Lex Fridman Podcast - #365 – Sam Harris: Trump, Pandemic, Twitter, Elon, Bret, IDW, Kanye, AI & UFOs
Episode Date: March 14, 2023Sam Harris is an author, podcaster, and philosopher. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Notion: https://notion.com - Indeed: https://indeed.com/lex to get $75 credit - MasterC...lass: https://masterclass.com/lex to get 15% off EPISODE LINKS: Sam's Website: https://samharris.org Making Sense Podcast: https://www.samharris.org/podcasts/making-sense-episodes Waking Up App: https://www.wakingup.com Sam's YouTube: https://youtube.com/@samharrisorg Sam's Instagram: https://instagram.com/samharrisorg PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (09:25) - Empathy and reason (17:17) - Donald Trump (1:00:11) - Military industrial complex (1:04:45) - Twitter (1:28:52) - COVID (2:12:35) - Kanye West (2:29:11) - Platforming (2:47:07) - Joe Rogan (3:03:59) - Bret Weinstein (3:17:38) - Elon Musk (3:29:45) - Artificial Intelligence (3:45:48) - UFOs (3:59:03) - Free will (4:26:17) - Hope for the future
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Sam Harris, his second time in the podcast.
As I said two years ago when I first met and spoke with Sam, he's one of the most influential,
pioneering thinkers of our time. As the hosts of the Making Sense podcast,
creator of the waking up app, and the author of many seminal books on human nature and the human mind,
including the end of faith, the more landscape, lying, free will,
and waking up.
In this conversation, besides our mutual fascination with AGI and free will, we do also go deep
into controversial challenging topics of Donald Trump, Hunter Biden, January 6, vaccines,
lab leak, Kanye West, and several key figures at the center of public discourse,
including Joe Rogan and Elon Musk, both of whom have been friends of Sam and have become
friends of mine.
Somehow an amazing life trajectory that I do not deserve in any way, and in fact believe
is probably a figment of my imagination.
And if it's alright, please allow me to say a few words about this personal aspect of
the conversation of discussing Joe, Elon, and others.
What's been weighing heavy on my heart since the beginning of the pandemic now three years
ago is that many people I look to for wisdom in public discourse, stop talking to each other's
often, with respect, humility
and love. When the world needed those kinds of conversations the most.
My hope is that they start talking again. They start being friends again. They start noticing
the humanity that connects them that is much deeper than the disagreements that divide
them. So let me take this moment to say with humility and honesty, why I look up to and
inspired by Joe Elon and Sam. I think Joe Rogan is important to the world as a voice of
compassionate curiosity and open mindedness to ideas both radical mainstream, sometimes
with humor, sometimes with brutal honesty, always pushing for more kindness in the world.
humor sometimes with brutal honesty, always pushing for more kindness in the world. I think Elon Musk is important to the world as an engineer, leader, entrepreneur, and
human being could take on the hardest problems that face humanity and refuse us to accept
the constraints of conventional thinking that made the solutions to these problems seem
impossible.
I think Sam Harris is important to the world as a fearless voice who fights for the pursuit
of truth against growing forces of echo chambers and audience capture, taking unpopular perspectives
and defending them with rigor and resilience.
I both celebrate and criticize all three privately, and they criticize me, usually more effectively,
from which I always learn a lot and always appreciate. Most importantly, there is respect and love for
each other's human beings, the very thing that I think the world needs most now in a time of
division and chaos. I will continue to try to mend divisions, to try to understand, not to ride,
to turn the other cheek if needed,
to return hate with love. Sometimes people criticize me for being naive, cheesy, simplistic,
all that. I know, I agree, but I really am speaking from the heart, and I'm trying.
This world is too fucking beautiful not to try. In whatever way I know how.
I love you all.
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And now, dear friends, here's Sam Harris.
What is more effective at making a net positive impact on the world? Empathy or reason?
It depends on what you mean by empathy.
There are at least two kinds of empathy.
There's the cognitive form, which is...
I would argue even a species of reason, it's just understanding another person's point of view.
You understand why they're suffering or why they're happy
or you have a theory of mind about another human being
that is accurate and so you can navigate
in relationship to them more effectively.
And then there's another layer entirely, you can navigate in relationship to them more effectively.
Then there's another layer entirely, not incompatible with that,
but just distinct, which is what people often mean by empathy,
which is more emotional contagion.
You feel depressed and I begin to feel depressed along with you,
because it's contagious, right?
I, you know, we're so close and I'm so concerned about you and your problems become my problems.
And it bleeds through right now. I think both of those capacities are very important, but
the emotional contagion piece, and this is not really my thesis, this is something
I have more or less learned from Paul Bloom.
The psychologist who wrote a book on this topic titled Against Empathy, the emotional
social contagion piece is a bad guide rather often for ethical behavior,
and ethical intuitions.
Oh boy.
And I would give you the clear example of this,
which is,
we find stories with a single identifiable protagonist
who we can effortlessly empathize with
far more compelling than data.
So, if I tell you, you know, this is the classic case of the little girl who falls down
a well, right?
You know, this is somebody's daughter.
You see the parents distraught on television.
You hear her cries from the bottom of the well.
The whole country stops.
I mean, there was an example of this,
20, 25 years ago, I think,
where it was just wall to wall on CNN.
This is just the perfect use of CNN.
It was 72 hours of whatever it was,
of continuous coverage of just extracting this girl
from a well.
So we effortlessly pay attention to that.
We care about it.
We will donate money toward it.
I mean, it's just,
it marshals 100% of our compassion and altruistic impulse.
Whereas if you hear that there's a genocide raging in some country you've never been to
and never attend to go to, and the numbers don't make a dent, and we find the story boring,
right?
We'll change the channel in the face of a genocide, right?
It doesn't matter.
And it literally, it perversely, it could be 500,000 little girls have fallen down wells in that country and we still don't care, right? So it's, you know, many of us have come to believe that this
is a bug rather than a feature of our moral psychology. And so the empathy plays an unhelpful role there. So ultimately,
I think when we're making big decisions about what we should do and how to mitigate human
suffering and what's worth valuing and how we should protect those values, I think reason
is the better tool, but it's not that I would want to spend with any part of empathy either.
Well, there's a lot of changes to go on there, but briefly to mention,
you've recently talked about effective altruism on your podcast.
I think you mentioned some interesting statement.
I'm going to horribly misquote you, but that you'd rather live in a world.
Like, it doesn't really make sense, but you'd rather live in a world
where you care about maybe your daughter and son more than a hundred people that live across the world,
something like this. Like where the calculus is not always perfect, but somehow it makes
sense to live in a world where it's irrational in this way. And yet, empathetic in the way
you've been discussing.
Right. I'm not sure what the right answer is there, or even whether there is one right answer,
there could be multiple peaks on this part of the moral landscape.
But the opposition is between an ethic that's articulated by someone like the Dalai Lama,
right?
Really any exponent of classic Buddhism would say that the ultimate enlightened ethic is true
dispassion with respect to friends and strangers, right? So that you would, you
know, the mind of the Buddha would be truly dispassionate, you would love and care
about all people equally. And by that light, it seems some kind of ethical failing,
or at least a failure of fully
actualized compassion in the limit, or enlightened wisdom in the limit, to care more or even
much more about your kids than the kids of other people, and to prioritize your energy
in that way.
He spent all this time trying to figure out how to keep your kids healthy and happy and
you'll attend to their
minutus concerns and however superficial and
and again, there's a genocide raging in
Sudan or wherever and it takes up less than 1% of your bandwidth. I'm not sure it would be a better world if everyone was
running the Dalai Lama program
there.
I think some prioritization of one's nearest and dearest ethically might be optimal because
we'll all be doing that and we'll all be doing that in a circumstance where we have certain norms and laws and other structures that
force us to be dispassionate where that matters, right? So like when I go to
when my daughter gets sick and I have to take her to a hospital
You know, I really want her to get attention, right?
And I'm worried about her more than I'm worried about everyone else in the lobby
But the truth is I actually don't want a totally corrupt hospital.
I don't want a hospital that treats my daughter better than anyone else in the lobby because
she's my daughter, and I've, you know, bribed the guy at the door or whatever, you know, or
the guy's a fan of my podcast or whatever the thing is, you don't want starkly corrupt,
unfair situations.
When you sort of get pressed down
the hierarchy of Maslow's needs individually
and societally, a bunch of those variables change
and they change for the worst understandably.
But yeah, when everyone's corrupt
and you're in a state of collective
emergency, you've got a lifeboat problem.
You're scrambling to get into the lifeboat.
Yeah, then fairness and norms and the other vestiges
of civilization begin to get stripped off.
We can't reason from those emergencies to normal life. I mean,
in normal life, we want justice, we want fairness, we want, we're all better off for it, even
when the spotlight of our concern is focused on the people we know, the people who are friends,
the people who are family, the people we have good reason to care about, we still, by default, want a system
that protects the interests of strangers too.
And we know that generally speaking,
interesting in game theoretic terms,
we're all gonna tend to be better off
in a fair system than a corrupt one.
One of the failure modes of empathy
is our susceptibility to anecdotal data.
Just a good story. We'll get us to not think clearly, our susceptibility to anecdotal data.
Just a good story. We'll get us to not think clearly.
But what about empathy in the context
of just discussing ideas with other people?
And then there's a large number of people
like in this country, you know, right and blue,
half the population believes certain things
on immigration or on the response to the pandemic or any kind of controversial issue
even if the election was fairly executed
having an empathy for their world view
trying to understand where they're coming from not just in the explicit statement of their idea
but the entirety of like the roots from which their ideas thumbs
explicit statement of their idea, but the entirety of the roots from which their ideas thumbs that kind of empathy, while you're discussing ideas, what is in your pursuit of truth,
having empathy for the perspective of a large number of other people versus raw mathematical
reason?
I think it's important, but it only takes you so far. It doesn't get you to truth.
Truth is not decided by democratic principles.
Certain people believe things for understandable reasons, but those reasons are nonetheless bad
reasons.
They don't scale, they don't generalize, they're not reasons anyone should adopt for themselves or respect, you know, epistemologically. And yet their, their
circumstances understandable and it's something you can care about, right? And so yeah, like,
let me just take, I think there's many examples of this you might be thinking of, but, I mean,
one that comes to mind is I've been super critical of Trump, obviously, and I've been
super critical of certain people for endorsing him or not criticizing him when he really made
it, you know, painfully obvious who he was, you know, if there had been any doubt initially,
there was no doubt when we have a sitting president
who's not agreeing to a peaceful transfer of power. Right? So I'm critical of all of that,
and yet the fact that many millions of Americans didn't see what was wrong with Trump or bought into
Americans didn't see what was wrong with Trump or bought into the, didn't see through his con, right?
I mean, they bought into the idea that he was a brilliant businessman who might just be
able to change things because he's so unconventional and so, you know, his heart is in the right
place.
You know, he's really a man of the people, even though he's a, you know, gold plated
everything in his life. They bought the myth somehow of largely because they had seen him on television for
almost a decade and a half, pretending to be this genius businessman who could get things done.
It's understandable to me that many very frustrated people who have not had their hopes and dreams
actualized, who have been the victims of globalism and many other, you know, current trends.
It's understandable that they would be confused and not see the liability of electing a grossly incompetent morbidly narcissistic
person into the presidency.
So I don't, which is to say that I don't blame, there are many, many millions of people
who I don't necessarily blame for the Trump phenomenon.
But I can nonetheless bemoan the phenomenon as indicative of, you know,
very bad state of affairs in our society.
So it's two levels to it. I mean, one is,
I think you have to call a spade a spade when you're talking about
how things actually work and what things are likely to happen or not.
But then you can recognize that people are
have very different life experiences.
And yeah, I think empathy and probably the better word
for what I would hope to embody there is compassion, right?
Like really, to really wish people well,
and to really wish strangers well effortlessly,
wish them well.
And to realize that there is no opposition between,
at the bottom, there's no real opposition between selfishness
and selflessness because why is selfishness really takes into account
other people's happiness.
I mean, which do you want to live in a society where you have everything
but most other people have nothing, or do you want to live in a society where you're surrounded by happy, creative,
self-actualized people who are having their hopes and dreams realize?
I think it's obvious that the second society is much better.
However much you can guard your good luck. But what about having empathy for certain principles that people believe?
For example, the pushback, the other perspective on this, because you said, bought the myth
of Trump as the great businessman. There could be a lot of people that are supporters of
Trump who could say that Sam Harris bought the myth that we have this government of the people by the
people that actually represents the people as opposed to a bunch of elites who are running
a giant bureaucracy that is corrupt, that is feeding themselves and they're actually
not representing the people.
And then here's this chaos agent, Trump who speaks off the top of his head.
Yeah, he's flawed in all this number of ways. He's a more comedian than he is a presidential type of figure. And he's actually
creating the kind of chaos that's going to shake up this bureaucracy, shake up the elites
that are so uncomfortable because they don't want the world to know about the game that
got running on everybody else. So that's, you know, yeah, that's a kind of perspective that they would take and say, yeah, yeah, there's these
flaws that Trump has, but this is necessary. I agree with the first part of this. So I haven't
bought the myth that it's, you know, a truly representative democracy in the way that we would
you might idealize. And, you know, on some level, this is a different conversation, but on some level, I'm not even
sure how much I think it should be, right?
Like, I'm not sure we want in the end everyone's opinion, given equal weight about, you know,
just what we should do about anything.
And I include myself in that.
I mean, there are many topics around which I don't deserve to have a strong opinion because
I don't know what I'm talking about, right, or what I would be talking about if I had
a strong opinion.
So, um, and I think we'll probably get to that, to some of those topics because I've
declined to have certain conversations on my podcast just because I think I'm the wrong person to have that conversation, right?
