Conversations with Tyler - Joseph Henrich on WEIRD Societies and Life Among Two Strange Tribes (Live at Mason)
Episode Date: December 14, 2016To anthropologist Joseph Henrich, intelligence is overrated. Social learning, and its ability to influence biological evolution over time, is what really sets our species apart. He joined Tyler for a ...conversation on his work on cultural evolution, as well as his life among different tribes (academic and otherwise), Star Trek, big gods, small gods, China's missing industrial revolution, the merits of coconut milk, the Flynn effect, American exceptionalism, and why he wants to travel in time to 6th-century Kent. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Joe on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
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Joe's book is called The Secret of Our Success.
The secret of his success is amazing intellect and drive.
I would describe him as currently the leading theorist
on how cultural and biological evolution interact.
He is an anthropologist at Harvard University,
but much more than that.
He does experimental economics, political science, cultural, psychology, sociology.
He studied economics with Paul Romer.
He's a true polymath.
I described him during our last session as, in a sense, the next Stephen Pinker.
So the introduction could be much longer, but we'll talk more about Joe as we proceed.
Now let me start with a simple question about your method.
So I'm an economist, and I'm familiar also with evolutionary biology.
So if I come at a problem, I tend to use economic reasoning, and then something from biology.
But you have insights from how cultural and social evolution intersect or interact.
What would be an example of something you try to explain with that framework that's much harder to explain using only economics and biology?
Sure, that's a great question.
So one example that I've been working a lot on lately is how it is that in modern societies and in the last few hundred years,
people all over the world have come to believe in big gods.
So gods that have power over life and death can reward you in the afterlife.
And what the implications are for cooperation and the scaling up of human societies.
These kinds of supernatural beliefs.
For much of human history, people believed in gods that were weak and whimsical,
not very powerful.
There was no notion of afterlife.
And so how can we explain this transformation of religions over the last few thousand years?
So you think there's some kind of natural progression
of religion as societies become wealthier and more complex
and intersecting cultural and genetic evolution.
Help explain that.
Just fill in the piece of that a little bit.
So, I mean, some basic aspects of human cognition.
For example, our ability to read other minds
or to do mentalizing to infer the thoughts
inside of other people's heads
makes it susceptible to dualism
to thinking that minds and bodies are separable.
And this also, people who are better at mentalizing are more likely to believe in supernatural agents.
So this means there's a possibility for humans to believe in supernatural agents,
and then various forms of cultural evolution can take a hold of this basic raw material
that's provided by aspects of our evolved minds.
And one of the arguments I've made is that societies that came to believe in certain kinds of supernatural agents,
supernatural agents with punishing power, with demanding certain kinds of behavior in humans,
helped humans scale up human societies to cooperate more in larger groups.
So cultural evolution, in a sense, carries those memes.
You don't necessarily need group selection, though that may be part of the story,
but cultural evolution is a more powerful way of propagating and replicating the memes
without groups having to die out necessarily, though both of those could be happening at the same time.
Is that the right way to think about it?
Yeah, I mean, you have intergroup competition.
I mean, you know, you don't want to get tied up in the semantic debate of group selection,
but if some groups come to have sets of rituals and beliefs that allow them to out-compete other groups,
then those beliefs are going to spread.
And that's what seems to have occurred with certain kinds of supernatural beliefs.
So if we look at the earliest human societies, the first time you see monumental architecture,
it's always religious.
It's always a temple or a tomb.
And this seems to help consolidate power and, um,
span the sphere of reliable social interactions.
So let me give you a super simple take.
I hear from a lot of people on how genetic and cultural evolution interact and tell me if
you agree with it.
So the standard story is we have genes that were optimized for some earlier environment,
maybe being hunter-gatherers.
So now we eat too much sugar, we become too fat, we have diabetes too often, we give our leaders
too much respect because we used to need them to stop ourselves from being killed, whereas
now we're too loyal to the president.
think in terms of anecdote and narrative rather than statistics, and thus there's this
quite radical mismatch between how we've evolved and the society we live in.
Is that an accurate picture in your account of things or not?
Well, certainly part of that is an accurate account.
So the importance of, say, our taste for sugar, our taste for fat seems to be a misfiring
from our ancestral environments.
But I think in the case of human cooperation, that doesn't fit the story.
So if we look at the smallest scale human societies, Hunter Gathers, they still rely on all of the
kinds of social norms and beliefs to cooperate, even when they're cooperating in relatively
small bands.
So for example, food sharing and lots of hunter-gatherer societies relies on food taboos in which certain
classes of people can only eat certain parts of the animal.
And if you eat a part of the animal that's not assigned to your class, say older,
married men or something, then the whole group has poor hunting.
And if people believe that, they're going to enforce that taboo on other people and you create
a self-interested incentive to share the meat.
Hunter-gatherers also have rituals, and psychologists have now shown when you cooperate,
when you participate in communal rituals, you become more cooperative and you have greater
social solidarity with other members of your group.
So even the smallest scale human societies are already using all these tricks of cultural
evolution to make them more social.
Now, another feature of your model, if I understand it correctly, is that you get more
rapid or more complex or more interesting cultural evolution when you have a larger number of moving
parts, more people or more wealth or more complexity?
There's a kind of increasing returns to scale to cultural evolution.
Is that fair to say?
Yeah, there's a couple different ways that that comes out.
I think the simplest and clearest one is this idea that I call the collective brain.
And so this is simply the idea because we're so dependent on learning from each other in order
to do innovations and to make up to construct increasingly fancy technologies, larger and
more interconnected populations tend to have fancy populations.
tools and technologies. So humans really don't think as individuals, we don't innovate as individuals,
we innovate as groups. And groups that for whatever reason are able to create more social
interconnections produce fancier tools and technology and they're able to maintain larger bodies of
know-how. So there are these great cases in the ethno-historical record of groups like the polar
Inuit who get cut off from the rest of the Inuit population and then they begin to lose valuable
tools and technology because their own brains are the right, remain the same size, but they're
collective brain became severed. So they're not able to maintain as much know-how in the population.
And that connection between size and speed of cultural evolution, that's true at most margins.
So say India evolves culturally more rapidly than Denmark because it's larger?
Well, I mean, so there's lots of pieces to this puzzle, right? But the key is to create
interconnectedness. So to explain the difference between Denmark and India, of course Denmark
is interconnected with many other populations, but the flow of information is much less
constricted. What happened in the scaling up of human societies in many places is societies
get built on complex kinship structures in which you don't have very much relations between different
families and between different tribes, and that constrains the flow of social information among
these groups. So the trick the West pulled off is to manage to make individuals, and so that
information could freely flow among individuals. Let's say I'm a cultural pessimist and try to talk me out of
this, but here it be my worry. If your theory implies cultural evolution speeds up as you have
parts, more people, more interconnections.
I worry that social evolution will bring us further from the point of what our genes can handle.
So think of there being an increased variance of the match between society and our genes.
Most things do in fact work better because cultural evolution carries a lot of useful knowledge.
But just a few things stop working, like maybe electoral politics, believe it or not,
or the diets we eat, or a few things in society go wrong.
And if you think of everything needing to work fairly well in society for it to sustain itself,
should we then be cultural pessimists?
Well, before I get to the cultural pessimist question, I think that a key insight is that
we've been in that situation for probably over a million years.
So, you know, human cultural products like tools and food processing abilities have been shaping
our guts and our teeth and our hands for a really long time.
And culture was always pushing up against these things.
And the slow process here is the genetic evolution.
It takes the genetic evolution a long time to respond,
to expand our brains and make them be able to deal with all the new world
that's being created by cultural evolution.
So the world we're facing now is just more of the same.
As far as cultural pessimism, things could get better, things could get worse.
I don't have any predictions.
Now we have the Internet, so that's very rapidly multiplied the number of combinations
and connections over a 20-year period,
much quicker than almost anyone had forecast.
So if we apply that to your model,
what does your model predict, if only in broad terms,
what effects will the Internet have on society,
given that genetic and cultural evolution are interacting,
and the number of permutations has gone up a lot quicker than we expected?
Is this a train wreck waiting to happen,
or the greatest thing since sliced bread, but 10,000 times better?
Certainly in the short term,
it should increase the rate of innovation
because it's easy to exchange ideas amongst very diverse minds.
But productivity growth is falling in most countries.
This baffles me.
You mean why productivity growth is falling?
Right. Japan, U.S., Western Europe.
Productivity growth is lower than it was, say, before the 80s.
I don't blame the Internet for that, but it doesn't seem to have helped very much.
Well, I mean, I think I'm a cultural evolutionist, so I want to see this on a much longer time scale.
