Decoding the Gurus - "Mini" Decoding of Matthew Goodwin & Interview with Paul Bloom
Episode Date: April 8, 2023Apologies everyone, we've been compelled to break our 'golden rule' of interspersing decoding episodes with interview episodes. However, the opportunity to talk to the well-known psychologist, Profess...or Paul Bloom. There are so many reasons to talk to Paul: first, he's a walking, talking cornucopia of knowledge across so fields in psychology that fascinate Chris and Matt. He's also a prolific author, most recently of "Psych- The Story of the Human Mind", and previously with "The Sweet Spot" about pleasure and pain, and the controversial "Against Empathy". He's also a great educator, having created a bunch of open learning resources in introductory and moral psychology. In addition to the new book "Psych", which offers a layperson's introduction to psychology he is ALSO producing a new podcast with friend of the cast and no slouch at psychology himself, Very Bad Wizard/Psychologist, Dave Pizarro. OK, that's enough reasons. There are probably more reasons, but we have provided enough. And anyway, who says we have to justify our guests and our interview to decoding schedule. We are free agents! We have agency... right?In any case, you cannot complain too much as we felt bad and have thus included in the short intro segment a "mini" (40min!) decoding of the recent appearance of academic/political pundit, Matthew Goodwin, on Triggernometry. And it's a spicy one...Next up Oprah! Coming soon...LinksPaul Bloom & Dave Pizarro's Psych PodcastPaul Bloom's New Book: Psych- The Story of the Human MindPaul's New Ted Talk on The surprising psychology behind your urge to break the rulesTriggernometry- Matt Goodwin: We're in the Post-Populist EraNew Statesman- Going native: How Matthew Goodwin became part of the right-populist movement he once sought to explain.Eliezer Yudkowsky's Tweet about bombing the WIV
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to Decoding the Gurus, the podcast where an anthropologist and a psychologist
listen to the greatest minds the world has to offer and we try to understand what they're
talking about. Our professor Matt Brown with me is Associate Professor Chris Cavanaugh.
It's the morning, we've had coffee, we are ready to decode, or more precisely,
give the introduction to one of our decodings. Hey Chris.
Well, a little bit of both, Matt.
A little bit of ying, a little bit of yang.
We are doing an interview episode, and we normally like to have a decoding episode
and then an interview episode, like, you know, break them up.
We don't like having multiple interview episodes there, because we know people are here primarily
for the decodings to get antsy
but we do have a very good guest paul bloom and we will have our next full-length decoding
oprah winfrey before very long so you won't have to wait the usual you know four months between
episodes just just a week or so so calm down yeah. It's coming. It's coming. We just want to get one episode in the editing bay and out the door before moving on to the next episode.
Because otherwise we get confused as to which intro goes with what episode.
And it all gets hard.
And the thing, though, Chris, that's good, is that at the time of recording the thing with Paul Bloom, I wasn't able to listen to the Psych podcast, which he has
done with our friend Dave Pizarro, because I don't know, it wasn't showing up in my podcast player or
something. And I since have been able to listen to it. And I know you've heard all the episodes,
and it's very good. Those guys are great. Highly recommend it.
It's very good, isn't it? It's excellent. So you endorsed that Psych Unseen,
but that endorsement has come back looking gold.
That's good.
Thanks for not embarrassing me, guys.
It checks out.
It's up to my usual standards.
Yeah.
So the reason I said yin and yang is because we actually will wedge in
a mini decoding into the introduction space.
It's unlike us, Matt, not to just launch into content directly.
We rarely have long introduction segments, but this week there was something that caught my eye.
But before we get to that tangent, the other slide tangent, I know you could talk about this for a long time,
but just want to say, Matt, that there's been a lot of hot ticks flowing around about AI,
right?
It's the new hot topic.
You know, if you were wondering what's after COVID, Ukraine, Brexit before that, you know,
is it going to be the next election? Is it going to be Trump's indictment?
Now that seemed to go with a whimper, really the predictable responses,
but not really the mass attention that you might've expected.
But AI chat GPT that is garnering a lot of attention.
And just to give an example, Alexandros Marinos, the Brett superfan who has been promoting Ivermectin, he had an interaction with Jordan Hall on Twitter, which I think exemplifies what Twitter has now become and also the whole tension ecosystem. So Alexandra said, WTF, I've made a hard shift from tweeting about
ivermectin and the pandemic, the 24-7 AI stuff, and not losing followers, dot, dot, dot.
So he's kind of verbalizing what we all know, these discourse surfers, they just,
you know, on to the next topic that gets them eyeballs, but Jordan Hall helpfully comes in to say,
Alex, look, you might be seeing things a bit too directly here.
Let's mystify.
Let's sense me.
And he says, technically, you are tweeting about our current governance capacity being
hubristically incapable of dealing with hyper objects.
Our current governance capacity being hubristically incapable of dealing with hyper-objects. Our current governance capacity being hubristically incapable
of dealing with hyper-objects.
Brilliant.
That's the most Jordan Hawley thing I've heard him say.
And I've heard him say a lot of Jordan Hawley things.
And Alexandra's response by saying, yes, of course,
but I wasn't sure if anyone would get that.
Oh, I noticed that.
that. So, you know, I know we're going to do an episode that's AI themed because Matt,
some of our lesser informed listeners are unaware, was involved in AI back before it was cool years ago in Japan. He was in Japan doing stuff with AI.
And robots, Chris, and robots.
How cool is that?
Yeah, this is true.
It was one of the also rants.
I could have been a contender and I didn't stick with it.
But it's been fun to see like Jan LeCun, who's one of the big names in AI, like all over the place,
to see like jan lecun who's one of the big names in ai like all over the place because i was citing his paper on this sort of convolutional neural network which had deep layers in it and
my colleague sayyid shiri and i coded that up in c++ for a little application and robot vision
it was all very very basic stuff primitive, especially by today's standards.
But... You're a bad guru, by the way, Matt.
You should simply assert that that was the foundations
for the entire AI revolution.
Friends, it was not.
I was one of the cast of thousands
who dangled their little toe in the AI waters
and then went away to do other things. But
it definitely did give me a healthy interest in these things. And also the neurophysiology
of cognition is another interest of mine. I teach that class. So yeah, it's true. I've been
watching the developments in AI with great interest and we won't get into it now. We'll
save it for another day. But I will say that back with this open ai's gpt 3.5
i would have used it as a bit of a slur to actually describe someone like jordan hall
as a chatbot but now with 4.0 i would say that that would be doing a disservice
because they've gotten pretty darn good.
Much less blathering, much less fantasizing,
and a whole bunch of emergent capabilities,
which is super interesting.
So we'll talk about it in detail another time.
I'm going to be spending some time with Aaron Rabinowitz
on Embracing the Void.
So yeah, watch out for that.
More and more AI hot takes inbound.
But well, you know, again,
we'll see if the in-depth analysis for the specific episode, we may cover Sam Altman, the CEO of Loopt and OpenAI or Eliezer Yudkowsky, rationalist, noted person who seemed to be suggesting maybe we should be calling a halt to everything, potentially bombing data centers and whatnot.
But you know, he also, when Rohit, another rationalist, was asking him
about his views, he clarified that he may have supported bombing the Wuhan
Institute of Virology because he's 50-50 on lab legs, so, you know, a very
reasonable person bombing a viral research center that would be a
great idea so yeah no it's true look as well as being a genuinely interesting topic in itself a
genuinely new thing that has come along the discourse around it is following the predictable
pattern of all of the flies swarming to the next shiny steaming pile of whatever.
And yeah, I mean, the psychological responses that people bias towards is kind of interesting
in itself.
On one hand, I think there's an emotional impulse in us to deny that it's got that ineffable
spark, that special something, the secret source that makes us special so people
will call it a stochastic parrot or merely auto complete um and on the other hand you have these
either doomsayers or boosters who are saying oh you know it's the super intelligence and it's
going to be the singularity and you know it's already conscious and it's yeah it's right yeah that's right it's nfts and crypto
and the singularity all all whipped into one and you know that the truth as always is somewhere in
between but yeah it's just a hard thing like because on one hand it produces such familiar
output in terms of pros right that we have a natural tendency to anthropomorphize that stuff even back in the day
the good old eliza chatbot was surprisingly convincing and it was as dumb as a rock yeah so
i think there's there's challenges in it and also in figuring out well how do you tell if something
is really smart as opposed to oh it's just sort of memorized a whole bunch of stuff and it's
smooshing it together and synthesizing things but it's that's not really smart real like no that's right we don't do that yeah we don't
just blather away just sort of mushing together the vaguely remembered things no no no no no so
yeah no it's it's sparking some good discourse and some stupid discourse and it's an interesting
thing in and of itself and i'll 100 say, that you said I've been paying attention to this course.
The person I know, apart from various AI programmers and whatnot, which are commenting
online, the person I know who's making most use of ChatGPT, both to ask annoying questions
and to make it do useful things, is you.
So, you know, I think you are in a good position
to talk about what its strengths and weaknesses
and capacities and whatnot are,
but we won't do that now.
So this is just a hint,
but none of that falls into our category
of whinge of the week, right?
I've got a good whinge of the week for you, Matt.
This is an extended one.
It's also a mini decoding.
I've wrapped a mini decoding in a whinge of the week for you, Matt. This is an extended one. It's also a mini decoding. I've wrapped
a mini decoding in a whinge of the week. So our good friends at Trigonometry,
you might not remember Matt, it's a very centristly liberal podcast. They recently
hosted this academic, Matthew Goodwin, a professor of politics at the University of Kent in the UK. Matt, you may have heard his name in discourse world because he often comes out with these
articles or polls that he's conducted saying, you know, people are in favor of Brexit.
People want more restrictive immigration, like basically arguing that it's all academics
and elites looking down on the masses and the
people aren't going to take it anymore. He's kind of like a, in a sense, like a pro-populist
academic. I think he started off supposedly in an objectively academic sense, documenting the
populist forces on the right, but he's ended up something of an
academic cheerleader for those forces in his own right. And we may cover him, but I listened
for my sins to that discussion he had with Constantine and Francis. And they're very
upset about a variety of things, but there were some things that got to me, Matt.
It reminded me of a conversation we listened to, and you discussed how Jordan Peterson seemed to be somewhat seemingly very intuitive principles advocating, you know, it's overused, but essentially advocating for the groundwork of fascism, right?
Like a kind of blood and soil appeal to real men and strong men and politics and the weak things holding stuff back and all this,
which was particularly glaring because Jordan Peterson fancies himself a scholar of the creeping authoritarianism
and then goes to Hungary and accepts an award of academic freedom
or whatever it is.
But yeah, so I got some shades of that from this conversation
and I wonder if you'll pick up on them too.
So I've got a clip that encapsulates the general thesis
that's been offered.
Here it is.
And it goes back to what i
what i talk about in the book i mean we've never really had a political class that has been
this dominated by people from particular groups i mean university graduates and political careerists
people who have only ever worked in politics and We've always had an elite in Britain, but in the old days,
the elite also typically went into politics having done other things,
different jobs, different things, running companies, being out there.
Today, I think that's less the case.
And so the political class in my book has become much more homogenous,
much more uniform, very narrow.
The range of voices in parliament, the range of voices in the media, in our culture has become much narrower.
So, Matt.
Indeed.
Never before have we had a homogenous, out-of-touch ruling class.
And I blame you for this annoying me so much because you've been talking about the revolutions podcasts endlessly, and I ended up starting to
listen to it, it's very good as you've recommended, and I'm listening to
it about the French revolution.
Now you'll be surprised to learn that there are out of touch elites and, and
even inherited monarchies that, that involve out of touch elites and even inherited monarchies that involve out of touch figures and accusations
that we are being ruled by, you know, the accusations of who is the out of touch elite
fling back and forth.
But it was surprising to learn that this is a new development that, you know, now this
era, the contemporary era is when this has just emerged.
It just emerged.
Yes.
It's never been that, uh, the university educated lawyers and such like have
dominated parliament and political things.
No, and careerists Matt.
Careerists.
Careerists.
They all had salt of the earth jobs, down at the mines, working on the fields
before they went into their lordships and their inherited peerships.
Like, that's always been the case, isn't it?
Yeah, it's interesting, isn't it?
They're totally out of step with reality,
but it's a perennial trope, isn't it?
That elites, these people in the big cities with their fancy degrees
and the corridors of power, you know, out of touch with the Volk,
with the people, the real people like you and me.
I mean, this is the populist
battle cry that's been... I mean, it's not that there's not some truth in it. Of course,
there's some truth in it. But that's been a trope for hundreds of years, ever since we had
politicians. Before then, we had, as you said, monarchies and aristocrats. That was it. I don't
think they were people of the people either no and so another part of this
analysis is essentially it wants to paint all the political parties currently vying as essentially
like a gray neoliberal blah like they've got like slight differences in emphasis. Sure, one is pro-Brexit, one is against Brexit, but you know,
fundamentally, it's all neoliberal shills, however you color it. And so this, I thought,
was an interesting way that they tie together. This is British politics focused, Matt, but I
think you'll know the figures that he mentions here. For the conversation, vividly, we said there is a unique historic opportunity here for Boris
Johnson and the Conservatives to reshape the country. And they squandered that opportunity.
They lost that opportunity. Why did they? I would suggest, as I argue in the book,
is that because Conservative elites basically are too culturally liberal and too economically
liberal to connect with the voters who are looking for somebody to reassert their values in the
system. And so all we've really had since Brexit is a continuation of what you might call the
liberal consensus, which has basically dominated British politics for much of the last 30, 40 years. Margaret Thatcher was needed. I accept the idea that Thatcher's reforms,
in my mind, at the time, they were needed. But what she did is she injected this radical
economic liberalism, deregulated the economy, liberalised finance, embraced globalization, or what Danny Roderick has
called hyper-globalization, the routine prioritization of big business, of big
corporates over the national community. And that was followed by Blair. And Blair then came along
and he injected radical cultural liberalism. He said, hey, we're going to strip away the borders
of the national community. We're going to have mass immigration. We're going to have European integration. We're going to take meaningful choice out of politics. Left and right
are essentially going to become the same thing. Brexit, populism, the realignment were really
an attempt by voters to break that consensus, to challenge that consensus. And what we can now see is that actually,
those revolts have failed to do that. And that the elite, the new graduate elite,
socially liberal, if not radically progressive, has reasserted its political and cultural power power and push back that rebellion. Yes.
So Thatcher, you know, minor things in between, but basically a complete, consistent line
up to Blair and the modern Tories, which is the hiccup of Brexit upsetting things in the
way.
But now we're all back on the neoliberal train.
How does that sound to you
matt you think there's any meaningful differences between thatcherite politics and new labor or
you know pretty much the same game i feel like it's a leading question i also feel like you're
you're better qualified to comment on former British PMs than me.
But before you do, I'll just point out an interesting thing, which is, so I guess this,
I'm trying to understand where the, what are they called?
The trigonometry guys and that land politically.
And that's actually quite helpful because it spelled it out.
And you explained it to me a bit before the other day, which is that they don't like economic
liberalism and also social liberalism.