And it's, and I think it's important to see those bright lines in one's life and in
the moment politically and ethically.
So yeah, I think, so we've aside the viability of democracy, I'm under no illusions that all of our institutions
are worth preserving precisely as they have been up into the moment. This great orange
wrecking ball came swinging through our lives, but I just it was a very bad bet to elect someone who is grossly incompetent and worse than incompetent, genuinely malevolent
in his selfishness.
This is something we know based on literally decades of him being in the public eye.
He's not a public servant in any normal sense of that term.
He couldn't possibly give an honest or sane answer to the question you asked me about empathy and reason.
How should we... What should guide us?
I genuinely think he is missing some necessary moral and psychological tools, right?
And this is, I can feel compassion for him as a human being because I think having those
things is incredibly important and genuinely loving other people is incredibly important.
And knowing what all that's about is that's really the good stuff in life.
And I think he's missing a lot of that, but I think we don't want to promote people to the
highest positions of power in our society who are far outliers in pathological terms.
We want them to be far outliers in the best case, in wisdom and compassion and some of the
things you've brought some of the topics
you've brought up, I mean, we want someone to be deeply informed. We want someone to be
unusually curious, unusually alert to how they may be wrong or getting things wrong
consequentially. He's none of those things. And so far as we're going to get normal
mediocrities in that role, which I think is often the
best we could expect, let's get normal mediocrities in that role.
Not once in a generation narcissists and frauds.
I mean, it is like that.
We just take honesty as a single variable, right?
I think you want, yes, it's possible that most politicians lie at least some of the time.
I don't think that's a good thing.
I think people should be generally honest, even to a fault.
Yes, there are certain circumstances where lying, I think, is necessary.
It's kind of on a continuum of self-defense and violence.
So it's like if
you're going to, you know, if the Nazis come to your door and ask you, if you've got Anne
Frank in the attic, I think it's okay to lie to them. But, you know, Trump, there's, I
arguably there's never been a person in that anyone could name in human history who's lied with that kind of velocity.
I mean, it's just, he was a blizzard of lies, great and small, you know, to pointless and
effective, but it's just, it says something fairly alarming about our society that a person of that character got promoted.
So, yes, I have compassion and concern for half of the society who didn't see it that way,
and that's going to sound elitist and smug or something for anyone who's on that side,
listening to me. but it's genuine.
I mean, I understand that like I barely have the, I'm like one of the luckiest people
in the world and I barely have the bandwidth to pay attention to half the things I should
pay attention to in order to have an opinion about half the things we're going to talk about.
So how much less bandwidth is somebody who's working two jobs or a single mom who's raising multiple
kids, even a single kid, it's just unimaginable to me that people have the bandwidth to really
track this stuff.
Then they jump on social media and they get inundated by misinformation and they see
what their favorite influencer just said.
And now they're worried about vaccines. And it's just, we're living in an environment
where the information space becomes so corrupted.
And we've built machines to further corrupt it.
And we've built a business model for the internet
that is further corrupted.
So it is just, it's chaos
in informational terms. And I don't fault people for being confused and impatient and at
their wit's end. And yes, Trump was an enormous fuck you to the establishment. And that was understandable for many reasons.
To me, Sam Harris, the great Sam Harris, is somebody I've looked up to for a long time,
as a beacon of voice of reason, and there's this meme on the internet, and I would love
you to steal man the case for it and against against that Trump broke Sam Harris's brain.
That there's something is disproportionately to the actual impact that Trump had on our
society.
He had an impact on the ability of balanced, calm, rational minds to see the world clearly,
to think clearly.
You being one of the beacons of that. Is there
a degree to which you broke your brain? Well, otherwise known as Trump's arrangements.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, medical. Medical condition. Yeah, I mean, I think Trump's arrangements in
drum is a very clever meme because it just throws the problem back on the person who's criticizing Trump.
But in truth, the true Trump derangement syndrome was not to have seen how dangerous and divisive it
would be to promote someone like Trump to that position of power. And to not, and in the final moment, not to see how untenable it was to still support someone who, you know,
sitting president who was not committing to a peaceful transfer of power. I mean, that
was, if that wasn't a bright line for you, you have been deranged by something, because
that was, you know, the, that was one minute to midnight for our democracy as far as I'm concerned.
And I think it really was but for the integrity of a few people that we didn't suffer some
real constitutional crisis and real emergency after January 6.
I mean, if Mike Pence had caved in and decided to not certify the election.
Right?
Literally, you can count on two hands, a number of people who help things together at that
moment.
It wasn't for want of trying on Trump's part that we didn't succumb to some real, truly
uncharted catastrophe with our democracy.
The fact that that didn't happen is not a sign that those of us who were worried that
it was so close to happening were exaggerating the problem.
It's like you almost got run over by a car, but you didn't.
The fact that you're adrenalized and you're thinking, you know, boy, that was
dangerous.
I probably shouldn't, you know, wander in the middle of the street with my eyes closed.
You weren't wrong to feel that you really had a problem, right?
And came very close to something truly terrible.
So I think that's where we were, and I think we shouldn't do that again.
Right. So the fact that he's still he's coming back around us potentially a viable candidate.
You know, I'm not spending much time thinking about it, frankly, because it's, you know,
I'm waiting for the moment where it requires some thought. I mean, it did, it took up,
I don't know how many podcasts I devoted to the topic.
It wasn't that many in the end against the number of podcasts I devoted other topics,
but there are people who look at Trump and just find him funny, entertaining, not especially
threatening.
It's just good fun to see somebody who's just not taking anything seriously and is just
putting a stick in the wheel of business as usual again and again and again and again.
And they don't really see anything much at stake, right?
It doesn't really matter if we don't support NATO. It doesn't
really matter if he says he trusts Putin more than our intelligence services. I mean, none of this,
it doesn't matter if he's on the one hand saying that he loves the leader of North Korea and on the
other threatening, it threatens to, you know, bomb them back to the Stone Age, right on Twitter.
It's all, it all can be taken in the spirit of reality television.
This is the part of the movie that's fun to watch.
I understand that.
I can even inhabit that space for a few minutes at a time, but there's a deeper concern
that we're in the process of entertaining ourselves to death,
right, that we're just not taking things seriously.
And this is the problem I've had with several other people we might name who just appeared
to me to be goofing around at scale.
And they lack a kind of moral seriousness.
I mean, they're touching big problems where lives hang in the balance, but they're just
fucking around.
And I think there are really important problems that we have to get our head straight around.
And we need, you know, it's not to say that institutions don't become corrupt.
I think they do.
And I think, and I'm quite worried that, you know, both about the loss of trust in our institutions
and the fact that trust has eroded for good
reason, right, that they have become less trustworthy.
I think they've become infected by, you know, political ideologies that are not truth tracking.
I mean, I worry about all of that.
But I just think we need institutions.
We need to rebuild them.
We need experts who are real experts.
We need to value expertise over amateur speculation and conspiracy thinking and bullshit.
The kind of amateur speculation we're doing on this very podcast.
I'm usually alert to the moments where I'm just guessing or where I actually feel like
I'm talking from within my wheelhouse and I try to telegraph that a fair amount with people.
So yeah, I mean, but it's not, it's different.
I mean, you can invite someone onto your podcast who's an expert about something that you're not
an expert about.
And then you, you in the process of getting more informed yourself, your audience is getting
more informed.
So you're asking smart questions.
And you might be pushing back at the margins, but you know that when push comes to shove
on that topic, you really don't have a basis to have a strong opinion.
And if you were going to form a strong opinion that was this counter to the expert you have
in front of you, it's going to be by deference to some other expert who you've brought in
or who you've heard about or whose work you've read or whatever.
But there's a paradox to how we value authority in science that most people don't understand.
And I think we should at some point unravel that because it's the basis for a lot of public
confusion.
And for frankly, there's a basis for a lot of criticism I've received on these topics,
where it's that people think that I'm against free speech or I'm an establishment,
shill, or it's like I just think,
I'm a credentialist, I just think people with PhDs
from Ivy League universities should run everything.
It's not true, but there's a ton of confusion.
There's a lot to cut through to get to daylight there,
because people are very confused
about how we value authority in the service
of rationality generally.
You've talked about it, but it's just interesting.
The intensity of feeling you have, you've had this famous phrase about Hunter Biden and
children in the basement.
Can you just revisit this case?
So let me give another perspective on the situation of January
6th and Trump in general. It's possible that January 6th and things of that nature revealed
that our democracy is actually pretty fragile. And then Trump is not a malevolent and ultra-competent malevolent figure but is simply a jokester.
And he just by creating the chaos revealed that it's all pretty fragile because you're a student history and there's a lot of people like Vladimir Lenin Hitler who are exceptionally competent at controlling power.
at being executives and taking that power, controlling the generals, controlling all the figures involved, and certainly not tweeting, but working in the shadows behind the scenes to gain power.
And they did so extremely competently, and that is how they were able to gain power.
The pushback with Trump, he was doing none of that.
He was creating, he's very good at creating drama, sometimes for humor
sake, sometimes for drama sake, and simply revealed that our democracy is fragile. And
so he's not this once in a generation scary sinister, you know, Putin-like or, you know, Hitler
much less Hitler-like figure, not at all.
I mean, he's not ideological.
He doesn't care about anything beyond himself.
So it's not, no, no, he's much less scary than any really scary, you know, totalitarian, right?
I mean, and he's he's more brave in your world than 1984.
This is what, you know, Eric Weinstein never stops badgering me about, but, you know, he's
still wrong, Eric.
You know, I can, you know, my analogy for Trump was that he's an evil, trancey gardener.
I don't know if you remember the book or the film
being there with Peter Sellers,
but Peter Sellers is this gardener
who really doesn't know anything,
but he gets recognized as this wise man
and gets promoted to immense power in Washington
because he's speaking in these kind of,
in a semblance of wisdom,
he's got these very simple aphorisms
or it seemed to be aphorisms.
He's just talking, all he cares about is gardening.
He's just talking about his garden all the time,
but he'll say something, but in the spring,
the new shoots will bloom
and people read into that some kind of genius insight
politically.
And so he gets promoted and says that's the joke of the film.
For me, Trump has always been someone like an evil
John C. Gardner. He's he's it's not to say he's totally and yes, he has a certain kind of genius. He's got a genius for
Creating a spectacle around himself. Right. He's got a genius for getting the the eye of the media always coming back to him
But it it's only it's a kind of, it's a kind of
self promotion that only works if you actually are truly shameless and don't care about
having a reputation for anything that that I or you would want to have a reputation for.
It's like it's pure, the pure pornography of attention, and he just wants more of it.
the pure pornography of attention, right? And he just wants more of it.
I think the truly depressing and genuinely scary thing
was that we have a country, at least half of the country
given how broken our society is in many ways.
We have a country that didn't see anything wrong
with that,
bringing someone who obviously doesn't know what he should know to be president
and who's obviously not a good person, right?
Obviously doesn't care about people, can't even pretend to care about people really, right, in a credible way.
And so, I mean, if there's a silver lining to this, it's along the lines you just sketched,
it shows us how vulnerable our system is to a truly brilliant and sinister figure, right?
I mean, like, I think we are, we really dodged a bullet.
Yes, someone far more competent and conniving and ideological could have exploited
our system in a way that Trump didn't. And that's, yeah, so if we plug those holes eventually,
that would be a good thing and he would have done a good thing for our society.
Right? I mean, one of the things we realized, and I think nobody knew, I certainly didn't know it,
and I didn't hear anyone talk about it,
is how much our system relies on norms rather than laws.
Yes, civility, right.
Yeah, it's just like, it's quite possible
that he never did anything illegal.
You know, truly illegal.
I think he probably did a few illegal things, but like illegal, such that he really
should be thrown in jail for it, you know.
At least that remains to be seen.
So all of the chaos, all of the, you know, all of the diminishment of our stature in
the world, all of the just the opportunity costs
of spending years focused on nonsense.
All of that was just norm violations.
All of that was just, that was just all a matter of not
saying the thing you should say,
but that doesn't mean they're insignificant, right?
It's not that it's like, it's not illegal
for a sitting president to say,
no, I'm not going to commit to a peaceful transfer of power, right? We'll wait and see whether I
win. If I win, it was, the election was, was, was valid. If I lose, it was fraudulent, right? But
aren't those humorous perturbations to our system of civility such that we know what
the limits are?
And now we start to think that and have these kinds of discussion.
But that wasn't a humorous perturbation because he did everything he could, granted he
wasn't very competent, but he did everything he could to try to steal the election.
I mean, the irony is he claimed to have an election
stolen from him all the while doing everything he could
to steal it, declaring it fraudulent in advance,
trying to get the votes to not be counted as the evening
war on, knowing that they were going
to be disproportionately Democrat votes
because of the position he took on mail-in ballots.
I mean, all of it was fairly calculated.
The whole circus of the clown car,
they crashed into four seasons landscaping,
and you got Rudy Giuliani with his hair dyed,
and you got Sidney Powell,
and all these grossly incompetent people
lying as freely as they could breathe
about election fraud, right?
And all of these things are getting thrown out by, you know,
largely Republican election officials
and Republican judges.
It wasn't for what have tried
that he didn't maintain his power in this country.
He really tried to steal the presidency.
He just was not competent.
And the people around him weren't competent. So that's a good thing. And it's worth not letting
that happen again. But he wasn't competent. So he didn't do everything he could. Well,
no, he did everything he could. He didn't do everything that could have been done by someone
more competent. Right. But the tools you have as a president, you can do a lot of things.
You can declare emergencies, especially doing COVID.
You could postpone the election.
You can create military conflict that, you know, any kind of reason to postpone the election.
There's a lot of what he tried to do things.
And he would have to have done those things through other people and their people who refused
to do those things.
Their people who said they would quit.
They would quit publicly, right?