Okay.
So ask me in 200 years.
Okay, 200 years.
We'll have you back for a second episode.
Now, another area of interaction between genetic and cultural evolution, people talk about it a lot,
but they don't always agree on the facts, and that's ascertain of mating.
So the claim that like marries like more today than in earlier periods of time, A, is that part of your theory?
B, empirically, do you think it's true?
So you may have law partners marrying each other rather than, say, a lawyer marrying an assistant,
and is that so much different from two high school valedictorians getting married in 1954?
Is that one of the forces shaping American society today or not?
Yeah, that's not something I've looked into.
I certainly think compared to small-scale societies,
it seems like there's a lot more opportunity for assortative mating in the world today
because your choices were just quite limited.
I've worked in three small-scale societies,
and you just don't have a lot of choices.
So it certainly seems likely over the long run that that's increased,
but that's not something I've focused on.
In which ways does culture make us dumb?
Which ways...
Well, so it removes a lot of need to think because it gives us pre-built solutions to problems.
It gives us protocols so that we don't have to figure out things for ourselves, just lots of pre-built solutions.
So it tells us what we need to think and what we need to know in order to survive in the world.
So it's made us dumb, you know, in ways X, Y, and Z.
But what would be an example today...
It's also made us smarter, though, which...
Oh, sure.
On that it's made us much smarter.
But what would be an area today where we're acting in a dumber way because of culture?
Well, so for one thing, we're all much dumber, at least in terms of the amount of societal
knowledge we have in our heads compared to our ancestors.
So if we go far enough back, every single person had to know everything about how to find
food, cook food, every feature of the productive system, how to make all the tools.
Now left to our own devices, we wouldn't be able to do the first thing in order to recreate
the productive system that we have.
So we've been breaking knowledge down into smaller and smaller parts.
So in terms of our ability to produce for ourselves, it's gotten smaller and smaller and in the book,
I have these cases of lost European explorers where a particular group of explorers get
struck in an environment where hunter-gathers have survived for centuries and they're faced
with the challenge of surviving.
And of course they can't because they're missing this large accumulated body that the hunter-gatherers
got for free, but it helps you find food and avoid disease and travel and all those kinds
of things.
As you know, it's a common 18th century theme that the division of labor possibly will make
a stupid or an interesting.
And it seems that was wrong in the 18th century.
Nicholas Carr's argued, well, Google makes us all shallow, and we lose the ability to remember
things. Will that also be wrong?
Well, I mean, the thing is we have probably been losing memory ability. So as soon as
we can write, we can offload lots of information that we normally have to keep in our
head. So I've always been impressed living in small-scale societies, the number of stories
that people tell over campfires, and just the amount of, say, folk biological information,
information about plants and animals and poisonous and what you can eat and what you can
and how you have to process it.
So there's just this encyclopedic knowledge, which I would just use the handbook for a
lot of that information, but that's not available to you.
So we've been kind of gradually figuring out ways to download stuff, and I think that's the
kind of Google problem is that we have less stuff in our heads, but our ability to do things
can still expand.
So from what I understand, people had larger brains 20 or 30,000 years ago, and brain size
roughly is correlated with intelligence.
Is it possible that they were smarter?
than we are.
And we're a kind of mental cripple in a way,
but we get by because in essence,
we're riding on the back of this marvelous cultural evolution.
Yeah, so I do think that the division of labor
could explain that decline, but there's also
been a self-domestication process where domesticated animals
have smaller brains.
And so we've been gradually domesticating each other.
For some reason, which is a little bit unclear,
animals that have to engage in more aggressive
against each other have larger brains.
And that would be us, right?
But so we've been reducing our, we've been getting less violent
and for quite a long time actually.
So there could be a long run dysfunctionality,
the more peaceful we become.
There's less competitive pressure put on us
and will stultify mentally, institutionally other ways.
I'm not sure that that necessarily follows,
but it's a coherent cultural pessimist scenario.
I'll have to think about it more.
But presumably in your model,
unless intergroup competition kicks in in some new way, which it might.
But it's implicitly a tale of cultural decline.
It looks wonderful on the surface, and you're getting net benefits any period of time.
But the longer run mismatch between culture and the genes seems to be increasing,
because one evolves much quicker than the other, and the cultural evolution is speeding up.
Well, actually, genetic evolution has been speeding up for the last 10,000 years.
So genes are trying, and actually genes can evolve faster and larger populations.
So as the population gets bigger, genes can actually respond more.
Now, of course, it'll never go at the rate of cultural evolution.
But you think that's sexual selection, group selection, speeding up genetic evolution?
I think it's individual garden variety selection responding to a culturally constructed environment.
So a lot of the genes that we know that have been selected over the last 10,000 years are response to agriculture.
So blue eyes in people of the Baltic area is due to high latitude agriculture.
There's the famous case of lactose genes, which is due to not having cheese and yogurt processing,
but still having access to cow's milk.
And there's just one example after another of these kind of genes that are driven by agricultural,
by agricultural know-how technology.
So galore at Brown University, you probably know this work.
There's a number of papers arguing societies that have been producing agriculture for longer periods of time.
They're today much more cooperative, and there's something, if not quite permanent about
that, something long run, something enduring about that. Do you agree with that hypothesis?
Well, I think the data's there. The question is why. And one of the things that I don't think
he takes into account sufficiently is that there can be long run cultural differences between
populations. And what he really means by more cooperative is that they're better at doing state
level societies. Right. Yeah. Which is... But if they play economic games with each other,
they'll share more, they're less likely to take the whole pie. Dealing with strangers, higher levels of
Patients, yep. But that could all be, I mean, so we know we can move patients around, for example, with cultural differences.
And how persistent do you think those cultural differences are? So you also know the literature when migrants come to the United States, two or three generations later, their children, grandchildren, tend to have a lot of the cooperative traits of the country their grandparents came from. And that decays, but it decays more slowly than a lot of people had thought.
Yeah, no, so I think that's great evidence that it's likely to be.
cultural and likely not to be genetic because if it was genetic it wouldn't go away in a few
generations. So it seems like they're bringing heritage from the place and it's getting
retransmitted because they're in ethnic communities or their parents and then it disappears
once they kind of converge to the local mean.
Say the Bill Easterly paper, I think it's Bill Easterly. It goes back to the year 500 AD and
per capita GDP in 500 AD predicts per capita GDP today relatively well, at least much better
than almost any other model would lead you to think.
Now, it could be cherry-picking.
500 AD actually may do better than 1,500 AD.
But do you think that result is just an artifact,
or is it reflecting the fact that cultural evolution runs deep?
And once you're in a good groove,
it tends to be self-reinforcing.
Yeah, because you're developing all kinds of institutions
that themselves can endure both formal institutions
and informal institutions,
family practices, cultural values.
So I think you're capturing a lot of that.
And how quick is the catch-up in that process?
So the West has a lot of contact with the world
in the 18th and 19th centuries,
or maybe a bit earlier,
brings Western norms,
not always in a welcome manner,
and often with violence.
There's a debate in the economics literature,
how much growth convergence is there?
If you put on your cultural evolution
plus genetic evolution
hat. On net, do you expect the poor countries to converge to the wealthy countries or not?
Yes. Well, I mean, I think we're seeing a lot of convergence. I mean, certainly lots of places
that were poorer 100 years ago are now relatively richer. So you're seeing a certain amount
of convergence. Now, one of the big problems is that key to this, understanding all this,
are family-level institutions. So small-scale societies, developing countries depend on complex
kinship institutions, which are really hard to break down. So what you're doing is you're putting
Western-style institutions on top of an underlying set of family institutions that doesn't fit,
and that misfit causes a lot of problems.
And it's only through process of urbanization that you gradually break apart those families.
But say we take Brazil, which is actually a pretty well-off society compared to a lot of parts of the world,
the ratio of American, North American, U.S. per capita GDP, to Brazilian in the year 1900
is pretty much the same as it is now, as best we can measure it.
And is that an argument for a different kind of cultural pessimism, that the lock-in
effects are strong enough.
Brazil is much better off.
It's arguably more Western in some way, whatever that might mean.
But Brazil isn't really catching up on the United States.
It seems.
Well, but do you disagree that as a broad statistical pattern, there's been a lot of economic
growth in the rest of the world in which there's convergence?
I think they don't know from the numbers.
I think if you look at all countries together, you can debate either side, whether countries
as a whole are converging on the richest countries.
So I would say I'm not sure.
Okay.
And the data that I've seen seems to suggest some convergence, but...
Yeah.
Certainly within the United States, we're sure there's the opposite of convergence.