Like what they like is a more authoritarian type approach to the economy. So you have like, you
know, not perhaps a command economy, but one that is more sort of aligned with the national interests
and things like that. You know, things like stopping jobs from going abroad and building
your own factories here because it's important we build chips or something like that and then also this social conservatism
like really you know traditional family values getting back to your traditional cultural roots
and well yeah it i mean it's interesting it's a point of view. We can say that, but it isn't.
It's not liberal.
It's not liberal, right? Not even in the classical liberal sense, is it? It's something else historically has appealed to those sorts of ideas.
So they spell out the differences where Johnson betrayed the promise that he offered the people.
And here's Goodwin spelling that out.
If you're going to deliver Brexit, if you're going to reform immigration, if you're going to push back against the woke, we're going to give you a chance.
And what happened? Johnson basically let them down.
Johnson did the reverse on a lot of that stuff. I mean, one of the untold stories about British politics today, which I don't think many people out there have yet realised,
is the extent to which Boris Johnson and the Conservatives liberalised the immigration system
in Britain to the point that we now have 504,000 as a net migration um level the highest we've we've ever had uh just
to make the point they promised that it would go down david cameron promised to the tens of
thousands yeah so what's happened is british conservatives boris johnson dominic cummings
and others have been gaslighting the british people because what they've been saying is we're
going to control immigration we're going to control immigration,
we're going to lower immigration.
And then when they ended up in power,
they said, well, actually, we didn't mean lower,
we just meant we're going to give you control.
So there, you hear, right,
the motifs, the portrayal of the common people by an elite which posed as delivering
what the people wanted.
And what do the people want?
They want mass reductions to the rate of immigration.
They want anti-cosmopolitan policies.
They want local jobs for local people.
And it's his reading of that as well, Matt, that Johnson and the conservatives,
like essentially the way he describes it is, you know, they're just really pro
immigration.
That's amazing given the current debates in UK politics around conservative efforts
to restrict immigration.
The problem is that they actually have succeeded in lowering immigration from the EU.
But the rates are high because, I don't know if you noticed, Matt, there's been a war on
and there's been a pandemic which has started to ebb.
So people are traveling and there is a high immigration rate this year, but it's due to a whole bunch of factors.
And overall, Britain's immigration is in line with other countries in Europe of similar sizes.
when you take into account emigration and so on and so forth, it's not this huge influx of people that are completely changing the fabric of Britain. It's living in a modern interconnected
world. Yeah, Chris, it really reminds me a lot of our take on Jordan Peterson, which is it's
impossible to listen to all the stuff he says
and not get the sense that he's this accidental fascist. He certainly has no idea. He's got
zero self-awareness that he has sympathies that lie in that direction. And that would be absolutely
true of the people that we're just listening to there. But if you just look at the themes,
that we're just listening to there. But if you just look at the themes, the betrayal of the elites who've tricked the common people into policies that they don't want, that xenophobia,
traditional family values, getting back to the fabric that holds our nation together,
even getting that anti-economic liberal idea of being against free trade and wanting to get big
business and stuff
sort of more under the thumb so it's in the service of the people rather than taking advantage of
them. I mean, these are all the things that was attractive about the Nazi party. I mean,
in general, people did not vote for them because they thought, hey, let's have a world war
and do the Holocaust. That wasn't why they voted for them because of these kinds of arguments.
You know, you talked about the lack of self-awareness.
So what Goodwin has suggested to this branch
is national conservatives.
Right.
So someone else used a similar terminology once.
But here's him talking about what the features of that would be.
Just listen to see if you can pick up on any common motifs.
Some conservatives today have grasped the fact that they cannot simply offer an anti-state, low-tax, pro-business message that the world has moved on.
pro-business message that the world has moved on. And so national conservatives are saying the time is now here to make the case for an active state that can intervene in the economy
to make things fairer, that is sceptical of business, especially when business becomes
political, especially when business starts to promote values that are seen to be anti-conservative,
especially when business starts to promote values that are seen to be anti-conservative,
and which is much more realistic about globalisation and free trade. I mean,
this is one of the things I talk about in the book is how basically Thatcherites became so obsessed with free trade and globalisation that they lost sight of the
damage it was doing in communities. I mean, globalisation wasn't just negative for economic
reasons. I mean, the evidence is pretty clear. It smashed communities in areas in northern England
that were subjected to higher imports from China or Eastern Europe. The result was not just lower
wages, was not just a lower share of the national income going to those areas. It was also weaker relationships, higher rates of
family breakdown, higher rates of alcoholism, drug addiction, people being pushed onto welfare
benefits. Now, conservatives, I thought, care about community, care about family. But too often,
I meet conservatives who routinely prioritize the market and globalization and free trade over these issues around community and family.
Yes.
Yeah.
So what you need now is a national conservative government that, you know, could intervene and take control of economics and, you know, not in a heavy-handed way, but just kind of prioritize it towards the national interests.
And that would promote, you know, healthy, traditional family
values and communities, national
communities and values. You know, you could braid people's hair, you could
practice fitness, you know, all these traditional values.
No warning.
Yeah, it's catched in some nice language about caring about communities and stuff.
But yeah, it's the same basic idea.
It's also a concern with morality, moral behavior, family-oriented behavior, behavior that conforms
with the community and supports and makes the social fabric of the nation stronger.
Yeah, it's interesting, isn't it?
I wonder if, like, the trigonometry people certainly don't know what they're talking
about.
Like, I'm sure they think of themselves as some kind of classical, true liberal, where
this is the exact opposite of that.
Well, you might be confused, Matt.
Sorry, I just, Constantine has a point where he addresses this.
So just in case you were getting confused, you know, from their lack of pushback on any
of this.
Can we come back to the economics of this?
Because, I mean, as you know, I'm not conservative, but on the economic side of it, I'm always
very, very persuaded by small state as an idea.
Because my concern is, and we've seen it with, you know, we're seeing these lockdown files
coming out. Yeah. The bigger the government, the more the, you know, seen it with, you know, we're seeing these lockdown files coming out.
The bigger the government, the more the, you know,
the government can, you know, they'll give you money,
but they're also going to tell you what to do a lot.
And I really don't want that as much as it can be avoided.
So just to be clear, Constantine's not conservative, Matt.
So you might have, you know, you might have got the wrong impression.
He's a small state guy.
He's the classical liberal guys, you know, you might've got the wrong impression. He's a small state guy. He's the classical liberal guys, you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think he's still just figuring it out.
He's figuring it all out.
On first principles.
Look, so the other point that you mentioned was in terms of the response,
there's also Francis response, the other host, the lesser mentioned hosts of Trigonometry.
And I think it's worth getting to how he responds to this tale of woe of
the people not being represented.
But just one more point, Matt, because Nigel Farage, given that he is
championing these kinds of things like economic isolationist policies and a strong anti-immigration
message. Why wasn't he able to seize the moment, win the general election or that kind of thing?
Well, Matt, we had Nigel Farage sitting in that very seat a few weeks back, and he actually said
the reason that populism, not that it failed, but it didn't achieve what it could have achieved,
that populism, not that it failed, but it didn't achieve what it could have achieved,
and in particular UKIP, was because of the two-party system, which is impossible to break.
Do you think part of the reason that populism founded is because of that? And if you look at our European friends, they all tend to have a proportional representation.
That's part of the story. And I've spent a long time following Farage's movement. And I've written about it. One of the first books that I did was about it. And, you know, the European Parliament elections under a proportional system with a springboard that he shrewdly used in 1999 to get visibility.
And then one of the ironies of Brexit is that a moment that was supposed to lead to the reform of our politics made our politics more elitist because it took away the European Parliament election.
So the only way you can change a system now is through first-past-the-post general elections, which is an impossible thing to do.
So just a couple of motifs I want to highlight.
First of all, there's the uncritical acceptance of his version of why he wasn't able to succeed. It's because of the party system. Otherwise, the will of the people would
sweep him and others like him into the halls of power. That couldn't be a self-serving
framing of things from a populist who is- It's not that popular.
Yeah. It couldn't be that.
No, it's all to do with the two-party system.
Secondly, this emphasis on the will of the people,
it's really selective
because in 2011 in the UK,
part of a coalition government,
this thing which apparently never happens in the UK,
it did happen.
The Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats formed a coalition government.
Part of that agreement was that the Conservatives would hold a referendum on an alternative voting system,
a change to the voting system which would not make it first past the post.
It would be proportional.
Now, you might notice that the UK doesn't have that system. So that referendum, Matt, the landslide will of the people was expressed with a 70% vote
against 68.2 or something like that.
But anyway, close to 70% vote against changing the voting system.
So presumably, given that Brexit was 52% of the vote in the referendum, and that was the
clear will of the people, this 70% should be a landslide indication that the people are very happy with first-past-the-post
voting systems.
But no, it seems like the will of the people only matters if it leads to right-wing
populists getting more power.
And similarly, all of the indicators are that Labour are going to sweep the power in the next election.
And this is a problem for that narrative, right?
Because why are people going to elect a liberal government if what they really want is a much harder right-wing government?
So here's why that square is circled.
You ask voters, who do you want to be prime minister? Keir Starmer is ahead of Rishi Sunak.
Who do you want to manage the economy? Labour's ahead of Conservatives. Who do you want to manage
immigration? Labour's ahead of Conservatives. Who do you want to manage Brexit? Labour's ahead
of Conservatives. But here's the thing, who's ahead of all of them? None of them. None of the
above. I mean, the level of disillusionment out there is palpable. You see it, right?
We feel it.
The reservoir of disillusionment, the fact that everybody is sort of just out there saying, none of these people really represent me. None of these people speak for me, speak for my values, represent my voice.
Except for Nigel Farage, of course, but yeah.
But people are unaccountably not voting for people like that. represent my voice. Except for Nigel Farage, of course, but yeah.
But people are unaccountably not voting for people like that.
Yeah, no, it's an interesting squaring of the circle, isn't it?
Like these people have always existed, right?
Like there's always fringe parties.
There's always discontent with the centre parties.
Everyone hates politicians.
Yeah, and we did have a populist movement, right? They're talking about real
dynamics. Yeah. Yeah. And we have them in Australia too. Every 10 years or so, you have this wave of
disillusionment with the major parties. The fringe parties get a bit more votes on the left sometimes
as well as the right. And people tend to move back to the center parties. But yeah, I mean, ultimately, the centre parties are the centre parties because they are the parties that people want. That's why they vote
for them. It's odd to me that the trigonometry guys don't recognise what it is that they are.
Like, the self-presentation is that they are like a median person, like a man in the street.
They represent common sense kind of views, and they set themselves up against these elite ivory towers and fancy ideological type people. But the people
that are the people in the street, the typical average median type person, are voting for the
major parties. Whereas these guys are advocating for what is a fringe view. A fringe view.
I find it so frustrating when the politician that you feel most affinity with is Nigel Farage.
And the guys that get you exercised are Lawrence Fox.
And there's a part where Goodwin and Constantino are talking about how often they bump into each other.
And they're often reading each other's substacks
and they find each other so insightful.
Welcome to Trigonometry.
Thank you for having me.
Welcome back.
We have had you on the show a lot.
This is my third time.
Is it?
Yeah.
Yeah, it feels like more because we really,
you always provide fantastic commentary on British and other politics.
Yeah.
And we always bump into each other at various events.
That we do.
It's actually your fourth time, Matt.
Sorry. Maybe the one in the aftermath of the 2019 election was a bit of a blur,
so maybe I forgot that one.
Yeah, so we've done a few. But my point is, we're always really interested to hear
your take on things. In addition to your books, you have a fantastic sub stack that I read
religiously, actually.
I read yours too.
Thank you.
I wonder, is it because they perhaps share some ideological presuppositions and interest?
You know, it's interesting the lack of awareness that's on display, but the cherry on the cake.
So after all this talk about, you know, politicians not delivering, the system being rigged,
After all this talk about politicians not delivering, the system being rigged,
this is what Oliver says about what can be done, poses this question to Goodwin. You won't meet many mainstream US Republicans today who are advocating a Reagan-type view
of the world. Conservatism is changing in big ways, in important ways. I know you had
Yoram Hazoni on the show,
and he's often made that very argument.
Matt, aren't we really just talking about the political system
no longer being fit for purpose?
If it doesn't represent the people that it should,
then quite frankly, what's the point?
What's the point, Matt?
What's the point of the political system then?
Should we just chuck it in the bin?
I'm wondering what is the alternative system?
If only someone in the past hundred odd years, 50, 60 years had fought or
there'd been people who had tried that, you know, that had said the people are
not represented, I, the people are not represented.
I, the strong anti-immigration pro-nationalist person, represent the true will of the people.
I can't be bothered with your representative democracies. If only that had been tried and we could look back at history and see how it went.
Yeah, I mean, the thing is clear that these guys who are speaking for the voice of the common
people, like all of the people that have claimed to do so all through history, from flashback to
the Jacobins and our episode with the sovereign nations type thing, like they've always been
this kind of chattering class. They've always never tilled the fields or worked at a factory or whatever.
They've always been people like this these days in the info sphere, in the discourse land,
writing books, having podcasts, doing all this shit. They always claim to be speaking
for the common man. And really what they're trying to do is just get themselves into power. I mean,
it's the same old thing, isn't it?
So funny.
Well, you know, so people, people will always take issue with this kind of thing.
They'll say, you know, don't draw, you shouldn't be comparing everyone to
proto-fascists or that kind of thing.
But it's just the rhetorical parallels are so clear in this material and
less, it got even, even you know even more sinister and goodwin just froze in this bit
towards the end of the interview it's going to be cool to kind of call some of this stuff out and
also i think the evidence is going to undermine it you know we are on the cusp of developments
with genetic coding um and science that are going to be complete game changers in how we understand health, medicine,
life expectancy, all of that stuff. So the idea that there are not inherent differences
between groups is just going to be completely unsustainable. I mean, it already is,
if you look at the evidence, but over the next five to 10 years, it's just going to look
utterly ridiculous as a lot of this research and evidence comes through why why just just popping that in that's
that's a nice stinger uh given the context of that discussion what prompted you to throw that one in
yeah yeah even the bit where he's talking about health outcomes, right?
Like you think that he's talking about, you know,
genetic developments and personalized health,
and then he's like, and of course, group differences.
Are going to be undeniable.
What? Like where was that flu in?
So we're going to have right-wing populist movements
that take greater control over the economy
to orientate it towards state interests.
We need to stop immigration, obviously.
That's part of it.
And the genetic evidence is going to come out,
which is going to show...
Group differences.
Who can say?
That will look so ridiculous in the glorious future of our nation.
So, yeah, that was just, I was like, why?
Oh, my God, that smells so off.
That whole conversation, when you put all those pieces together it's yeah it has a lot
of it about you know the anti-woke stuff to get into diversity statements and all that and we
could look at that whole side of it but i know we've spent a significant portion on it but just
it was so striking to me one the superficial and ahistorical nature of the political analysis.
There's components of it which, yes, are correct, like talking about these ebbs and flows and
support for populist figures and various dynamics. But fundamentally, it's presented as something
of a dispassionate scholarly examination of that phenomenon. But Goodwin's preference is so clear, so close to the surface,
that you have to be wearing blinders not to see it.