I mean, you start, again, there are multiple books
written about all in the last hours of this presidency.
And the details are shocking in what he tried to do
and tried to get others to do.
And it's awful, right?
I mean, it's just awful that we were that close to something
to a true unraveling of our political process. I mean, it's the only time in our lifetime
that anything like this has happened and it's deeply embarrassing, right? You you're at, you know, on the world stage, it's just like we looked like a banana republic there for a while.
And we're the lone superpower.
It's a bet.
It's not good.
And so we shouldn't, there's no, there's no, the, the people who thought, well, we just
need to shake things up.
And this is a great, great way to shake things up.
And having people, you know, storm our capital and, you know, smear shit on the walls, that's just more shake things up and having people storm our capital and smear
shit on the walls.
That's just more shaking things up.
It's all just for the lulls.
There's a nihilism and cynicism to all of that, which again, in certain people, it's understandable.
Frankly, it's not understandable.
If you've got a billion dollars and you have a compound in Menlo Park or wherever
It's like that there are people who are cheerleading this stuff who shouldn't be cheerleading this stuff and who know that they can get on their
Gulfstream and fly to their compound in New Zealand. They've everything goes to shit, right?
So there's a cynicism to all of that that I think we should be deeply
Critical of what I'm trying to understand is not
deeply critical of. What I'm trying to understand is not,
and analyze, is not the behavior of this particular human being,
but the effect it had in part on the division between people.
And to me, the degree, the meme of Sam Harris's brain
being broken by Trump represents,
you're like the person I would look to to bridge the division.
Well, I don't think there is something profitably to be said to someone who's truly captivated
by the personality cult of Trumpism, right?
Like, there's nothing that I'm going to say to, there's no conversation I'm going to
have with Candace Owens, say, about Trump.
This is going to converge on something reasonable, right?
Do you think so?
No, I haven't tried with Candace.
I've tried with many people who are in that particular orbit.
I mean, I've had conversations with people who won't admit that there's anything wrong
with Trump, anything.
So I'd like to push for the empathy versus reason.
Because when you operate in the space of reason, yes.
But I think there's a lot of power in you showing, in you,
Sam Harris showing that you're willing to see the good qualities of Trump,
publicly showing that.
I think that's the way to win over the country.
But he has so few of them.
He has fewer good qualities than any, virtually anyone I can name, right?
But so he's funny.
I'll grant you that he's funny.
He's a good entertainer.
There's others look at just policies and actual impacts.
I've admitted that.
No, no.
So I've admitted that many of his policies I agree with.
Many, many of his policies.
So probably more often than not,
at least on balance, I agreed with his policy
that we should take China seriously as an adversary.
Right?
And I think, again, there's a lot of fine print
to a lot of this because the way he talks about these things and
many of his motives that are obvious are things that I don't support, but I'm going to take immigration. I think there's
it's obvious that we should have control of our borders, right?
Like I don't see the argument for
not having control of our borders. We should let in who we want to let in and we should keep out who we want to keep out and we should have a sane immigration policy. So I don't I didn't necessarily think it was a priority to build the wall, but I didn't I never criticize the impulse to build the wall because if you know tens of thousands hundreds of thousands of people are coming across that border and we are not in a position to know who's coming. That seems untenable to me. So, and I can recognize that many people in our society
are on balance the victims of immigration.
And there is, in many cases, a zero sum contest
between the interests of actual citizens
and the interests of immigrants, right?
So, I think we should have control of our borders,
we should have a sane and compassionate immigration policy.
We should let in refugees, right?
So I'd, you know, Trump on refugees was terrible.
But no, like, I would say 80% of the policy concerns
people celebrated in him are concerns that I either share entirely or certainly sympathize
with.
That's not the issue.
The issue is a threat to democracy and some fun to do.
The issue is largely what you said.
It's not so much the person.
It's the effect on everything
he touches. He has this superpower of deranging and destabilizing almost everything he touches
and compromising the integrity of almost anyone who comes into his orbit. You looked at
these people who served as chief of staff or in
various cabinet positions. People had real reputations for probity and levelheadedness,
whether you share their politics or not. I mean, these were real people. Some of them were goofballs,
footballs, but you know, many people who just got totally trashed by proximity to him and then trashed by him when they finally parted company with him.
Yeah, I mean, there's just people bent over backwards to accommodate his norm violations. And it was bad for them and it was bad for our system.
But none of that discounts the fact that we have a system
that really needs proper house cleaning.
Yes, there are bad incentives and entrenched interests.
And I'm not a fan of the concept of the deep state, but because it's been so propagandized.
But yes, there's something like that that is not flexible enough to respond intelligently to the needs of the moment.
So there's a lot of rethinking of government and of institutions in general that I think we should do,
but we need smart, well-informed, well-intentioned people to do that job.
And the well-intentioned part is hugely important. Right? Just give me someone who is not the most selfish person anyone has ever heard about in their
lifetime.
And what we got with Trump was literally the one most selfish person I think anyone could
name.
I mean, and again, there's so much known about this man.
That's the thing. It was like, it predates his presidency. We knew this guy 30 years ago.
And this is what to come back to, those inflammatory comments about 100 Biden's laptop.
The reason why I can say with confidence that I don't care what was on his laptop is that
there is, and that includes any evidence of corruption
on the part of his father. Now, there's been precious little of that that's actually emerged.
So, it's like, there is no as far as I can tell. There's not a big story associated with that laptop
as much as people bang on about a few emails. But even if there were just obvious corruption, right, like Joe Biden was at this meeting
and he took, you know, this amount of money from this shady guy for bad reasons, right?
Given how visible the lives of these two men have been, right, and we've given how much
we know about Joe Biden and how much we know about Donald Trump and how they have lived in public for almost as long as I've been alive, both of them.
The scale of corruption can't possibly balance out between the two of them.
If you show me that Joe Biden has this secret life, or he's driving a Bugatti and he's
living like Andrew Tate, right, and he's doing all these things I didn't know about.
Okay, then I'm going to start getting a sense that,
all right, maybe this guy is way more corrupt
than I realized.
Maybe there is some deal in Ukraine or with China
that is just like this guy is not who he seems.
He's not the public servant.
He's been pretending to be.
He's been on the take for decades and decades.
And he's just, he's as dirty as can be.
He's all mobbed up and it's a nightmare.
And he can't be trusted, right? That's possible if you show me that his life is not at all what it seems, but on the assumption that I have
an looked at this guy for literally decades, right? And knowing that every journalist has looked at him for decades, just how many affairs
is he having, just how much, you know, how many drugs is he doing, how many houses does
he have, where, you know, what is, what are the obvious conflicts of interest, you know,
you hold that against what we know about Trump, right?
And I mean, the litany of indiscretions, you can put on Trump side that that testified
to his personal corruption, to testify to the fact that he has no ethical compass.
There's simply no comparison.
Right.
So that's why I don't care about what's on the laptop.
When now, if you tell me Trump is no longer running for president in 2024 and we can put
Trumpism behind us. And now you're saying, listen,
there's a lot of stuff on that laptop that makes Joe Biden look like a total asshole. Okay,
I'm all ears. Right. I mean, it was a forced in 2020. It was a forced choice between a sitting
president who wouldn't commit to a peaceful transfer of power and a guy who's obviously too old
peaceful transfer of power. And a guy who's obviously too old to be president
who has a crack addicted son
who lost his laptop.
And I just knew that I was gonna take Biden in spite of
whatever litany of horrors was gonna come tumbling
out of that laptop.
And that might involve sort of,
so the actual quote is Hunter Biden
literally could have had the corpses of children in the basement. There's a dark humor to it, right?
Which is, I think you speak to, I would not have cared. There's nothing. It's hunter-biden,
it's not Joe Biden. Whatever the scope of Joe Biden's corruption is, it is infinitesimally
compared to the corruption. We know Trump was involved in, it's like a firefly to the sun. It's what you're speaking to but let me make the case that you're really focused on the surface stuff
that it's possible to have corruption that
Masquerades in the thing we mentioned which is civility you can meant you can spend the hundreds of billions of dollars or trillion stores of war
in the Middle East, for example, something
that you've changed your mind on in terms of the negative impact that has on the world.
And that, you know, the military industrial complex, everybody's very nice, everybody's
very civil, there's very upfront, here's how we're spending the money.
Yeah, sometimes somehow disappears in different places, but that's the way, you know, where it's complicated.
And it's everyone is very polite.
There's no Coke and strippers or whatever is on the laptop.
It's very nice and polite.
And the meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of civilians die,
hate, just an incredible amount of hate is created because people lose
their family members, all that kind of stuff.
But there's no strippers and coke on a laptop.
So, yeah, but it's not just superficial.
It is when someone only wants wealth and power and fame, that is their objective function, right?
They're like a robot that is calibrated just to those variables, right?
And they don't care about the risks we run on any other front.
They don't care about environmental risk,
pandemic risk, nuclear proliferation risk, none of it, right?
They're just tracking fame and money
and whatever can can personally
uh, redound to their self-interest along those lines. And they're not informed about the
other risk we're running really. I mean, in Trump, you had a president who was repeatedly
asking his generals, why couldn't we use our nuclear weapons? Why can't we have more of
them? Why do I have fewer nuclear weapons than JFK? Right? So that were a sign of anything other than progress. Right? And this is the guy
who's got the button, right? I mean, somebody's following him around with a bag waiting to take his his order to launch. That is a risk we should never run. One thing Trump has going for
my thing because he doesn't drink or do drugs. People allegedly do speed, but let's take
him in his word. He's not deranging himself with pharmaceuticals at least, but apart
from diet coke. But there's nothing wrong. Just for the record, we need to push back
on that. There's nothing wrong with that coke. Yeah. I'm very large amounts. I occasionally
have some myself. There's no medical, there's no scientific evidence that I observed the
negatives of, you know, all those studies about aspertaim and all that is, I don't know.
I hope you're right.
Yeah, I mean, everything you said about the military industrial complex is true, right?
And it's been, we've been worrying about that on both sides of the aisle for a very long
time.
I mean, that's just, you know, that phrase came from Eisenhower.
It's, I mean, so much of what ails us is a story of bad incentives, right?
And bad incentives are so powerful that they corrupt even good people, right?
How much more do they corrupt bad people, right? How much more do they corrupt bad people, right? Like so it's like,
you want to at minimum, you want reasonably good people, at least non-pathological people,
in the system trying to navigate against the grain of bad incentives. And better still,
all of us can get together and try to diagnose those incentives and change them.
We will really succeed when we have a system of incentives where the good incentives
are so strong that even bad people are effortlessly behaving as though they're good people because
they're so successfully incentivized to behave that way. Right? That's, you know, so it's almost the inversion of our current situation. So yes,
and you say I changed my mind about the war. Not quite. I mean, I was never a supporter of the war
in Iraq. I was always worried that it was a distraction from the war in Afghanistan. I was a supporter of the war in Afghanistan,
and I will admit in hindsight, that looks like,
at best, a highly ambiguous and painful exercise,
more likely a fool's errand, right?
I was like, that did not turn out well.
It wasn't for want of trying.
I have not done a deep dive on all of the failures there.
And maybe all of these failures are failures in principle.
I mean, maybe it's just not the kind of thing that can be done well by anybody, whatever
are intentions.
But yeah, the move to Iraq always seemed questionable to me. And when we knew the problem, the immediate problem
at that moment, you know, Al-Qaeda, uh, uh, uh, wasn't in Afghanistan, and, you know, and
then bouncing to Pakistan. Um, anyway, you know, so, yes, but my, my, my sense of the possibility of nation-building, my sense of, you know, in so far as the neo-con
spirit of, you know, responsibility and idealism, the, you know, America was the kind of nation
that should be functioning in this way as the world's cop and we have to get in there and untangle some of
these knots by force rather often because if we don't do it over there, we're going to have to do it
over here kind of thing. Yeah, some of that has definitely changed for me in my thinking.
I mean, there are obviously cultural reasons why it failed in Afghanistan. And if you can't change the culture, you're not going to force a change at gunpoint in the culture.
It certainly seems that that's not going to happen.
And it took us, you know, over 20 years to apparently to realize that.
That's one of the things you realize with the wars.
There's not going to be a strong signal that things are not working.
If you just keep pouring money into a thing, a military effort.
Well, also, there are signs of it working, too.
You have all the stories of girls now going to school, right?
The girls are getting battery acid thrown in their faces by religious maniacs, and then
we come in there, and we stop that, and now girls are getting there's a and that's all good and our intentions are good there and I mean we're on the
right side of history there good girls should be going to school you know
Malala Yosef's I should have the Nobel Prize and she shouldn't have been
shot in the face by by the Taliban right. We know what the right answers are
there. The question is what do you do when there are enough, in this particular case, religious
maniacs, who are willing to die and let their children die in defense of crazy ideas and
moral norms that belong in the seventh century?
And it's a problem we couldn't solve, and we couldn't solve it even though we spent trillions
of dollars to solve it. This reminded me of the thing that you and Jack Dorsey jokingly had for a while,
the discussion about banning Donald Trump from Twitter.
But does any of it bother you? Now that Twitter files came out that,
it has to do with sort of the hunter laptop,
hunter by laptop story.
Does it bother you that there could be a collection
of people that make decisions about who to ban and not?
And then that could be susceptible to bias
and to ideological influence.
Well, I think it always will be,
or in the absence of perfect AI, it always
will be. And this becomes relevant with AI as well. Yeah, because there's some censorship
on AI happening. Yeah. And it's an interesting question there as well. I don't think Twitter
is important as people think it is, right? And I used to think it was more important when
I was on it. And now that I'm off of it, I think it's, it's, I mean, for some of you say,
it's just an unambiguously good thing
in my experience to unleash your Twitter account, right?
It's like it is just, even the good parts of Twitter
that I miss were bad in the aggregate.
