Into the Impossible With Brian Keating - Brian Keating on Humility, Chutzpah, and the Arrow of Time | The James Altucher Show

Episode Date: October 10, 2025

Please join my mailing list here 👉 https://briankeating.com/list to win a meteorite 💥 Brian Keating and James Altucher have an unfiltered talk on humility, arrogance, and the strange mix of t...raits needed to achieve great things. From the wisdom of the Talmud to the Dunning–Kruger effect, they explore why even Nobel Prize winners wrestle with imposter syndrome. James shares how writing books requires a mix of blind confidence and humility, while Brian connects scientific resilience to obsession, quests, and flow states. The two also talk candidly about the challenges of writing and publishing science books in today’s world—and Brian previews his bold new project exploring Jim Simons, “Chern–Simons Theory,” and the very arrow of time itself. What You’ll Learn Why success requires balancing humility with courage—and sometimes arrogance with ignorance How Nobel Prize winners secretly struggle with imposter syndrome Why writing books demands both blind confidence and ruthless editing The difference between obsession and quest when pursuing success What “Chern–Simons Theory” reveals about time, space, and the structure of the universe Timestamped Chapters 00:00 Humility and Chutzpah in Science 06:35 "Feel Good Productivity Insights" 08:08 Considering Career Change for Fulfillment 10:36 "The Genius of Science" 13:54 Topology Links Time and Dimensions — ➡️ Follow me on your fav platforms: ✖️ Twitter:⁠ ⁠⁠https://twitter.com/DrBrianKeating⁠  🔔 YouTube:⁠ https://www.youtube.com/DrBrianKeating?sub_confirmation=1⁠  📝 Join my mailing list:⁠ ⁠⁠https://briankeating.com/list⁠  ✍️ Check out my blog:⁠ ⁠⁠https://briankeating.com/cosmic-musings/⁠  🎙️ Follow my podcast:⁠ ⁠⁠https://briankeating.com/podcast⁠  — Into the Impossible with Brian Keating is a podcast dedicated to all those who want to explore the universe within and beyond the known. Make sure to follow/subscribe so you never miss an episode! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:01:00 Today on the James Altiger show. In order to become the best writer in the world, you have to spend many years as a horrible writer believing you're the best writer in the world. Because to write a book, as you know, is really hard. I usually tell them, only do it if you'll regret it for the rest of your life. Because that's the, you know, regrets of the dying, so to speak. I'm going to have a quest.
Starting point is 00:01:23 I'm going to figure out what happened at the beginning of time. So now, okay, what are the steps? I'm going to build this. I'm going to, this quest fills me with joy and progress on this quest, fills me with joy and I'm going to make progress and feel joy every step of the way. There are so few books about non-nonsense nowadays, like not about string theory or not about multiple universes. Most of the science books are about those things because they can't be proven. So the author will never be proven wrong in his lifetime.
Starting point is 00:01:52 This isn't your average business podcast and he's not your average host. This is the James Altager show. So, James, there's a famous statement by Talmudic scholars that really echo what I think it takes to be a great scientist is to have both humility and be humble, but also a lot of chutzpah and courage. Because if you're only like humble, you won't feel that you can accomplish and take on the greatest warrior of all time, which is Mother Nature. Like, Mother Nature does not give up her secret. It's very hard to win a Nobel Prize to discover something new to prove a new law theorem or whatever. But on the other hand, if you're only humble, you won't have that kind of swagger, let's just say, swagger, not arrogance, because arrogance gets a bad name. So there's a famous passage in the Talmud,
Starting point is 00:02:46 and it says, a man should have two pockets. On one pocket, he should have the statement from the Bible that the whole world was created for me, just for me. And the other pocket should say, I'm nothing but dust and ashes. Because if you don't have that, you will not be humble and you will be arrogant, and then you're prone to the fall that pride always goes before. So it's very interesting to know that you are also acquoting that. In some ways, you are the best writer in the world, right? I mean, let's not be falsely humble, but you're not the best writer in all categories in the world, right? You wouldn't say that. Right.