And the Trigonometry fellows, I believe, have just the blinders.
Even to the extent that there's supposed to be people
that are all worried about the creeping authoritarianism of the state.
And then Oliver, sorry sorry his name is francis i've been calling them all of them so anyway francis
he goes so far as to say what's the point of the democratic elections and that kind of thing so
yeah yeah well that was ugly um i didn't like that but it was a good
i was on topic it was a good whinge of the week um you heard them whinging about why us whinging
about them yeah double whinge good that triple whinge the quadruple whinge even but um yeah
so now we are going to move to somebody who who doesn't whinge at all during the conversation.
No, no, actually he didn't.
He's not like us.
He doesn't have that sort of bitter, sour streak.
Something about him.
Well, you know, it might be there.
It's just like he's good at hiding it.
I think that's the way to do it.
Yeah, everyone has it, Matt.
So yeah, Paul Bloom, esteemed psychologist,
guest that we really should have had on earlier
and very entertaining person to talk to.
We now pass you to Matt and Chris interacting with Paul.
Okay, so first off, it's just me at the minute. Matt will emerge from the ether
shortly as he's wont to do, running late today, but I can't blame him because he's doing an errand
for me. But with me is eminent psychologist, Paul Bloom. Paul, in case you didn't know,
you are Professor Emeritus of Psychology and Cognitive
Science at Yale University and the Professor of Psychology at the University of Toronto. You
might have to explain how that due location ability works. It's like you have two professors
here. Yeah, the one from Toronto, the mild Mount Canadian and the firebrand American.
So that's exactly I'm I'm totally thrilled to be on.
I'm a big fan of the podcast like we were talking about before.
I would have hoped to come on as a guru with his right to response.
But but I'm happy to come on just under whatever role.
You know, it has happened before.
Robert Wright was on as an interview person, and then
we covered him as a guru. So it doesn't prevent it. It's not impossible. That's a hugely exciting
possibility. No, I don't envy the guru life. Yeah, I do have to say as well, Paul, especially
while Matt is not here to stop me from gushing,
I have been a longtime consumer of your work just through being involved in psychology
and also interested in developmental psychology.
And your videos of you in the research group and your wife, I believe as well, are a frequent
thing on my courses about moral
psychology.
So your MOOC as well, the Coursera course, I teach a moral psychology course in a university
in Japan, and I needed to bone up on moral psychology quite efficiently.
So you and David Pizarro were two sources that I mainlined and kind of
consumed your entire book in a matter of like two or three weeks. So it was extremely good. I highly
recommend it to anybody interested in it. So yeah, I'm a fan as well, I can say.
It really means a lot. We have a lot of similar interests not just in sort of the ecology of uh of social
media and the people and gurus and the like but also in the cognitive science of religion where
yes an area we we both you more than me but i've i've done a little bit in the cognitive science
of religion we've been to the same conferences we know the same people yeah and i actually think
i'd probably like to talk to you about some of the work that you did about people enjoying unpleasant things which is an interest of mine this podcast and in some respects it's it's really
you enjoying something uh unpleasant yeah yeah not this interview
you're getting a lot out of your system before your co-host comes in yeah Matt usually keeps
me under control from these kind of things but he he's not here, so it can happen. But another reason is, actually, it's quite surprising we haven't had you on already, because you're kind of an obvious guest, you know, not just because of your guru nature, but because there are so many overlaps in interest, but in particular, just recently, there's only three episodes currently released, but you and former guest Dave Pizarro, one half of the Very Bad
Wizards, are in the process of releasing a podcast series called Psych, which is like kind of an
introductory course in psychology, but in podcast format. Is that an accurate description?
psychology, but in podcast format. Is that an accurate description?
That's exactly an accurate description. David Pizarro and I have been friends for a long time.
He was a graduate student at Yale when I was at Yale. And sometimes I like to brag that he was my student, which is not technically true, but we could pretend. We wrote a paper together
when we were there and we remained close friends. And then i just finished off this book that came out uh you know a
few weeks ago psych and um and it's supposed to be an entertaining and accessible and interesting
overview of the whole field of psychology and david suggested why don't we do a podcast on it
where the book has 15 chapters we'll have 16 episodes including an introductory episode
and for each one we'll talk about what's
what's uh about the contents of the chapter so we already uh talked about the brain and
consciousness coming out uh on monday will be uh freud then skinner and um and we had a great time
david is is a a podcast veteran he's one of the funniest people and smartest people I know.
And so we just have a really good discussion and it's a lot of fun.
Yeah, I have to say again to anybody listening
that I'm a fan of you and Dave
and together discussing psychology is,
you know, it's a genuine pleasure.
And I think that there's a lot of talk
that's kind of floats around the guru's sphere about
alternative ways to get a university education or like the Peterson is Jordan Peterson and
family are currently preparing the Peterson Academy.
And I'm promising that it will provide, you know, an alternative to the indoctrination
that we all go through in mainstream academia. But I have consistently been responding to those things saying,
MOOCs exist.
Like you can audit a book right now for free on almost any topic.
And they're really good.
There are very, very good courses out there.
You're one of morality I mentioned.
But I also think this podcast that you and Dave are putting out, it is a way for people, you know, obviously, if you take like a full introductory course, I genuinely think it would give you a good
overview of the field. Judging from the first three, it could go off the rails.
Yeah, you want to lead with your best and then who knows what's going to happen. By the time we get
to memory and social psychology, we'll just be all spent and spend time just making jokes and
complaining about each other. But we hope to keep up the energy.
It's meant as a possible companion of my book.
And I think if you read the book and you listen to the podcast,
you would definitely have easily the equivalent of an intro psych course.
But it's also meant people who don't want to buy the book,
they just want to listen to for free.
Just two guys talking about things. And as we talk about it, want to listen to for free you know just two guys talking about
things and as we talk about it we try to sort of you know we're going to do freud and we say you
know here's freud's theory we we talk about him back and forth we say what we think he got right
we say what i think he got wrong we we try our best to mark off here's the sort of standard view
in psychology here's our opinion and um and i don't know i i gotta say i i can't
put myself in the shoes of somebody who's never heard of psychology jumping on us but we had a
great time doing it yeah and matt has just emerged from the ether his important mission posting
various documents so welcome matt thanks chris hi pa. Good to see you. Hey, Matt. Nice to meet you.
Just to catch you up, I've started talking about the podcast and book Psych that he's released,
and also his previous Morality of Everyday Life. Is that it? Or I can't remember the title of the
course. So I have two Coursera courses. One is just Intro Psych, which is yet another way to
learn Intro Psych for me.
Another one is called Moralities of Everyday Life.
Well, you will discover, Paul, that Matt has a problem that he cannot sit still.
So he roams around the mic, constantly changing.
For audio listeners, it's kind of like, you know, they've got Dolby surround sound where
he'll be in your left ear one minute and then he moves over to your right.
So yeah, that's not just for you. He does that for everyone. sound where he'll be in your left ear one minute and then he moves over to your right so yeah
that's not just for you he does that for everyone that's a podcast experience that is just hard to
be it's not your competition doesn't don't offer you that yeah yeah well i paul i do have a follow
up about that like so you were early into the MOOC space, right? Your course, I remember being
one of the early ones. And it's clear, like there's a lot of effort put into the course in
terms of the structure, in terms of like the different options that the students have. And
then this, with this book, you have a limited podcast series, which is also an unusual thing for people to do, right?
So are you just like a cutting edge techno wizard?
Why are you always involved in these things?
Well, no, I'm technologically deeply incompetent.
The MOOC was set up by my bettors at Yale who were setting up a program,
and then they encouraged me to be part of it.
And, you know, you do these things. And I would have thought that most of the response to what I do
would be based on my research and my whatever discoveries I make.
It's a damn MOOC.
I still must get, you know, several emails a week from this thing which has been, you know,
out of service for years and years ago, just asking me questions about psychology
and often telling me that they appreciate it. know out of service for you know years and years ago just ask me questions about psychology and
often telling me that they appreciate it and in some way it's something i'm very proud of because
it's not like i don't think many college students in the states or canada or europe listen to it
but i get a huge response from china from africa from the middle east they're the ones taking it
maybe because there isn't there aren't you know equivalent resources being offered and it's a lot of fun as for the podcast this is all david pizarro's uh
motivation and and i i am the last man in north america to get a podcast everyone else has a
podcast there was there was a point where i thought you were going to become a permanent
co-host with sam you were like on a bunch of his podcasts in a row.
We had something going, and then a little thing called COVID started.
And then Sam decided he wanted to spend some time with people who knew about COVID.
And we remained friends.
I'm actually going to be talking to him in a couple of weeks.
But yeah, we did this sort of gig for a while, which was a lot of fun.
Yeah. And then other things happened. For my own vote, you know, I enjoy Sam's content sometimes
more so than other times, but when you were there, it was a little bit like having someone
who would occasionally say the thing I wanted. Someone to say, well, you know, but it's that,
the thing i wanted someone to say well you know but it's not it couldn't be like that i was like yes yes so uh i vote for you to return uh well thank you thank you i've always had fun talking
to sam if he ever wants me back as as a permanent co-host i'm in so so what's the aim with the psych
podcast because i tried to listen to it actually but it must be too new my podcast player wasn't
happy downloading it.
Is it like an educational experience that sort of mirrors the book or complements the book?
Or is it just inspired by the book?
It's meant to be a companion to the book.
So the book has 15 chapters, each going over some aspects of psychology.
And we have 15 episodes planned each.
In some way, you don't have to read a book to do the podcast meant to
be entirely independent so um so we talk about uh about uh mental illness and skinner freud memory
language development each time we go and we talk about it so so david's also an intro site
constructor at cornell and we both have experience teaching and so what we do is we kind of lay you
know who's this guy freud what was he saying and what do we think of experience teaching. And so what we do is we kind of lay, you know, who's this guy, Freud? What was he saying? And what do we think of him now?
Most of the time we agree on things. Sometimes we disagree. Sometimes we disagree with the field,
but it's meant for somebody who has no real knowledge of psychology to just listen to
episodes and then get a sense in some way as if you're taking a course. And at the end of it,
they know something about the field psychology and maybe more importantly know something about the mind yeah
you know to the extent to the extent that that there are discoveries that our field has come up
we try to tell them about about them matt this reminds me that you know off air and matt and i
were talking because we both teach courses and stuff about the kind of possibility to help
incorporate into tutorials
what you're discussing about like because you know listening to two people talk about an issue
when they both have you know expertise or interest in it usually it can be illuminating because they
raise points of objection or they you know can bounce off each other and it's more engaging and
matt you were talking about wouldn't this be a good way, you know, if you need to explain a paper, if you're talking to a colleague, because sometimes
it's hard to listen to responses from students. But it sounds like, you know, Paul, what you're
describing, and it's certainly my sense from listening to you and Dave talk, and I think it's
just in podcasts in general, people like listening to people have conversations about topics and, you know,
do so and have fun. But when it's people with expertise discussing their areas of expertise,
it gives you like a genuine fly on the wall experience. I think of being in like a lab
discussion or just two psychologists discussing psychology like yeah i think
there's something to that dynamic which is very appealing and probably speaks to a whole bunch of
stuff i totally agree i i like podcasts and i like podcasts about things i don't know much about
and the format i like isn't sometimes you have these things where it's one person monologuing or
getting asked questions having two people who are roughly roughly on the same page maybe not perfectly in sync just talk about
something you know well is is when properly done it's just exhilarating yeah yeah i've been thinking
about this a lot paul because um my university it's a regional university a lot of our teaching
happens a lot of the students are attending online and even more of them listen to the recording and so we're in this weird situation where the
tutorial type workshop setups is is set up kind of for the very few students that are actually
attending live in front of me um and i'm in the awkward position of being up there by myself
monologuing and trying to instigate student interactions and it just struck me because
we're doing the podcast with chris that it's just so much easier when you have somebody else with
you and you can go backwards and forth and i and i i feel like yeah i'd like to take this further
i guess merge podcasting with normal teaching yeah or or have you ever had the chance to do a seminar with a friend or something where you're just doing it and it mingles with the students, but the two of you are going back and forth?
Yeah, and via the tag teaming, one of you gets the chance to just rest and think about what you're going to say next.
And it ends up being just better in so many ways.
what are you going to say next?
And it ends up being just better in so many ways.
What Ma is saying is he wants to bring me into all aspects of his life,
professional, at the dinner table,
having a sidekick frontcaster constantly there. It's like the right hemisphere and the left hemisphere.
I'm suddenly suggesting to Paul that he adopts me as his partner, Chris.
That's what I'm doing here.
You're already in too many aspects of my life, Chris.
We're already in too deep.
This is probably true.
But, you know, Paul has already
broke up one podcast marriage with Tamler.
No, I did not.
The rumors are entirely false.
They had an open podcast relationship.
I saw someone online commenting on Tamler saying that he wishes you well.
This is true compersion at last.
Yes.
Tamler is very happy seeing David take his pleasure from another co-podcaster.
Yes, he came on here without Tamler initially as well.
He had to coax him you know tamler's like a
kind of like a groundhog he sniffs the air and then when dave shows him it's okay he'll
come try to you have to you know coax him out but but enough tamler she had for a while so
paul there's literally a whole bunch of topics that I'd be interested to talk to you about.
But the one that I mentioned, Matt, before you were here was that, Paul, I seen a talk
that you gave at a conference, which was very entertaining about the paradox of people seeking
out painful experiences and enjoying it.
And this is like a research interest of mine, mainly for the area of like
painful rituals or, or people engaging in like painful martial arts ceremonies or these kind of
things. And I do have a way to tie it to the gurus, but I'm just curious initially, like your
big picture takeaways from looking at the paradoxical nature of pain. Is everybody like secretly a masochist or is there something else
at play? Yeah, this was the focus of my last book, The Sweet Spot. And at this conference we were at
in Sicily, I was trying out the ideas, I think for the first time, which was a lot of fun.
I do think we seek out pain and struggle and effort and misery into right doses, all of us in both
religious and non-religious contexts. I don't think there's going to be a single story behind
it. So some of it, and this will be ideas familiar to both of you, some of it I think is signaling.
You might want to stick needles through your body or something to show others how tough you are or
how pious you are. Some of it has a sort of, I'm cautious here,
but a kind of group selectionist idea,
which is that communities of people who suffer together
kind of stick together.
And there's a real power to that,
everything from a fraternity to a cult.
I think that there's a pleasure sometimes to be taken in pain
from the sort of contrast.
You eat really spicy
curry and then you wash it down with some cool beer and it's just transcendent. But mostly,
I try to tie suffering and effort and struggle to meaning. And I try to argue that, you know,
there's many things we want out of life. And one thing we want is to have meaningful,
rich lives. And we recognize that that involves struggle and difficulty, sometimes real physical pain. I know guys who decide,
oh, there's a marathon coming up. I'm just going to run it. And then they run it and it's just fine
because they're in such great shape. But for them, it's not going to be that satisfying.
When I ran a marathon, I was in terrible shape and it took me months and months of training.
It was agony. And because of that, many years later, I'm talking about it to you too, because it was
really meaningful to me.
And I think those are some of the stories behind suffering.