In the degree to which it was fragmentmented my attention, the degree to which
my life was getting doled out to me in periods between those moments where I checked Twitter,
right, and had my attention divergent. And I was, you know, I was not a crazy Twitter addict. I mean,
I was probably a pretty normal user. I mean, I was not someone who was tweeting multiple times a day
or even every day, right?
I think I probably averaged something like one tweet a day.
I think I averaged, but in reality,
it would be like four tweets one day,
and then I wouldn't tweet for the better part of a week.
But I was looking a lot because it was my newsfeed.
I was just following 200 very smart people and I would just wanted to see what they were paying
attention to and they would recommend articles and I would read those articles.
And then when I would read an article, then I would thought I should signal boost, I would
tweet.
And so all of that seemed good.
And that's all separable from all of the ODS bullshit that came back at me in response
to this largely in response to this Hunter Biden thing.
But even the good stuff has a downside.
And it comes at just this point of your phone is this perpetual stimulus of which is intrinsically fragmented of time and attention.
And now my phone is much less of a presence in my life.
And it's not that I don't check Slack or check email.
I use it to work, but my sense of just what the world is and my sense of my place in the world, the sense of where I exist as a person has changed a lot by deleting my Twitter account.
I mean, I had a, and it's just, it's, and the things that I think, I mean, we all know this phenomenon.
I mean, we say of someone that person is too online, right? What does it mean to be too online?
And where do you draw that boundary? How do you know?
What constitutes being two online? Well, in some sense, just being on social media at all
is to be two online. Given what it does to, given the kinds of information, it
given the kinds of information, it, it,
signal boosts and given the,
given the impulse it kindles in each of us to reach out to our audience
in specific moments and in specific ways, right?
It's like there are lots of moments now
where I have an opinion about something,
but there's nothing for me to do with that opinion, right? Like there's no Twitter, right? So like there are lots of moments now where I have an opinion about something, but there's nothing for me to do with that opinion.
Right? Like there's no Twitter, right? So like there are lots of things that I would have tweeted in the last months.
That are not the kind of thing I'm gonna do a podcast about. I'm not gonna roll out 10 minutes on that topic on my podcast.
I'm not gonna take the time to really think about it. But had I been on Twitter, I would have reacted to this thing in the news
or this thing that somebody did, right?
What do you do with that thought, no?
I just let go of it.
Like chocolate ice cream is the most delicious thing.
Yeah, it's usually not that sort of thing,
but it's just,
but then you look at the kinds of problems
people create for themselves.
You look at the life, deranging,
and reputation destroying things that people do.
And I look at the things that have,
the analogous things that have happened to me,
I mean, the things that have really bent my life around
professionally over the past decade.
So much of it is Twitter.
I mean, honestly, in my case,
almost 100% of it was Twitter.
The controversies I would get into, the my case, almost 100% of it was Twitter. The controversies
I would get into the things I would think I would have to respond to in a pie like I would
release a podcast on a certain topic, I would see some blowback on Twitter. You know, it
would give me the sense that there was some signal that I really had to respond to. Now
that I'm off Twitter, I recognize that most of that was just
It was totally species right it was it was not something I had to respond to but yet I would then
Do a cycle of podcasts responding to that thing that like taking my foot out of my mouth or taking someone else's foot out of my mouth and
It became this this self-perpetuating
cycle which It's this self-perpetuating cycle, which, I mean, it's, you know, if you're having fun, great.
I mean, if it's, if it's, if it's generative of useful information and, and, and engagement
professionally and, and psychologically, great.
But, and, and there, you know, there was some of that on Twitter. I mean, there were people
who I've connected with because because I just, you know, one, one of us DMed the other
on Twitter and it was hard to see how that was going to happen otherwise. But it was largely
just a machine for manufacturing unnecessary controversy.
Do you think it's possible to avoid the drug of that?
So now that you've achieved a Zun state, is it possible for somebody like you to use it
in a way that doesn't pull you into the whirlpool?
And so anytime there's attacks, you just, I mean, that's how I try to use it.
Yeah, but it's not the way I wanted to use it.
It's not the way it promises itself as a... I wanted to have debate with the sportsmen.
I wanted to actually communicate with people.
Yeah. I wanted to hear from the person because, again, it's like being an Afghanistan, right?
It's like there are the potted cases where it's obviously good, right?
It's like an Afghanistan, the girl who's getting an education, that is just here, that's why we're here.
That's obviously good.
I have those moments on Twitter,
which I'm hearing from a smart person
who's detected an error I made in my podcast,
or in a book, or they've just got some great idea
of something that I should spend time on.
And I would never have heard from this person
in any other format, and now I'm actually in dialogue
with them, and it's fantastic. That's the promise of it to actually talk to people.
And so I kept getting lured back into that. No, the same or sanity preserving way of
using it is just as a marketing channel. You just put your stuff out there and you don't
look at what's coming back at you. And that's, you know, for, you know, I'm on other social media platforms that I don't even touch.
I mean, my team put post stuff on Facebook and on Instagram. I never even see what's on
there. So you don't think it's possible to see something and not let it affect your mind?
No, that's definitely possible. But the question is, and I did that for vast stretches of time, right? And, but then
the promise of the platform is dialogue and feedback. So like, so why do my, if I know
for whatever reason, I'm going to see like 99 to one awful feedback, you know, bad faith feedback,
malicious feedback.
Some of it's probably even bots and I'm not even aware of who's a person who's a bot,
right?
But I'm just going to stare into this funhouse mirror of acrimony and dishonesty that is
going to I mean the the reason why I got off is not because I couldn't recalibrate and
and find equity again with all the
the the nastiness that was coming back at me and not that I couldn't ignore it
for vast rest of time, but I could see that I kept coming back to it hoping that
it would be something that I could use, a real tool for communication, and I
was noticing that it was insidiously changing
the way I felt about people.
Both people I know and people I don't know, right?
Like, people I, you know,
mutual friends of ours who are behaving in certain ways
on Twitter, which just seemed insane to me.
And then I, that became a signal I felt like I had to take
into account somehow, right?
You're seeing people at their worst,
people, both friends and strangers. And I felt that it was as much as I could sort of try to recalibrate
for it, I felt that I was losing touch with what was real information because people are performing,
people are faking, people are not who themselves are, you've seen people at their worst.
And so I felt like, all right, was being advertised to me here on a not just a daily basis,
you know, hourly basis or, you know, increment sometimes of, you know, multiple times an hour.
I mean, I've probably checked Twitter, you know, at minimum 10 times a day, and maybe
I was checking it 100 times a day on some days, right,
where things were really active and I was really engaged with something. What was being delivered
into my brain there was a was a fall subtly false information about how dishonest and just generally unethical, totally normal people
are capable of being.
It was like, it is a fun house mirror.
I was seeing the most grotesque versions of people who I know.
People who I know I could sit down at dinner with
and they would never behave this way.
And yet they were coming at me on Twitter.
You know, I mean, it's essentially
turning ordinary people into sociopaths.
Right?
People are just, you know, there are analogies
that many of us have made.
It's like one analogies road rage, right?
Like people behave in the confines of a car in ways that they never would if they didn't
have this metal box around them, you know, and moving at speed.
And it's, you know, all of that becomes quite hilarious.
And, and, you know, obviously dysfunctional when they actually have to stop at the light
next to the person they just flipped off.
And they realize they didn't realize they didn't understand that
the person coming out of that car next to them with cauliflower ear is someone who they
never would have rolled their eyes at in public because they would have taken one look at
this person realize this is the last person you want to fight with.
That's one of the heartbreaking things is to see people who I I know who I admire who I know our friends be everything
from snarky to downright. Yeah. I mean, derisive towards each other. It doesn't make any sense.
This is the only place where I've seen people I really admire who have had a calm head
about most things like really be shitty to other people.
It's probably the only place I've seen that. And I don't, I don't, I choose to maybe believe that
that's not really them. There's something about the system. Like if you go paintballing,
if you go to Peterson and go paint your friends. Yeah, you're going to shoot your friends,
but you kind of accept it. that's kind of what you're doing
in this little game that you're playing,
but it's sometimes hard to remind yourself of that.
Well, and I think I was guilty of that, definitely.
I don't think there's nothing,
I don't think I ever did anything that I really feel bad about,
but yeah, it was always pushing me to the edge of snideness
somehow.
And it's just not healthy.
It's not, it's not, so the reason why I deleted my Twitter account in the end was that
it was obviously making me a worse person.
And so, and yeah, is there some way to be on there where he's not making
you know, where is person? I'm sure there is, but it's given the nature of the
platform and given what was coming back at me on it, the way to do that is just
to basically use as a one-way channel of communication, just marketing. And it's
like, here's what I, what I'm paying attention to. Look at it if you want to.
And you just push it out and then you don't look
at what's coming back at you.
I put out a call for questions on Twitter.
And then actually quite surprising,
there's a lot of good, I mean, they're like,
even if they're critical, they're like being thoughtful,
which is nice.
I used it that way too, and that was what kept me hooked.
But then there's also a touch balls 69 wrote a question.
No, ask, can't imagine.
This is part of it, but one way to solve this is,
we've got to get rid of anonymity for this.
Well, let me ask the question, ask Sam why he sucks,
was the question.
Yeah, that's good.
Well, one reason why I sucked was Twitter.
That was, and I've since
solved that problem. So I mean, touch, touchball 69, yeah, touchball 69 should be happy that
I suck a little bit less now that I'm off Twitter. I mean, the fact don't have to hear
from touch balls 69 on the regular. The fact that you have to see that it probably
can have a negative effect, just even a moderation, just to see that there is can have a negative effect,
just even a moderation, just to see that there is,
like for me, the negative effect is slightly losing faith
in the underlying kindness of humanity.
But you can also just reason your way out of it,
saying that this is an intermediary,
and this is kind of fun,
and this kind of just the shit show of Twitter, it's okay,
but it does mentally affect you a little bit.
Like I don't read too much into that kind of comment.
It's like, that's just trolling.
And I understand the fun the person is having
on the other side of that.
It's like, do you though?
I do, well I do. I don't, I mean, I don't behave that way. But I do. And for all
I know that person could be, you know, 16 years old, right? So it's like, it could be also
an alter count for Elon. I don't know. Well, yeah, it's right. Yeah. Yeah. No, I'm pretty
sure. Elon would just tweet that. It's a long zone name at this point. I tell each other.
Okay, so do you think so speaking of which now that Elon has taken over Twitter, is there
something that he could do to make this platform better?
This Twitter and social media in general, but because of the aggressive nature of his
innovation that he's pushing, is there any way to make Twitter
a pleasant place for Sam Harris?
Maybe.
I can then explain it.
I don't know.
I think I'm agnostic as to whether or not
he or anyone could make a social media platform
that really was healthy.
So you were just observing yourself week by week
seeing the effect as in your mind
and on how much you're actually learning and growing as week seeing the effect as in your mind and on how
much you're actually learning and growing as a person and it was negative.
Yeah, and I also seen the negativity in other people's lives.
I mean, it's obviously, I mean, he's not going to admit it, but I think it's obviously
negative for Elon, right?
It's just not, it's, uh, and that was one of the things that, you know, when I was looking
into the fun house mirror, I was was looking into the fun house mirror,
I was also seeing that the fun house mirror on his side of Twitter and it was just even
more exaggerated.
It's like, well, when I was asking myself, why is he spending his time this way, I then
reflected on why, you know, why was I spending my time this way to a lesser degree, right?
And at lesser scale and at lesser risk, frankly, right? And so
and it was just so it's not just Twitter, it means it's this isn't part an internet phenomenon.
It's like the the whole hundred Biden mess that you explored. That was based on a clip taken from that podcast, which was highly misleading as to
the general shape of my remarks on that podcast.
Even I had to then do my own podcast, untangling all of that, and admitting that even in the
full context, I was not speaking especially well
and didn't say exactly what I thought in a way
that would have been recognizable to anyone,
even someone with not functioning
by a spirit of charity,
but the clip was quite distinct from the podcast itself.
The reality is, is that we're living in an environment now
where people are so lazy and there's their
their attention is so fragmented that they only have time for clips. 99% of people will see a clip and
we'll assume there's no relevant context I need to understand what happened in that clip, right?
And obviously the people who make those clips know that, right? And
they're doing it quite maliciously. And in this case, the person who made that clip
and subsequent clips of other podcasts was quite maliciously trying to engineer, you know,
some reputational emulation for me. And being signal boosted by Elon and other prominent people who can't take the time to watch anything other than a clip,
even when it's their friend or someone who's a stensibly their friend in that clip.
So it's a total failure, an understandable failure of ethics that everyone is so short on time and they're so fucking lazy that the
and that we now have these contexts in which we react so quickly to things, right?
Like Twitter is inviting an instantaneous reaction to this clip that it's
um, it's just too tempting to just say something and not know what you're even
commenting on.
And most of the people who saw that clip don't understand
what I actually think about any of these issues.
And the irony is people are going to find clips from this conversation
that are just as misleading and they're going to export those
and then people are going to be dunking on those clips.
And we're all living and dying by clips now, and it's, it's dysfunctional.
So, I think it's possible to create a platform.
I think we will keep living on clips,
but, you know, when I saw that clip of you talking
about children and so on,
just knowing that you have a sense of humor,
you just went to a dark place and in terms of humor.
Right.
I didn't even bother, and then I knew that the way clips work is that people use it
for virality's sake, but the giving a person benefit of the doubt, that's not even the
right term.
It's not like I was really interpreting it in the context of all your past.
The truth is, I even give Trump the benefit of the doubt
when I see a clip of Trump.
So because they're famous clips of Trump
that are very misleading as to what he was saying in context.
And I've been honest about that.
