Decoding the Gurus - Mini Decoding: Yuval and the Philosophers
Episode Date: January 30, 2024Join us for a mini decoding to get us back into the swing of things as we examine a viral clip that had religious reactionaries, sensemakers, and academic philosophers in a bit of a tizzy. Specificall...y, we are covering reactions to a clip from a 2014 TEDx talk by Yuval Noah Harari, the well-known author and academic, in which he discussed how human rights (and really all of human culture) are a kind of 'fiction'.Get ready for a thrilling ride as your intrepid duo plunges into a beguiling world of symbolism, cultural evolution, and outraged philosophers. By the end of the episode, we have resolved many intractable philosophical problems including whether monkeys are bastards, if first-class seating is immoral, and where exactly human rights come from. Philosophers might get mad but that will just prove how right we are.LinksThe original tweet that set everyone offBananas in heaven | Yuval Noah Harari | TEDxJaffaPaul Vander Klay's tweet on the kerfuffleAn example of a rather mad philosopherSpeak Life: Can We Have Human Rights Without God? With Paul Blackham (The longer video that PVK clipped from)Standard InfoWars article on Harari
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Decoding the Gurus, a podcast where an anthropologist and a psychologist listen
to the greatest minds the world has to offer and we try to work out what they're talking
about. I'm Matthew Brown, Australian extraordinaire, high-level skier, all of that. The guy over there
is Christopher Kavanagh, dashingly handsome, Northern Irish, very young, smart brain on him.
No, no, it's me. I had you all fooled, but it's me, Chris, doing the intro because Matthew is back from his world
travels, back from the DTG company retreat in Japan, where we met up, as people heard,
and he's managed to survive the trip, but not entirely. You're not operating at 100%. Is that
fair to say, Professor Brown? That is fair to say. G'day, Chris.
Not a bad intro.
I have some notes I'll share with you later.
Yeah, no, it was a great holiday.
Great to see you.
Great to go skiing.
Great to show off skiing.
Be a big hit with your son, teaching him how to ski.
Become an idol for my son, yeah.
That poor kid not having someone to look up to on the slopes.
No one to mentor him no father figure
i went down a red thing at the end my a red thing a red slope you know good job my wife wouldn't do
that but no as so many people do i picked up a little bit of a sickness a bit of the plague
the covid plague on the way home and it's not too bad bit of coughing all that stuff but i'm
good i'm on the mend point of order
point of order it's probably cool we don't have a diagnostic test to prove that you know i'm
rigorous matt i'm i'm here fact checking but the symptomology the epidemiology from cases that
we've studied i've located case zero there i've i've got a i know a guy the child of my friends
who did get diagnosed with it,
and he was the one.
He infected us all.
That's here, Sandro.
Fortunately, you're vaccinated.
Many times.
We're not anti-vaccine here.
Famously, non-anti-vaccine podcast.
Yeah, so it was all right.
The only bit that I really didn't like was getting on the plane as I was inching my way back towards economy through the first-class cabin,
which is always a humiliating
experience at the best of times and there was a young guy sitting there in first class like 25
years old that was his first crime being much younger than me and enjoying his first class seat
but the second thing that really got me down was that he had a great big fat copy of Jordan
Peterson's 12 rules for life sitting there on his thing, which I noticed. Yeah, that would drain the gears.
I hope at the least that you audibly tutted on the way back.
Shake your head and say,
mate, you should check I've got a podcast.
I wanted to punch him, but I couldn't.
That stands to reason.
One of my more communist-y opinions, Chris,
is I think we should ban first class and business class
or any classes on aeroplanes.
We should just have the one class
because those different classes just make the other people feel bad. And I think we should
give everyone a little bit more room. Yes, plane flights would be a little bit more expensive.
We'll all travel a little bit less. They should make it so you just can't buy a more expensive
seat. Everyone gets the same. And that way there's no envy, there's no injustice,
and no one has to get punched in first class. Yeah, that's a socialist take to start the podcast.
But maybe I can sign off on this
until I'm wealthy enough to travel in first class.
And then I'll rescind my endorsement of that.
But I will say,
whenever anybody is traveling first class
and complaining about service in any way,
I find it infuriating.