Starting point is 00:03:18 But what's interesting there is that, you know, and then this kind of goes side by side or the Dunning-Bruger effect. Like, think about writing. In order to become forever, I'm not even saying about me or anyway, in order to become the best writer in the world, you have to spend many years as a horrible writer believing you're the best writer in the world because to write a book, as you know, is really hard. You have to sit down and write like a thousand words a day for, let's say, hundreds of days.
Starting point is 00:03:46 And then, of course, that's before the 18 rewrites to have a finished copy and combined with the humility to do the editing and the format and everything that's required to put together a book. And then, by the way, your first effort is going to suck. There's no way to avoid it. And I wrote at least three or four books before I would say I even got a glimmer of skill into writing.
Starting point is 00:04:10 But every step of the way, I thought I was the best. So I was lying to myself. And you have to be able that Dunning Kruger blindness is so important to excellence. So either you have this kind of humility combined with confidence where you can do that or you have to be arrogant combined with stupidity in order to do that. What are the other? And so I don't know if it's the tametic advice or just being arrogant and stupid at the same time, the Dunning Kruger solution that does it.
Starting point is 00:04:37 But you have to have one or the other. Exactly. Yeah, I do believe that, you know, without equal amounts of both, so to speak, we can't really make any progress. And to me, these laureates that I talked to, I said, you know, earlier, only two of the 22 I've ever interviewed said, yes, of course I knew I was going to win the Nobel Prize. I should have won it earlier. You know, I won't say who they are, but, you know,
Starting point is 00:04:58 people might be able to figure it out. But the rest were like, no, I really didn't believe I would win it. Barry Barish, who wrote the forward with you on the first volume, he said that he had the Nobel Prize apostor syndrome. In other words, he didn't feel like he should have won the Nobel Prize after he won the Nobel Prize. So, like, how bad can it get? Because he thought Einstein was in a different universe than him.
Starting point is 00:05:17 He didn't belong in this same universe, let alone the same book of Nobel laureates as he was in. So, yeah, I think it's important to have those balances. Don't be falsely humble. At the same time, you know, these people are so interesting and so determined. But my whole thing is like nowadays resilience, like the David Gagins' portrayal when you interviewed him, is just so fascinating. But I don't know that it directly applies. Just keep toughing out.
Starting point is 00:05:42 I mean, we don't have like Bud's Week, you know, SEAL Team 6. And, you know, like you're just in water and freezing water for a week straight. And then attrition, you know, just naturally sets in. We do have, you know, kind of qualifying exams. And we have, you know, other things meant to, you know, kind of we. out, but it's not exactly like the hunger games, the way the Navy is. And nor do I think it should be, but at the same time, you know, people should go into it with open eyes, that this isn't like, you should only do it if you can't see not doing it. When someone asked me, they want
Starting point is 00:06:11 to go back to grad school, they didn't, you know, they didn't go to grad school after undergrad, as most people do go through grad school, at least. They want to go back. I usually tell them, only do it if you'll, you know, regret it for the rest of your life, because that's the, you know, regrets the dying, so to speak. Yeah. And that's... not only for science, obviously, it's true with, oh, should I write a book? Should I not write a book? Should I move to L.A. and try to become an actor or not? Or, you know, but let me ask you a question,
Starting point is 00:06:38 because this is related to my next book. You know, what is the role? There's two ways of approaching success, I feel. One is you become obsessed with something, and you talk about this in your book, you become obsessed with something, and like you say, you can't not do it because you're obsessed,
Starting point is 00:06:56 and it fills up every part of your brain, It fills up waking time, and that's how you're able to compete against the people. If they're not obsessed, it's not going to fill up their waking time. And the obsessed person will compete successfully against the not obsessed person. But the other thing is to approach things like a quest, which is, I'm going to have a quest. I'm going to figure out what happened at the beginning of time. So now, okay, what are the steps? I'm going to build this.
Starting point is 00:07:19 This quest fills me with joy, and progress on this quest fills me with joy, and I'm going to make progress and feel joy every step of the way. I mean, they're both really analogies, but what do you think is more important for success? Or what's more interesting to read as a book, the power of obsession or the power of quest? Well, so my friend Ali Abdal, who's a big YouTuber and podcaster, he wrote a blurb on the back of the book. And his book is called Feel Good Productivity. And he wrote, Professor Keating's book, Surprising Habits, Mental Models, and Mindset Shifts, shared by dozens of Nobel Prize winners.