Yeah, that resonates a lot because I've done a bit of work on similar things and about
people enduring rites of initiation, but also just traumatic experiences,
which they then reflect on, right?
And some people end up with post-traumatic stress disorder
or kind of lingering mental issues around trauma,
but other people reframe it as like the catalyst for growth
that they were able to get through, whatever it was.
And in the gurus that we cover,
one of the things that we've noticed as a recurrent theme and it probably is gurus that lean a bit more towards the heterodox or right
side but they'll often be referencing a cancellation right a public public trauma that they've gone
through and brett weinstein has has discussed this like explicitly where he says
that once you see that somebody else has undergone the public trial by fire and they've come through
the other side one you can trust them so like it's automatically a kind of signaling thing but also
just that there's an empathy because you both have experienced the same thing and uh i've i've been critical of
sam in this direction because i suggested his experiences in those regard might make him
overly sympathetic to any figure who you know has gone through a kind of public denunciation
but i i'm wondering do you think that stretching things, you know, a cancellation is not necessarily the kind of trauma that people are usually talking about when they're talking about bonding?
That's super interesting.
The sort of suffering I'm most interested in, I've done the most thinking about, is voluntary suffering.
And these are cases you're talking about involuntary suffering, where really bad things happen to you.
And I guess I'll say two things.
One thing is that I think being canceled in a strong sense is horrible. It's social death.
I think if you really ask people, would you want to have your friends, your family reject you,
be roundly mocked by thousands of strangers public humiliation or would you rather
lose an arm i think people would prefer to lose the arm i think i think that i think that that
and and if and those who don't actually may not may not be fully appreciating what our social
pain feels like this is why you know when i'm on social media i try to my little bit and not and
not pounce on people even if they seem deserving because whatever taste I've had of it, I know it is worse than
you may think. And so that I agree with, I agree with people who say, you know, how awful it is,
whether it's deserved or undeserved is a separate question. There's all sorts of cases where people
might, you know, cry on being canceled when they're just undergoing perfectly normal criticism but the full heavy
duty stuff is is the worst the second thing i'd say i'll push it back to you to tell what you
think i think that this stuff is often does not make you a better person on the other side
a lot of it messes you up i think something post-traumatic growth maybe a little bit of a
myth a story we tell ourselves. And often people come
out, this cancellation, come out fairly damaged and damaged and not better people in a lot of
ways. I have a lot of respect for people who go through this, and I know a few, and they come out
and they're generous and they're kind and they're warm and they're loving and their politics hasn't
gone crazy and they're not simmering with rage but i know a few people one or two personally
who have been really messed up by this yeah i i agree with you there paul i think um if i cast
my mind back to my life and the really dysphoric experiences are not really associated with
physical suffering of various kinds um or even sort of internal emotional stuff but it's more
to do with those social emotions and you know chris and i from catholic backgrounds and you know
shame is an important part of what motivates us uh and and guilt and and obviously ostracism is
one of the worst things you can have but i, you were saying earlier that suffering is kind of an important part of pleasure,
in a way, if you want it for happiness.
And that made me think of how, like, you know, if you were just paradoxically, if you're
just focused on maximizing your comfort and your pleasure, then you would never get off
the couch.
You would be fed grapes or eating chocolates or something, taking the least path of resistance.
But then I compare that to someone like my dad, for instance, who until very recently
was a very keen sailor.
He sailed around Australia and took many months.
And I was with him for a little while of that.
And it's really unpleasant.
Like, it's really boring.
It's really hard.
In many ways, it's unpleasant.
But for him, probably he was suffering too.
But you could tell that that suffering that made the adventure made the good parts really good.
And it was an intrinsic part of the whole experience.
That's right.
And that's a deep truth.
It's a truth some people don't know.
Some people, mainly adolescents, think the good life is you know is
netflix and and pot and casual sex and there's a lot to be said for that but it does not make a
life and and what you need is is struggle and difficulty but the distinction i'm i really push
for is there's a difference chosen and unchosen you know your dad went through a lot
if this was against his will you know he's taken aboard as a prisoner or something against his will
it would not be positive yeah we feel hopeless and and and it's true too for social suffering
so sometimes people choose loneliness they choose estrangement maybe as a test maybe as a rite of passage and that that
can make you a better person it's when you know it's when it happens against your will that i
think does not tend to have good effects i have a possible kind of example that i think speaks
to that but it might be like a kind of specific subcure So like one of the things I'm thinking about is that the guru figures occasionally position
as they did choose the cancellation, right?
They could have chosen to be silent,
but they had the strength of will to stand up
and they are, you know, the man in the arena
that is refusing to salute or that kind of thing.
So I think whether or not that is an accurate representation
of what they did, I think it is true that a lot of them
are the types that don't mind everybody else looking at them
and saying, you're wrong.
That's one thing that would be interesting to talk about.
And the other is I'm thinking about like from my background
in Belffast and growing up
in the troubles i know a lot of people a lot of friends a lot of family that had various
very bad experiences during the troubles people whose followers were executed or had family
members shot or um a whole you know a whole host of of negative experiences that they went through.
And I'm not saying that everybody comes out of that feeling
like their life is much better, that they underwent that.
But there is an element that nobody chose that.
It was just the situation of being born there.
But people do have a certain pride of having endured it and
you know they i mean including me would be like oh whenever people are telling me sometimes about
things i'm comparing it to the context of you know my childhood and then feel like, and related to that, when I meet
other people from Belfast who went through the same childhood, even if we're very different in
a whole bunch of different ways, there's kind of a feeling that, okay, but you understand what that,
you know, what that particular period of struggle was like. So yeah, I'm curious what you think
about like those. I think that's i think
that's a good qualification so we're talking now about unchosen suffering the stuff that you know
you you didn't sign up for but you get and i think you're right that it comes in different flavors
and um i think it was i forget her name uh soul netter so she wrote a book called a paradise built in hell and it was about group traumas and there's some sort of suffering that you experience if you
experience that as a group you could actually take something positive away from it it makes
it increases solidarity it increases uh connection empathy a sort of connectedness
it's probably not good for you probably in the end you know
having watching your father being shot isn't you better off without it but there are some of these
things like i don't know um for americans 9-11 where it was you know for many of a period of
great meaning and significance even though they were they were afraid they suffered
various deprivations uh some people look back on natural disasters typhoons hurricanes uh droughts
and stuff with great and having great significance and i but i think for those the ingredient you
have to have is you have to sort of face it together as a group. It's like a case we're talking about, the Troubles,
would be London during the Blitz,
where from what I've heard, everybody expected mass trauma,
and there was like none of it.
People were just totally intact
because they stood it together for a just cause.
Now you compare it to somebody who is bullied,
whose child dies, who's, you you know there's all sorts of bad things
that happen you don't face as a group and i think those enact the worst the worst costs
yeah that definitely gels with me um we have many years ago now but in this area we were hit by
tornadoes actually very rare in australia to get tornadoes and floods you name it and and we were cut off in our little town here by the coast for
almost a week with with no power and little food frankly it was no problem really in real practical
terms but it was extremely disruptive and uncomfortable um our kids look back on that
and things we were doing like you know lighting the candles and cooking outside on a little
i actually made a fire and stuff and like they
loved it i mean it was a bit uncomfortable a bit difficult but yeah it was a good experience
for us so that's the kind of mild i guess calamity and and let me just jump jesse somebody's gonna
hear this and wonder about covid and covid's very funny because covid is an intermediate case
on the one hand i was like in lockdown and i said to myself oh my god just about
everybody else in the world right now is experiencing what i'm experiencing i've never
had anything like that this degree of sharedness but because of the isolation so many of us faced
it alone yeah yeah and so it seems we had in some way it was the best sort of suffering combined
to worst sort of stuff sorry i didn't mean to cut you off. Yeah, no, no, that's a good point.
So I wanted to ask you a question about, I guess, the science-y aspect of this in terms of the why.
So a couple of things seems to be definitely true, like suffering and feelings of pleasure and accomplishment and all of that stuff are two sides of the same coin.
And obviously doing things together and overcoming adversity in a group
has those social aspects as well so my my basic understanding of this is that the reasons for this
is i guess sort of evolutionary in terms of our affect how we feel about things is not we're not
optimized to be happy but it's optimized to to get us to to do things function effectively in the
world and you have the homeostasis effect,
which if you just try to maximize pleasure full stop,
it's not really going to work too well.
Is that your understanding as to the why,
like why people are like this?
I think it's an important first step to recognize
that we haven't evolved to be happy.
Happiness, like any sort of emotion or feeling
or state exists for a reason so happiness is like an evolutionary pat on the back you've done well
keep it up um you know you're you're you're apparently you're well fed and you're in a
loving relationship you have a roof over your head way to go be happy but um and this is sort
of psychology 101 the happiness quickly fades
it's the hedonic treadmill and and that's basically a natural selection saying giving
you a kick in the pants saying you know now do better than everybody else improve your status
you know go go kill somebody make love you know hurry up and then you feel sad and so so there's
a lot going on which i think does think is explained by an evolutionary framework.
I think some of it is, in a sense, more general, which is that sometimes suffering is like a hack you figure out to enhance your pleasure.
You say, hey, you know, if I spend a lot of time in this real hot bath and then step out, I feel so good.
And then we invent the sauna.
Sometimes I think it's a hack just for signaling.
How do I show everybody here how tough i am well you know i'm sitting my story my younger my
teenage son i'm gonna stick as much wasabi in my mouth as i can you know you see if you see
individuals willingly stick wasabi in in their mouths you can guess your teenage voice and then
and it's not as specific it's not that they reproduce more.
It's just that it's like a signaling trick that they do.
Or sometimes, and this gets into religion thing,
you might want to signal your piety, how much you love God.
I love God so much that I obey the dietary laws 100%.
I love God so much that I'm going to have myself crucified
in honor of Christ's suffering.
I'm really interested in teenage boys and young men. That sounds odd, but
that's a good clip. But my day job is mainly looking at addiction and the behavioral problems
and risky status signaling, rash impulsivity, and how it's so exaggerated in
young men is just a really interesting effect to me.
Yeah.
So the thing I was going to say, Paul, which I think reflects badly on me and illustrates
your thesis is that quite a long time ago, during one of my first trips to Japan, I ended
up in an onsen with a friend's follower.
He was Japanese and he took me to a local onsen.
I've been to onsens before, but I was...
I'm sorry, I don't know what an onsen is.
It's like the hot bath.
Oh, got it.
Everybody's naked and it's extremely hot.
But it wasn't one of the beautiful ones that you see out
in nature this was like a local sento so like it was quite functional small hot bathtubs but still
still nice and because it was like a local one they're not in the center of tokyo there were
just other japanese people there and i was attempting to you know appear yeah i'm fine
like i'm this kind of stuff doesn't bother me.
He was saying, the water is very hot.
Is this going to be an issue?
And no, no, no, I'm fine.
Don't worry.
And I got into one of the baths
and it was exceedingly hot.
I felt like the proverbial lobster
that had made a very bad choice, but I needed to sit there.
And after kind of reassuring him that I would have no issue with this, I stayed for longer
than I should have. And I also hadn't drank anything before I went in. So upon exiting the bath, I promptly fainted. And I think I gave all of the other
Japanese people present a story for the ages. But they would remember that day because I went on to,
I think I fainted two times, like after I was revived and stood up and said, no, no, I'm fine.
I subsequently fainted again. that that was you know doing all
of the things that you're indicating it's an excellent story yeah it doesn't fit me in the
best light but i will say as soon as i drank water i recovered i was fine so it was yeah it was
dehydration rather than intolerance the nonsense but um yes i mean imagine martians like like looking looking at us and so much of
what we do makes sense you know we're putting foods into our faces and and mating and building
shelter and fighting for territory it's all you know evolutionary biology you know in a similar
and and then they zoom in and there's extremely hot water.
And there's these people gently dipping into the extremely hot water.
And it's not a torture.
It's not a punishment.
They paid to get in and do this.
And in some way, that's why I'm fascinated by these sort of puzzles.
I think these puzzles reveal something really interesting about ourselves.
Yeah. Well, I appreciate you indulging me on that topic, which is a pet
interest, as I say. It's a great topic. And another pet interest that we occasionally talk
about on the podcast is the kind of emerging secular gurus and the marketplace of ideas that
we all find ourselves operating in. And as we discussed prior to the pod, you, Paul, are not necessarily immune from featuring
as a potential.
I would say, you know, like we tried to cover people like Carl Sagan and Robert Wright and
so on, people that we also generally appreciate.
But basically anybody that we can say is a public intellectual with a
following we could we could at least wedge them into the grometer i'm kind of a guru in in the
model of segan or maybe einstein yeah yeah that's not not one of these cheap gurus but
important ones that's it or you know like a stats guru. People don't mind me. Oh, right, stats guru.
Yeah.
But it is curious because you're a well-known author,
a psychologist that people may have heard of in discourse land. And that means that inevitably you will be interacting with,
or at least, you know, in the same kind of conversation space
as people like Jordan Peterson, Sam Harris, we at least, you know, in the same kind of conversation space as people like Jordan Peterson,
Sam Harris, we talked about, or any number of the people that we cover. And yeah, I have my thoughts
about why you in particular, but you know, others who are publicly intellectuals in the space don't really fit well to the kind of character
that we're talking about but i'm curious like do you see a a big disconnect from from like you and
russell brand or are you basically doing the same thing just with different words arranged in
different patterns i'm just not doing it anywhere near as well as him, if I was trying to do the same thing.
You know, like the two of you, like a lot of people, I have a lot of ambitions and a lot of things I want to do.
I really like teaching. I teach at my university. I like advising graduate students and postdocs.
I like doing research, and I like writing popular books and
popular articles. There's a lot about the guru lifestyle. It actually seems kind of a lot of fun.
It'd be nice to make bags and bags of money and which I think many of the gurus do. But in the
end, I'm just kind of most interested in thinking through interesting ideas and exploring them, like the questions of why we like to suffer,
the nature of psychology. I have a TED Talk that just came out actually eight hours ago on perverse
actions, which was a lot of fun. And I do things because they're fun and interesting.
I'm in some way, I think I'd be not honest if I said that I'm entirely uninterested in what people
think of them. I probably am. I think we're all vulnerable to, I guess, what they call audience
capture these days. But I've never been pulled into the vortex of needing to talk about the
political and social issues of the day. I've never felt a particular temptation to mouth off
on something I didn't know much about. Or at least i know i don't know much about it i know somebody might say oh no
dude you do that a lot but um but but so i i talk and i and i explore what i find interesting and
fun and i have you know enough people who seem to enjoy it and and i have good back and forth
and good discussions and i think there's something about that that it doesn't quite match the kind
of guru status of the people you discuss does that make sense no it does yeah yeah what you're
saying is you're up there with gad side in terms of the people having i yeah i i am i am
i'll tell you i'll tell you i steven pinker was um was one of my teachers at MIT and, and somebody who's a, who's a
friend and somebody I respect a lot.
And I know he, he talks, he's in the public sphere more than me, but I mean, it's kind
of a model and I don't think of him as a guru.
I think as somebody who has strong opinions and, and ideas, but doesn't, you know, doesn't
aspire towards that sort of status.