Like the whole, you know,
there were good people on both sides scandal around
his remarks after Charlottesville,
that the clip that got exported
and got promoted by everyone left of center,
from Biden on down, the New York Times, CNN,
there's nobody that I'm aware of
who has honestly apologized
for what they did with that clip.
That clip, he did not say what he seemed to be saying
in that clip about the Nazis at Charlottesville.
I've always been very clear about that.
Even people who I think should be marginalized and people who should be
de-fantastrated because they really are terrible people who are doing dangerous things and for bad reasons.
I think we should be honest about what they actually meant in context, right? And this goes to
anyone else we might talk about, you know, who is more where the case is much more confusing, but yeah, so
Everyone's it's just so and then I'm sure we're gonna get to AI
But you know the prospect of being able to manufacture clips with AI and deep fakes and
That where it's gonna be hard for most people most of the time to even figure out that whether they're in the presence of something real
You know forget about being divorced from context. There was no context
I mean that is that's a
Misinformation apocalypse that is we are right on the cusp of and you know, it's
It's terrifying. Oh, it could be just a new world like where Alice going to Wonderland, where humor is the only thing
we have and it will save us.
Maybe in the end, Trump's approach to social media
was the right one after all.
Nothing is true and everything's absurd.
Yeah, but we can't live that way.
People function on the basis of what they assume is true,
right?
They think you will have functioned.
Well, to do anything, it's like, I mean, you have to know what you think is going to happen.
Or you have to at least give a probabilistic waiting over the future. Otherwise, you're
going to be incapacitated by, like, people want certain things and they have to have a
rational plan to get those desires gratified and they don't
want to die, they don't want their kids to die. You tell them that there's a comet hurtling
toward earth and they should get outside and look up, right, they're going to do it. And
if it turns out it's misinformation, you know, it's it's it's a it's going to matter
because it comes down to like what medicines do you give your children, right? Like, we're going to be manufacturing fake journal articles.
I mean, this is, I'm sure someone's using chat GPT for this, as we speak.
And if it's not credible, if it's not persuasive now to most people, I mean, honestly, I don't
think we're going to, I'll be amazed if it's a year before we
can actually create journal articles that would take a PhD to debunk that are completely
fake. And there are people who are celebrating this kind of, you know, coming cataclysm.
But I just, it's just, they're the people who don't have anything to lose who are celebrating
it or just are so confused that they just don't even know what's at stake.
And then they're the people who have met, the few people who we could count on a few hands
who have managed to insulate themselves or at least imagine they've insulated themselves
from the downside here enough that they're not implicated in the great unraveling.
We are witnessing or could witness.
The shaking up of what is true.
So actually that returns us to experts.
Do you think experts can save us?
Is there such thing as expertise and experts in something?
How do you know if you've achieved it?
I think it's important to acknowledge upfront that there's something paradoxical about how
we relate to authority, especially within science.
I don't think that paradox is going away, and it doesn't have to be confusing.
It's not truly a paradox.
It's just like there are different moments in time. So it is true to say that within science or within,
within rationality generally,
I mean, we're just,
whenever you're making a,
having a fact-based discussion about anything,
it is true to say that the truth or falsity of a statement does not even slightly depend
on the credentials of the person making the statement.
So it doesn't matter if you're a Nobel laureate, you can be wrong.
The thing you could, the last sentence you spoke could be total bullshit.
And it's also possible for someone who's deeply uninformed to be right about something or
to be right for the wrong reasons, right?
Or someone just gets lucky or someone or and they're middleing cases where you have like
a backyard astronomer who's got no credentials, but he just loves astronomy and he's got a telescope
and he's spent a lot of time looking at the nice guy and he discovers a comet that no one else has seen, you know, not even the professional expert
astronomers. I've got to think that happens less and less now, but but some
version of that keeps happening and it may always keep happening in every
area of expertise, right? So it's true that truth is orthogonal
to the reputational concerns we have among apes
who are talking about the truth.
But it is also true that most of the time
real experts are much more reliable than frauds or
people who are not experts, right?
So and expertise really is a thing, right? And when you're flying an airplane in a storm
you don't want just
randos come into the cockpit saying, listen, I've got a new idea about how to, you know, how we should tweak these controls, right?
You want someone who's a trained pilot and and that training gave them something, right?
It gave them a set of competences and intuitions and they know what all those dials and switches
do, right?
And I don't, right?
I shouldn't be flying that plane.
So when things really matter, you know, and put in this at 30,000 feet in a storm, sharpens this up,
we want real experts to be in charge, right? And we are at 30,000 feet a lot of the time on a lot
of issues, right? And whether they're public health issues, whether it's issues, whether it's a
geopolitical emergency like Ukraine, climate
change, I mean, just pick your topic.
There are real problems and the clock is rather often ticking and their solutions are not
obvious, right?
And so expertise is a thing and deferring to experts much of the time makes a lot of sense.
It's at minimum, it prevents spectacular errors of incompetence and just foolhardiness.
But even in the case of some where you're talking about someone, I mean,
people like ourselves who are like, well educated, we're not the worst possible candidates
for the Dunning Kruger effect.
When we're going into a new area where we're not experts, we're fairly alert to the possibility
that we don't, you know, it's not as simple as things seem at first and we don't, you know,
we don't know how our tools translate to this new area.
We can be fairly circumspect, but we're also, because we're well educated,
we can, we're, and we're pretty quick studies,
we can learn a lot of things pretty fast.
And we can begin to play a language game that sounds fairly expert, right?
And in that case, the invitation to do your own research, right, is, when times are good,
I view as an invitation to waste your time, pointlessly, right?
When times are good.
Now the truth is, times are not all that good, right? And we have the
ongoing public display of failures of expertise. We have experts who are obviously corrupted
by bad incentives. We've got experts who, you know, perversely won't admit they were
wrong when they, in fact, you know, are demonstrated to be wrong. We've got institutions
that have been captured by political ideology
that's not truth-tracking and this whole woke encroachment into really every place, you
know, whether it's universities or science journals or government or I mean, it's just
like that has been genuinely deranging. So there's a lot going on where experts and the very concept of expertise
have seemed to discredit itself, but the reality is that there is a massive difference when
anything matters, when there's anything to know about anything, there is a massive difference
most of the time between someone who has really done the work to understand that domain and someone who hasn't. And if I get sick or someone close to me gets sick,
you know, I have a PhD in neuroscience, right?
So I can read a medical journal article
and understand a lot of it, right?
And I, you know, so I'm just fairly conversant
with, you know, medical terminology.
And I understand its methods and I'm alert to the difference because in neuroscience,
I've spent hours and hours in journal clubs, diagnosing, analyzing the difference, being
good and bad studies, I'm alert to the difference between good and bad studies in medical journals.
And I understand that bad studies can get published, and, you know, et cetera.
And experiments can be poorly designed.
I'm alert to all of those things,
but when I get sick or when someone close to me get sick,
I don't pretend to be a doctor, right?
I've got no clinical experience.
I don't go down the rabbit hole on Google
for days at a stretch trying to become a doctor,
much less a specialist
in the domain of problem that has been visited upon me or my family, right?
So if someone close to me gets cancer, I don't pretend to be an oncologist.
I don't go out and start reading, you know, in journals of oncology and try to really
get up to speed as an oncologist becausees, because it's not, it's,
one is a bad and potentially,
and very likely misleading use of my time, right?
And it's, if I decide, if I had,
if I had a lot of runway, if I decide, okay,
it's really important
for me to know everything I can.
At this point, I want to, I know someone's going to get cancer.
I may not go back to school and become an oncologist, but what I want to do is I want to know everything
I can know about cancer, right?
So I'm going to take the next four years and spend most of my time on cancer.
Okay, I could do that, right?
I still think that's the way it's to my time. I still think at the end of, even at the end of those four years, I could do that, right? I still think that's a waste of my time. I still
think at the end of, even at the end of those four years, I'm not going to be the best person
to, to form intuitions about what to do in the face of the next cancer that, that I have
to confront. I'm still going to want a better oncologist than I've become to tell me what
he or she would do if they were in my shoes
or in the shoes of, you know, my family member. I'm going to, you know, what I'm not, what I'm not
advocating, I'm not advocating a, a blind trust and authority. Like if you get cancer and you're
talking to one oncologist and they're recommending some course of treatment, but all means get a second
opinion, get a third opinion, right?
But it matters that those opinions
are coming from real experts
and not from, you know,
Robert Kennedy Jr., you know,
who's telling you that, you know,
you got it because you got a vaccine, right?
It's like, it's just,
it, there's, we're swimming in a sea of misinformation
where you've got people who are moving the opinions of millions of others
Who who should not
Have an opinion on these topics like there's no there is no
scenario in which you should be getting your opinion about vaccine safety or or climate change or
the warn you crane or anything else that we might want
to talk about from Candace Owens.
She's not a relevant expert on any of those topics and what's more, she doesn't seem to
care.
And she's living in a culture that has amplified that not carrying
into a business model, an effective business model.
So it's just, and there's something very trumping
about all that, that's the problem is the culture,
it's not these specific individuals.
So the paradox here is that expertise is a real thing
and we defer to it a lot as a labor saving device, and it's just based on the reality that it's very hard to be a polymath,
and specialization is a thing.
So that people who specialize in a very narrow topic, they know more about that topic than the next guy, no matter how smart that guy or gal is, and that those differences matter. But it's also true that when you're talking
about facts, sometimes the best experts are wrong, the scientific consensus is wrong. You get
a sea change in the thinking
of a whole field because one person who's an outlier for whatever reason decides, okay,
I'm, you know, I'm going to prove this point and they prove it, right? So somebody like
the doctor who believed that the stomach ulcers were not due to stress, but were due to,
to, um, H. Pylori infections, right? So he just drank a vial of H. Pylori bacteria
and proved that and quickly got an ulcer and convinced the field that
minimum H. Pylori was involved in that process. Okay, so yes, everyone was wrong.
That doesn't disprove the reality of expertise. It doesn't disprove the utility
of relying on experts most of the time, especially in an emergency, especially when the clock
is ticking, especially when you're in this particular cockpit and you only have one
chance to land this plane, right? You want the real pilot at the controls. But there's just a few things to say. So one, you mentioned this example with
cancer and doing your own research, there's several things that are different
about our particular time in history. One, doing your own research has become
more and more effective because you can read the internet made information a lot more accessible.
So you can read a lot of different meta-analyses. You can read blog posts that
describe to you exactly the flaws and the different papers that make up the meta-analyses.
You can read a lot of those blog posts that are conflicting with each other and you can take that information in and in a short amount of time, you can start to make good faith interpretations.
For example, I don't know, I don't want to overstate things, but if you suffer from depression,
for example, then you could go to an expert and a doctor that prescribes you some medication,
but you could also challenge some of those ideas and seeing like what are the different
medications, what are the different side effects, what are the different solutions, the depression,
all that kind of stuff.
And I think depression is a really difficult problem that's very, I don't want to, again,
state and correct things, but I think it's, there's a lot of variability of what depression
really means. So being introspective about the type of depression you have and the different possible solutions
you have, just doing your own research as a first step before approaching a doctor or
as you have multiple opinions could be very beneficial in that case.
Now that's depression that's something that's been studied for a very long time with
a new pandemic that's affecting everybody.
It's with the airplane equated to like 9-11 or something.
Like, the new emergency just happened and everybody, every expert in the world is publishing
on it and talking about it.
So doing your own research there could be exceptionally
effective in asking questions. And then there's a difference between experts, virologists, and it's
actually a good question who is exactly the expert in a pandemic. But there's the actual experts
doing the research and publishing stuff. And then there's the communicators of that
expertise. And the question is, if the communicators are flawed, to a degree, what doing your own
research is actually the more effective way to figure out policies and solutions. Because you're
not competing with experts, you're competing with the communicators of expertise. That could be WHO, CDC, in the case of the pandemic or politicians or political type of science figures like Anthony Fauci.
There's a question there of the effectiveness of doing your research, your own research in that context, and the competing forces there in centers,
the mention, is you can become quite popular by being contrarian,
by saying everybody's lying to you, all the authorities aligned to you,
all the institutions aligned to you.
So those are the waters just swimming in.
But I think doing your own research in that kind of context could be quite effective.
Well, let me be clear. I'm not saying you shouldn't do any research, right? I'm not saying that you
shouldn't be informed about an issue. I'm not saying you shouldn't read articles on
whatever the topic is. And yes, if I got cancer or someone close to me got cancer, I probably
would read more about cancer than I've read thus far about cancer. And I've read some.
So I'm not making a virtue of ignorance and a blind obedience to authority.
And again, I recognize that authorities can discredit
themselves or they can be wrong.
They can be wrong even when there's no discredit.
There's a lot we don't understand
about the nature of the world.
But still this vast gulf between truly informed opinion
and bullshit exists, it always exists.
And conspiracy thinking is rather often,
most of the time, the species of bullshit, but it's not always wrong, right?
There are real conspiracies.
And there really are just awful corruptions of, you know, born of bad incentives within
our scientific processes, within institutions.
And again, we've mentioned a lot of these things
in passing, but what woke political ideology did
to scientific communication during the pandemic was awful.
And it was really corrosive of public trust,
especially on the right.
For understandable reasons, it was crazy.
Some of the things that were being said and still
is.
And these cases are all different.
It's like you take depression, but we just don't know enough about depression for anyone
to be that confident about anything, right?
And there are many different modalities in which to interact with it is a problem, right?
So there's yes, pharmaceuticals, have whatever promise they have, but there's certainly reason to be concerned that they don't work well for everybody, and
that's obvious they don't work well for everybody, but they do work for some people.
But again, depression is a multifactorial problem and there are different levels at which to influence it.
And there are things like meditation,
there are things like life changes.