So Silicon Valley and Bethesda, Maryland are getting richer, and West Virginia is not catching
up with them.
There was convergence in the 50s and 60s, but across cities, counties in the U.S., we're quite
sure there's the opposite of...
convergence. And that clearly is purely cultural and economic, right? It's going to have nothing
to do with genetics. And there seem to be a lot of scenarios where you never get convergence.
You have a kind of averages over scenario and the world diverges. Yeah. I mean, so the challenge
that complex societies have always faced is that, you know, when they get big enough, they break
down into little pieces. And systems for maintaining uniformity have always been a problem. So if you
look at human history, what you'll often see is the expansion of one group rapidly conquering or
otherwise assimilating a large area, and then that group gradually breaks down as the inability to maintain
cultural uniformity. Now, you have a view communicated in a lot of your research, some of your
most famous pieces, that people in the West, or at least some people in the West, they are what you
call weird, and that's an acronym for Western, educated, industrialized, rich, and democratic. And we
should not draw general conclusions about humanity on the basis of weird people. And most of us here,
possibly all of us, were deeply weird. Tell us a little more about that. Yeah, so in around 2006,
I arrived at the University of British Columbia and I had been in an anthropology department at Emory
University and I met a couple of cultural psychologists and we got to talking over lunch and we realized
in each of the areas for which we were experts on that Westerners were unusual compared to all
the other populations that had been studied. So we thought this was interesting and we began to
compile all the available data we could find where Western populations were compared against
some larger global sample. And what we found in not every but a large number of important
domains in the psychological and behavioral sciences that Westerners were at the extreme end of
the distribution. So, I mean, this made us worry, and I think it ought to make lots of people worry
about the typical textbook conclusions that you would find in psychology textbooks. And much
of behavioral economics, at least at the time, was based on running experiments on undergrads.
And it's actually mostly American undergrads that are studied.
So for instance, peoples are better at cooperating if they have had many generations in a
market economy or needing to do a lot of cooperative hunting. That would be an example of how
we're weird. So we have some positive sum mentality that maybe is relatively rare in the world.
Right. And so this is, so the case that I've made for this particular,
is that, you know, in order to make markets work, we need particular social norms for how to
deal with strangers and interact with them in a mutually beneficial way. And in the smallest scale,
human societies, you have social norms for dealing with different kinds of relatives and people
you have a certain kind of relationship with. But this kind of general purpose norm for how you're going
to treat anybody is a product of cultural evolution. And much of what I think we measure in
behavioral economics, experimental economics, is actually just a measurement of a culturally local
social norm. Culturally local. So if I try to tie this to other areas of psychology, so we all know
about the Flynn effect that measured IQ each generation, at least in the West, probably many
other places, it goes up consistently just by having a new generation. It goes up a surprisingly
large amount. Is this the same as the Flynn effect? Is it operating in parallel? Is it explaining
the Flynn effect? Is the Flynn effect explaining this? Is the Flynn effect real or artifact? What's
your take on how the big picture fits together?
So I don't think there's any relation between these numbers.
So efforts to control for IQ or intelligence scores don't seem to predict behavioral games.
There's a few exceptions to that.
So I don't think those are linked.
The Flynn effect is a great example.
People tend to think of IQ as being a product of genes,
and certainly genes make a contribution to IQ,
although the heritability of IQ actually depends on the population you use.
So you pick one population, you get a high heritability saying there's lots of genetic influence of 0.8.
That would be like middle class, upper class Americans.
but if you study low-class Americans, it's like 0.2, 0.1.
And that's because there's a lot of variation in the environments
that people in lower classes face compared to the relatively homogeneous environments
that they face in upper classes.
So, I mean, that's just a comment on IQ heritability.
But the Flynn effect, I think, is a great example
of people adapting their cognition to the economic and social world that they face.
So they've got to deal with new kinds of problems,
and that's going to favor more analytic thinking.
So most of the increase in the Flynn effect is due to the three sub-tests.
So there's 10 sub-tests on the IQ test, and three of them are about analytic thinking.
And those are the three that have really dramatically gone up over the last hundred years.
But the Flynn effect in the short run puzzles me more than in the long run.
So if I compare today to the 18th century, I can see where the difference might be.
But in many countries, it seems the Flynn effect hasn't stopped.
Nutritional gains probably are over.
The environment smartphones are newer than the Flynn effect,
But it doesn't seem to be changing now
compared to a generation ago.
They both seem quite complex.
We've had TV for a while.
People have books, market society.
I mean, what exactly is the difference
over the last generation in the short run?
So it's a cultural evolutionary treadmill.
So one place where you see this
is the complexity of television shows.
So now you have like an ensemble cast
and 20 different plots going on
and you've got to track all these different plots
that wasn't the television of the 1950s.
It was one plot, one thing after another.
simple. So now we're just, the whole world is getting more complex, at least in terms of your need
for analytic thinking. And some of that in your view is a supply side effect. So it's not that we got
smarter and they made TV better. It's also they made TV better and that made some of us smarter.
Co-evolutionary. Co-evolutionary. So this is going to make you out to be quite an optimist then
because TV is going to get better and better. We're just going to keep on getting smarter.
Yeah, of course. But when we tie that back in with the people 30,000 years ago,
having bigger brains and maybe they were smarter.
Somehow, how the whole picture operates?
Is it that the variance of our smarts goes up
and we use as a crutch, the areas where we're really stupid?
Is that what the picture looks like?
So one of the cases I make in the book
is that a lot of our intelligence,
we have this tendency to think that our intelligence
is about raw brain processing power.
But I make the case that a lot of our intelligence
comes from our culturally downloaded tools.
tools. So a simple example is all of you have a numbering system that you can count without bound.
But the smallest scale human societies will count one, two, three, many. So they can't differentiate 36 from 37.
And you can see the full variation of numbering systems by looking at these body part counting systems.
So some groups in New Guinea will have a body part counting system that goes up to 27. Another one will have one that goes up to 17.
And somewhere in cultural evolution, we developed this ability to count without bound.
Once we do that, we actually get new cognitive ability.
So when you grow up with this new kind of system, you get abilities you didn't have before.
The same thing is true of our spatial cognitive abilities.
So in English, there's three different spatial reference system.
So there's absolute north, southeast, and west.
There's body centered, left, right, front, back.
And then there's also a relative one.
So between me and the door, I could say she's to the left of the door.
and that's by drawing a line between myself and the doorway,
and then using that as a reference point.
But in some languages, they just have north, southeast, and west.
So they can't tell you to drive on the left or drive on the right
because it's not one of the systems that's built in there.
And so once you have those, you can redeploy them
in all kinds of fancy ways to do new stuff.
So cultural evolution is making us smarter
by giving us all these new cognitive tricks.
And I think something else is important.
People often conflate biological differences with genetic differences.
So culture changes our biology even when it doesn't change our genetic.
So in the book I make this long-term story that culture has been shaping our genetic evolution.
But it also shapes our biology.
So a simple example is everyone in this room, I would say with, I can't be 100% sure,
but you have a specialization in your left hemisphere and you have a thicker corpus callosum
than you would otherwise.
But you've acquired a particular cultural skill, literacy, that changes your brain and makes you
biologically different and actually thickens that information highway between your two hemispheres.
So when you hear spoken speech, you get greater full brain activation patterns than you would
if you'd still been illiterate. So culture changes our biology and causes to think differently.
So we're at George Mason University. I need to ask you about Hayek.
Hayek had a theory that we still have atavistic instincts. We have the instincts of a collectivist
people with strong sharing norms, which we needed when we were near subsistence, but we're
are now much wealthier and these norms are dysfunctional
and in fact they give us a bad politics.
Agree, disagree, what's your take on this?
Well, I think I can agree with the broad claim.
So one of the things we always face
in complex societies, meritocratic-based societies,
is there's a tendency for people to want to surround themselves
by people that are loyal to them, by family and friends
and people who owe them things, right?
That we call this corruption.
And most human societies, this was called businesses,
usual. So there is this tendency to want to surround yourself with those loyal to you, those of
your same tribe, ethnic group, all those kinds of things. And so maintaining well-functioning
institutions requires constantly resisting the tendency to surround yourself with reciprocal partners
and family members that would otherwise corrupt the system. Let me try a somewhat related
question. And I'm not at all intending this as asking you about your personal views on politics.
But let me pose the question and then circle back to what I'm really trying to ask.
I look at your research.
So you have papers.
We learn better from teachers who are like us in some way, maybe slightly senior, but they're similar in terms of their groups.
Religion is something that's very pro-social.
There's a kind of wisdom in intuitions about repugnance.
Not always, but often.