If, if, if he's a guru, it's only accidentally.
Yeah, we're always trying to be as science-y as possible
in terms of our gurus,
and the worst thing for it to be
would just be a pejorative label
to be affixed to people that we don't like.
But I think a pretty objective way
to delineate what someone like yourself does
versus the more toxic gurus
is that looking at the stuff you do,
the talks you give, the books you write,
you have your own insights and thoughts and contributions, sure,
but it's positioned within the orthodox literature.
It's positioned within a field as far as I understand.
Yeah.
I mean, this is the thing that I think is sort of epistemically different
with gurus in that they stand alone.
They are like a little island offering stuff
which is kind of disconnected from the external field.
So even when they do give academic citations
or reference various things,
like Jordan Peterson might reference lobsters
as a role model for men,
it's not a genuine kind of connection.
I think what distinguishes the gurus, and I'm using it in a pejorative sense,
and so not the ones I respect, but the ones I have less respect for,
is this extraordinary confidence, this extraordinary,
where there's pronouncements on all sorts of issues without qualification,
often with the most extreme emphasis. And, you know, first thing, this is
actually not how, it's not a proper way to understand the world. I have all sorts of views
about our evolved cognitive capacities, about language, about AI, about sex differences and
where they are and where they aren't. But I'm not going to say, you know, look, there's one thing
we really know for sure, and only an idiot would deny this and go on.
But then the second thing is that that, I think, is a very powerful way. That's part of the guru trick. The pure confidence, a mere mortal stumbles upon somebody who has this pure confidence,
and then they feel, wow, this person knows the way. I have found somebody to worship.
All the rest of the mortals around me are qualifying things. They say, I need to learn more.
I could be wrong.
But the mortals are doing it right.
The gurus have somehow found a hack that subverts other people's normal caution.
And then you fall under their sway.
And that goes to the real gurus, the sort of religious gurus or the political gurus
you know including the very worst of them you know no dictator ever stood on a stage and says
i think we should invade poland although there are arguments against us yeah that's not how
they're doing i'm not really sure i'm gonna have to consult with other people yeah yeah i could be
wrong no you don't hear donald trump say that very often yeah so
that's right trump trump in some way he doesn't follow near ambit but in some way he's a perfect
guru because of the the unqualified the the confidence the narcissism yeah yeah and and
that's why and i gotta say some of the people you have under the guru scope are people i respect a lot and and i people like like sam harris are robert right i hear he's a guru now um and but but part of the
reason why i expect them is you can argue with them yeah yeah just to be super clear by the way
it's confusing because we not everyone we cover we diagnose as a toxic guru that they're certainly
so you have you have a taxonomy that the toxic gurus the small g gurus
it's a spectrum it's a spectrum we have a measurement scale which which runs from what's
the minimum you can get 10 to uh no we're 5 to 50 right yeah yeah yeah there's a broad
a broad spectrum and sam harris actually does does all. We haven't. I know we haven't done him.
That's right.
We threatened to, but then he came on,
and we haven't got Ryan Deer since then.
But we will, you know.
You could have a graph out.
You could publish this graph where you have it online, and then you have all the gurus in different spaces there.
But you keep updating it.
So, you know, so Scott Adams scott adams pulls back he apologized
he qualifies he could slide a bit down low numbers on the scale yeah we could like have a positive
feedback effect on people like but i suspect what will happen paul given the people that we've
covered is they'll just all gradually migrate to the top right hand corner. Currently at the very tippy top of our readings are Reverend Moon from the Moonies.
He's quite the toxic guru, would you believe?
And then the Weinsteins come immediately after him.
But it's not to say that the level of societal harm that they introduce is the same,
but I think they fit the prototypical secular guru archetype that we're looking at. And
confidence, as you've highlighted, is not something that they tend to be lacking in that respect.
And I mentioned to Paul beforehand
that he's something of a unicorn, right?
Because, you know, as he mentioned,
Steven Pinker, you could add Jonathan Haidt,
us as well, Sam Harris,
magnets in some respects
for people getting annoyed
with various takes and political issues.
Not us so much.
Most people love us, but, you know,
there's a few weirdos out there, Paul.
Who couldn't love you?
But Paul is involved in various discussions
about controversial issues on various podcasts.
And yet, I've never seen him included on Watchlist.
No, I've never heard a bad word about Paul.
No, now you mention it.
Well, that's
that's nice i feel my luck is gonna end yeah yeah so so i had someone to look into for
anybody you know they're running out of culture war targets a lot of my interests don't overlap
with the culture war like the people you discuss i'm not going to talk about about the lab leak theory or um or issues or the issues about trends well i are trans adolescents or uh or you
know stuff like that i just don't know much about it and i'm not i don't want to go go there i i
have just just in defense uh my own controversy i wrote a book a little while back called against empathy oh which um which
actually did generate some discussion now that's true now in the end um a lot of people read the
book or listen to me give a talk on it and had perfectly interesting arguments against me which
i've engaged in in print my my friend jimil zacky wrote some objections and we went back and forth
and other people who i really see as friends disagreed with me and that was fine and maybe they aren't speaking about the sort of
lack of confidence that I say that that is what I'm missing for guru status but some people pretty
much just read the title not even the subtitle which was the case for rational compassion
they assumed I was a psychopath arguing for psychopathy and and they let me have it and yeah and you know i have a i have a small
i have memories of being treated very poorly by by by a cadre of attackers yeah and i have long
i have long memories they will they will have forgotten and then you know one day that's yeah
that's that's how we operate a good friend of the pod has talked about how
if you live long enough you you can see your enemies come around the bend of the river
usually so that's i think that's a motto to live your life but i but i think i have to pick up
chris on something paul said about himself which is obviously true which is that he's got a broad
range of interests sometimes
might touch a slightly controversial topic like should you be empathetic or not but you know
doesn't have uh doesn't feel a compulsion to to opine strongly on things that are the topic of
the day the controversy of the day whether trans issues or lab leak theories or whatever and that's
the big thing that distinguishes gurus as well. Yeah. Yeah. I have that to be the impulse. Just going back to the last theme, by the way,
there was somebody who was very nasty to me in a very public way. And then he got himself immersed
in quite the scandal over Twitter. And I got very tempted to simply do a tweet, which in its
entirety would be what goes around. And my wife suggested I do not do that.
I do not do that.
Because he would read it and he would know.
Would they go live?
Would they go live?
We'd go home.
No quote tweet.
You mean, Paul, you would do the subtle subtweet.
The subtle subtweet.
The subtle, what do you call it, vague booking or whatever.
But no i i just
watched in quiet satisfaction i just like to go up for his uh very real sense yeah yeah i i have
done that myself and usually i don't have someone except matt to tell me not to post it but yeah the
the against empathy thing is interesting because you're right there there was a lot of discussion
around that but the interesting thing is i'm i'm sure you're much more privy to the
unhinged responses to it but the way i saw that and the way for example i use you in my various
courses is your position is is very useful in the the way that like a consequentialist is very useful because
you can present, okay, so this is somebody making the case strongly why empathy, you know, can cause
bad heuristics to come into play and be distorting of what we would want. And actually Sam Harris in
the same way is often very useful because he takes out
very clear, strong stances on positions. But those stances, like his stance on consciousness,
for example, and I think there's a similar thing that what I was going to say is people respond a
little bit more from what I saw academically or like philosophically, like they might strongly
disagree with you, but they're not saying you're a moral monster who's going to go out and like,
you know, execute children. But that is the tenor of if you're in a culture war frenzy,
you are a very, very malignant and dangerous person. But that's what your critics were saying.
I think what happens to some people is that they get a reputation for they people hate them for something and then no matter what
else they do every all other responses are filtered through the hate or or through the adoration
and to some extent i'd like to think i have the luxury of being able to come to each issue
fairly fairly fresh so if people if people
don't like my book psych they won't like my book psych but i don't think people are going to say
oh my god his book just babies was such you know got me so mad i'm going to really attack him for
this chapter four paul chapter four yeah i i have um i have a sort of a serious email folders and i you know one of them is crazy
emails and a smaller one is death threats and you know because there is a small minority of people
who respond very badly to what you say no matter if you have any sort of public space at all just
to just to get you to say a little bit more about the case against that but the i was um let me ask
you this something that we've
encountered recently is um like um and i don't want to draw you into a controversial political
topic which you don't want to but about the ukraine conflict putin nato zelensky all that stuff
i'm uh i'm against putin by the way i gotta say this this may push me over, but I think it was an immoral war,
and I'm not in favor of his side.
Matt's a huge Britain fan.
Huge.
So this is going to be fireworks.
I will say, I could be wrong, though, and I don't want to be too out.
This leads me to the question, which is I've seen a point of view
from people like Robert Wright who would say that we don't have enough
empathy for what it's like to be in Putin's shoes. And that kind of lack of empathy is leading us to
have the wrong view about that conflict. Is that the kind of thing that you'd be against
with the against empathy argument? it's good for me to
clarify that because i've actually talked talked to baba about that i'm not against that that you're
talking about is somewhat times about cognitive empathy which is understanding what's going on
with somebody else and i think um the empathy i'm arguing against is when you feel what they feel
or at least you think you feel what they feel. And my problem with that roughly is we feel empathy towards those who look like us, who are
close to us. It is a very biased emotion, and it leads to sort of myopic and poorly, and ultimately
immoral decisions. But getting into somebody's head and trying to figure it out, what's going on,
is, I think, a pretty useful skill. Now, I remember, I think you two went back and forth with Bob on this.
And I think that there's room to sort of ask the questions, how good can we be at this?
And how much of a difference will it make in the end?
But I still think, I agree with Bob in the spirit of this, that if you had to choose
between knowing too much about somebody's head, what they're thinking, knowing too little,
you should try to know too much. You should try to err on the side of cognitive empathy do you two
disagree with that no i'll speak for myself and you can like rejoin what i say but i have no
issue and i think it is useful to understand even the most terrible people like understanding how
hitler seen himself or whatever i think it is good to have cognitive empathy,
even just from strategic purposes
of trying to defeat your enemy, right?
Like if you don't have a good model for them,
it's going to go worse for you.
But I think the issue that we had
with the way that Bob applies it
is that it feels a little bit like
there's an issue of cognitive empathy if it's
unevenly applied so if you extend the whole heap of cognitive empathy to understand how putin feels
aggrieved at the the west and and nato expansion and so on and the possibility that various countries
will join nato but you also should be surely extending the cognitive empathy towards Finland and the
various other countries neighboring Russia, who might find a belligerent, imperialistic neighbor
of concern. So like, I kind of feel everyone is employing a selective degree of cognitive
empathy. And then just appealing to the cognitive empathy idea can
allow you to justify, well, I'm really focusing on, and in the worst case, leaning into apologetics
for people.
I see what you're saying.
I guess what I think is you're describing bestowing cognitive empathy almost as if it
were a gift, a kindness.
bestowing cognitive empathy, almost as if it were a gift, a kindness.
And to some extent, I see this, which is, if I care for you,
I'm going to want to know what makes you tick.
I don't want to hurt your feelings. I want to sort of be able to appreciate why you're doing what you're doing.
So, yeah, in a perfect world, we extend cognitive empathy to everybody.
But you might say, I think that Bob would say this,
is you really, if we had a limited supply, not much time, too much, you know, it's hard. We don't have much time. We
should direct a lot of it towards Putin because he's our enemy on this. And far from being a gift,
if you have to figure out what's going on, figure out what's going on ahead of the person who might,
you know, blow up the world.
No, I think Chris and I totally agree with with that aspect of it that that kind of cognitive empathy is a very good thing whether or not you're
looking to work with somebody or work against them i think where we see the danger is is that
it can open the door to a kind of relativism which is i see the world this way you see the
world that way well um north korea that's right yeah which i don't think is healthy yeah you know i i worry
about because i think it's so what somebody would say is well if i see the world through putin's
eyes then ultimately i think if i was in his shoes i would do the same thing i mean in a way i would
be governed by the same history and beliefs and desires and so on. And I don't think that makes you a moral relativist. I think you
could say, but that would be wrong and step above it. I think it just makes you more effective.
But Chris mentioned this, and it's a very real worry that by dint of applying cognitive empathy,
it makes you maybe softer towards
people.
And I think we feel this way towards third parties.
After 9-11, just to go to example, a lot of people, or few people would say, well, let's
try to figure out why bin Laden did what he did.
And people were furious at them for doing it.
They said, look, he did it because he was evil.
Maybe we'll raise it a bit and say,
he hates our freedoms. Okay, we can do that. But to talk about grievances he might have had
was treasonous. And I think this is a very natural response. Someone murders my child,
and then do I really want to hear somebody explain, well, the guy had a certain circumstance,
da, da, da, da. No, he's evil and you want him punished. But I think when to hear somebody explain, well, the guy had a certain circumstance, da-da-da-da. No. You just want, he's evil, and you want him punished.
But I think when we do things well, we override this impulse to demonize the empathizers.
And I think this sort of cognitive empathy is something we should Putin and those kinds of things, is that whenever I hear people expand on what Putin is feeling or the way that his model of the world works, I usually don't find any of it hugely surprising right like i understand that putin is resentful for russia's
diminished influence in the world feels that nato expansion is a threat to the influence of of russia
and you know sees amer the past 20 years. I still end up at the position that like, okay, Putin thinks of things like that.
Hitler might've thought that the German people were entitled to an expansion of their living
space and that this had been stolen by a malignant element of their society.
But like, we agree that Hitler was wrong.
And like, in the same respect, I think that international relations, of course,
there's more to be, especially around contemporary things, but it can be the case that people are
just one side is wrong and, or they're, they're framing things too charitably and another side
isn't. And when I see the presentation of dictators on sites like the gray zone, which
they could be present, I don't know if you're familiar
with them like aaron matthew and that kind of thing but they would present themselves as just
understanding bashar asad the syrian leader and you know trying to provide a counterpoint to the
western narratives about russian aggression but in in actual fact they are downplaying chemical attacks.
They're going on guided tours in totalitarian regimes and saying everyone here is happy
and so on.
And I feel that there's a danger that people will appeal to cognitive empathy.
But it's like I say, like it's so selectively applied that it leads to a misrepresentation
of the scenario rather than a grasp of the different
perspective so it's kind of getting into different motives that people would have for doing that but
i think that definitely happens so it's kind of hard because both kinds of people can say well
i'm just doing cognitive empathy yeah i i can see it happening in the way you're worrying about
i i'm thinking of it more like in all the tv shows i
watch the three of us are trying to track the serial killer and so we ask you know we have all
the maps up and he says like we have you know where's it going to strike next and then we think
and we are and then we're like hannibal the tvs are like i get this misty look as i start to
inhabit his body and i i the music changes and so on and and then I figured out, oh, he's going to attack in Delaware next
because the letter D is special to him.
And we're doing cognitive empathy.
At no point do we say, you know, he's not a bad guy.
It's pretty clear he's not a bad guy.
We fully recognize what he's doing is awful.
We're just trying to get in his head.
Yeah.
There's a series that was just out on Apple.