Starting point is 00:07:53 Keating reveals the hidden scaffolding of genius and how anyone could. and adopted to do their life's best work. It's a master class and focus from those who have changed the world. The reason I interviewed him is because he quotes in his book, Feel Good Productivity, Donna Strickland, the famous Indian Nobel laureate who invented LASIC surgery techniques and who refused to be like you, unlike you, rather. She refused to write the forward because she's too damn busy, boxing her time, doing deep work as my friend Cal Newport, who also wrote a blurb, very honored to have all these
Starting point is 00:08:21 blurbs on the back. But they're all productivity blurbs. And, you know, he says in his book, quoting her, her that the most important trait she had was play. Winning the Nobel Prize, he says in his book about her, felt like play. And so I quote that in my book. So in other words, do what passes the time so quickly. Do what gets you in that flow state because you can't like, I don't know anyone who gets in a flow state, you know, getting a colonoscopy, right? I mean, maybe there are people that's kind of sick, but, and I thank God that people do it. Like here's an example. I have a good, good friend
Starting point is 00:08:54 goes to the same temple I go to. He's a pediatric. Neuropsychiatrist. That means he deals with kids and he operates on kids that have brain tumors, sometimes they're inoperable, and he has to tell the parents that. I don't think he's ever in a flow state, James. And so now he's like, maybe I should leave. I feel horrible for him. He comes home and he's depressed and he's, you know, and I couldn't do. I hope he doesn't because it would be a blow to the world in these kids, but I wouldn't, you know, I wouldn't blame him if he did. But I don't know why he got into that field, you know, in knowing how sensitive he was. Maybe it came upon him less as a kid and more as an adult with his own kids.
Starting point is 00:09:29 The thing I would say is, you know, you want to go for that thing that gets you into that flow state that you would do for free because, you know, as they say, do what you love to do and you'll never work a day in your life and then people say because you'll be unemployed.
Starting point is 00:09:43 With that, James, I can't wait to hear about your new book. You've got to come back on the end of the empire. Maybe we'll do another one because I do want to explore the attributes of the books because right now, you know, the book sales and book, you know, publishing, for science books is very, very challenged, and it's kind of unlike any other time in history. Like, I do feel like it's different. You know, there's so much, you know, teaching and
Starting point is 00:10:05 nonfiction you can get from AI or from, you know, blog posts. So like, what are the arguments? Why should I write a book about Jim Simons? You know, what's the market like for it? And how do you do it in a way that doesn't dumb stuff down? I never like to dump stuff down. But that makes it accessible, too. So I hope we can talk about that and your new book. What are you thinking about, call? What's your inner book publisher and so forth tell you? I don't know. It's one of those things where, and this has been happening to me a lot lately, a lot of times, let's say I have to give a talk into, I had this happen the other day. I had to give a talk at Google. And about two weeks in advance, I didn't really know what I was going to talk
Starting point is 00:10:40 about. And I just kept thinking about it and thinking about it. And literally, no joke, three in the morning, I wake up and it's as if the talk is downloaded to me. And this has been happening to me more, it almost, like 10 years ago, if you told me people come up, with ideas like this, I would have said that's a cliche. But it's been happening to me more and more where I don't know something and I'm just mulling it over, mulling it over, mulling it over, and then unexpectedly, I'll wake up in the middle of the night and figure it out. So I don't really know the answer. I know the story and I know roughly the story. I know roughly the amazing adventures I've had in the past couple of years. And I know roughly how I will tell it. I just don't,
Starting point is 00:11:22 it hasn't really fully congealed in my brain yet. But I have faith that, will at some point and get downloaded in some way. But part of the process is asking these questions to people I respect and want to hear the answers to. Well, that reminds me, the back of the Nobel Prize in physics, the front has Alfred Nobel's image on it. On the back is called the genius of science. So the genius was like the spirit, this goddess that would visit you in the night and make apparitions that would then be perceived as basically effortless and so forth. But I think that kind of is, you know, is belied by the fact of how hard it is to write a book, how lonely it is to write a book,
Starting point is 00:12:00 how incredibly painful. Hemingway said it's like you sit in front of a typewriter and bleed. Nowadays we have Scrivener or Google Docs or whatever, but a lot of stuff hasn't changed. I talked to my agent, and he's basically kind of like discouraging me. Maybe we'll do it for one more minute because I do have to go and have some birthday cake at some point. Oh, sorry.