One of the first things about depression
is that when you're depressed,
all of the things that would be good for you to do
or precisely the things you don't wanna do,
you don't have any energy to socialize,
you don't wanna get things done, you don't wanna exercise. And all of those things, if you got those up and running,
they do make you feel better in the aggregate. But the reality is that there are clinical level
depressions that are so bad that it's just, we just don't have good tools for them. And it's not
enough to tell you, there's no life change.
Someone's going to, going to embrace that is going to be an obvious remedy for that.
The pandemic are obviously a complicated problem, but I would consider it much simpler than
depression in terms of what's on the menu to be chosen among the various choices.
It's less multifactorial. The logic by which you would make those choices.
Yeah, so it's like we have a virus, we have a new virus. It's some version of bad.
You know, it's human transmissible. We're still catching up. We're catching up to every aspect of
that. We don't know how it spreads. We don't know how effective masks are.
At a certain point, we knew it was respiratory,
but we knew how it spread.
And whether it's spread by phone mites,
and all that we were confused about a lot of things,
and we're still confused.
It's been a moving target this whole time,
and it's been changing this whole time.
And our responses to it have been,
we ramped up the vaccines as quickly as we could, but, you know, too
quick for some, not as quick enough for others, we could have done human challenge trials
and got them out more quickly with better data. And I think that's something we should
probably look at in the future because, you know, to my eye, that would make ethical sense
to do challenge trials.
But, and so much of my concern about COVID, I mean, many people are confused about my concern
about COVID.
My concern about COVID has, for much of the time, not been narrowly focused on COVID itself,
I had dangerous, I perceive, COVID to be as a illness, it has been for the longest time even more a concern
about our ability to respond to a truly scary pathogen next time.
Like for outside those initial months, give me the first six months to be quite worried
about COVID and the unraveling of society,
but-
And the supply of toilet paper.
You want to secure a steady supply of toilet paper?
But beyond that initial period, when we had a sense of what we were dealing with,
and we had every hope that the vaccines are actually going to work,
and we knew we were getting those vaccines in short order, right?
Beyond that, and we knew just how dangerous the illness was and how dangerous it wasn't.
For years now, I've just been worrying about this as a failed dress rehearsal for something
much worse, right?
I think what we proved to ourselves at this moment in history is that we have built informational tools that we do not know how to use
and we have made ourselves, we've basically enrolled all of human society into a psychological
experiment that is deranging us and making it virtually impossible to solve coordination problems
that we absolutely have to solve next time when things are worse do you understand who is it fault for
the way this unraveled
the way we didn't seem to have
the distrust institutions and the institution of science that grew like seemingly exponentially or got revealed to this process,
who is a fault here?
And what's the fix?
So much blame to go around,
but so much of it is not a matter of bad people
conspiring to do bad things.
It's a matter of incompetence and misaligned incentives
and just ordinary, you know, plain vanilla dysfunction.
But my problem was that people like you, people like Brett Weinstein, people like that I look
to for reasonable, difficult conversations on difficult topics, have a little bit lost
their mind, became emotional and dogmatic in style of conversation, perhaps not in the depth
of actual ideas, but they're, you know, it's we something of that nature and that about you,
but just it feels like the pandemic made people really more emotional than before. And then
Kimbo Musk responded, I think something I think you probably would agree with. Maybe not.
I think it was the combo of Trump and the pandemic.
Trump triggered the far left to be way more active than they could have been
without him. And then the pandemic handed big government,
nanny state left these a huge platform on a silver platter.
I want to punch in here we are.
Well, I would agree with some of that.
I'm not sure how much to read into the nanny state concept,
but well, yet like basically got people on the far left, Some of that, I'm not sure how much to read into the nanny state concept, but...
Well, yet, basically, people on the far left really activated and then gave control to,
I don't know if you say nanny state, but just control to government that one executed
poorly has created a complete distrust in government.
My fear is that there was going to be that complete distrust anyway given the nature of
the information space, given the level of conspiracy thinking, given the gaming of these tools
by an anti-vax cult.
I mean, there really is an anti-vax cult that just ramped up its energy during this moment.
But it's a small one.
It's not to say that everything,
every concern about vaccines is a species
of it's born of misinformation or born of this cult,
but there is a cult that is just,
and the core of Trumpism is a cult.
I mean, a QAnon is a cult.
And so there's a lot of line and there's
a lot of confusion. You know, there are, it's almost impossible to exaggerate how confused
some people are and how and how fully their lives are organized around that confusion.
I mean, there are people who think that the world's being run by pedophile cannibals and
that, you know, Tom Hanks and Oprah
Winfrey and Michelle Obama are among those cannibals. I mean, like, they're adjacent to the pure crazy,
there's the semi-crazy, and adjacent to the semi-crazy, there's the grifting opportunist asshole, And the layers of bad faith are hard to fully diagnose, but the problem is all of this
is getting signal boosted by an outrage machine that is preferentially spreading misinformation.
It has a business model that is guaranteed that is preferentially sharing misinformation.
Can actually just in a small tangent.
Yeah. How do you defend yourself against the claim
that your pedophile accountable?
It's difficult.
Here's the case I would make.
Because I don't think you can use reason.
I think you have to use empathy.
You have to.
But what, like a part of it, I mean,
I find it very difficult to believe
that anyone believes these things.
I mean, I think that there's, and there, and I'm sure there's some number of people who are just pretending
to believe these things because it's just, again, this is sort of like the for-channification
of everything.
It's just, it's just, it's just Pepe the frog, right?
Like, none of this is what it seems.
They're not signaling an alliance with white supremacy or neo-Nazism, but they're not
doing it.
They just don't fucking care.
It's just cynicism overflowing its banks.
It's just fun to wind up the normies.
Look at all the normies.
You don't understand that a green frog is just a green frog, even when it isn't just
a green frog.
It's just gming up everyone's
cognitive bandwidth with bullshit, right? I get that that's fun if you're a teenager and you just
want to vandalize our, our, our news sphere. But at a certain point, we have to recognize that
real questions of human welfare are in play, right? There's like, there's really, there's, there's, there's, there are wars getting fought
or not fought, and there's a pandemic raging,
and there's medicine to take or not take.
But I mean, to come back to this issue of COVID,
I don't think my, I don't think I got so out of balance
around COVID.
I think people are quite confused about
what I was concerned about.
I mean, like, I, there was a, yes, there was a period where I was crazy because anyone
who was taking it seriously was crazy because they had no idea what was going on.
And so it's like, yes, I was wiping down packages with alcohol wipes, right?
Because people thought it was from, from a transmissible by touch, right?
That's so.
And then when we realized that was no longer the case, I stopped doing that.
But so there, again, it was a moving target.
And a lot of things we did in hindsight around masking and school closures, looks fairly dysfunctional,
right?
But I think the criticism that people would say about you're talking about COVID, and maybe
you can correct me, but you were skeptic, or you were against skepticism of the safety
and efficacy of the vaccine.
So people who get nervous about the vaccine, but don't fall into the usual anti-vax camp, which I think there was a significant
enough number. They were asking, they were getting nervous. I mean, especially after the
war in Afghanistan and Iraq, I too was nervous about anything where a lot of money could
be made. And you start, you just see how the people who are greedy, who come, they
come to the surface all of a sudden. And a lot of them that run institutions actually
really get human beings. I know a lot of them, but it's hard to know how those two combined
together when there's hundreds of billions, trillions of dollars to be made. And so that
skepticism, I guess you, the sense was that you weren't open enough to the skepticism, I guess the sense was that you weren't
open enough to the skepticism.
I understand that people have that sense.
I'll tell you how I thought about it and think about it.
One, again, it was a moving target.
So there was a point in the timeline
where it was totally rational to expect
that the vaccines were both working,
that the vaccines were both working,
but both they were reasonably safe and that COVID was reasonably dangerous.
And that the tradeoff for basically everyone
was it was rational to get vaccinated,
given the level of testing
and how many people had been vaccinated before you,
given what we were seeing with COVID, right?
That that was a forced choice. Are you eventually going to get COVID and the question is,
do you want to be vaccinated when you do? Right. There was a period where that forced choice,
where it was just obviously reasonable to get vaccinated, especially because there was every
reason to expect that while it wasn't a perfectly sterilizing vaccine,
it was going to knock down transmission a lot
and that matters.
And so it wasn't just a personal choice.
You were actually being a good citizen
when you decided to run whatever risk
you were gonna run to get vaccinated
because there are people in our society
who actually can't get vaccinated.
I mean, I know people who can't take any vaccines.
They're so allergic to, I mean, they, they, in their own person, seem to justify all of the fears of the anti-vax cult.
I mean, it's like they're the kind of person who, Robert Kennedy, Jr., can point you and say, see vaccines.
Well, we'll fucking kill you, right? Because, because of the experience it, and they, and we're still, they, I know people who have kids who fit that description, right? Because if the experience it and they and war still they I know people who have kids who
fit that description right so we should all feel a civic responsibility to be vaccinated against
egregiously awful and transmissible diseases for which we have relatively safe vaccines
to keep those sorts of people safe. And there was a period of time when it was thought that the vaccine could stop transmission.
Yes.
And so again, all of this has begun to shift.
I don't think it has shifted as much as Brett Weinstein thinks it's shifted, but yes,
there are safety concerns around the mRNA vaccines, especially for young men, right? As far as I know, that's the purview of actual heightened
concern.
But also, there's now a lot of natural immunity out there.
Basically, everyone who was going to get vaccinated has
gotten vaccinated.
The virus has evolved to the point in this context where it seems less dangerous.
You know, again, I don't, I'm going more on the Siemens than on research that I've
done at this point, but I'm certainly less worried about getting COVID.
I've had it once.
I've been vaccinated.
I feel like it's like, so you ask me now, how do I feel about getting the next booster?
I don't know that I'm going to get the next booster, right?
So I was somebody who was waiting in line at 4 in the morning, hoping to get some overflow
vaccine when it was first available.
And that was at that point, given what we knew, or given what I thought I knew based on
the best sources I could consult, and based on, you know, based on anecdotes that were
too vivid to ignore, you know, both data and personal experience, it was totally rational
for me to want to get that vaccine as soon as I could.
And now I think it's totally rational for me to do a different kind of cost-benefit
analysis and wonder, listen, do I really need to get a booster? How many of these boosters am I going
to get for the rest of my life? Really? And how safe is the mRNA vaccine for a man of my age?
Right? And do I need to be worried about my carditis for you know?
All of that is completely rational to talk about now. My concern is that at every point along
the way, I was the wrong person and Brett Weinstein was the wrong person and there's many other
people I could add to this list to have strong opinions about any of this stuff.
Right.
I just disagree with that.
I think, yes, in theory, I agree 100%.
But I feel like experts failed at communicating.
Not at doing.
They did.
And I just feel like you and Brent Weinstein actually have the tools with the internet, given
the engine you have in your brain of thinking for months
at a time, deeply about the problems that face our world, that you actually have the tools to do
pretty good thinking here. The problem I have with experts. But there would be deference to experts,
pseudo experts behind all of that. Well, the papers, you would stand on the shoulders of giants,
but you can serve those shoulders better than the giants themselves. Yeah, but I knew we were going to disagree about that. Like I saw his podcast where he brought
on these experts who had many of them had the right credentials, but for a variety of reasons,
they didn't pass the smell test for me. Maybe the one larger problem and this goes back
to the problem of how we rely on authority and science is
that you can always find a PhD or an MD to champion any crackpot idea.
I mean, it is amazing, but you could find PhDs and MDs who would sit up there in front
of Congress and say that they thought smoking was not addictive, or that it was not harmful
to, there was no direct link between smoking and lung cancer.
You could always find those people, and you could end.
So, but, you know, some of the people Brett found were people who had obvious tells to my
point of view, to my eye, and I saw them on, some of these same people were on Rogan's
podcast, right? And it's hard because if a person does have the right credentials,
and they're not saying something floridly mistaken, and we're talking about something where
they're genuine unknowns, right? Like how much do we know about the safety of these
vaccines, right? It's at that point, not a whole hell of a lot.
I mean, we have no long-term data on mRNA vaccines.
But to confidently say that millions of people
are gonna die because of these vaccines,
and to confidently say that Ivermectin is a panacea,
right, Ivermectin is the thing that prevents COVID, right?
There was no good reason to say either of those things
at that moment.
And that's,
and that, and so given that that's where Brett was, I felt like there was, there was just no,
there was nothing to debate. We were both the wrong people that would get beginning into the weeds
on this. We're both going to defer to our chosen experts. His experts look like crackpots to me.
And, um, or at least the ones who are most vociferous
on those most, on those edgeiest points that seem most.
And your experts seem like,
what is the term, mescisteria?
I forgot the term.
Well, it's like, it's like with climate science.
I mean, this old, it's received as a canard
for in half our society now,
but the claim that 97% of climate scientists
agree that human cause climate changes a thing, right?
So do you go with the 97% most of the time, or do you go with the 3% most of the time?
It's obvious you go with the 97% most of the time for anything that matters.
It's not to say that the 3% are always wrong.
Again, there are things get overturned.
And yes, as you say, I've spent much more time worrying about this on my podcast than
I've spent worrying about COVID.
Our institutions have lost trust for good reason, right?
And it's an open question, whether we can actually get things done with this level of transparency
and pseudo transparency given our information ecosystems.
Like, can we fight a war?
Really fight a war that we may have to fight.
Like, the next Nazis, can we fight that war when everyone with an iPhone is showing just how
awful it is
that little girls get blown up when we drop our bombs?
Right?
Like, could we as a society do what we might have to do
to actually get necessary things done
when we're living in this panopticon of just,
everyone's a journalist, everyone's a scientist,
everyone's an expert, everyone's got direct contact with the facts or some or semblance of the facts.