There's a wisdom to these carried intuitions.
There's a high value to cultural evolution.
War, in some cases, can foster cooperation, especially over the longer hall.
Biology really matters, and the West is quite distinctive in terms of what we do and how we think
and the culture we've developed.
And I'm not trying to ask, you know, personally are your views conservative, but in some
temperamental sense, if I can just whisper this, I mean, do you ever feel, even here,
does it make you conservative?
believing all these things.
I just follow the trail where it goes,
and I don't think of these things as conservative ideas,
although...
I don't mean conservative in the sense of modern political parties,
but in the sense, in the broad sweep of human history,
there are conservative thinkers,
such as Edmund Burke would be one, or Adam Smith.
And you could argue today,
right now the Democratic Party is in some ways more conservative
than the Republican Party.
Do you think of yourself fundamentally
as a conservative thinker in that sense?
I'm not sure, so I don't think I've really thought about that question.
One of the things I think, thinking about cultural evolution
and the scaling up of human societies and the adaptive nature of culture
means that when you see a practice,
you're thinking about how could that have emerged,
why would it have spread, you need some way of making sense of that.
So one of the things I've worked on is a normative monogamy.
So it's really puzzling that in most so much of the world today,
we have laws that prohibit elite males from taking additional wives.
And 85% of human societies have allowed polygyny.
So this is an example of one of these things where what is monogamous marriage doing,
if anything?
And I wrote this paper where I made the argument that it actually reduces male male competition.
So it's a very biological argument.
Actually lowers male testosterone.
own. And it reduces crime rates and has a bunch of positive pro-social effects.
It's a kind of redistribution in a sense. It's, yeah, it's sexual egalitarianism.
And there was a wisdom to that even before we could articulate those gains from an argument.
And the people who, to spread that themselves, don't appear to have known what it was doing,
right? They believe God wanted it that way or something. And that was an efficient form of
cultural revolution. But it gave it, gave a competitive advantage to the societies that adopted it. And then
other societies began copying the West.
So, for example, China adopts Western marriage norms in 1950.
China, I mean, sorry, China does it in 1950.
Japan adopts it in the Magi Restoration in the 1880s.
Nepal doesn't adopt it until 1963.
I mean, it's all relatively recent.
Now, in all of these dialogues, we have a segment in the middle called
underrated versus overrated, and I name a thing, a person, a thinker.
You're always free to pass.
Okay.
And you tell us if you think it's underrated or,
overrated. And I'll start with secular humanism.
Pass. You pass, okay. Stephen Pinker would not have passed, I think.
Maybe my pronunciation is wrong. The Sonawa Islands in Fiji.
Sinawa Islands?
Suana? The outlying islands in Fiji, where you've done field work.
They're great. They're great? So, properly rated, I don't know.
What's interesting about them that you don't see when you go to the more heavily touristed parts of
Fiji. Yeah, so people still live in traditional ways of life. They plant yams. They live in complex
kinship groups. They cooperate. They have hereditary chiefs. You've done a lot of field work in
Michigan studying Iraqi Chaldean Christians. That's a longstanding cultural norm. The city of Detroit,
underrated or overrated? Properly rated. Properly rated. Okay. Herbert.
Spencer. Probably the greatest 19th century theorist of how social and genetic evolution interact.
Yeah, so I'll give him an underrated just because I feel like, you know, there's a lot of
good stuff there that one could still learn from, even if you don't agree with everything he said.
So sometimes people say that, you know, they don't like him because he had this kind of evolutionist
view of humanity, but you can, there's still some good stuff there. It's worth checking out.
Claude Levi Strauss, underrated or overrated?
Overrated.
Why?
I just, I mean, no evolutionary approach.
I mean, kind of a too much nativism without evolution.
I don't like nativism without evolution.
And when you say nativism, what do you mean?
So the idea that there are innate structures without supplying a theory about why those structures would have emerged.
Okay.
What's your favorite television show?
Star Trek.
Which one?
I'm really a new generation.
guy, although I think I like them all.
And why a new generation? What do we learn
from Star Trek?
Well, lots of great things.
It's about, you know, it's kind of like an anthropological
quest, right? So Captain Kirk
was originally based on Captain Cook.
And the idea was you're going out to
encounter new
different peoples. And of course,
in Star Trek, you go out into space and do it.
Captain Cook was doing it in the Pacific, you know, and around the world.
So we learn about, we learn about
ourselves by seeing ourselves projected in other peoples and other cultures and other societies.
And if you think of the implicit vision of how cooperative different groups can become,
including people from different planets, in various varieties of Star Trek, as an anthropologist,
that seems realistic to you or utopian?
I just thought it was fun.
Coconut milk as a cooking medium, overrated or underrated?
Underrated.
Underrated.
And what do you enjoy in coconut milk?
Fish.
Fish.
Fish.
In the village I work in in Fiji, we do a lot of fish and coconut milk.
And that's your favorite thing to eat in Fiji?
Yeah.
Yeah, I like the eel.
We do a lot of more at eel.
You've done a lot of field work in southern central Chile with the Mapuche.
What would you say is the main thing you personally have learned from the Mapuche in terms
of your research?
Rich? Well, the Mapuche was the main source for an idea that I'm working on now. And the idea is that
some, one of the cultural ways of interpreting the world is as a zero-sum game. And that envy and
witchcraft can play an important role in influencing economic behavior and economic development.
So the Mapuche, I saw clearly that they, you know, if they someone else in the community did well,
that meant that everybody else in the community had to do worse.
because there's a limited good in the world.
Anthropologist named George Foster famously describes this.
So people would hide when they had a good crop
and they brought in a big yield.
They would underplay it and try to hide how much they did.
And they might have had a particularly good fertilizer,
they might have figured out a new cropping technique,
but that would be concealed from dissemination
because of this concern that if people knew they were doing well,
they would envy them and then bad stuff would happen to them.
So envy and people's negative emotions
has people believe it has a real force in the world,
and it can cause bad stuff to happen to you.
So this, I think, is one of the main challenges
to some economic development in some places.
Amongst the weird people,
how fragile do you think the positive sum mentality is?
So can you readily imagine that 30, 40, 50 years from now
we've in some way regressed and become much more zero-sum?
Or would that be extremely unlikely?
Yeah, I mean, I think it's a ready ability
for us to see the world in zero-sum terms,
and I don't think it takes very much,
to push people into zero some thinking.
And you think it's scarcity,
or slow growth, or ethnic conflict,
or what are the triggers?
Well, the main thing would be negative growth
and conflict with various groups.
I mean, we don't know yet,
but those are my suspicions.
We have some cases, like say
the former Yugoslavia in the early 1990s,
it fights a vicious war.
Not too long before,
it seemed levels of ethnic conflict
we're going to prove manageable.
If you look at measures such as intermarriage
or just domestic violence,
and then all of a sudden things break loose,
and you would think at this time,
people would have had optimistic views about the future
and maybe wish to go their own way,
but not fight on such a scale.
And what's the right conceptual framework
for thinking about conflicts like that?
Well, I mean, I don't know much about that conflict,
but I mean, I didn't want to speak too quickly
on the idea that the zero-something can change
I think it can go from positive sum to zero-sum relatively quickly,
but at least in the studies that anthropologists have done
in different parts of the world,
the zero-sum thinking can get really embedded.
So just because things are going good for a little while,
external forces can cause economies to grow,
and people could still have fundamentally zero-sum thinking
or at least be able to drop back into it pretty quickly.
So that kind of thing could help explain this situation.
Now, you've done a lot of work on religion
and the social role of religion,
and how religion can have a pro-social role,
and the costly signaling of certain things
through religion can be useful.
What is your view on how,
what seemed to be some atheistic societies
can be so orderly?
Possible nominations would be Japan or Sweden,
though those are subject to possible challenge.
Is it that you think religion gets replicated
through some kind of non-religious belief,
or you think there's really some different set of
categories of thought where you can in a sense move beyond religion and still cooperate?
Yeah, so the case we make in this paper we wrote recently reviewing all this work is that
these big god religions that we talk about allow for the, allowed for the construction of
well-functioning secular institutions, but once you have well-functioning secular institutions,
then religion loses its functionality and begins to ebb away.
And so one of the best predictors in Europe of not being religious, of atheism, is good social
safety nets. And so the reason why the U.S. is such an outlier in being so religious is one,
not such a great social safety net, and actually variation across states in that, which predicts
religiosity. And the second one is the kind of free market for religion. So religious freedom
meant you had the kind of production of the Walmart of religion. So you don't get that in European
powers. So the combination of those two things explain why the U.S. has religiosity closer to Lebanon.