Yes, there's little things that annoy you when traveling,
but you should have compassion for the rest of us
who suffer those indignities
alongside the broader indignity of economy class in general.
So just be careful what you're complaining about.
Have you ever flown first class or business class?
No, I don't think so.
I have been in slightly better seats in like a domestic flight that you
have to pay slightly extra for but it wasn't like an extra location or anything so i i don't think
that counts no that doesn't it's like the upgraded seats on like like economy plus or something that
does not it does not count no i've never flown anything other than economy
either that's what you get for having a family in this day and age chris i'm being an academic
being an academic if i was swanning around free man about town without responsibilities maybe
things would be different would you fly first class no i don't think i would i think i'd prefer
to suffer and then stay like you could take that money and stay in like a first class hotel like a
much nicer hotel when you get there for like a week i know senior academics that only fly like
business class and stuff and i remember because people were talking to me about being able to get
all this work done which i sometimes endeavor to do on planes and you know it sort of works a bit
but it's always the issue of you know the space right and they're like no but you could just put it and then i'm like no no no that doesn't work then i realized oh you're always
traveling in a like a different world let me hey is that getting paid by the university or they
pay for it themselves i guess so but these are like pi i'm a pi hey i've been a pi on some
well no maybe they're at your level but you're busy now because i'm at
the highest level there is no level above mine chris well the reason i ask because it's not
possible uh as far as i know in australia like it's not allowed no way yeah but my academics
have their ways because that's the thing like on most grounds it says you can't reimburse tickets
that are you know above a certain class or whatever that's
that's normal no no chris i'm not i'm not talking about the grants i'm talking about the university
the university will not let you wow like it doesn't matter in fact even at csiro the australian
government research organization where i also worked uh and i think most government places
are the same i remember my my mentor and supervisor bill venables he was like a world
renowned statistician also happened to be really very large he had health problems right he had
health problems which actually led to him being an extremely large heavy guy not very healthy
he's the kind of person that would die from deep vein thrombosis and stuff on a plane right is he
still alive i hope so i haven't checked in on him recently okay well if you're listening bill i hope you're alive but anyway but they wanted him he was invited to go on this world
tour giving lectures right to people about statistics and r and stuff because they really
wanted him you know he's smart guy yeah and he had to jump through all of these hoops because
like he just physically couldn't do it unless he went first
class right he would probably die um but that was like a big deal that exception to be made yeah i
don't know what anyway it's different if you're in the c-suite if you're up there with associate
vice chancellors and the those people they fly first class i'd say the majority of academics
don't but i just know a lot who seem to be very comfortable in business
and maybe higher.
And that might be the kind of academics I'm dealing with, Matt.
The fat cats are the academic world.
But yeah, I mean, so I don't see those spoils.
So that's it.
But yeah, so this has been your advertisement for,
why don't we lift everyone's boat?
Why don't we make all the seats a little bit nicer for everyone you take some of the niceness i did the first part yeah and spread
it around economy it would be like spreading a little bit of butter over a lot of bread but
even so it would all be you know incrementally better off we'd all have to pay a bit more
wow that's okay millionaires just don't need a bit more shouldn't they do that if we we should
do the online leftist thing,
if we just take Bill Gates' money,
we'll be able to pay for first class seats
for everybody for 100 years.
That's it.
I don't get why it doesn't work, Matt.
So, you know, this is why people come to this podcast
for economic analysis.
So apart from setting the economic system
and clean travel systems to right.
We are here for a purpose, Matt.
Oh, and by the way, should you want more of our unstructured waffling
and particular discussions about the experience in Japan at the Ryokan,
more so than you got, there is a bunch of videos and audio stuff on the Patreon.
There's a long extended discussion on plagiarism, academic
plagiarism, if you want to hear us discuss that with a glass of whiskey or two. So just mentioning,
should that be something people are interested in? But that's all Patreon waffle. What we're
here for today, Matt, we're not doing the Sean Carroll decoding, which is the next decoding we
have planned. A treat for you,
a reward for all the terrible people that we cover. Instead, you know, to gently bring you
back into the fold and give you a chance to build up your decoding muscles, you know, to let your
lungs recover. We're doing one of those short focused decodings on a specific, really a tweet
actually that went viral. So a little bit different,
but it touches on a bunch of topics that we're interested in. The clip, Matt, why don't I play
it for you and then I'll explain the context. Is that the right way to do it? Okay, I'll play it
first so that I don't give you any preconceptions. Many, maybe most legal systems are based on this idea, this belief in human rights.