I don't know
exactly how accurate it is but when i looked into it it was kind of amazing to me that it does seem
to have occurred in the 90s where somebody was in prison for various drug dealing charges and was
perceived to be very charismatic and like good at getting oh and they brought they brought him
in to to see this this i saw that yeah they brought him in to see this kid. I saw that. Yeah, they brought him
into like a high security prison and offered to dramatically reduce his sentence if he could get
the guy to confess to these murders of young girls. I forget the name of everybody, but the
actor who played the murder of young girls was the most astonishing acting I have seen in my life.
who played a murder of young girls was the most astonishing acting i have seen in my life and um he played this creepy killer guy so well but yeah trying to they got somebody to get inside
of somebody's head and yeah and it worked which is like yeah and i i looked it up expecting to
see you know those articles where you're oh, here's 20 differences between what actually happened. And as far as I could tell, it's fairly accurate representation. I was like,
they did this, like the FBI got someone sent them into a high security prison and was like,
you know, you get the confession and you can get out of jail. It's like,
oh, America's a crazy place. That's how how we do it here but you know if you ever get
arrested you're just pretty your eyes are pretty high you get talked into going to another prison
to to get in the head of another serial killer i mean look to take so here's a practical version
of bob's claim as i understand it which is that for a long time, people have been provoking Putin
in all sorts of ways. And, you know, they might say, look, I don't care what Putin thinks. I want
to provoke him anyway. Maybe it's good for me politically. Maybe I feel he deserved to be
provoked. Maybe these things we're doing are right. But wouldn't you want to know how what you're saying affects people i mean here's another
case this is gonna seem crazy white house correspondence dinner many years ago donald
trump's in the audience barack obama's on stage very funny obama can deliver a speech about
starts taunting trump obama's having time of his life. Everyone's loving it. I'm watching him cracking up
because Trump is humiliated there. You're just stuck there. I think that was the moment Trump
decided to run for president. Now, imagine that's true. Imagine Obama could have known that. He
would have just skipped those jokes. Look, I think we're on the same page with paul on the cognitive empathy part of it
absolutely it's it's just that in practice we we suspect we have our suspicions that um there's
sometimes other things going you're worried you're worried that some people are sympathetic
to somebody to do a bad guy well then say well let's look at the reasons and and do the cognitive
empathy dance but what they're
really doing is providing excuses and justice. Yeah. Yeah. Like I think Chomsky after 9-11
wrote a rather infamous piece, right? Which many characterized as essentially saying,
why we deserved 9-11, right? And like you said, that wasn't received warmly in all quarters,
though some people were perfectly fine with it. But I think Chomsky is a good example of someone, he might be quite strongly ideologically possessed as well, but I don't doubt his's applied evenly across nations equally.
I think he has a particular soft spot that makes it likely
that he would defend the Khmer Rouge from accusations of genocide
and very likely that he would not defend the US foreign policy
in almost any regard.
So in that respect, I think the cognitive empathy is real
that he's and and useful that he's extending towards the taliban and osama bin laden yeah but
but it's it's that chestnut of the distribution of cognitive empathy is selective and it it can
skew things but the the practice of it i'm completely in favor of like you say most
people could benefit from doing it more including about people that they think are are vile yeah
yeah chris chris we're living proof of this i mean first of all i'm old enough to to remember
the 9-11 situation well and and the responses to it i I remember what Paul was talking about, which is
that they're just evil, right? They're just evil. It's so simple.
Bill Maher on his TV show said they were brave, meaning that they overcame fear of death to do
what they wanted to do, and he was taken off the air. Yeah. So there's all kinds of hot takes,
but truth is, whatever you want foreign policy to be or the response to be, the real reasons are complicated and are understandable and kind of interesting.
And we have the same approach, Chris, with the gurus.
There are people who are haters or activists who would like to take down various people.
And, you know, you'll get these interpretations of what makes them tick in terms of, oh, they're all grifters.
Oh, they're all trying to create a gateway to fascism or something.
Basically, simplistic explanations for understandings of who they are and why they do what they do.
And the real reasons are often really interesting, like the narcissism that you mentioned before there, Paul.
Like, often they're acting in full sincerity.
They really are that full of
themselves. And the picture you get is not a pretty one necessarily, but it's a more complicated
and interesting one. Before you respond, Paul, I just qualified that Matt is not saying that
there's no structural influences that are relevant because like, I think as we've looked at
gurus and the networks that happen, it is clear that there are sometimes influences coming from
either their audience or, you know, political ideologies, which do impact beyond like just
their psychological motives, but in like reducing it to the single
factor that, oh, this person doesn't hold any of those actual beliefs. In many cases, like they
find the ideology and the partners that match their psychological and personal beliefs. So
yeah, that's just a qualification. I'm just saying that. I'm anticipating emails.
Paul? I'll even get more, more sympathetic gurus because we're just mentioning motivations that are sort of unsavory, like narcissism and the like.
But sometimes the gurus, even the ones that you're hardest on, may be making the world a lot worse.
But their motivations might be to impress their friends, to show some people that they're worth taking seriously, to avenge past humiliations.
Honest belief that they're right.
Honest, you know, which we all have maybe more than we should.
None of us would be talking to this unseen audience of a lot of people if we didn't have this somewhat unhealthy belief to what we say what we have to say matters yeah you know we're we're a small proportion of the
population was that that that sort of weird psychological state that we share with the gurus
well a lot of the world you know i just wanted somebody said hey you know have you ever thought
of being on a podcast thing and they'd say well I don't really have much to say that people would be interested in.
And I think maybe that's true of you too.
We've all got unwarranted confidence.
There's no doubt about that.
That's right.
That's right.
You know, in some way, you know, I know you're the guru hunters, but, you know, these movies just stand one way where you become what you've been fighting against.
Don't worry.
I'm ready to take him down, Paul.
I've seen the warning signs.
This is going to be like backdraft, isn't it?
It's going to turn out one of us is lighting the fire.
But yeah, like we were talking at the beginning about how human beings are intrinsically status-seeking animals and social animals looking for recognition and respect.
And one of the patterns you see with some of the gurus is that the traditional avenues of respect
and recognition haven't really panned out for them for whatever reason. Now, someone like you,
Paul, you're one of the lucky ones. I'm not going to embarrass you, but there's lots of
things you can point to where you can be very secure in that and you wouldn't be driven or vulnerable to wanting to make very hot takes about the dangers of getting vaccinated in order to get this alternative source of respect.
And in fact, in there lies an argument against cancellation and censorship, which is, you know, I think there are arguments
just based on intrinsic values of free speech and open discourse and so on. But you're pointing to
a very practical argument, which is if you shut down people's access to normal avenues, it doesn't
make their desire to be heard go away. It drives it underground. It might make it more extreme.
I think, I'm not a freudian but i think
that there's something to the sort of hydraulic metaphors where it's good to have the valve a
little bit open so that people can you know express whatever they want to express and if
you shut it down too tightly um it comes out in other ways yeah Yeah, agreed. I think, Paul, that both you and Matt
are talking about the fact that people in general,
they're psychologically motivated
by seeing themselves positively, right?
And believing that what they're doing is good.
There are a few people, I imagine,
that do exist that knowingly do evil and enjoy it, right?
But they're rare.
Very few.
And the majority, even if they're objectively doing evil will have a self-narrative or or justification for why it's necessary to do it
you always have to crack a few eggs to you know create the utopia that we all need but with that
as a granted that it's psychologically normal to do that.
And that it's kind of orthogonal to what you're actually doing in the world.
Like you could be a rank partisan like Dave Rubin, but I think he still thinks he is doing
something good.
But one thing that I've noticed with Matt and I, when we're trying to do the kind of cognitive empathy thing with the gurus,
is that sometimes we fall short.
Because when we try to model in our head about like,
what would you do in this situation? Say you take a stance and just get endless wave of people saying,
what an idiot you are.
endless wave of people saying what an idiot you are and just like a flood of hate coming at you for your takes that you constantly put out into the world for most people as you said i think that
would be an experience where it's negative lots of people are talking about how you're an extremist
and and and so on but the gurus lots of them don't seem to react like a normal person. It's like
they're immune to that in a way that's similar to Trump, right? Where he doesn't seem to be
embarrassed by being caught lying. He just plies on through it in a way. And it looks not
psychologically normal. At the very least, it's at the top of a distribution and i wonder do you
think that that is more often the case or that that is rare not saying that people are psychopaths
but rather that they're you know on some psychological toggles they're way up high
where actually most of us aren't and that makes the cognitive empathy thing difficult. I think people have different tolerances and even
sometimes take delight in controversy and argument. Some people will collapse at a single
negative thing said to them over Twitter. Other people could take pride in a huge storm of hatred
against them. But I think one thing which is important not to miss is that
there's often another audience that we don't see. So Twitter's attacking me and it was yelling at
me for something. And you wonder, why is Paul holding onto this view? But what you don't see
is all the messages of support I get from my side and all the people on social media you don't even
follow, you don't even see.
And the fact that Joe Rogan gave me a thumbs up over a text. And that sort of status dynamic explains something which I've seen more than once.
I'm sure you two know more about this.
You have a character who's fairly centrist, maybe on the left a little bit,
ends up in a huge storm.
The ref loses reputation, often a job,
but there's people waiting for him on the other side,
on a conspiratorial right,
who take him in and offer him, you know,
and it really is a sort of familial dynamic,
but they take him in, they offer him a home,
they offer him respect and love, and that's where he stays.
And it's not right to dismiss it as sort of audience capture it's it's it's more like you
know it's more like all these movies where where some poor kid who's abandoned in a family of
criminals adopt them and looking at it because shows these people are not exempt from from from
being respected and being loved it's just there there's a there's a
dynamic i i i see it more i'm framing it one way because i don't think it happens that often the
other way i don't see many cases where conservatives rip into some conservative and then that person
being adopted by the left the conspiratorial left conspiratorial yeah that's right we're all
of a sudden they're they're with with palrow or they're a hawk in crystals.
Yeah.
I mean, we're frustrated with this too, Paul, because we'd actually be, just on theoretical grounds, happier if there was more political symmetry, I guess.
But, you know, it is just the case that there are these odd asymmetries in the current political climate. I guess if I have
understood the first thing you said properly, I think you were kind of saying that even though
we all yearn respect and regard, yearn for it, it's not a democracy, right? What matters is
our in-group, our familial, whatever our perceived group is and you know if if they respect us what builds
respect in those circles is the thing that counts for us and to be hated or despised or whatever by
by the enemies out there that that doesn't really hurt our self-esteem does it you know it's really
right the first thing i ever wrote in my life was an op-ed piece about the, there is no soul in New York times, which, which
was like, nobody read it. Some, some priests sent me a very long, polite letter saying that I may
be mistaken anyway, but, but when I, as it was coming up, my, my, my uncle who I love very much
said to me, aren't you worried that you're going to get attacked by, by very religious people for
what you're saying? And the truth is, no, because
that doesn't bother me that much. I've written some things critical of Trump, making me the
one millionth person raised in the country. I don't care if Trump people attack me, but it really
stresses me and burns me if my colleague down the hall attacks me or my professional organization condemns me,
yeah, we're most worried about what the in-group feels like.
And this is the peculiar dynamic, which is so many people on the left who commit some
hearsay, hearsay, heresy, heresy, get stomped by their own group.
Yeah.
So like, there's a couple of things where you know the dynamics that some people
have referred to especially in like cult scenarios like love bombing right where the yeah the the
group is so affectionate and welcoming at least initially before the bigger asks come like leave
your family and you know sleep with the leader now, but at the beginning, not like that. And then that love
bombing, I'm not making the comparison just with cults to be disparaging, but because I think that
helps to explain in a way, because when people see people in the cult, they're like, why would
anybody join that group? It's so horrible. It makes such demands on their time on there, but
they don't see all of the psychological work put to bring the person in then to make them
you know interdependent and the genuine happiness that they often have in the initial stages of
joining the group like genuine connection with people and i for my sins i listened to james
lindsey document his descent shall we say to where he is now but what was interesting for me was he would
do things like you know he's pretty much an open book when he's recording like on his podcast thing
and he would talk about all these people on the right are being nice to me now like i don't agree
with all the thing but they're you know they're welcoming me and i had this wrong image of them
like you know my voice is screaming, be self-reflective.
Consider what if you were saying something different that they didn't like, would they
be so welcoming?
But that seems to really be a dynamic that applies.
And I do think that the left is particularly prone to just being like, the best kind of
love is harsh love like you know we yes
you we will tell you all of the sins that you've committed and why you're actually
an evil right ringer and then i'm not saying that all the people just respond like you know
there's that meme of okay well now i'll go be a nazi but there is a little bit of okay if you keep
telling people you're not a real you're not actually a liberal
like go join the conservatives and then they join the conservatives you can't like yeah yeah you
know i know exactly that that's sort of leftist rhetoric you're talking about i can't imitate it
on the fly probably chat gpt could do better but it's stuff like you know look own up to own up to
your mistakes you messed up and you messed up big, and you hurt a lot of people.
So just shut up, apologize to the people, and just, you know, don't censor yourself.
Do better.
Do better.
Do better.
Do better.
Okay, I got to ask you this, though, the two of you.
And I come at you out of love, really, because I am a huge fan.
But where do you fit in this ecosystem?
You're not separate from it.
You're strong critics and, you know, just moral critics,
I think fair critics of people.
But do you worry that you do a very critical episode on Gadsad,
for instance, and you push them further away from, you know,
what do you think, where do you put yourself?
We don't like the idea of having any influence on the world.
I'd almost like to be a little bit smaller.
So whatever we do, we don't have to worry about that kind of thing.
Leave us one star on Apple Podcasts, please.
We get enough of that, Paul.
Don't encourage people.
I was thinking, you know, but Paul, it's obvious.
We flew above the discourse.
You know, we are just the pure angels above.
No, that's not the case.
But you actually, you swerved from allowing me to answer flippantly by talking about our
impact on the people that we cover, which has been a reliable feedback whenever we've done the
right to reply things like Chris Williamson, for instance, brought up, you know, and that was very
decent. Chris came back that you treated him unfairly and you guys apologize for unfair parts
and went back. And now I understand that you all love each other now. That's right. We endorse
everything that he puts out all the especially that recent stuff
that he's done about eugenics that's the one that i really sign off on but yeah so you know like
with chris i that i do think that the way that you framed it is the way that i would take it that
there's things that we are harsh about that you know can be a bit cruel or or like you could be
more kind more empathetic,
but it doesn't remove the things that you're actually criticizing.
And sometimes I feel like when we display the empathy,
people assume, well, that means all the altruisms dissolve.
And they don't.
And usually the people themselves understand that,
but not always the people following.
But that's not really what you were talking about with the impact.
And I think like Matt said, there is a case to be made that we don't like to think that we are impacting the discourse that much. And that lets us off the hook a little bit in our own mentality
from dealing with the consequences. But it shouldn't really, because especially as audience
size grows and it's quite clear that we can get under people's skin at the very least in some
context. And I think one of the defenses that we would raise, and we did recently when we had a
conversation with John Vervaeke, is that we're very clear that our assessment is our assessment, right?
And it's not coming from this ethereal place of perfect judgment.
It's coming from our assessment of what we think people are doing rhetorically.