But say Japan, which doesn't have an enormous safety net, it has in some ways more cooperation through families,
and they're possibly the most atheistic society in the world.
And is it ethno-nationalism that carries that, or some embedded ethics since medieval times?
Yeah, I think it's an open question as to whether how much religion there is in Japan.
Certainly when you ask people, you know, people think religion means the Christian God and people say,
know to that question. But then if you start talking about other kinds of beings and spirits and
agents, people get a little bit softer. Sure, quite a bit softer, perhaps. Yeah. Something else I find
interesting in your work, there's the sense of how firmly we can believe in some God or gods,
and how hard it is to get us to believe in others. So very few people today believe in Zeus,
or if they do, it might be a kind of joke or affectation. And they're split in our intuitions
between these very firm loyalties and these very loose loyalties.
Now, there are some societies, I think Haiti and the Caribbean would be an example,
where that seems much more fluid.
You can talk people into new gods at times.
It's not easy, but it's probably easier there than here.
And what accounts for that across societies,
the ease of believing in additional gods?
Yeah, I mean, I think the standard way from what looking at religions
all around the world is that most people accepted that their tribe or their clan or their group
had a god and naturally that meant that other people's tribes or groups had a god right so the world was
you know there were lots of gods and you just you dealt with your god and they had their god
he no the atheism yeah right um and what was unique about the abrahamic religions was that they at a
certain point in their history they they have in the past they were more similar to everybody else
but then they decided there was only one god and the other gods were non-existent and this this may have
them a competitive advantage because then you go and you actually try to stomp out.
Christian missionaries, I've encountered them in Peruvian Amazon and other places.
They're hard at work at this because it takes a long time to convince people that all these
other beings don't exist.
And that's a competitive advantage through group selection or through the memes of cultural
evolution?
Yeah, so it's divided loyalty.
So the problem in Europe was that people still maintain their ancestor gods.
And the Catholic Church wanted them to believe in the Catholic God.
And it's trying to serve two masters.
So you can do that, but it's really better if you get rid of the ancestor gods,
which might have been one of the reasons why the Catholic Church
dismantled all these complex kinship systems that led to ancestor worship.
And then you get people fully invested in the one church and the one god.
And that's correlated with higher cooperation on other matters?
Well, here's what we know.
People being weirder?
Our effort to test this is to go to places around the world
where people believe in the Christian God, but also maintain local God.
and then we look at their willingness to cheat in an experiment and we find that the more
they believe in the Christian God are other big gods too works with Islam the more
they believe that God is punishing and monitoring them than the more cooperative
they were in the game less willing to cheat they were but their belief in the local
God either didn't have an effect or cause them to go the other way so one of the
ways we deal with this is we unconsciously prime them of either their local God
or the big God and in the case of the local God it usually makes them more
their in-group, whereas priming the big god made them more fair towards out-group members,
towards this larger circle of co-religionists.
So maybe more cosmopolitan, more likely to buy into nationalism for larger political unit.
Yeah, so the idea is the one god is for building a big society, and the other god is for
galvanizing cooperation in this village.
And then if you have cultural evolution operating more quickly for larger units, that
will be correlated with a more rapid pace of cultural evolution and carrying more positive
means.
Yeah, it allows you to scale up, basically.
So there is in this account some positive external social benefit to a lot of forms of monotheism.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's the idea.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's very interesting.
What would be a prediction you would make about religion that you think a lot of other frameworks would not or could not make?
Well, I mean, the typical evolutionary approaches to religion don't take into account that the kinds of gods we see in religions in the world today are not seen in small-scale societies.
So, you know, I mentioned the ancestor gods.
Other kinds of spirits can be tricked, duped, bought off, paid.
You sacrifice in order to get them to do something.
They're not concerned about moral behavior.
So whatever your story is, it's got to explain how you got these bigger gods.
Now, the kind of obvious alternative is people believe in gods that reflect their society.
So what we've been trying to do is work to see if those gods are doing any work, right?
It might be the people believe in bigger gods, but can they do any lead to greater cooperation
or other kinds of pro-social benefits.
So that's why I've done all these experiments
in different parts of the world,
trying to see if there's any evidence for this.
And if you're thinking about a series of connected problems,
say the origins of the Industrial Revolution,
how we should spend foreign aid,
how economic development can be encouraged,
for this reason,
do you see the roles of ideas and religions as primary
as driving forces, or not so much?
Yeah.
So in my latest,
project I'm really looking at the kind of spread of the Western Church into Europe and how
it transformed the social structure in ways that I think led to individualism.
It led to a different kind of cultural psychology that would eventually pave the way for secular
institutions and economic growth.
So the church is the first mover in that account.
And what did the British and the Dutch arguably have that say other parts of Europe or for
that matter China might not have had as much of?
Well, in the case of the,
when the church first began to spread its marriage
and family program, where it would dissolve
all these complex kinship groups,
and it altered marriage, so it ended polygyny,
it ended cousin marriage,
which stopped to kind of force people to marry further away,
which would build contacts between larger groups.
That actually starts in 600 in Kent,
Anglo-Saxon Kent.
And then missionaries then spread out into Holland
and northern France in places.
like that. So at least in terms of timing, the marriage and family program gets its start in
southern England. And what's your take on how China fits into this picture? Because during the
Song Dynasty, a lot of economic historians feel, well, there might have been, could have been,
should have been an industrial revolution. There wasn't, China ends up stagnating for a while,
has a disastrous 19th century, but it's still the case that Chinese immigrants coming to the West,
even not from wealthy backgrounds. They seem to assimilate.
into weird culture very rapidly and very successfully.
How does that fit this picture?
And they're not monotheistic in any simple way.
Yep.
Well, so there's two questions.
There's one is, why didn't you get an industrial revolution in China?
Right.
And, I mean, they're always going to be impeded
by the fact that there was a strong patrilineal clan system,
cousin marriage, all these things to prevent individualism,
which is the fuel for entrepreneurship and individual innovation.
So you can't get that going,
or it's harder to get that going.
Now, because of this large cultural capital
that's been built up in China
for having a state for a very long time,
having early agriculture,
those forces,
you have a lot of cultural capital
and migrants that they then take when they move.
So they're arriving with a bunch of cultural stuff
that allows you to do well in societies like the U.S.
So they somehow maintain that cultural capital
without moving on to the most rapid growth path?
Oh, you mean why China doesn't move on?
Right, so China now arguably is moving on to that path.
But if you start in, say, 1730,
when China might have been wealthier per capita than France,
you have a long period of decline,
maybe two and a half centuries for the most part.
And yet so much of that remains intact
at the level of individual family,
that Chinese migration in terms of per capita incomes
goes very well, very quickly.
And I mean, there were still functioning markets,
there were still a functioning state.
I mean, there was still an economic system
that was pretty complex, linked lots of different places.
And of course, since the 1950s,
the China has been pushing exactly the same marriage and family program
that the Catholic Church started pushing in 600 in Europe.
So they dissolved cousin marriage.
They actually did the same thing as the church
where first they ended first cousin marriage.
And then a little later they ended second cousin marriage,
ended polygyny, all those kinds of things.
So they've been transforming the society from the grassroots.
And China can do this because it's such a powerful state, right?
This would be hard for any other state to do.
What's your opinion on American exceptionalism culturally?
I know you're from Canada.
Well, I mean, in terms of the weird psychology, the security.
Yes, are we special in some way?
Yeah, well, so in a lot of our measures, you can't always detect it,
but Americans turn out to be weirder than Canada and weirder than the rest of Europe.
And in which way are we we weirder than Canadians?
So more individualistic, a little more analytic thinking,
Do we really have more instrumental rationality?
I don't observe it these days.
Yeah, valid point.
And let's see, so what was the other,
so greater overconfidence, more focus on the self.
So part of the individualism thing is an obsession with the self
and the attributes and individual achievements.
So Americans are particularly obsessed with themselves.
And do you have an account of how much neighbors matter?
So it's a common debate in development
like Mexico versus Brazil.
They're at about the same level of per capita income.
Mexico's immediate neighbor, of course, is the U.S.
and also will link to Canada through NAFTA.
Brazil doesn't quite have anything comparable.
Chile is small, and in some ways it's quite distant.
Is the correct inference that Mexico is part of this larger network
will grow more rapidly than Brazil?