Starting point is 00:12:21 He told me he's like, there are so few books about non-nonsense nowadays. days, like not about string theory or not about like multiple universes. Most of the science books are about those things because they can't be proven. So the author will never be proven wrong in his lifetime. Like Stephen Hawking famously wrote tons and tons of nonsense in a brief history of time, which is one of the greatest science books of all times. But it's really, he was a salesman. He knew how to pitch something that he couldn't be wrong about that would stimulate the mind.
Starting point is 00:12:51 That would be perennial seller like Ryan Holliday talks about because it would never be, able to be proven wrong. It's like predicting cold fusion or something. Like, you'll always be right. It's always the future energy source and it always will be. In this case, my agent, you know, Brockman, Max Brockman, whose dad is John Brockman, like, Titanic. Oh, yeah. Name is agent. Yeah, so he's a super feigned, old New York, Jew, you know, kind of agent, just a lovely guy office and, you know, but it's a dying, you know, kind of industry. And they're like, I mean, their logo is like, it has a floppy disc on it, okay. But I love Max, and he just gives it to me straight. He's like, you know, your book,
Starting point is 00:13:26 about how the experiment is built, is not going to sell, no one's going to care about that, because that's like you can understand it, and it's like provable, but if you can write about something that nobody understands, like string theory,
Starting point is 00:13:39 or, you know, my favorite thing is like quantum entanglement. It's funny that you mentioned, I should write this book on quantum computers, because that's actually the one implication where quantum entanglement does take place, and people say we do have proof of multiple universes via quantum entanglement
Starting point is 00:13:54 as exhibited in quantum computers. computing. I talked with David Deutsch, who's the pioneer of that on my show. But anyway, so now I start to lean towards, well, actually, there is a theory of everything, and it is, it has like nine out of the ten predictions it makes have been proven, and nobody knows about it, but best of all, Jim Simons invented it. And it's called Cherns-S-S-T-E-R-N-S theory. And it plays a role in many branches of physics, including quantum computing, but even biology, even geometry and other things. Sh-U-R-N-S, Simon.
Starting point is 00:14:26 C-H-E-R-N-S-S-S-S-S-SOMON. So churn-Simons. This is the main accomplishment that Jim Simons had mathematically before he left and started in the hedge fund world. But this relates the properties of geometry to the properties of topology.
Starting point is 00:14:42 So topology is like this coffee cup here, how many holes does it have in it? Like a pretzel has two. And so if you tried to put a rubber band around it, there are certain pathways that you couldn't deform it into a perfect ball. I would always have a hole in it like a donut.
Starting point is 00:14:56 So a cup, a mug is not translational, isomorphic as it's called to a ball, but one of those Japanese kind of cups you get at the Chinese restaurant, teacups, those could be squished into a ball. Anyway, Jim showed how you could relate topology to geometry, which is like angles of triangles on a surface.
Starting point is 00:15:15 And it turns out that actually the universe may show this property, and it may be related to why we have an hour of time. In other words, why does time flow in one dimension only? Jim showed is that there's a reason that space has the dimensions it has, but I think, with the Simon's Observatory, we might be able to prove why time has the arrow that it does have. So I'm going to leave you with that.
Starting point is 00:15:36 But that's sort of the bold prediction of my new book, and I think that'll make it more exciting and palatable, because this one will be traditionally published. And so the publisher will want to make money. Like my book, I self-published it. I hope I make some money out, but I really hope people read it. but the publisher is going to really want this book to sell rather than just be out there. So anyway, James, love you.
Starting point is 00:15:56 Thank you so much for the time. Yeah, at Thursday, come back again soon. Ambition comes in all shapes and sizes. At First Citizens Bank, we roll with your goals because we're built for what you're building. Fit for your ambition for Citizens Bank. Own it all. Pay off your home, travel for life, drive a Ferrari. In celebration of the world premiere of the Monopoly Big Board Bucks,
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