But human rights are just like heaven and like God.
It's just a fictional story that we've invented and spread around.
It may be a very nice story.
It may be a very attractive story.
We want to believe it.
But it's just a story. It's not a very attractive story, we want to believe it, but it's just a story.
It's not a reality.
It is not a biological reality.
Just as jellyfish and woodpeckers and ostriches have no rights,
Homo sapiens have no rights also.
Take a human, cut him open, look inside,
you find their blood, and you find their heart and lungs and kidneys,
but you don't find their any rights.
The only place you find rights is in the fictional stories
that humans have invented and spread around.
And the same thing is also true in the political field.
States and nations are also like human rights and like God and like heaven.
They too are just stories.
A mountain is a reality.
You can see it, you can touch it, you can even smell it.
But Israel or the United States, they are just stories, very powerful stories,
stories we might want to believe very much, but still they are just
stories. You can't really see the United States. You cannot touch it. You cannot smell it.
So that was Yuval Noah Harari, somebody that actually we are planning to cover in the future,
a Israeli historian, philosopher, author, wrote a book, Sapiens and Homo Deus. And there he is giving a TEDx talk, I believe in 2014,
TEDx Jaffa. It's an old video. And the specific clip that I played to you went viral on Twitter.
Various people shared it around. One of them, someone called Scarlett Johnson, a political
scientist, grassroots activist, daughter of a Marine Corps vet and blah, blah, blah, blah,
blah, right, said in response to this video, in a tweet that has 3.1 million views,
if you believe this, what we just heard, is there any horror you cannot justify? And this was
retweeted wildly with a lot of people outraged. Yes. So what did you think about, were you
similarly outraged well that's
how it came across my desk shall we say as well which was that yeah it was getting retweeted
there was an outrage farming going on uh initially pretty much the religious right i think in the
united states who'd like to find things to be outraged about even if it's a relatively tepid 10-year-old TEDx snippet because, you know, this goes to their idea of
atheistic socialists who believe in nothing, nihilistic point of view where, you know,
unless you actually have faith in the reality of the eternal nature of God, the United States and
the flag and all that stuff, then, you know, you'll just be, you know, sniffing your own farts
and wallowing in your
own crapulence as socialists are wont to do. So that was the original outrage thing. But it was
interesting to see academic philosophers get in on the act as well, hey?
Oh, we'll get to them. We'll get to them. But before we get off the religious right,
I do want to say that I think part of the reason that Harari triggered them is that at the
start, he says, human rights are just like heaven and like God. It's just a fictional story that
we've invented and spread around. It may be a nice story, maybe a very attractive story. We want to
believe it, but it's just a story. So I think that is the bit that set him up for angering religious
people because they don't like it when you present their stories
as comparative to fiction, right?
That is not good.
Now, I would say when I heard this,
the general takeaway I got from it is
he's wanting to emphasize that humans have the capacity
for symbolic culture and that we invent ideas like nations and democracy and
human rights and languages and so on, and that these are very important and that this distinguishes
humans from other animals in very important respects. So if we care about those things,
we have to take consideration that they aren't like the others. They're reliant
on humans coming up to some sort of shared agreement about their importance. Now that
felt obvious to me, especially because so many cultural evolution theorists have emphasized this
point about the ultra-sociality of humans, right? Like why are humans able to cooperate in such
large numbers beyond like genetic kin? Lots of of explanations but a lot of them revolve around
having symbolic culture and cumulative cultural capacities so to me this is nothing new and it
was very clear that he is not saying that these things are not important and the fact that they
are symbolic means that we shouldn't invest our passions in defending them or that
kind of thing. Well, you would say that because you're a godless materialist reductionist, Chris.