I don't know. I think yes, and I think voices like yours are exceptionally important,
and I think there's certain signals you send in your ability to steal me on the other side,
in your empathy, essentially. So that's the fight, that's the
mechanism by which you resist. The dog went to some of these, this binary thinking. And
then if you become a trusted person that's able to consider the other side, then people
will listen to you as, as the aggregators, the communicator of
expertise. Because the virologist haven't been able to be good communicators. I
still to this day don't really know what is the, what am I supposed to think
about the safety and efficacy of the vaccines today? As it stands today, what are
we supposed to think? What are we supposed to think about testing? What are we supposed to think about the effectiveness of masks or lockdowns? Where's the great
communicator on this topic that consider all the other conspiracy theories, all the other,
all the communication that's out there and actually aggregating it together and being able to say,
this is actually what's most likely the truth. And also some
of that has to do with humility, epistemic humility, knowing that you can't really know for sure,
just like with depression, you can't really know for sure.
And who worries, I'm not seeing those communications being effectively done, even still today.
Well, I mean, the jury is still out on some of it. And again, it's a moving
target. And some of it, I mean, it's complicated. Some of it's a self-fulfilling dynamic where
like, so like lockdowns, in theory, lockdowns, a lockdown would work if we could only do it,
but we can't really do it. And there's a lot of people who won't do it because they're convinced that this is the totalitarian boot, you know, on finally on the neck of the good
people who are always having their interests, you know, produced by the elites, right?
So like this is, if you have enough people who think the lockdown, for any reason in
the face of any conceivable illness, right,
is just code for the new world order coming to fuck you over and take your guns, right?
Okay, you have a society that is now immune to reason, right?
Because there are absolutely certain pathogens that we should lock down for next time. Right? And it was completely rational in the beginning of this thing,
to lock down, to attempt to lock down, we never really lock down.
To attempt some semblance of lock down just to, quote, bend the curve,
to spare our healthcare system,
given what we were seeing happening in Italy.
Right? Like that moment was not hard to navigate.
I at least, in my view, it was obvious at the time
in retrospect, my views on that haven't changed,
except for the fact that I recognize
maybe it's just impossible
and be given the nature of people's response
to that kind of demand, right?
We live in a society that's just not gonna lock down.
Unless the pandemic is much more deadly. Right, so that's the point I made, which, you know,
was maliciously clipped out from some other podcast, someone's trying to make it look like I want to
see children die. It looks like there's a pity more children didn't die from COVID, right?
This is actually the same person who I met, uh, I'm that's the other thing that got so, um, poisoned here.
It's like that person, this, this psychopath or effective psychopath who's creating these clips of me on podcasts, the second clip of me, uh, seeming to say that I wish more children died during COVID, which, but it was, it was so, I was so, it was so clear in context.
What I was saying that even the clip betrayed the context so it didn't actually work.
This psycho and again, I don't know whether he actually is a psychopath, but he's behaving
like one because of the incentives of Twitter.
This is somebody who Brett signal boosted as a as a very reliable source of information.
He kept retweeting this guy at me against me. At one glance, I knew
how unreliable this guy was. But I think I'm not at all set. One thing I think I did wrong,
one thing that I do regret, one thing I have not sorted out for myself is how to navigate the professional and personal pressure that gets applied at this
moment where you have a friend or an acquaintance or someone you know who's behaving badly in public
or behaving badly, behaving in a way that you think is bad in public.
And they have a public platform where they're influencing a lot of people and you have your
own public platform where you're constantly getting asked to comment on what this friend
or acquaintance or colleague is doing.
I haven't known what I think is ethically right about the choices that seem forced on
us in moments like this.
So like I've criticized you in public about your interview with Kanye.
Now in that case, I reached out to you in private first and told you exactly what I thought.
And then when I was going to get asked in public or when I was touching that topic on my podcast,
I more or less said the same thing that I said to you in private, right?
Now, that was how I navigated that moment.
I did the same thing with Elon, at least at the beginning.
We have maintained good vibes, which is which is not what I
know you want but I don't think I disagree with you because good vibes in the
moment there's a deep core of good vibes that persist through time between you
and Elon and I would argue probably between some of the other folks you mentioned.
I think with Brett I failed to reach out and private to this degree that I should have.
And we never really had a, we, we, it's tried to set up a conversation in private that,
that never happened, but there was some communication, but it would have been much better for me to
have made more of an effort in private than I did before it's built out into public.
And I would say that's true with other people as well.
What kind of interaction and private do you think you should have with Brett? Because my case
would be beforehand and now still. The case I would like in this part of the criticism
you sent my way, maybe it's useful to go to that direction. Actually, let's go to that direction
because I think I disagree with your criticism
as you stated publicly, but this is very...
You're talking about your interview with Kanye.
The thing you criticized me for
is actually the right thing to do with Brett.
Okay, you said,
Lex could have spoken with Kanye in such a way
as they have produced a useful document.
He didn't do that
because he has a fairly naive philosophy
about the power of love.
Let's see if you can maintain that philosophy in the present. Let's go. He's beautiful.
He seemed to think that if he just got through the mind field to the end of the conversation
or the two of them still were feeling good about one another and they can hug it out,
that would be by definition
a success. So let me make the case for this power of love philosophy. Right. And first of all,
I love you Sam. You're still in inspiration and somebody I deeply admire. Okay. Back at you.
The to me in the case of Kanye, it's not only that you get to the conversation and have hugs.
It's that the display that you're willing to do that has power.
So even if it doesn't end in hugging, the actual turning, the other cheek, the act of turning, the other cheek itself communicates both to Kanye later and to the rest of the world that
we should have empathy and compassion towards each other.
There is power to that.
I, maybe that is naive, but I believe in the power of that.
So it's not that I'm trying to convince Kanye that some of his ideas are wrong, but I'm
trying to illustrate that just the act of listening and truly trying to understand
the human being, that is opens people's minds to actually questioning their own beliefs
more.
It takes them out of the dogmatism, de-escalates the kind of dogmatism that I've been seeing.
So in that sense, I would say the power of love is the is the is the philosophy you might apply to Brett
Because the right conversation you have in private is not about hey listen
You're you know the experts you're talking to they seem credentialed, but they're not actually
As credentials as they illustrating. They're not grounding their findings in actual meta-analyses and papers and so on
Like making a strong case.
Like, what are you doing?
There's going to get a lot of people in trouble.
But instead, just saying, like, being a friend in the dumbest of ways,
being like respectful, sending love their way,
and just having a conversation outside of all of this.
I'll say, like, like basically showing that like, removing the emotional attachment to this
debate, even though you are very emotionally attached because in the case of COVID, specifically,
there is a very large number of lives at stake, but removing all of that and remembering that
you have a friendship.
Yeah, well, so I think these are highly non-analogous cases, right? but removing all of that and remembering that you have a friendship.
Yeah, well, so I think these are highly non-analogous cases, right? So your conversation with Kanye misfired from my point of view for a very different reason.
It was, it has to do with Kanye.
I mean, so Kanye, I don't know, I've never met Kanye.
So obviously, I don't know him.
I don't know, I don't know, I've never met Kanye.
So I was saying, I don't know him.
But I think he's either obviously in the midst of a mental health crisis,
or he's a colossal asshole, or both. I mean, the exact opposite of those aren't mutually exclusive.
So one of three possible, he's either mentally ill.
He's an asshole or he's a, he's mentally ill and an asshole.
I think all three of those possibilities are possible for the both of us as well.
No, I would argue none of those are likely for either of us, but possible.
Not to say we don't have our moments, but so the reason not to talk to Kanye,
so you, I think you should have had the conversation you had with him in private.
That's great.
And there's no, I have got no criticism of what you said had had been in private.
In public, I just thought, you're not doing him a favor.
If he's mentally ill, right, he's in the middle of a, a, a manic episode or, or, you know,
I'm not a clinician, but I've heard it said of him that he is bipolar.
You're not doing him a favor sticking a mic in front of him
and letting him go off on the Jews or anything else, right?
We know what he thought about the Jews.
We know that there's not much illumination,
it's gonna come from him on that topic.
And if it is a symptom of his mental illness
that he thinks these things,
well then you're not doing him a favor
making that even more public.
If he's just an asshole and he's just an antisemite,
an ordinary, you know, garden variety antisemite,
well then there's also not much to say
unless you're really going to dig in
and kick the shit out of him in public.
And I'm saying you can do that with love. I mean, that's the other thing here is that
I don't agree that compassion and love always have this patient embracing acquiescent
face, right? They don't always feel good to the recipient, right? There is a
sort of wisdom that you can wield compassionately in moments like that where someone's full of
shit and you just make it absolutely clear to them and to your audience that they're full of
shit. And there's no hatred being communicated. In fact, you could just like listen, I'm going
to do everyone a favor right now and you know know just take your foot out of your mouth and and
And the truth is you know, I wouldn't I just wouldn't have aired the conversation
Like I just don't think it was a document that had to get out there, right? I get that
Many people this is not a signal you're likely to get from your audience, right?
I get that many people in your audience thought oh my god. That's awesome
You you're talking to Kanye and you're doing it in Lex style, where it's
just love and you're not treating him like a pariah. And you know, you're holding this
tension between, he's this creative genius who he was work we love. And yet he's having
this moment that's so painful. And what a tight rope walk. And I get that maybe 90% of your
audience saw that way. They're still wrong. And I still think that was not balanced, not a good thing to put out into the world.
You don't think it opens up the mind and heart of people that listen to that.
Just having it. Seeing a person.
It's led if it's opening up in the wrong direction where just gale force nonsense is coming in.
Right. I think we should have an open mind and an open heart,
but there are some clear things here that we have
to keep in view.
One is the mental illness component is its own thing.
I don't pretend to understand what's going on with him.
So, but in so far as that's the reason he's saying
what he's saying, do not put this guy on camera
and let me-
But I had to-
Sorry, in that point real quick
I had a bunch of conversation with them offline and I didn't get a sense of mental illness. That's why I chose to sit down
Okay, and I didn't get it. I mean mental illnesses such a
But when he shows up in a gimp put on Alex Jones's podcast. I mean this is either that's more, you know
Genius performance in his world or it's he's
unraveling further.
I wouldn't put that under mental illness.
I, we have to, I think there's another conversation to be had about how we treat artists.
Right.
Because they're, they're weirdos.
They're very, I mean, we, you know, taking, taking words from Akanya as if he's like Christopher
Hitchens or something like that, like very eloquent, researched, you know, written
many books on history, on politics, and geopolitics, on psychology.
Akanya didn't do any of that.
He's an artist just spouting off.
So that's a different style of conversation
and a different way to treat the words
that are coming out of the stuff.
Let's leave the mental and society.
So if we're gonna say that there's no reason
to think he's mentally ill
and this is just him being creative and brilliant
and opinionated, well then that falls
into the asshole bucket for me.
It's like then he's someone,
and honestly the most offensive thing about him
in that interview from my point of view is not the anti-semitism, which you know we can talk about
because I think there are problems just letting him spread those memes as well. But the most
offensive thing is just how delusional egocentric he is or was coming off in that interview and in others like he he has an estimation
of himself as this omnibus genius to to arrive not only to rival Shakespeare to exceed Shakespeare
right and he's like he's he is the greatest mind that has ever walked among us and he's
more or less explicit on that point and yet he manages to talk for hours without saying anything actually interesting or insightful or factually illuminating. So it's complete delusion of a very Trumpian
sort. It's like, when Trump says he's a genius who understands everything, but nobody takes
him seriously. It wonders whether Trump takes himself seriously. Kanye seems to believe his own press. He actually thinks he's a colossus.
He may be a great musician. Certainly not my willhouse to compare him to any other musicians, but
one thing that's patently obvious from your conversation is he's not who he thinks he is
intellectually or ethically or in any other relevant way.
So when you couple that to the anti-semitism he was spreading, which was genuinely noxious
and ill-considered and has potential knock-on effects in the black community.
I mean, there's an ambient level of anti-semitism
in the black community that is worth worrying about
and talking about anyway.
There's a bunch of guys playing the knockout game
in Brooklyn just punching Orthodox Jews in the face.
And I think letting Kanye air his anti-semitism,
that publicly only raises the likelihood of that rather than diminishes.
I don't know. So let me say just a couple of things. So one, my belief at the time was it
doesn't. It decreases it. Showing an empathy while pushing back decreases the likelihood of that.
It does might, it might on the surface look like it's increasing it, but that's simply because
the anti-Semitism or the hatred in general is brought to the surface and that people talk
Talk about it, but I should also say that you're one of the only people that wrote to me privately criticizing me and
Like out of the people I really respect that admire and that was really valuable that I got to
Painful because I have to think through it for a while. I'm still, it still haunts me because the other kind of criticism I got a lot of, people
basically said, thinks towards me based on who I am that they hate me.
Just, you mean anti-Semitic things or that you're wrong?
Anti-Semitic things, I just hate the word, anti-Semitic.
It's like racist.
But here's the reality.
So I'm someone, so I'm Jewish, although obviously not religious.
I have never taken, I've been a student of the Holocaust.
Obviously I know a lot about that.
And there's reason to be a student of the Holocaust.
But in my lifetime and in my experience, I have never taken
anti-Semitism very seriously. I'm not worried about it. I have not made a thing of it. I've
done exactly one podcast on it. I had Barry Weiss on my podcast when her book came out.
when her book came out. But it really is a thing and it's something we have to keep an eye on societally because it's a unique kind of hatred, right? It's unique in that it seems,
it's knit together with, it's not just ordinary racism. It's knit together with lots of conspiracy theories that never seem to die out.
It can, by turns, equally animate the left and the right politically.
I mean, it was so perverse about antisemitism.
It looked like in the American context.
With the far right, with white supremacists, Jews aren't considered white.
So they hate us in the same spirit in which they hate black
people or brown people or anyone is not white.