Well, I think there is some evidence to suggest
that you're more likely to copy useful institutions,
institution, social norms from nearby neighbors. So there is a proximity effect. So that could result
in both positive and negative copyings. So, yeah, I mean, I think neighbors matter. Your work on
animals, we have a little time to talk about this. You've studied chimpanzees. They're termite
fishing. They're ant dipping. They're nutcracking. How conservative are chimpanzees? How much is their
chimpanzee culture in addition to their instincts? Right. So chimps definitely have some culture. They do
some social learning, they learn a few tools. The key difference between other animals and humans
is that human culture is cumulative. So we're able to learn stuff from the previous generation,
add a little bit to it, pass it down to the next generation, add a little bit to it. And in chimps,
because of their social structure and part maybe because of their cognition, they're not able to
generate this cumulative cultural evolution. So nothing that a chimp does is not, nothing that he does
he couldn't figure out by himself. So we might get it more easily by learning it from another chimp,
but nothing is so complex that he couldn't figure out by himself.
And in humans, even in the simplest human societies, Hunter Gathers,
there's tons of things that no single individual could figure out in their lifetime.
And you're completely dependent on this body of knowledge, know-how norms
that's bequeathed to you from prior generations just to survive.
There's some breakthrough in the past that's quite remarkable.
What are now human beings start doing something that the other great apes don't?
And this is all speculative, of course.
but what in your opinion is that confluence of events
that leads to this great filter
what are now human beings pass through it
but the other great apes basically do not.
Yeah, so that's this startup problem.
And so the key thing to understand the startup problem
is how humans went up down this special trajectory.
So the way I think about it is you want to think about natural selection
as investing either in bigger brains that make you better at figuring out stuff out by yourself,
better at individual learning,
or better at cultural learning, at learning from others.
And when there's not very much interesting things, interesting tools, techniques, ideas in the minds and behaviors of other members of your social group, individual learning is better because learning from others doesn't get you anything because nobody else in the group has anything.
So what you need is a situation where you're able to have useful ideas in the minds of other members of your social group.
So in the book, I make the case that, you know, when humans are on the savannah as bipedal apes, the predator guild was probably much larger.
So humans have a chimpanzee-like brain, except they lived in larger groups,
and they would have had to be more social with each other,
so there's a chance they could have crossed this threshold and started down this road.
There's a few other factors like the climate was changing in a way
that would have favored cultural evolution.
So a few other things play into it, but that's the basic idea.
But it's odd in a way there are not intermediate species,
or maybe there were, we killed them off, but like Neanderthals, Denisovans,
might they have been smarter than humans?
Yeah, so in the book I make the case that Neanderthals,
were probably smarter than us because in primates, basically its overall brain size predicts
how good you're on various cognitive tests.
And Neanderthals are our cousins, so they're around, say, from 200,000 to 25,000, and they
have larger brains than us.
We're about 1,350 cc's.
Neanderthals are 1,500, so we should expect them to be smarter than us.
The difference is, is the African variant.
We had larger groups because we were living.
in a climate that a lot of us have a larger collective brain, so we're able to generate
probably bows and arrows, other fancy technologies, and then we move into Europe and exterminate
the Neanderthals.
Now, you're an anthropologist. You've spent a lot of time with economists, co-authored,
worked with Paul Romer, Colin Kammer, or others. As an anthropologist, what do you find strange
about the tribe known as econ? Yeah, so I had a real opportunity. I was very fortunate in my career
to be a professor of psychology and a professor of economics at the same time, but to be neither,
in some deep sense. So I would get to go back and forth from seminars in economics and psychology.
And in economics, you know, there's this really competitive culture. So the way I like to describe it,
if you're giving a seminar in economics, the crowd, everybody's trying to show who's the smartest guy
in the room. And so just on your first slide, someone will raise their hand. I haven't said anything yet.
And then they'll try to ask the killer question, which undercuts your whole talk,
so that you can get you right at the beginning.
Whereas psychologists will sit quietly.
They watch your talk.
You go through your whole PowerPoint.
You probably touch a lot of different research projects.
And then there'll be question time, and first no hands will go up.
And then someone will be like, I've got a question.
And then they say, I just have one small question.
I mean, it was a great talk, and this is just a very minor thing.
And then they'll, they could be a killer question at that point when they've done the preface.
So it's a very strong cultural difference between.
the Econ tribe and the psychology tribe.
So we're less patient than less modest.
I've always wanted to write in ethnography,
my life among two strange tribes,
the psychologists and the economists.
And what's strange about the anthropologists?
That's a whole other thing.
So anthropology is a strange field
because it's split, not down the middle,
but about for 74% of the way through,
between the humanities on one side,
and then kind of evolutionary biologists
on the other who call themselves anthropologists.
And so there's this science, anti-science war that goes on within the same department.
So that's a whole other thing.
What I would call narrative or more subjective or interpretive anthropology,
does that have a future in a world where everyone is access to audiences?
People post anthropological accounts on the Internet every day.
Some of them are quite wonderful.
They're typically by people with little or no training in anthropology.
The world pays more attention to those on average than to the writings of narrative anthropologists.
Is there some kind of disconnect here that the profession due to tenure is in one stage of its cultural evolution,
and the rest of culture already has moved somewhere else?
That's possible, although, I mean, in my work, I've always tried to say that there's,
and make the case and do, that there's real valued ethnographic work,
that you really learn a lot and you get lots of ideas when you're in a village and you're living with the people,
you're working with them, you're eating their food,
and you're just watching village life go on.
some of my best ideas come when I'm in that situation.
So I think there's great value to doing this rich deep ethnography,
but we should combine it with the full set of tools
that the rest of the social science has to offer.
So behavioral experiments, biometric measures, fMRI, all this kinds of stuff.
If you were to name two or three thinkers and or books
that were your main intellectual inspirations, what would they be?
So I'm a big fan of guns, germs, and steel, Jared Diamond.
I would also have to say cultural and the evolutionary
process. Boyden Richardson, yeah. We have a copy of that here. And let's see, I guess those are
the main two. There's a book by Steve Frank called Foundations of Sociality, which I really enjoyed as
well. And outside of your field, what's really influenced you? Hmm, outside of my field.
Well, I mean, my undergraduate degree was aerospace engineering, or one of my undergraduate
with degrees. And that gave me a real appreciation for a body of math and a way of thinking
that is very different from the field I went into, which was anthropology at first. So I think
I always had that kind of engineer in me, which might have led me to think in ways different
from your usual anthropologist. And that's quite unusual for an anthropologist, correct?
I think so. And it's unusual for an aerospace engineer, correct? As far as I know, yeah.
When you originally became an aerospace engineer, what was the thought in your mind for doing that
and not anthropology or something else.
I like Star Trek.
Sure, you like Star Trek.
Yeah, so I just wanted to, actually,
I wanted to do space propulsion.
So when I was at the end of my undergraduate,
I was trying to decide if I wanted to go
to grad school in anthropology or study space propulsion.
So I took a job actually here in Northern Virginia
and thought about it for a while.
And then I decided, then I quit my job
and drove to California and became a grad student at UCLA.
If you've watched Star Trek and thought about space,
let's say someday, whenever we encounter
intelligent aliens, how intelligible do you think they will be to us?
I wouldn't be very optimistic.
Wouldn't be very optimistic.
Because, I mean, I can imagine an evolutionary track that is so different from anything
we can comprehend.
So they're not going to be like Vulcans and Romulans.
It'll be a kind of pulsating mass mind and will never be able to translate into their
language and we won't even be sure how smart they are for a long time.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that seems like the most likely scenario.
And in your own work and in the social sciences, what are you currently most excited about?
Well, I'm most excited about this book, which I was partially describing.
So I'm writing a book on the weird people problem on this question of how Westerners became psychologically unusual.
And that's taking me kind of deep dive into European history.
So that's what I'm working on now.
And you're mainly working on the historical side of that.
No, so I move back and forth.
So there's tons of experiments and lots of work from economics, actually.
Lots of work on institutions and culture from economics.
But I'm trying to weave that together where I move back and forth from that.
the history. So I might have some historical sequence, but I can't show the causality because I
don't have the data from history. But I can test the theory up here in the real world,
and then I go back to the history and move back and forth between those two. And you're allowed
to go back in time and visit one historical era as an anthropologist, assuming you can speak
the language and won't catch a disease. When and where would it be? 600 AD in Kent when the first
missionaries arrived. And what would you ask them? Well, I'd observe them. I'd live among them.
Sure, you'd live among them, but at some point, you'd sit down for breakfast.
So I want to know, the thing, I mean, we have some insights, but what was the social structure at the time, how were people living, what was the real political power of the chiefs, what were the missionaries really up to?
We have a few letters they sent back to the Pope, but I'd want to get the whole story.
As to what life in Kent was like in the 6th century?
And what the missionaries were actually up to?