And I would too. You know, the other thing too is, I mean, I'm not a big fan of Yuval Harari
and I'm not a fan of TEDx talkie. And this was a perfect example of that where you want to make
a point. His point is, hey, ideas hey ideas are important man let's talk about the
importance of ideas but they're not tangibly real it's a pretty basic trite point he was dressing
it up in some flowery language rather than describing it in terms of social constructivism
or in terms of symbolic ideas or transmissible culture and stuff like that he was talking about
as stories that we fictional stories that we made up and told ourselves,
you know, to sex up his talk a little bit. And then, of course, that sexing up, ironically,
is the thing that triggers the little outrage cycle we saw.
Yeah. Although also part of the outrage cycle here is that Harari is in the pantheon of right-wing
villains, right? Infowars often references him. He's like, if Klaus Schwab
is the evil deity at the top, Harari is somewhere down in the demigod status. He's a neoliberal
Jewish person. So already he's not doing well. And he's a slight futurist in certain respects,
right? So his villain status already makes
him like a suitable you know it's very easy to whip up anger at a man the fact that he appeared
to be disparaging religion helps and just to highlight Matt Paul van der Klee a religious
person on Twitter who I've interacted with before he was pointing out this video and promoting a response to it from
some religious talk show kind of thing. Looks like a religious talk show. Some guy called Glenn
Scrivener. And he was saying that their response is pure Jonathan Peugeot and Jordan Peterson.
So let me play the response that they had to this clip.
Why do you think this went viral on Twitter?
I've never seen that clip
and it's extraordinary to me that when he says oh man like i can see a mountain and i'm like well
you don't actually what you see is a conglomeration of rocks and things like that but he like will
adopt a standpoint and see these things and go that's a mountain how do you know it's not a hill
that's right how do you know it's not a hill? That's right, how do you know it's not a hill?
And why is it?
Because if he just sees a few rocks, would he go, it's a mountain?
Yes.
No, he wouldn't.
He has to be, and he arbitrarily selects a certain point at which,
or he might say social convention does that and says, this is a mountain.
He goes, now that's a mountain.
That's fact.
But then if he sees a conglomeration of human beings and says, this is a mountain. He goes, now that's a mountain. That's fact. But then if he sees a conglomeration of human beings,
and so there's a point at which people go,
oh, no, that's the United States.
And he goes, oh, no, you see, I can't buy into that.
I'm having a conglomeration of rocks,
but not a conglomeration of human beings.
You're like, dude, your metaphysical trousers are down.
We can see how you're being thick.
I sort of feel embarrassed for him
really yeah this kind of pseudo-philosophical wordplay is so annoying isn't it because it
sounds smart superficial sense makers love this this is what they love to do anytime that somebody
suggests that something is objectively exists or whatever they're like ah you know how can you say that egregores are any less real
than a sun say because a sun is just a concept it's just an idea that we've applied to a bunch
of hydrogen and helium that happens to be in the same place you know these are just concepts chris
yeah you know egregores are just as real as stars there's plenty of legitimate arguments that you
could make to somebody being too glib about the
way concepts work or whatever but like the central thing he's saying he would agree if they wanted to
emphasize this point that you know what we deem mountains and what is a hill it's actually like
a social convention which you know there are there are fuzzy bind like harari would be down with all
that yeah of course he's not talking about that.
He's not making that distinction.
That's right.
That's right.
That's not his point.
As we've said before, it's not a very interesting point.
It's probably a boring TEDx talk that he gave, right?
I don't know.
But he's just saying that there are tangible material things and there are things that
are sort of cultural ideas and things like that, that sort of live in our heads and that
you cannot point to any place in the physical world where they actually exist.
Yeah. And just to make this point clear, he wasn't in the larger talk arguing that because
human rights derive from like symbolic culture, whatever, that they're not important, or that
all these concepts, they're just, you know, compared to the objective reality, they're so
fluffy and nonsense. Like, this is from later in the talk, I went, compared to the objective reality, they're so fluffy and nonsense. Like this is from later in the talk.
I went and listened to the talk.
So here's him talking about, you know, what makes humans special.
You will never catch a chimpanzee standing in front of an audience of 200 other chimps
and giving a talk about bananas or about humans or something.
Only humans do such things.
It should also be said, however,
that chimps not only don't give talks to strangers,
they also don't have prisons.