But you can have a different judgment.
We are not calling for people to be like
exercised from the public discourse
or that kind of thing, right?
We are generally not people
that are jumping on cancellation campaigns
despite what people might perceive.
So I think in that respect,
it feels a little bit like
all of these big figures that we cover
or even the slightly lesser famous people they're
out there spewing discourse into the ether and they often have very large audiences they tend
to get a lot of positive feedback and and we're just injecting you know our brand of criticism
so they put the information out there so you know it's a response to that that that's like
one of the defenses i think is that was that convincing
you know it's reasonably convincing and i think i think there's some words in there which are
important which is i think it makes the most sense if you go after the big guns
you know take an extreme example.
If you're going to have an episode about Trump,
I don't worry about you having a huge effect on Trump.
But there's a lot of smaller gurus in there. And you're morally obliged to treat them gentler
because you have some reasonable influence.
Certainly they'll watch your show.
And to some extent, you you know it goes back to cognitive
empathy if you think about the effects of being harshly criticized and that might drive them to
do worse and not better it's something just keep in mind no no paul this is something we've talked
about a fair bit and actually it was a chris williamson episode that wrong-footed us because
we at until that point were pretty small or thought of ourselves as small and insignificant
and didn't really think about that.
And since then, we do think about it.
So, you know, you can go off at Donald Trump.
You can go off at Jordan Peterson because, you know,
you're not going to have any effect.
But say Seva Vaki, he's a bit less famous than Jordan Peterson.
I spoke to him a couple of
days ago on a committee together yeah perfectly yeah we had a very pleasant discussion with him
where which but I think both it was still quite obvious where we were looking at things in very
different ways but it's a challenging one because it can be hard to criticize people when you have
genuine very large differences in point of view with those personal connections and i guess we're
pushing back a little bit we're a bit i'm a bit worried about the way the alternative media
system works because unlike the sort of hard-nosed traditional journalists that that would go about
their business you know i think a pretty professional kind of way,
there is an awful lot of back padding.
And, you know, it's almost like a gentleman's club
where no one will ever be mean to each other.
Or if they are, it'll be expressed very genteely in private.
Yeah.
Paul, I have a question which is a bit left field.
So I feel I should wait unless it's okay to completely left field the topic.
But that might seem like us skipping.
No, I'm good.
I didn't come here to scold you.
Decoding those who decode the GURs.
No, we welcome that.
We're like a sponge.
We absorb that.
Yeah, I've heard the same sponge line.
Yeah, we welcome the negative reviews.
We're always accepting them with open arms
and no defensiveness.
That's our brand.
But, you know, I'll try this very torturous connection
to what we were just saying.
So in contrast to the world of alternative podcasts
and the heterodox ecosystem where
I do think there are very thin skins on display amongst people that throw bombs readily. Academia,
in my experience, I'm not saying there's no egos involved. There are large egos. There are people,
there are data terrorists roaming around the halls of psychology, tearing down illustrious
replication bullies. Yeah. And I, I caught myself on their side, but nonetheless, you know,
it's a good example that not everybody welcomes criticism with, with open arms. And I think we're
all defensive when we get reviewer to comments, but there is that culture of criticism, right? And robust exchange. And related to that,
I enjoy your developmental work, your older developmental work with the moral development
of children. And I had a methodological query, which I'm sure is really rudimentary.
But in those paradigms, typically children are shown a puppet show or a video or something.
And then there are various things that you can look at, how long they looked at different
characters and, you know, or forced choice selection, right?
Which toy that they want to play with.
So to give children the option to play with a toy, somebody has to give them the toys,
right?
Near them.
And in those experiments, in a bunch of them that i read
it wasn't clear that the person offering the toy was blind to the condition and similarly
the exact thing for how to characterize like a child leaning versus a child actually reaching
out wasn't clear and that worried me because know, I'm always thinking about clever hands
and the signals that people can give off.
So I was wondering, I imagine this is something that people have addressed,
but is this a robust thing which happens when nobody knows
and it's all very, very well controlled?
No, it's a very fair question
um infant researchers are obsessively worried about exactly that sort of thing so i won't say
it's for every study but every study i've been involved with and every study i've had any
collaborator do everything is as blind as possible so you might have an experiment i've been involved
in experiments where um one guy helps somebody up a hill and another guy pushes that individual down.
Kids see this as a one-act play.
And then someone's going to hold the two guys, the helper and the hinder, up to the kid to see which one the kid picks.
That person holding out the characters has no idea which character played which role.
The experiment was set up.
They could not see.
They could not, even if they tried to cheat,
they couldn't have a look at it.
Someone else, typically someone else,
is monitoring the kid and marking off on a sheet of paper
or on an iPad which one the kid chose.
That person also has no idea what the right answer is.
So in habituation studies,
we look to see how long kids look at a scene.
Again, studies are in there because this is a very serious concern.
The person making a judgment is blind to the condition the kids are in.
Some of these studies, the kid is sitting on a mother or father's lap for very young babies.
In those cases, the father are blindfolded or have a visor, so they can't see it and unconsciously give so they can't see it so they can't unconsciously give
the baby any yeah yeah they're always questioning the replication crisis there's always questions
about a lot of the studies i'm most interested in have replicated some studies including baby
studies have failed to replicate but i'm not i don't think this is locus of the problem this is
always this is you have exactly the right concern and people are hyper concerned about it yeah i
remember some of the methodologies of those kinds of things and even seeing video of them and just how how strict they
are with themselves in terms of you know lay out the things like this and then cross your arms you
know it's like really buttoned down there's all sorts of things you know like you have the red
character help the kid up the hill and the green one pushing down kid chooses red care how do you
know he just doesn't like the color red well you got to counterbalance the color what if he likes squares and us we've
got to counterbalance that and and it's difficult and and there have been claims in the literature
so um we did some research that got uh published in nature that said the kids prefer to help or
to hinder but another team investigator said they help it not because they prefer it not
because it's helping, but because of certain patterns of movement that it made. So we do
more experiments. Liz Spelke, who's a friend of mine, a brilliant developmental psychologist,
maybe the brilliant scientist in the world, has complicated objections to our interpretations.
So this stuff's very much being debated, but those sort of worries,
the clever Hans worries, I think we pretty much have worked out. I've followed the research a
little bit, including various back and forths. And I like those studies where somebody proposes
an alternative explanation, then another group tests it. That's psychology working from my point
of view. I think part of my bias is that i've seen so many videos
from you know like the new york times or something where i don't think it's the laboratory conditions
it's just a video i was gonna session i was gonna say this and maybe we're a bit to blame for this
the new york times did some videos of this 60 minutes did some videos and the videos are are
you know alan all that came to the lab and that was so much fun and he doesn't and the videos are, you know, Alan Ola came to the lab and that was so much fun. And he just, and the
videos are sham trials where
everything's moved away to get good camera
angles. We use the
most obedient kids, smart kids,
you know, and it all looks
great. But then somebody says, oh my god,
you're not controlling for that. And, you
know, Alan Ola has his eyes open and
that. And you're exactly right.
The videos are not accurate depictions of the studies.
So I'm guilty of that exact effect,
that this is why you should be careful
about getting popular media representations.
But in a better presentation of that, though, Paul,
and perhaps like a slightly more general one,
like the replication crisis,
we would be remiss if we didn't yeah address it and i'm i think
firmly on record as pro-open science pro-methodological reform i think the replication
crisis was very good for psychology and led by psychologists so it it kind of reflects well in
the discipline in certain respects but i'm i'm curious know, you're obviously no opponent to the replication crisis and methodological improvement, but some of the work which you are known for, like I would say the kind of maybe this embodied cognition, like the impact of disgust on moral judgments and that kind of thing, there has been questions raised, right? Not about like anybody doing thing on the ward, but just how well it replicates.
And I, yeah, I'm curious, you know, big picture thoughts about the replication crisis and
any interaction, your research, particularly embodied cognition or otherwise.
Yeah.
Big, big picture thoughts is I devote a chapter of my book to it because and I talk about it, and I give the perfectly view, I think we all agree on the standard view, which is a lot of studies have failed to replicate.
They failed to replicate because psychologists have been doing their studies poorly.
We've been doing p-hacking and harking and file drawer problems and read the book for the gory details, but we've been doing them badly.
I also go on to say that may not even be the biggest problem.
The biggest problem might be the weird problem,
which is so much of psychology has been done with a small sample of humans
from the United States and Canada and Europe.
One or one estimate, an American college undergraduate
is about 4,000 times more likely to be in a psychology experiment
than a resident of China, India, or Africa.
You know, and this might make a real difference, really limiting the generality of our findings.
That's the bad news.
The good news is we're doing our studies better.
We're pre-registering.
We're using bigger samples.
We're doing more international stuff.
So that's the big picture.
My own work, I've done some work which I've done one study which has failed to replicate,
and I believe that nobody ever decided to study, nobody ever decided to fail to replicate.
I believe that the failure to replicate was done very poorly, and it wasn't a fair test.
But, you know, of course, what am I going to say?
But as for the relation of disgust and morality, I think it's really interesting.
As for the relation of disgust and morality, I think it's really interesting.
There have been, I would say that some of the stronger claims that being disgusted makes you think something is immoral probably don't work out.
It falls under the whole social priming, embodied cognition thing, which has just been a disaster. I think, however, the correlational claims that discuss sensitivity is related to political attitudes and moral judgments is pretty robust.
And if I'm right, there's a meta-analysis published a few months ago that supports it.
At least my colleague, Yoel Inbar, who knows 100 times more about this than me, assures me that the evidence is on our side.
So I'll tell you the broader philosophical thing, which is I've done a lot of research.
Some of it I'm more confident in than others.
There's experiments I've done 20 years ago where the results were so strong that, of course, it's going to replicate.
I could, give me 10 kids, I'll replicate it for you.
Boom, boom, boom.
There's other findings where we squeezed out every level of significance we could using crazy-ass analyses.
And if it replicated, it's just because God has a sense of humor.
I have the same guilty conscience about a subset.
I emphasize, a subset, a minor subset.
For those listening, not the majority of my work.
There's no need to check.
No, no, stay away.
Don't let it. Paul, can I ask you a bit of a random question but it's just such a hot topic right now
which is about artificial intelligence i'm sure you must have been following stuff like chat gpt
three and now chat gpt4 which i've been playing with and you may have also seen there's a lot of
hot takes on it some people saying that the singularity is here and the world's going to hell in a hand basket um do you have thoughts about that yeah um this is an area where i will uh admit i was wrong
five years ago i would have said this stuff we're seeing now is 50 years in the future um and and
that these deep learning things would never get this far. And I honestly think people, people are, are being, you know, Oh, you have a machine that
could solve deter, that could pass the Turing test.
Oh, it gets high SAT scores.
Oh my gosh.
Who cares?
Boring, boring, but get into top law schools.
Boring.
Um, this is not boring.
This is stuff that a lot of people would have put money would have been impossible this thing
and here we have it so it it it you know it is shocking how good this stuff is so that's that's
one half of it and i'm very interested here's the other half which is i've been persuaded by people
like gary marcus that there's certain walls these systems are going to hit because they don't have
the proper symbolic reasoning systems or pure statistics and because they lack the symbolic reasoning things
they could paper over something with a billion examples and make it look like they got it right
but they fundamentally lack certain things that humans possess until you put those in
you won't get fully human ai yeah but i'm saying the second thing acknowledging i was wrong about the first yeah
i i heard matt that the i can't remember where i heard this i'm stealing from another podcast
knowledge but that the computer uh ai goal playing systems were doing things unheard of and coming up
with strategies that humans couldn't devise but then it was discovered that like that you could
box them in just because they were they weren't really understanding the game they were you know
running tons of algorithms on strategy and whatnot but the basic thing about if somebody forms a box
around the outside that you will lose like it the top layers couldn't compete so they could
they could beat these massively highly ranked things by just like exploiting no of course
it'll be patched yes i think it's a good illustration that the point that you made
that you know there are these things that look incredibly impressive and then you realize
wait but there's there it's actually
doing that in a way which is quite different than what we imagine from what humans are doing like
and that there might be holes that are not there that's what i'm like yeah i guess it's it's kind
of reprised the well it's also called embodied cognition but i think in a different kind of
context which is that you know the the challenge in artificial intelligence when they were back in the day when they were building those rule-based systems and it was all symbolic manipulation and so on.
And the consensus kind of was that, look, this is ultimately a fool's errand because it's like trying to define words in the dictionary via other words in the dictionary.
And at no point is there ever actually a connection to the real world and it's kind of interesting to me teaching every year i get reminded of this when i teach
cognitive neuropsych how at some level there is a there is a grounding that there is a grounding
in sensory and motor interaction with the real world and even highly abstract concepts that
we've got likely can be traced back to to certain experiences. So is that kind of what you were
saying that Paul, which is that despite very clever statistical learning that's going on with
massive corpuses of text and images, it's still kind of disconnected from a world?
You're raising a real concern. It's somewhat separate from one I'm raising, which again,
I'm kind of indebted to my friend Gary Marcus for pushing so hard. It's that you're right. They did these kludgy symbolic
systems based on these logics, and it couldn't do much of anything. And it just barely plays chess
and so on. And then these brilliant people started, let's get through statistics. And then
statistics took over. But what Gary says is you've given up too quickly
on the symbolic systems. The fact that we can do language and math and logic and hypothetical
reasoning at some level involves a symbolic understanding. And this debate over how to create
a smart AI mirrors the debate over how the mind works,
where a lot of people picked up the sort of British associationist
empiricist view is that the mind is just a big statistical machine.
And people like Gary and Steven Pinker and others say, no,
we also have symbolic understanding.
So the idea would be once you get enough,
once you develop a hybrid model that has both,
then we'll have machines powerful enough to destroy the world. The idea would be once you develop a hybrid model that has both,
then we'll have machines powerful enough to destroy the world.
Great. We can look forward to that.
For what it's worth, I'm sure any technological development ultimately hits a ceiling.
And it might be hard to perceive where that ceiling is
just because it's exponential growth.
Now it doesn't mean it's not going to saturate shortly.
And again, it's weird what exponential growth now doesn't mean it's not going to saturate shortly and and again what it's it's weird what what it can and can't do like um we still don't have robot butlers or robot gardeners we don't have them that could deal
with the 3d world anywhere near the amount of a child but robot professors and podcasters
yeah that's just around the corner well you obviously haven't been to Japan.
We're just, my robot butler is just out of free
and robot gardener was just chatting to this morning.
I know you're kidding,
but is the technology a little bit more advanced there
in terms of daily use?
No.
Well, Japan is famously like a land of contrast
because it does have areas where it seems more futuristic
in the application of technology,
but then it has fax machines in every office,
which are still in use.
So it's got that weird thing.
But I did notice that in media representations of Japan,
there's a whole bunch of tropes that you usually get but i seen one which was about a conductor uh i can't remember mozart in the jungle or
something it was it was called and in one of the seasons the thing was set in japan but the
storyline was around a robot conductor like taking the the jobs of the conductors and they had a concert at a shrine
like a western orchestra at a shrine which we just has never happened the whole thing you know
the japanese were just really into the the robot conductor and you occasionally see these stories
as well that appear on like they appear in the guardian and you're maybe not the new york times i hope not but where they're saying in japan now funerals are being done by robots right and they have the
little video of the pepper robot hitting the thing and doing the chant and every time i look into
these there's like one one enterprising funeral company which has found a way to get massive coverage across the media.
