn't matter if they produce a hundred babies or three the average that will reach that number is two and the reason is because the population isn't growing or contracting so two parents will end up replacing themselves and know better at least on average when you have succeeded evolutionarily you find some opportunity that allows that rule to be broken right uh a creature that passes over a mountain pass and ends up in a valley in which it has no competitors may leave a hundred times as many offspring as it would have if it had remained in its initial habitat and so these places where creatures discover an unexploited or underexploited opportunity and their population can grow are frontiers and the feeling of growth is the feeling of evolutionary success the problem is all of these things are limited right no matter what opportunity you've found the population will grow until that opportunity is no longer underexploited at which point the zero-sum dynamics will be restored but let's just lay out the the first three types of frontier before perhaps you um you expand on what the fourth frontier is so um the the first type of frontier being the one that most people think of when you hear the word when they hear the word frontier which is a geographic frontier so we begin the book by talking about the beringians the first americans who came over um from through beringia across what is now the bering strait from asia into the new world something between 10 and 25 000 years ago they were coming into two continents that had never before been inhabited by humans and that was a vast geographic frontier the second type of frontier might be called a technological frontier in which you innovate something that allows you to make use of resource uh that you heretofore had not had access to so for instance the terracing of hillsides to allow water to be held and agricultural systems to be to be done uh where previously all the water would have run off taking the nutrients in the water um with it that would be an example of a technological frontier and then the third type of frontier which is ubiquitous throughout human history is a transfer of resource frontier and this is really not a frontier it's it's just it's theft right and so the beringians coming into the new world for the first time again 10 to 25 000 years ago we're experiencing a geographic frontier thousands of years later when europeans came into the new world from the other direction from from the east they landed in a space that already had tens of millions of people in it and basically took over and that was a transfer of resource moment and a transfer of resource frontier basically theft so geographic frontiers and technological frontiers are not inherently theft transfer of resource is and so we are proposing a fourth frontier so i just say a transfer of resource is the explanation for almost all wars and genocide from the point of view of some population the resources of some other population that cannot be defended are as if a frontier but the idea the overarching idea is that all creatures are seeking these non-zero-sum opportunities that they are experienced as growth um that they are inherently self-destabilizing that they cause the growth of populations that then restores the zero-sum dynamics restores the austerity which doesn't feel so good and the population is then in the search for the next non-zero sum growth frontier the problem is we can't keep doing that right that process made us what we are and we've been tremendously successful at it but there are no more tech uh geographic frontiers on earth we've found it all technologically we've done an excellent job of figuring out how to exploit the world in fact over exploit the world transfer resource is a world destabilizing not only is it a despicable process but it is a lethal process from the point of view of the danger it puts us at we simply have weaponry that is too powerful we are too interconnected and so in a sense our fates are all now linked and we have to agree to put that uh competition aside and then the question is well what do we do do we face or do we accept the zero-sum dynamics and live with austerity that doesn't sound like uh a very good sales pitch even even if it was what we had to do so what we propose in the book is that there's actually an alternative to this that one can produce a steady state that feels like growth to the people who experience it without having to discover new resource and that may sound preposterous it may sound utopian we are not utopians we regard utopia as the worst idea human beings ever had or at least very close to the top of that list but there's nothing uh undoable about a system that feels like perpetual growth in the same way there is nothing utopian about the idea that it's always springtime inside your house right it's always pleasant inside your house that's not a violation of any physical law it's just a simple matter of the fact that we can use energy to modulate the temperature with a negative feedback system and we can keep it very pleasant in your house all the time and the point is can that be done in our larger environment such that human beings are liberated to do the things that we are uniquely positioned to do to generate beauty to experience love to feel compassion to enhance our understanding of the world all of those things are the kinds of things that are worthy of us as an objective and what we need in order for more people to spend their time pursuing those things is a system in which we are freed from competing one lineage against the others for a limited amount of resources and and the uh uh so that you know we are condemned to violence against each other in order to pursue these things so in essence the fourth frontier is a steady state designed to liberate people we should say it is not something we believe we can blueprint from here we know enough to navigate our way in that direction but we cannot blueprint it it is something we will have to prototype and navigate too but the good news is although we here probably would not live to see the final product things would start getting better immediately upon our recognition that pursuing the fourth frontier was the right thing to do that suddenly there would be a tremendous amount of useful work to be done in discovering what the various mechanisms of that new way of being are all right you guys are gonna have to give me a little more than that in the book you talk about you give an example and it was the thing that really allowed me to begin to understand how we could achieve a steady state that gave us those things um i don't know if you remember the example that you gave in the book i do so if you don't let me know and i will refresh your memory but i'm talking about the mayans is that right in the book you specifically talk about craftsmanship but if you've got something for me on the minds i'll take it yeah well i mean we i think we do we do both right um and uh let's see well maybe maybe remind us of exactly what we say about craftsmanship i remember that we talk about it but i'm not sure exactly what the context is here the idea was basically that so we have this inherent desire for growth but it isn't necessarily growth itself it's sort of now i'm using my own words it's the neurochemical state of feeling this deep sense of satisfaction at having something of import is probably the the easiest way to think of it and that gave me something to grasp onto because i so i often get asked the question i've had financial success in my life and the irony of my life is that i'm constantly going around trying to convince people that money is not going to do for you what you think it will it's very powerful but it isn't what most people think they think it will make them feel better about themselves and money is just absolutely incapable of doing that and so when you realize the only thing that matters is how you feel about yourself you start playing a game of neurochemistry and so this idea of craftsmanship felt like that to me yeah