They don't have concentration camps.
They don't have slaughterhouses.
They don't have arms factories.
Cooperation is not always nice.
Often when we think about cooperation,
we think about Sesame Street and teaching children
to cooperate together, but all the terrible things that humans have been doing, still are doing in
the world, they too are the outcome of this ability to cooperate flexibly in very, very large numbers.
to cooperate flexibly in very, very large numbers.
Now, suppose I've managed to convince you that the secret of success of our species
is this ability to cooperate flexibly in large numbers.
The next question that immediately arises
in the mind of an inquisitive person
is how exactly humans do it.
What gives us this ability to do something no other animal
can do and the answer is our imagination humans cooperate flexibly in large numbers
because humans can create imagined realities together yeah he's saying this intangible stuff
this conceptual stuff,
this cultural stuff is terribly, terribly important. Two-edged sword can be used for
great things or terrible things. Even if you're religious, Harari is atheist or whatever, right?
But you can actually take from this that he's saying human cultural products or human imagined
realities that we share, which maybe, you know, you can say,
you know, God helped to create those in man through the kind of instincts that he developed.
This should be freaking gravy for the sense makers. This is what they love, right? Talking
about symbolism and the importance of imagined realities. So he actually was making a point,
which they would be on board with but because
they were so triggered by the you know the reference to fiction in regards religion it's
taken one that he's arguing human rights aren't important and you know that they're a fiction and
in terms of like you know being insubstantial he's not saying human rights are not important no
no or two that religion is a you
know terrible thing that we should transcend and he again isn't saying that either he might think
that but that's not what he's arguing at all he's arguing that all these imagined realities like
states like democracy like religion are hugely important for human societies which obviously
they are so it should be a mundane point right
the kind of point which is like what is money you know the money that you have in your pocket
it's just paper and metal and the only thing that gives it value is people are willing to treat it
and treat it like it has inherent value and that's just a shared convention what if society broke
down and you're like yes
that actually is an interesting thing to realize but most people realize that in their teens
and you're right though that there's something special and triggering about him saying that
natural and all human rights are imaginary right or are invented but people wouldn't have a problem
if you said that people invented democracy, right? Or money.
Or money or freaking anything, right?
But we went down a little bit of a rabbit hole, didn't we?
And in finding out that there is a stream of respectable thought, not amongst the religious
right, but amongst a much broader stream of philosophers and other people, that human
rights and natural rights are not a human invention like democracy or money, but actually
exist independently of
their mind independent i think is the jargon that they what they use for but like so yeah so you
mentioned academic philosophers matt and in a rare clasping across the boundaries right that meme
you had the religious right and the sound speakers and the philosophers i actually think they're
fairly they're not a huge distance apart.
I described them a little bit like Pokemon,
you know, the beast Pokemon
and the evolved version,
with philosophers being the evolved version
of sense speakers.
Now, I don't know who that's word something for,
but I do think there's at least connections there.
But the bit that is not always so in step
was that academic philosophers were likewise
very annoyed by this clip from Harari.
And what triggered them was not the reference to religion as being a fiction.
They didn't really care about that point.
What they got triggered by, and I will say it's triggered, is because he referenced human
rights.
why, and I will say it's triggered, is because he referenced human rights. And apparently, there is a developed debate within philosophical circles about the nature of rights and whether
they are like, what I would say, a kind of naturalistic science-based perspective would be
is that human symbolic culture relies on humans existing. So the concept of rights
has to develop from human symbolic culture. So you go back to the dinosaurs, you don't have any
concept of rights, but there are a class of philosophers, including ones that classify
themselves as naturalists, who think that those concepts existed without humans and that there's very complications about it. But that's
why. So, had he used the other example, he wouldn't have triggered the reaction, but they
were very annoyed because they said, what a simplistic way to, you know, treat a very complex
topic about rights. So, the interesting thing about this, Chris, is it puts you and me,
reductionist materialists, that we are in the same camp as michelle fuko and other people because
they would describe this kind of rights as being totally socially constructed right which is
saying the same thing just just trust me on that one at least i i think i'm probably right whereas
it's more the liberal i guess philosophers who would talk about natural rights and inalienable sorts of things. And they sometimes
would say that they derive from the divine, right? God or a godlike essence in people or something.