And I don't know if anybody's actually ever had a robot funeral performed, but it doesn't matter
because just the concept as well, it's Japan. So they probably do do it. But I will say that
in counter to all of what I've just said, in a bunch of the restaurants that I go to with my family,
the kind of chain restaurants,
the servers are now like kind of robot cats.
Robot cats.
They're portable trays, but they have a cat face.
And they deliver your food, you order it on the tablet,
and it comes over.
And then, you know, you hit the button and the cat says,
yes.
Wow. That's the stage that we're at okay paul we will let you go and we'll finish up by asking you about yourself but before we do we're going to be selfish and ask you a quick one about
ourselves and just see whether you can think of anything is there anything that's occurred to you
in terms of what we're missing?
Some,
some aspects of gurus or some dynamic that's going on that we've missed.
It's fine if nothing occurs to you,
but we,
we can't help but ask.
If it's a,
if it's a personality failure of Matt,
if you find his,
you know,
relaxed attitude to annoying.
You're welcomed like a sponge.
I welcome you.
I welcome you.
No, I, I, I enjoy, I enjoy i enjoy the podcast i uh i you know sometimes i hear you mention certain people i say oh this
is going to be a punching bag because it's there's certain characters who are just characters so i'm
more interested sometimes when you go after something like like i don't know kendy who's you know and um and i think
also you should have a helen lewis uh join you for all the shows because she's so much she's amazing
she's great we can't afford her she's got a proper career and everything sadly um yeah okay so um
how about yourself so there's the book, the latest book, and the associated
podcast and all your day jobs. Are there any sort of extracurricular activities that you're
preparing for or getting into next?
No, I have this TED Talk on why we do perverse things. And that I think is going to be my next
book. And honestly, I'm looking forward to starting to write i like i like writing books i mean it's it's one thing having a book that just came out and it's fun
promoting it and everything but it's it's it's it involves the ego way too much
and and you worried oh people like how many people are reading this book and what are people saying
and everything and i like just sitting down and working at home and just kind of writing a book and thinking my way through. Nice.
See, and that's why you're not very suitable for material.
Oh, man.
What a sad way to end.
The end was a mess.
Why you're not good at material.
That's a good thing.
Toxic guru.
You're not toxic guru.
Have you considered getting into race science?
Yes.
That's such good advice.
Race science has some strong opinion on trans issues and an unconventional take on Ukraine.
That's all I need.
Yes, yes.
And so January 6th wasn't a big deal.
Come on.
You know, they were just having fun.
I think it's just peaceful protests and the media is on the way.
How am I doing?
Mostly peaceful.
Mostly peaceful. Except for the Antifa to wait. How am I doing? Mostly peaceful. Mostly peaceful.
Except for the Antifa provocateurs.
Yeah, well,
if you didn't know, Paul, they were
planned, it was in coalition with the
FBI. They were just dressed up like
crazy QAnon. I know all that.
I know all that. Well, this is
amazing career advice.
I really appreciate it.
It's been a genuine pleasure.
And all of this was essentially just to lull you
into your false sense of security
for the next week's episode,
which is the Paul Bloom.
I'd be honored.
And I get to come back for my right of response.
And that'd be so happy.
But thank you guys for having me here.
This was a thrill.
Thanks very much, Paul.
Great to meet you.
Thank you.
Nice to meet you too.
So that was Paul.
And that was a very entertaining conversation.
I feel with Paul that I could literally just pepper him with questions endlessly
and just be entertained with the results because he he knows so many
topics and has like interesting things to say so you know if i'm taking gurus matt if i have to
take a secular guru with me to desert island paul's paul's a possible candidate you're gonna
take paul all right but does he know does he know
how to like fashion a spear out of a could he survive based on his knowledge of evolutionary
principles first principle like einstein that's a good question i'm i'm not sure yeah maybe
maybe i need to factor in practical survival abilities so yeah yeah but he wouldn't annoy you
he wouldn't annoy you he's like like you and him would not be throttling each other on the beach
death grip like he might he might reach there and we've been a week but yeah but i i don't think
that it would be much higher danger from any other figures that we cover i think i
think they try to get me on the second or third night so uh so yeah paul you're invited on the
island that's on the island yeah okay that could be the new format yeah you know instead of the
grommeter we'll just go are you invited on the island or do you get kicked off the island it'd
be like reality tv we had it with travis you know like the zombie apocalypse thing do we want him and you know he's
definitely in he's definitely he's one he's our number one pick sorry sorry paul so now we have
well look this is going pretty well so on our anti-zombie island paradise that we're building, we've now got Travis View
and Paul Bloom. That's our society
so far.
So we need to...
There's obvious gaps, but we've just started.
So we'll populate
the island over time.
Yeah, we're building a team.
It takes time. Probably no philosophers
though. We'll have a sign on the island saying
no philosophers allowed.
Yeah, what are they going to do?
They'll just complain about everything
and ask questions.
So, no, they're not allowed.
They're not allowed.
Sorry, Aaron and T and Liam.
Liam, all, and Neil Levy as well.
Neil as well, yeah.
Supposedly not allowed.
So it's unfortunate for them.
Now, Matt, we had some people ask for,
well, we had one person ask for,
the wisdom of Makilla to return.
I'm not quite ready for that
because I haven't listened to any Makilla,
so I'd just be guessing
at what nuggets
she's been throwing out there.
So yeah, we will decode Oprah and she may feature there.
We'll have to see it maybe too much to combine, but we'll
say we'll see, we'll see.
Um, now we do have reviews, Matt, and we've got mostly five-star ones. No very critical ones.
Okay. That's okay. Yeah, I could just read out a couple of points.
Yeah, we could do that.
Yeah. Great podcast, 100% five stars. This is from Hola gatito i like the the cut of this jib already at first
i didn't like this podcast mainly because of their voices matt sounds exactly like the insufferable
australian formula one driver daniel ricciardo who is someone no one would like if he wasn't
a famous race car driver ch Chris says he's Irish,
but his accent sounds like he was orphaned in an international airport
by a different sympathetic traveler every other day.
It's distractingly odd.
Despite all this, you will eventually really like this podcast.
Trust me, I'm trustworthy.
That's pretty good. That's pretty good that's pretty good no lies detected um do you know ricky ardo do you sound like him
i don't i don't know him unfortunately i don't watch any sports let alone racing
is racing a sport what is it it's i guess so i guess it's. I guess it feels like you're cheating when you have big mechanical things
with wheels.
Yeah.
Like, I don't mind a wooden thing.
Like a go-kart.
Like a go-kart would be a test of pure attention.
Yeah, the one that you have to pedal, right?
But the Flintstones car as well would be okay.
I'm all right with bobsleds, but is, yeah, Formula One.
Formula One, yeah.
Like jet racing.
Why do we have jet racing then?
Which jet is the fastest?
Oh, that's a good idea.
We should have jet racing.
Yeah, the crashes would be spectacular for them.
Yeah, so that's our diss on the sport of Formula 1.
Alternative opinions, please let us know.
Now, the last one, Matt,
because I don't want to read too many positive reviews,
lest our heads swell to enormous proportions,
but this one is from Days O' of fierce days of fierce like a person with
a fierce for days days of fierce he's got there so that uh oh no maybe days of ears
would that be it days of fierce but days of ears which one do you think it is i can't understand what you're
saying like you know is there an f in there is there an f in there days of fears that's my first
one like oh i see i see or it could be days off yeah or it could be days yes look they're both
good whichever one it is that's it's one of those
and their title is love you guys five stars we love you two days off oh ace and they said
since you were begging for reviews you make a norwegian's cold heart warmer. Look at that. Scandinavian love.
And in the Patreon, Matt,
we had another Norwegian person
explain that they listened to us
in the frigid cold
outside operating heavy machinery.
They're probably not supposed to do that.
That's so cool.
That's true, not recommended.
There's a warning label on it.
Yeah, that makes me happy. You know, There's a warning label on it. Yeah.
That makes me happy.
You know, I've always wanted to go to Scandinavia.
I've never gotten there.
I'd go anywhere.
Finland, Sweden, Norway, Denmark even.
It's probably a little bit too far south.
But, you know, it's just so romantic, isn't it? Like the, I don't know, the snow, the pine trees.
We're big in Norway, Michael.
We have interest. There's the comedian dags or us
over there he likes us so yeah they should they should they should invite us you know i've got
norwegian heritage svenson svenson i got svenson's in my in my treat they came over to australia and they set up a furniture factory in cans
yeah yeah wasn't dublin's like pillaged by the uh like i think that wasn't to say viking
settlement yeah it was it was but not by my family the svenson stayed home all the guys
were saying hey let's get on the boat let's go over and race some hell and they were like no no
no no we'll just stay here and mind the goats.
Yeah, that's it.
So maybe I'm just saying, you know, probably I probably have Viking blood
that came up from the South, like into the Northern Irish.
That's just probably true.
I probably connected there.
You know, and I think they are, aren't they?
Like that sense of humor where I'm not very ashamed of the entire country,
but you know the way, aren't Scandinavians themed for their like direct
attitudes towards things, you know?
So now be funny, do it.
That's how I imagine them.
Joke funny man.
I wonder, I wonder. somebody could tell us maybe i i probably they must be somewhat similar is there a a pan scandinavian attitude to humor there's the i know the dutch you know the dutch are like
very honest right they don't understand why people just don't say what they mean.
And it's a thing to behold.
It's a beautiful thing in a way.
It is.
I admire them.
That's right.
It's admirable in a way.
In a way it is.
I wonder if Norwegians are the same or maybe they're very frustrated with the Dutch.
So if you people from Norway orand can tell us about your international relations or which scandinavian countries are
very annoyed with all our scandinavian countries we'll be very interested to hear those kind of
details and well i already know about that i know that the swedish people and norwegian people they
don't like each other which is silly because they're basically identical any any anyone who's
not from scandinavia can't tell the difference so very weird that sounds to me like someone saying
irish and english basically the same aren't you really you're very close to each other
that wouldn't go down well matt so i'm outraged on behalf of our Swedish and Norwegian listeners. How dare you?
How dare you?
I can't do it.
I can't do it.
Where's she from?
You Europeans, you're very touchy about these things, aren't you?
You're very touchy.
Unlike us in New Zealand.
We're not. I can admit on air and live that Australians and New Zealanders
are basically indistinguishable.
We've got slightly different accents that are funny
in slightly different ways.
That's about it.
Yeah, because you're an imperialist.
It's the New Zealanders who don't want your cultural oppression
claiming them as a homogenous colony.
No, no, no.
Not sure, Matt.
They have their own traditions.
The colonization is going the other direction, Chris.
All the New Zealanders are coming over here
and taking our jobs and our women, probably.
Well, yeah, they are a sexy bunch,
so that would make sense.
But I've seen Fight of the Concordes.
But yes, enough of that malarkey
Matt we also
need to give
Patreon shoutouts and this is
this is just a perennial stress for me
you know
we've talked about alternative
systems we've talked about a lottery system
something's got to give
something's got to give
let's show off your organizational skills once again they never
get old let's let's do it i'm going to shout out this week matt from our conspiracy hypothesizers Robert Diem, Malik Ismail, Rosemary, Simmon, Christy McCormick, Drez Tanguy, Samuel Francis, John Hutton, and Eric Eder.
Eric Eder.
Okay.
That is our conspiracy hypothesizers for this month excellent thank you i feel like there
was a conference that none of us were invited to that came to some very strong conclusions
and they've all circulated this list of correct answers i wasn't at this conference this kind of
shit makes me think man it's almost like someone is being paid like when when you hear these george
soros stories well he's trying to destroy the country from within we are not going to advance
conspiracy theories we will advance conspiracy hypotheses yeah you will and for that we have tobias nielsen timo cow colampi kagar
erin h stephan konopik per adolfson we already called him out before but he's thematically relevant today. Kai, Michael Hayes, Martin Unland-Ellioretta, Nick McDonald, Eric Beiler, Nancy Carrozza-Carradonna,
Tom McInerney, Tom McInerney, why can't I pronounce that?
And Tina Matthews.
That's who we have for the revolutionary geniuses
this week. Great.
Keep being revolutionary, guys.
I'm usually running, I don't know,
70 or 90 distinct paradigms
simultaneously all the time. 70 or 90?
And the idea is not to try to collapse them down to a single
master paradigm. I'm someone who's
a true polymath. I'm all over the place.
But my main claim to fame,
if you'd like, in academia is that I founded the field of evolutionary consumption.
Now, that's just a guess. And it could easily be wrong. But it also could not be wrong.
The fact that it's even plausible is stunning.
It never fails.
But someone needs to tell Gadzad that being a polymath doesn't mean that you
just weigh in on
whatever the
current thing is. You actually
have to be good at it.
That's the crucial distinguishing
feature of polymaths
but Gad didn't get that memo
I'm afraid so
you know what can he do Matt? What can he do?
Now on to the galaxy green gurus the most stress-inducing category defined in our horrific spreadsheets but um nonetheless oh
and i i also want to shout out mike and um and and larsvin larsvin i'm not entirely sure i'm pretty Mike and Larsvin.
Larsvin. I'm not entirely sure. I'm pretty sure
Mike is a
Galaxy Brain Guru. Larsvin
maybe, but in any case
he's getting a shout
out here because I've
remembered. And
Martian Stan.
Martian Stan. That's another
Galaxy Brain Guru. N nudge matt we definitely shouted out
nudge before and we shouted out chelsea trembly but again they keep coming up zed is also there
in the mix old zeddy um now adam session might be the 100th time he got shouted out but there he is he's just reappeared
matthew brown what's he doing there i shouted him out definitely shouted him out loki fio donald
uh paul wilkie bradley g wall and Jester.
Jester, a lot of you sound very familiar.
Suspiciously familiar.
I'm clicking the little button. Why is it? Anyway, okay.
There we go. Galaxy being good.
We still thank you, even though you stressed me out
finding you in the spreadsheet, but thank you
all. Thank you.
We tried to warn people
what was coming, how it was going to come in the fact
that it was everywhere and in everything considering me tribal just doesn't make any
sense i have no tribe i'm in exile think again sunshine yeah yeah yeah, there we are, Matt. Another decoding and interview done.
Next up, Oprah Winfrey, a big figure in the guru constellation,
a classic guru in many respects, and also forthcoming AI guru,
as we mentioned, and a possible return to Weinstein world for an
out of this world episode
should we say
out of this world
yeah just look
keep looking at the skies Chris
keep watching the sky
I want to believe but
yeah we're going back to them
so look forward to that
and yeah it's nice to see you all again
we'll see you again if the disc allows if the gin permits it we'll we'll meet again
maybe even within a week we'll see maybe maybe yeah if you're lucky if you're lucky so bye bye
okay see ya. Oh, I'm supposed to do an intro, aren't I?
That's going in after.
That's going to be a stay.
That's going in.
That's going in.