Like, were they actually trying to ban cousin marriage and all the stuff that they purported to do in their letters back to the Pope?
Joe, we look forward to your next book, his current book, The Secret of Our Success,
will be available for sale outside afterwards.
We will move in just a second to question and answer.
We have microphones on each side, but before we do that, let's give Joe a big round of applause.
For the questions, you are to ask questions to Joe, not speeches.
If you start a speech, I will cut you off.
This is question and answer, but mostly answer.
Anyway, I will start over here.
Mark, first question.
So this is about cousin marriage.
I'll try and be quick.
So if it begins that the church is undermining cousin marriage around 600,
and then European economic success only really takes off maybe a thousand years later,
depending on what you think about the economic history,
is it plausible that the initial effects of undermining cousin marriage
may have been quite detrimental, like weakening social stability?
making societies more fragmented.
Yes, absolutely.
So the first thing that in order to get to individuals,
you had to break down the social safety nets
and the fabric of complex kinship societies,
which were really fundamental to how people were able to survive
and inheritance patterns had to be changed.
So I would expect things to get worse before they got better.
I mean, it took a long time.
It took centuries for the church to alter these practices.
And you don't get the emergence of, say,
the first charter towns where people are entering the town,
as individuals until the 10th century and then 11th century.
Next question.
I'm Mike Nelson.
I work for an internet company, so I have to ask an internet question.
I was looking at your Twitter feed, and I noticed you don't tweet a lot,
but some very interesting things are in your feed,
including an article by Jessica Tracy that you tweeted a month and a half ago
about how people don't like bullies,
but society tends to give bullies power.
power. So my question is, do you believe that? Is it something you see in other societies? And is there
any advice you would give for dealing with online bullies who seem to be gaining a lot of power
and audience? Right. Well, so Jess Tracy is a collaborator of mine. We were colleagues at the
University of British Columbia. And we did research on how different forms of status affect
leadership. And we did a number of different studies. We worked with sports teams and we also
who created groups in the laboratory.
And what we found both in the field and in the laboratory
is that individuals who were given prestige,
so who people thought were particularly skilled
or particularly knowledgeable in a certain area,
had influence and were likely to become leaders in groups.
But we also found that individuals who were pushy,
aggressive, and sometimes agonistic
could also find their way into leadership roles in groups.
So that was the basis of Jess's,
I guess it was an op-ed in USA Today.
So that's what she was writing about, and it appears in our data, so the scientific process will move on.
So tentatively, I do think it's an important idea.
I don't have any advice for the online bullies.
Next question.
Hey, I'm Kathy. I write about sex and politics.
I was curious about if society got better, more prosperous, more peaceful, by making monogamous marriage and norm,
by taking some extraneous males out of society,
then would it not follow that a social norm
that has one female with multiple husbands
would be even better because we've got pretty good evidence
that extraneous females are not particularly problematic to society
and it would help get rid of their remaining extraneous males.
Right.
So, yeah, that's a great question.
So here's the issue.
So when I assemble this argument,
taking what we know about evolutionary biology
and about kind of male-female differences,
and you very rarely see polyandras society.
So in the anthropological record,
about 0.3% of human societies have polyandry.
And those societies don't have wide,
I mean, they don't have lots of polyandry,
they have a sort of non-trivial proportion of polyandry.
The elite males in those societies
are still often polygynous,
and there's lots of monogamous marriage.
And so from a kind of fitness point of view,
males can create children with number of different females
simultaneously, so there's a big advantage to polygyny.
Females, there's no advantage to her
from a fitness point of view of having multiple husbands
because the husbands will invest in the children
according to the degree to which they see themselves as the father.
And so if you have multiple husbands
and they're all having sex with the wife,
then the degree to which they see themselves,
as the father will get smaller.
So she doesn't get any more investment in the children
by having multiple husbands.
So she has no incentive to be the husbands
and the males aren't going to like it.
So it's only in certain ecological context
where you really need two or more males
to run the households that you see this pop up.
And the men are usually brothers,
which helps reduce the conflict of interest over paternity.
Next question.
Hi, I'm Tom.
I'm a student here at Mason.
You talked a little bit about,
well, you talked a lot about
the role of gods in society.
And you mentioned how having one big god creates a bigger society while other smaller gods.
I think you said galvanizes cooperation in local communities.
So how does that sort of cultural evolution from these smaller gods to the bigger god
shape understandings of human dignity?
Now that's a tough one.
So tell me more about human dignity.
So my gut, well, my gut reaction would be, oh, you're thinking everybody's, you know, we're all children of God, whereas if I'm paying tribute to the God of my city, I'm more akin to the people in my city, but somebody else living, you know, elsewhere, you know, they're completely different from me and I can't judge them by the same standards.
Right. Yeah, so some historians, this relates to some of my thinking and research and reading about European history
have made the case that the kind of human universalism that we see emerging in Europe notions of human rights and stuff
come in part from this notion that we're all children of the same God rather than each of our tribes or each of our clans having its own independent gods.
So you can see if you're in this mindset, it might be easier to come up with the idea of individual rights or some kind of universalism.
And you see this, I mean, even in the awful things, the same thing,
Spanish were doing when they first arrive in Mexico, the priests are having this debate, and they're
saying, you know, you've got to treat these, you know, these are children of God just like
everybody else. Now their preferences got lost and Spanish political interests to overwhelm that
situation, but yeah, it was there. The debate was there. Thank you. Question here.
There's been a decline in the number of languages spoken worldwide, as well as the number of dialects
the languages that are spoken.
From your cultural evolutionary perspective,
is that a benefit from the perspective
of increased interconnectivity between the people
or is it a loss of cultural biodiversity?
So I mean, I would see it as a great loss
because languages contain rich ideas about the culture.
When people learn languages,
they may actually come to think about the world differently.
Languages contain all these kind of different things
like the spatial reference systems
that I mentioned, different ways of partitioning
the group and people can be bilingual. So you don't have to necessarily impede communication.
You can learn one language that's a traditional language that you speak with people in your
community and also learn a kind of lingua franca so you can speak to the wider world.
If I could just follow up on that though, if we think the larger cultural units have more
rapid cultural evolution and they carry memes better and the second language is much tougher.
So you go to India, the percentage of people who really speak English well in India, it's probably
below 10%, would be my sense.
And you say Denmark is in some ways very well interconnected with the world.
There's a real chance in workplaces Danish won't be spoken 30 years from now, and English
will be.
It's already the case.
I mean, shouldn't you consistently at most margins favor the larger language groups?
Either that or revise your views as to the greater number.
number of pieces having more rapid cultural evolution. It could be if you have seven languages in your
country, you have more poetic ideas and different frameworks. Well, I think when people use
different languages, they can think about things in different ways, and it'll highlight different
features of the problem. So I think it's still valuable. I mean, I would encourage people to learn
multiple languages. And as long as you start young enough, we seem to be pretty good at it,
and it may actually have some positive cognitive effects. There's debate remains about that. So I think
we should encourage people to learn multiple languages.
But if you're just like betting on countries,
here's a country with only one language,
here's a country with five languages,
which will be more creative?
I mean, what's your bet?
Well, but I think it's unclear
because if you have multiple languages,
you can potentially learn from people.
So suppose you speak Spanish, Mandarin, and English.
Then you can search the web in three languages
and you get access to a much wider collective brain
than if you can just read the English.
So the extra languages can actually expand the size of the collective brain.
Next question.
Hi, I am David.
To the extent that you think that human beings are hardwired to be tribalistic,
do you think that the modern world's cultures are strong and good enough
to overcome the effects of violence and tribalism and its negative effects?
Yeah, so my take on this is that we do have a tribal psychology,
and the key to building nation states was actually to harness,
and religions was to harness this tribal instinct.
So one of the things nations do is try to create a uniform language
because language is one of the key cues that people use
and figuring out what group they're in.
Establishing other sort of similar cultural patterns and beliefs
helps in establishing a nation.
So we talked about this idea that these things break down over time
because it's hard to maintain a large country
in sufficiently culturally similar
that you don't end up with different tribes.
So I think we're going to see what we've always seen,
is things break down.
Things fall apart, and then they reform and they spread,
and they break down, and they reform, and they spread.
Next question here.
Hi, I'm Anthony.
I'm really curious about your thoughts
on the Maverick versus the cultural learner.
And what you think today the role of the Maverick is?
And it appears that culture evolution
shrunk the size of the number of Mavericks needed
to get us here.
In other words, we didn't need a lot of cultural pessimists and individual learners.
We needed a lot of people thinking alike and following the norms.
The reason I'm so interested in that ratio is, as a career coach, all my clients are the maestros.