Or if you get a bit more sophisticated and less religious, you might say that they arise
kind of by our inherent human qualities, right? Like humans, from that argument, you'd say that natural rights or human rights arise
because humans as being conscious, intelligent creatures or whatever,
just naturally want to be free, that kind of thing, right?
Not be oppressed.
Yes, and I was helpfully sent a link to, you know,
the Stanford philosophy page,
which has a long entry about these kind of debates, but I couldn't help but notice that
whenever it's referencing a lot of the points of the people who are, who want to argue that they
are not mind dependent or whatever, it will reference the source can be supernatural or
an unspecified, but kind of mystic-y.
I'm sorry, it is.
It's kind of like a realm of concepts or something.
Yeah.
The ether or whatever.
Yeah, like platonic eternal forms.
Yeah, we'll be triggering the philosophers, but I don't mind.
I'm sorry.
Because the point I want to emphasize with this was,
take whatever philosophy you want, like theistic philosopher, if you so believe that's your bag. But the point for me is that
both of those groups, the academic philosophers and the religious reactionaries on Twitter,
they both were just focusing on this little thing, you know, this part of the speech.
That's right. We have to remind people, these were just examples, right? He was not making a point about human rights
or natural rights or about religion.
He was making a point about transmissible culture
and the importance of cooperation and ideas
in fueling organized endeavors.
Yes, and almost universally,
I will say from interacting with some philosophers,
I cannot speak for all of them and a
few just looking to the religious right they seem to get that wrong like they didn't infer that the
broader point of the talk is actually a promotion of the importance of imagined realities right for
humans so like they they kind of assumed that he was he was sort of dissing yeah he's implying that
either god or human rights aren't important yeah which he wasn't that it was it was very obvious
to me so you know you know work on your theory of mind guys work on your theory of mind figure out
what the person's trying to communicate what their motivations are rather than zeroing in on the
syntax that would be my yeah and i i do think it's occasionally worth looking into the context of why
harari is a particularly triggering individual for the reactionary right or that kind of thing
like just a five minute google search will reveal to you his position in you know conspiracy theorist
lore and whatnot which seems like you might consider it when addressing this kind of topic. But I don't
know. Philosophers are very good at focusing on individual words, or in this way, they share a lot
with sense makers that that's what they like to do. Making simple things extremely complicated,
you mean? Don't say that. But I will say another, like an external example is a guy, Alex O'Connor,
who's doing a bunch of interviews recently with
various figures. Peter Hitchens stormed out of an interview with him and he's kind of like an
atheist philosopher. He recently did an episode with Peugeot and they enjoyed a productive,
symbolic, laden philosopher slash sensemaker crossover with nary a word about, you know,
the lurid conspiracism and religious apologetic style reasoning that
that Peugeot applies and both seem very happy that they were able to you know achieve such
an important reaching across dialogue and I thought really this is something to be impressed
by because the fact that philosophers and sense speakers can talk together and enjoy this kind of
thing i could
have told you that from my experience with both of them so i'm sorry i'm not besmirching all
philosophers i know there are plenty of philosophers who are you know they also find issue with
conspiracy theorists and sense makers and and this kind of thing so i'm not casting aspersions
at the entire philosophy field and I know that very many smart people
have spent many decades talking about rights and how they can be independent from mind.
Yep. And a lot of religious scholars have spent a long time arguing how many angels
dance on the head of a pin. I don't know why you would use that analogy. That's not fair.
We're coming back with a bang maybe the normal people won't
have the when i say normal i mean like reasonable people won't understand why philosophers are going
to be slightly mad at us but well you know philosophers being mad at you you have to be
doing something right to get some set of philosophers mad at you like the philosophers
would agree they're all mad with each other so So yeah, yeah, yeah. That's what it is. But that clip, just to be clear again,
like Harari is, I think both of us agree.
It's a fairly mundane observation
just about humans having symbolic culture
and it being important, right?
Our cumulative culture in some respects,
the thing which distinguishes us
from almost all other animals,
their capacity to communicate,
create cumulative culture
and share intentionality
in a kind of bonding and whatnot way.