so you know recognizing the long-term hormonal glow that you get from producing something of lasting value and beauty and meaning in the world as opposed to only being exposed to short-term stuff you know the difference between buying something at ikea and putting it together with allen wrenches on your floor and of either making yourself or coming to know a craftsman who really builds things with care and knowledge with the intention that you will be able to pass this on to your children or your friends or whomever later on this is a piece with with lasting beauty lasting function that was built with someone who knew something about the wood or the metals or whatever the materials are this is a way in to finding the kinds of meaning that a fourth frontier mentality uh can provide yeah i think uh the distinction is one between um the satisfaction of life coming from consuming which is inherently empty versus uh producing and producing doesn't necessarily have to mean stuff it can be meaning or insight or any one of a number of other things but what we say about the the maya in the book what we argue is that they very conspicuously this is an extremely long-lived civilization um thousands of years of remarkable success and they had as one of the things that they produced in all of their city-states they produced these incredible monuments which are actually not what they appear to be we have spent a lot of time in uh in mayan territory and these things look like pyramids in the sense that the egyptians produce them but they are not they are in fact growing structures so these things got bigger and bigger over time the longer a city-state existed in the same place and then there's the hidden version of this which are an incredible network of roads stone roads that exist between the city-states called sock bays in any case the point is the maya were producing things that stood in for population growth they were taking some fraction of their productivity and they were dedicating it to these massive public works projects and the thing about a massive public works project is that it brings a kind of reality and cohesion to the people involved i mean imagine yourself living in one of these amazing cities and the public monuments made of stone that speak to the power and the durability of your people are you know part of this uh this public space these things allow the following process if it's not just a pyramid that you you know you it's a line item on a budget you build the pyramid it's done but in fact what you do is you augment it well then in good years you will have that to augment and you will take some fraction of the productivity that might be turned into more people which would then result in more austerity you can invest it in these public works project and then in a lean year instead of having not enough to go and feed all of the mouths that have been created you can just simply not augment the public works project that is a natural damper for the kind of ebb and flow the boom and bust that we have suffered so mightily under under our modern economic systems so the production of meaning the production of uh shared space that actually augments the ability of people to interact with each other these things are models of what we should probably be seeking as a society a system that tamps down the fluctuations that provides liberty to people that's really the key thing right we want realized liberty for individuals that they can pursue what is meaningful rather than satisfying themselves with consumption that's sort of a rough outline of what a fourth frontier would look like nice i love it in the book i can't remember if it was liberty that you were talking about specifically but you talk about it's an emergent property i assume you mean the same with liberty how do we create the bed from which liberty will emerge well what we argue in the book is that liberty is a special value and the reason that is a special value is there really two ways to to delineate it you can be technically free but not really free right if you're concerned about being wiped out by a health care crisis or you're concerned that you you may lose your job and have to find another in a different industry you're not really free even if technically you could go out and start an oil company it's not going to happen so what we argue is that real liberty realized liberty is liberty you can act on and in order for a person to be liberated their more mundane concerns their safety their sustenance all those things have to be taken care of and therefore we can know that we have succeeded when somebody has real liberty that they are capable of acting on it's a proxy and what we argue is that the objective ought to be to provide real liberty for as many people as possible hopefully ultimately everyone would be liberated to do something truly remarkable rather than only elites having that freedom i guess i would just say um as as high a fraction of the population as possible if we say as many people as possible it might sound like we're also interested in maximizing population growth and of course you know of course we're not you know i think we will we will peak hopefully at some point soon and then population may start going down through attrition but that at every moment in uh in human history going forward the vast number of the greatest number of people possible who have maximal liberty will be a success and let me just uh refine that slightly the objective is the maximum number of liberated people but not living simultaneously ultimately the way to grant the marvelous liberated life to the maximum number of people is to get sustainable at the level that humans can live indefinitely on the planet rather than having a clock ticking where we just simply don't have the resources to continue doing what we're doing i love it guys thank you so much for coming on the show today the book was phenomenal your podcast is phenomenal every moment i've ever got to spend with you guys has been absolutely wonderful where do you want people to follow along with you where's the best place to get the book well that's a that's a question we should have an answer to yeah the best place to get the book is hopefully just about anywhere um you know it's obviously available uh on on the big big sellers like amazon and barnes and noble but um i know it's available in many independent bookshops as well and i'm a big fan of independent bookstores so if if you ask for it there whatever your favorite one is that's probably a a terrific move to help to help support your local economy it will also be available as an audio book which we read yup that's absolutely true and you can find us at uh the dark horse podcast we do weekly live streams uh the two of us and brett also has guests on every now and again uh i also am doing a newsletter called natural selections you can find that on naturalselections.substance.com and um yeah maybe maybe that that sounds perfect guys thanks again for joining me this was absolutely wonderful and to everybody out there trust me when i say the book is amazing the podcast is extraordinary you guys will love it so be sure to subscribe there and speaking of places you should you should subscribe if you haven't already hit that subscription button there and until next time my friends be legendary take care peace [Music] you
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Channel: Tom Bilyeu
Views: 393,436
Rating: 4.6771302 out of 5
Keywords: Tom Bilyeu, Impact Theory, ImpactTheory, TomBilyeu, Inside Quest, InsideQuest, Tom Bilyou, Theory Impact, motivation, inspiration, talk show, interview, motivational speech, Bret Weinstein, Heather Heying, A Hunter Gatherer’s Guide to the 21st Century, Conversations with Tom, evolution, evolutionary biologists, culture, society, collapsing society, evolutionary theory, collapse of society
Id: vm-4HS2khTw
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 85min 22sec (5122 seconds)
Published: Thu Sep 16 2021
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