They're all Mr. Cowans, and they're all in careers that their tribe picked for them.
You see, they copied what worked for the tribe.
Right.
You see.
So my question is, what's the role of the role of the tribe?
the Maverick today? Do we still need some? Does cultural revolution need us? Where do we fit?
Yeah, so one thing that's interesting about the Maverick question is we tend to think of the Maverick
is the individual learner, the person who comes up with their own idea, their own new idea.
But my take on the history, at least of invention, so that's something I've spent a little bit
of time on. I mean, it could be different in other domains, is great ideas actually come from
a recombination. So if you're a cultural learner and you learn a little bit from this guy and a little bit from this guy and a
little bit from that guy and recombine them.
You get a brand new thing, but you actually didn't,
you actually were just three cultural learning
from three different people.
So being able to, knowing people
in very different domains of knowledge
that normally don't meet is a great way
to be an innovator.
To follow up on that, in the 19th century,
Tocqueville wrote that Americans
were among the most conformist of people,
and it was precisely because they are free,
and that they could be organized in mass numbers,
was in a kind of larger market setting
and you had a lot of economies of scale.
He thought that made us, on average, quite conformist.
Do you agree with that portrait?
I mean, Americans had, well, at least some of them,
had relatively similar cultural backgrounds.
I guess I don't know enough about the data at the time, to say.
Next question.
Sorry, yes, here.
I recalling your observation of the attack mentality
of economic seminars,
And adding to that the observation that over my 50 years an economist, the literature has changed completely so that now every article in the journal begins, I construct a model which, so that you can't argue about the economics of it.
One of the things that you might elaborate on on how this affects the evolution of things that when I started, there were no schools of public policy.
And now if you want to do the economy, you go to a school of public policy.
So can you elaborate on how this kind of mentality of the internal discourse of various disciplines might have affected where they've gone and what they do and who takes up what social issues nowadays?
Yeah, I mean, I don't know.
I mean, I tend to think of disciplines as, you know, they're really cultures, right, because you're training graduate students.
They're being taught certain what counts as evidence, what's a good project, what's a good paper, how do you do a presentation?
You mentioned anthropologists.
Anthropologists read their papers,
so they stand up in the front and just read it.
I mean, that's a quite different cultural style.
But in the case of economics,
I think it's strongly influenced by the need
to run everything through individual choice models.
So everything's got to be a kind of utility function.
And I have a lot of friends who,
they have an interesting empirical result,
but they rack their brains
because they've then got to make up some model
that will produce that result
in order to be able to sell it to a top five economics journal.
So I think that that's not completely healthy, and there should be, you know, there's lots of other ways of thinking about human decision-making, cognition, how it is people come to do what they do besides running everything through a utility function.
But, you know, it's a cultural tradition within the discipline.
Next question.
When Tyler asked you whether the U.S. or Canada was weirder, I was surprised that you didn't mention the American obsession with American football and baseball.
I'm curious, in any of your books, have you explored how sport affects culture and culture affects sport?
And have you read the book, How Soccer Explains the World?
No, I haven't read how soccer explains the world.
I mean, I do think sport is potentially a great cultural technology for bringing people together
because they all get together to watch the event and they have high emotions.
And, I mean, I think it can be a neat cultural technology.
I haven't gotten into it beyond that, but it seems like a good candidate.
That's one of those things where I'd say.
say maybe there's more to it than just a happy pastime, you know, it might have some deeper
social function. Next question, Michael. You write a lot about prestige. I'm interested in
lack of prestige and the effect on us, particularly men, and what behavior that may cause.
Right. So you're thinking that when males don't achieve very much prestige, how that affects
them. Right. So there's a lot of copying and mimicry amongst, you know, people, you know,
who are prestigious, you know, or if you're prestigious, so I'll mimic you. But what if, what if,
you know, a person who lacks prestige, you know, there's a phrase that I come across recently
called, you know, damaged masculinity. Like, what would happen to those people in, in their little
tribes or whatever? And what would that cause them potentially to do? Well, one of the things that
comes up in the polygyny research is when you have high rates of polygyny, you get this group
of low status males. And in order to increase their status, they have to take big risks. So they
go into a mindset where they're willing to do anything that'll allow them to hop up into the higher
status states. So you might get, when you get really low status males, you might get lots more,
a lot more risk-taking, steep temporal discounting, a psychological shift that gives you a chance
to possibly climb the status hierarchy. Because if you determine, I'm not going anywhere unless
I do something big in order to get into that higher status.
So I think there's some evidence out there for that.
Next question.
So I was thinking with the example of the monks going into,
or the missionaries going into different tribal situations,
or just even with cultural evolution in general,
to what extent do the established norms try to punish difference?
Well, yeah, I mean, that's part of the story.
So cultural norms, part of being a cultural norm,
is to say that if you deviate from it,
people are gonna be annoyed with you in some way.
So there's gonna be some kind of punishment
or sanctioning, you know,
people won't marry you, all kinds of things like that.
So that's what creates kind of the stability.
And then the question is,
if you got this stabilizing social set of social behaviors,
how do you change that?
So if it's not a very good social norm,
not very efficient or pro-social,
how do you change that?
And this intergroup competition
is one of the possible ways of changing that.
So if groups are copying more successful groups,
then they can,
They'll tend to copy norms that are more pro-social lead to success and intergroup competition relative to the others.
Did that get at your question?
I guess I was thinking, you know, it's like how do the missionaries, these sort of outsiders coming in, you know, how does that culture sort of quote-unquote win out?
Oh, I see. Okay, yeah.
Not to think of it in zero some terms.
So, yeah, so both from my own experience and from reading, the way Protestant missionaries operate in South America is that,
they show up with radios, steel tools, and antibiotics.
And so right away, they're seem like a more successful group,
so they're able to influence people,
and especially the key with the Manga, was getting the children.
So the parents begin coming to services and stuff
in order to get the cooking oil and the machetes and stuff.
But then the children are experiencing the religion while growing up,
and then they're believers, even when their parents weren't.
And just tell us who the Mashi Ganga are?
Oh, so this is this group I worked with in the Peruvian Amazon,
traditional small scale lived in single families scattered throughout the forest and I spent a few months
paddling around in a dugout trying to learn about their society.
Question over here.
Hi.
I was just wondering if you could talk a little bit about China because I personally think
China is a pretty successful society just because there are so many Chinese people in the world
and they have not had a single God or just any company.
comments you might have on that.
Yeah, so in our...
Sure, so in our religion project,
we've actually brought a bunch of historians of China into the project.
And there seems to be quite a bit of debate in the field
about whether there were high gods in ancient China.
So there's certainly textual evidence from the warring states period
suggesting there were big high gods
and people were very concerned with getting the mandate of heaven.
So at least based on that evidence,
there actually may have been high gods during at least the early period of Chinese history.
And now there's lots of ancestor gods and other kinds of supernatural agents.
Buddhism made a brief appearance before it got stomped out by the Chinese state.
So it's a more complicated religious picture.
Question.
Do you think that modern cultural evolution, at least in the U.S., is making people more individualistic and selfish?
or do you think it's leading to a more collectivist society?
Yeah, I mean, I think that individualism is still increasing,
certainly I think, in the last 50 years or so.
So, I mean, we now have psychological measures, for example, conformity,
showing that Americans have gotten less conformist over the last 50 years.
So, yeah, greater individualism, more concerned with self,
more concerned with personal achievements,
self-enhancement is the psychological term,
trying to make yourself look good.
Last question.
What proportion of the variation in cooperation, let's say, in a prisoner's dilemma,
would you attribute to, would you say is phenotypic versus cultural?
And I ask because you seemed very much on the side of culture earlier in the talk,
but then your comment about the adoption of missionary religion seems to suggest that culture is much more mutable.
than something like the persistence of cooperation over many generations could explain,
or could be explained by.
So thinking about phenotype, so we have evidence from twin studies in Sweden and the U.S.
suggesting that about half of the variation, say, behavioral economic games is explained by genes.
Now, there's no reason to think that that actually extends to other populations.
So, for example, the kind of variation you would get in something like the ultimatum game,
which is a standard behavioral economics game,
you don't even get that kind of variation in the smallest scale human societies.
People just, you know, they always accept offers in the ultimatum game.
So it's pretty hard to make an estimate of the different contributions from genes and culture.
I think for explaining most of these things,
you want to recognize that we have an evolved psychology that allows us to acquire social norms.
And what you're really trying to figure out is what social norms people are,
mapping on to the experiments or to the situation and how those social norms vary across societies.
So I would start by trying to explain the variation in social norms across societies.
Let's give a big round of applause for Joe.
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