But that to me seems unobjectionable,
but not particularly mind-blowing.
No.
Well, anyway, I'll be keen to look at her.
Maybe it was a bit unfair to him.
Maybe I'll think he's all right
when we cover him properly.
I started reading Sapiens
and I got bored and stopped. So I can't really speak to it i believe part of the issue is you know he he does
long big picture history and so if you know specifics of any of the topics he covers it's
really oversimplifying claims and complexities and yeah you know if you do big history for all
of human civilization and history you're really going to annoy a large, diverse set of people.
Yeah, Steven Pinker, for instance.
Yeah, he's in the same category.
But Chris, speaking of culture and monkeys and people,
when we were in Japan, my wife, I didn't actually go to see them,
but she took photos for me.
She went to see the snow monkeys.
Nihonzaru.
Nihonzaru. Nihonzaru.
Macaques.
Macaques, are they?
Yeah, I think they're Japanese macaques.
Anyway.
Very, very famous people probably seen the beautiful photos of the snow monkeys sitting in the steaming pond or hot spring bath.
I don't know what they're called.
Hot spring.
Hot spring.
Hot spring.
You know, but what is also pretty well known, but my wife saw it for herself, is that not all the monkeys are allowed into the spring.
There's the alpha, high status family, males and females and their children, maybe cousins.
I don't know how far it extends, but, you know, the in-group, the aristocrats.
They're in there having a lovely bath.
And meanwhile, all of the other members of the macaque troop are sitting
there literally clutching their shoulders like huddled together for warmth in the snow because
they're not allowed to get into the spring even though there's room for everyone there's room in
the spring for everyone but they're not allowed in because of monkey society does that remind you of
another species that behaves like this chris i like how you've tied this into our opening segment with the discussion of first class
plane travel oh yeah yeah obviously you meant to do it
this whole discussion leading to that that's right i'm the monkey shivering in the snow at
the back of the plane they should let me in first class. This is right. Jordan Peterson, Hooperman, and Joe Rogan are the monkeys luxuriating in the hot spring
and telling everybody else the benefits of cold water plunges while they retreat to their
mansion.
So yes, I agree.
The proletariat macaques need to seize back the means of water heating production and
enjoy this world.
But Matt, you answer one question to me if you cut
open the macaque where do you see that status you cut open a macaque there's no status there
wait a second this is blowing my mind like are you telling me that monkeys have some kind of
symbolic system of reasoning as well have you fought this for yeah yeah yeah well i mean this
would i'm sure this is in your wheelhouse right because this is what comparative anthropology and uh i i love that
stuff because i mean one like monkeys are bastards right they're bastards i've met monkeys all over
the world and they've never been anything other than horrible but they're very clever they're a
lot like us and in one spot that i figured out that they could steal tourist stuff and that
i'd race up a tree.
You know, the sunglasses.
This is pretty famous.
Most people know this, right?
And they'll hold on to your sunglasses until you chuck them a banana.
Then they'll drop the sunglasses.
So it's basically extortion, right?
They've invented extortion.
They've invented extortion.
That's a good example, Matt, because the limitation there for the monkeys and why we don't have the capitalist class developing amongst them is
that typically, with some limited examples, they're not great at passing down that kind of
knowledge across generations. Now, there are a couple of notable exceptions, but it's the
cumulative culture and the capacity for passing down information and cultural learning, which is the hallmark.
But actually, they do.
There's a good example.
You know, we're primates, we're cousins,
we've got close common ancestors.
And like us, and like many other species too,
they are concerned about prestige and hierarchy or status.
Yep, social status.
Hierarchies.
So they are modeling a component of relations in their
mental wheel space but yet they didn't invent rights no or democracy so what's the difference
or socialism that's right they need to invent socialism but you know but this is good i think
it sort of speaks to the power point because i generally even though it's bland i generally agree
with it like monkeys societies suck and they're pretty similar to basic state-of-nature type
human psychologies.
Small-scale human societies before we developed
larger communities and shared cultures.
Yeah.
We were just another primate on the block for a long time.
Yeah.
It's basically a very hierarchical,
totally status-driven, oppressive kind of society careful the
anthropologists i can feel them cringing within because what did i get wrong just plenty of
examples you're gonna mention bonobos or something no no no i'm not those little freak geeks
there's sexy little bastards we talked about it with manvir oh you weren't here
you were drunk at the time but But there's plenty of societies,
you have small scale societies or hunter-gatherer style.
They're not always nasty.
No, no, no. They don't always form in the hierarchies. In fact, there's plenty of
examples where there are anti-hierarchy social organizations. So it isn't necessarily a
fundamental feature for society to function that you would have to have this rigid social hierarchy system. This is something that various anthropologists and other social science
people want to emphasize that, you know, like Jordan Peterson looking at nature and saying the
status hierarchies of lobsters equate to that it's such a primal component that you simply can't
understand human society without understanding
that that is a core component that can never be removed.
And the notion that prestige biases and that there are status and stuff, I think he's actually
right there, but he's wrong on the notion that it has to form in the kind of...
A rigid hierarchy type thing.
Yeah, like status and social cachet reputation is always important, but it doesn't necessarily ossify into a hierarchy type thing yeah like status and social cachet reputation is always
important but it doesn't necessarily ossify into a hierarchy type thing exactly by the point that
harari is making we can create cultural systems that are much more egalitarian yeah and whatnot
that's the the difference that's the point i was trying to make just the relatively weak version
of that which is that we can make things more sophisticated, sometimes for better, sometimes for worse,
but it does at least expand the universe of possibilities,
including this great state of Queensland,
this great country of Australia,
where we live in the best of all possible worlds.
Wow, that took a surprisingly parochial turn.
Yeah, well, look, I just demonstrated anthropologists
getting triggered over the mention of natural hierarchies
and whatnot. So yeah, it's all complicated, Matt. We can all agree.
But I'm with Harari. Natural doesn't mean good. And this is where Jordan Peterson's wrong,
that natural doesn't mean inevitable either, right? Natural is usually not very good and
certainly not inevitable. And you know, you've got to be aware of it.
Common misreading of old Dawkins, right? That because he said selfish genes,
that he was saying we should be selfish
and humans are selfish.
And no, that was actually the opposite.
We're not tailored to the gene drives
because of our cultural values.
So a similar point, commonly misinterpreted
and equally somebody that annoys philosophers
for some valid reasons as well so
there we go matt look we tied it all up you see how many little threads we wove and we pulled it
all together we're getting back into the swing of this yep we'll we'll be decoding gurus in a full
length episode in no time yep i'm feeling healthier just having spoken to you off the air you mentioned
that you know it's difficult if you laugh because
you know it can induce coughing so you have to be careful and so for that reason i was 20 to 30
percent less funny than usual but listeners might have might have noticed that so if there's any of
that it was purely to protect matt's lungs that's why i was doing any jokes that didn't land any
you know it was all in service of protecting
the most important member of the Guru's pod team.
The most vulnerable, you could say.
Wow, this gives us something to look forward to.
Excited to see how you're going to perform back where you are.
That doesn't follow, but yeah.
So there we go, Matt.
A little, the daily delivery on Twitter and elsewhere
of outrage from various different factions and
stupid clips surfacing years and years after they were made this is what social media was made for
to make people outraged about out of context clips yep and lucky for us that they are because it gives
it's grist to our mill chris gives us a position to give a reasonable, considered,
and fundamentally correct take on events.
But there's one message that I want to leave people with,
which is monkeys are bastards.
Never trust a monkey.
Or a philosopher.
That's a good message to end on.
Some of my best friends are philosophers.
Some of them, I assume, are good people.
No, we'll leave with that,
and we'll return soon enough
with full-length decodings, other things that you can expect.
And thank you all.
Have a wondrous day out there.
Don't worry about hierarchies and, you know, money.
What is it anyway?
It doesn't mean anything.
It's just like a made-up concept.
Yeah, like, you know, imagine, Chris, there's no countries.
Imagine.
And no religion too. It's easy if you try. Yeah, it is. It, imagine, Chris, there's no countries. Imagine. And no religion too.
It's easy if you try.
Yeah, it is.
It is.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Food for thought.
Adios.
Adios, amigos.
Ciao, ciao.
Bye-bye.