But on the left, Jews are considered extra white.
I mean, we're the extra beneficiaries of white privilege, right?
And in the black community, that is often the case, right?
We're a minority that has thrived.
And it seems to stand as a counterpoint to all of the problems of other
minorities suffer, in particular, African-Americans in the American context. And, yeah, Asians are
now getting a little bit of this, like the model minority issue. But Jews have had this going
on for centuries and millennia, and it never seems to go away.
And again, this is something that I've never focused on, but this has been at a slow
boil for as long as we've been alive.
And there's no guarantee it can't suddenly become much, much uglier than we have any reason
to expect it to become even in our society.
There's a special concern at moments like that where you have an immensely influential person
in a community who already has a checkered history with respect to their own beliefs about the Jews
and the conspiracies and all the rest. And he's just messaging, you know, not especially fully opposed by you and anyone else who's
given him the microphone at that moment to the world.
And so that made my spidey sense.
Yeah, it's complicated.
It's the stakes are very high.
And I, somebody that's been obviously family
and also reading a lot about World War II.
And it's just this whole period
that's a very difficult conversation.
But I believe in the power, especially given who I am
of not always, but sometimes often turning the other cheek.
And again, things change when they're for public consumption.
You know, when you're, it's like, I mean, the cut for me that, you know, has just the
use case I keep stumbling upon is the kinds of things that I will say on a podcast like
this or if I'm giving a public lecture versus the kinds of things, I will say a dinner with
strangers or with friends. Like if you're in an elevator, like if I'm in an elevator with strangers,
I do not feel, and I hear someone say something stupid, I don't feel an intellectual
responsibility to turn around in a confine to that space with them and say, listen, that thing you just said about X, Y, Z is completely
false and here's why, right?
But if somebody says it in front of me on some public
dius where I'm actually talking about ideas,
that's when there's a different responsibility that comes
online.
The question is how you say it?
How you say it?
Or even whether you say anything in those,
I mean, there are moments, there are definitely moments to privilege, civility, or just to pick your battles. I mean,
sometimes it's just not worth it to get into it with somebody out, out in real life.
I just believe in the power of empathy, both in the, in the elevator, and when a bunch
of people are listening, that when they see you willing to consider
another human being's perspective,
it just gives more power to your words after.
Well, yeah, but until it doesn't,
like if you, because you can,
you can, you can extend charity too far, right? You can, like it can be absolutely obvious what someone's motives really are, and they're disembling
about that.
Then you're taking at face value, their representations begins to look like you're just
being duped, and you're not actually doing the work of putting pressure on a bad actor. So it's, and again, the mental illness component here
makes it very difficult to think about
what you should or shouldn't have said to Kanye.
So I think the topic of platforming
is pretty interesting.
Like what's your view on platforming controversial people?
Let's start with the old, would you interview Hitler
on your podcast and how would you talk to him?
Oh, and follow a question. Would you interview him in 1935?
41. And then like 45.
Well, I think we have an uncanny valley problem with respect to this issue of
problem with respect to this issue of whether or not to speak to bad people. So if a person is sufficiently bad, all the way out of the valley, then you can talk to
them and it's totally unproblematic to talk to them because you don't have to spend
any time signaling to your audience that you don't agree with them.
If you're interviewing Hitler, you don't have to say, listen, I just got to say, before
we start, I don't agree with them. If you're interviewing Hitler, you don't have to say, listen, I just got to say before we start, I don't agree with the whole genocide thing.
And I just think you're killing mental patients and vans and all that. That was all bad.
It's a bad look. It can go out sane that you don't agree with this person and you're not platforming them to signal boost their
their views
You're just trying to if they're sufficiently evil you can go into it very much as an anthropologist would
Just you just want to understand the nature of evil right?
Just want to understand this phenomenon like how is this person?
who they are right and that strikes me as a intellectually interesting
and morally necessary thing to do, right?
So yes, I think you always interview Hitler.
Well, when you know, once he's hit, but when do you know it?
Once he's legitimately, but when do you know it?
Is genocide really happening? Yeah, yeah, 42, three, if you're on? Once he's legitimately, but when do you know it? Is genocide really happening?
Yeah, yeah, 42, 33.
No, if you're on the cusp of it where it's just, he's someone who's gaining power and
you don't want to, you don't want to help facilitate that, then there's a question of
whether you can, you can undermine him in the, by while pushing back against him in that
interview.
Right.
So there are people I wouldn't talk to just because I don't want to give them oxygen and I don't think that in the context of my interviewing them, I'm going to be
able to take the wind out of their sails at all. So it's like for whatever, either because in asymmetric
advantage, because I just know that they can do something that they, within the span of an hour that I can't correct for.
You know, it's like they can light many small fires
and it just takes too much time to put them out.
That's more like on the topic of vaccines, for example,
having it to be in the efficacy of vaccines.
Yeah, it's not that I don't think sunlight
is usually the best disinfectant, I think it is.
You know, even these asymmetry aside,
I mean, there are, it is true that a person can
always make a mess faster than you can clean it up, right? But still, there are debates worth
having even given that limitation. And they're the right people to have those specific debates.
And there's certain topics where, you know, I'll debate someone just because I'm the right person
for the job and it doesn't matter how messy
they're going to be. It's just worth it because I can make my points land at least to the right
part of the audience. So some of it is just your own skill and competence and also interest
in preparing correctly? Yeah, and the nature of the subject matter. But there are other people
who just by default, I would say, well, there's no reason to
give this guy a platform.
And there are also people who are so confabulatory that they're making such a mess with every sentence
in so far as you're even trying to interact with what they're saying, you're going to, you're by definition going
to fail and you're going to seem to fail to an un-informed, sufficiently large, uninformed
audience, where it's going to be a net negative for the cause of truth, no matter how good
you are.
So like, for instance, I think talking to Alex Jones on any topic for any reason is probably a bad idea because I just
think he's just neurologically wired to just under a string of sentences. He'll get 20 sentences
out, each of which has to be, each of which is, you know, contains more lies than the last.
And there's just, there's not time enough in the world to run down, and certainly not
time enough in the span of a conversation, to run down each of those leads to bedrock
so as to falsify it.
I mean, it'll just make shit up or it makes shit up and then weave it in with half
truths and micro truths that give some semblance of credibility
to somebody out there. I mean, apparently millions of people out there. And there's just no
way to untangle that in real time with him.
I have noticed that you have an allergic reaction to confabular terrorization.
confabularity. Confabulation. Confabulation. If somebody says something a little micro-entruth, it really stops your brain. Here, I'm not talking about micro-entruths, I'm just talking about
making up things out of whole cloth. If someone says something, well, what about, and then the thing they put
If someone says something, well, what about, and then the thing they put at the end of that sentence is just a set of pseudo facts, right, that you can't possibly authenticate
or not in the span of that conversation.
They will, you know, whether it's about UFOs or anything else, right?
They will seem to make you look like an Aonoramus when in fact everything they're saying is
Specious right whether they know it or not. I mean there's some people who are just crazy. There's some people who are
Who are just bullshit in and they're not even tracking whether it's true
It just feels good and then some people are consciously lying about things
But don't you think there's just a kind of jazz
Masterpiece of untruth that you should be able to just a
Wave off by saying like well, none of that is backed up by any evidence and just almost like take it to the humor place
We but the thing is is I mean just the place I'm familiar with doing this and not doing this is is
On specific conspiracies like 9-11 Truth.
Because of what 9-11 did to my intellectual life,
and it really just sent me down a path for the better part of a decade,
I became a critic of religion.
I don't know if I was ever going to be a critic of religion.
It happened to be in my wheelhouse because I spent so much time studying religion on my own.
And I was also very interested in the underlying spiritual concerns of every religion.
And so I was, I devoted more than a full decade of my life to just, you know, what is real here?
What is possible?
What is the nature of subjective reality and how does it relate to reality at large?
And is there anything to, you know, who was someone like Jesus or Buddha and are these
people frauds or are they, are they, are these just myths or, or is there really a continuum of insight to be had here that
is interesting.
So I spent a lot of time on that question through the full decade of my 20s.
And that was launched in part by 9-11 truth or?
No, but then when 9-11 happened, I spent all this time reading religious books, understanding empathically understanding the motivations
of religious people, knowing just how fully certain people
believe what they say they believe.
So I took religious convictions very seriously.
And then people started flying planes into our buildings.
And so I knew that there was something to be said
about that.
The core doctrine to Islam, exactly. exactly so i went out so that was that
became my will house for a time um you know terrorism and and jihadism and related topics and so the
9-11 truth conspiracy thing kept you know getting aimed at me and the question was, well, do I, do I want to debate these people? Right?
Like, Alex Jones, perhaps. Yeah. I mean, yeah. So Alex Jones, I think, was an early
purveyor, but although I don't think I knew who he was at that point.
And so, and privately, I had some very long debates with people who, you know, one person in my
family went way down that rabbit hole. And I just, you know, every six months or so, I'd literally write the two-hour email, you know, that would try to try to deprogram him, you know, however, I could see the structure of the conspiracy. I could see the nature of how impossible it was to play
whack-a-mole sufficiently well,
so as to convince anyone of anything
who was not seeing the problematic structure
of that way of thinking.
I mean, it's not actually a thesis.
It's a proliferation of anomalies
that don't, you can't actually connect all the dots that are being pointed to. They don't connect in a coherent way.
There's incompatible
theses that are not, and their incompatibility is not being acknowledged.
But they're running this algorithm of things are, Things are never what they seem.
There's always malicious conspirators doing things
perfectly.
We see evidence of human incompetence everywhere else.
No one can tie their shoes, expertly, anywhere else.
But over here, people are perfectly competent.
They're perfectly concealing.
Like thousands of people are collaborating
inexplicably, I mean, incentivized by what? Who knows? They're collaborating to murder thousands
of their neighbors and no one is breathing a peep about it. No one's getting caught on camera.
No one's, no one's breathed the word of it to a journalist. And so I've dealt with that style of thinking and I know what it's like to be in the weeds
of a conversation like that.
And the person will say, okay, well, but what do you make of the fact that all those F-16s
were flown 800 miles out to sea
on the morning of 9-11 to do it in an exercise
that hadn't even been scheduled for that day.
But it was, and now all of these,
I dimly recall some thesis of that kind,
but I'm just making these things up now, right?
So like that detail,
hadn't even been scheduled for that day.
It was inexplicably run that day.
Like it was a, how long would it take to track that down, right?
The idea that this is a anomalous,
like that there was a F-F-16 exercise run
on it and it wasn't even supposed
to be been run that day, right?
Someone like Alex Jones, their speech pattern
is to pack as much of that stuff in as possible at the highest velocity that
a person can speak. And unless you're knocking down each one of those things to that audience,
you appear to just be uninformed. You appear to just not be, you don't, wait, he didn't know
about the F-16s. He doesn't know that Project Mockingbird, you haven't heard about Project Mockingbird,
I just made up Project Mockingbird.
I don't know what it is, but that's the kind of thing
that comes that tumbling out in a conversation like that.
That's the kind of thing, frankly,
I was worried about in the COVID conversation
because not that someone like Brett would do it consciously,
but someone like Brett is swimming in a sea
of misinformation on social living on Twitter,
getting people sending the blog post and the study from, you know, the Philippines that
showed that in this cohort, Ivermectin did X, right?
And not like to actually run anything to ground, right? You have to actually do the work
journalistically and scientifically
and run it to ground, right?
So for some of these questions,
you actually have to be a statistician to say,
okay, they use the wrong statistics in this experiment.
Right?
Now, yes, we could take all the time to do that.
Or we could, at every stage along the way, in a, in a context where we,
we have experts we can trust, go with 90, what 97% of the experts are saying
about X, about the safety of mRNA, about the transmissibility of COVID,
about whether to wear masks or not wear masks.
Marne about the transmissibility of COVID, about whether to wear masks or not wear masks. And I completely agree that that broke down, uh, uh, unacceptably in the over the last
few years and that, but I think that's largely a social media and blogs and, and the efforts of podcasters and substack writers were not just a response to that.
It was, I think it was a symptom of that and a cause of that.
And I think we're living in an environment where people, we've basically, we have trained ourselves not to be able to agree about facts on any
topic, no matter how urgent, right?
What's flying in our sky?
What is, what's happening in Ukraine?
Is Putin just denocifying Ukraine?
I mean, they're people who we respect who are spending time down that particular rabbit hole.
Like, this is, this is, you know, maybe there are a lot of Nazis in Ukraine, and that's the real problem.
Right. Maybe Putin's, maybe Putin's not the bad actor here, right? How much time do I have to spend
empathizing with Putin to the point of thinking, well maybe Putin's
got a point and it's just like, what about the Polonium and the nerve agents and the killing
of journalists and the Navalny and like, does that count? Well, I'm not paying so much
attention to that because I'm following all these interesting people on Twitter and they
did to give me some pro-Putin material here. And there is a, there are some
Nazis in Ukraine. It's not like there are no Nazis in Ukraine. How am I going to wait
these things? I think people are being driven crazy by Twitter.
Yeah. But you're kind of speaking to conspiracy theories that pollute everything. But every
example you give is kind of a bad faith style of conversation.
But it's not necessarily knowingly bad faith by the people, the people who are worried about
Ukraine and Ukrainian Nazis.
To my, I mean, there's some of the same people, there's the same people who are worried about
Ivermectin got suppressed.
Like Ivermectin is really the panacea, but it got suppressed because no one could make billions on it.
It's the same, it's literally,
it's in many cases, the same people and the same efforts to unearth those.
And you're saying it's very difficult to have conversations with those kinds of people.
What about a conversation with Trump himself? Would you do a podcast with Trump?
No, I don't think so. I don't think I'd be learning anything about him. It's like with Hitler,
and I'm not comparing Trump to Hitler, but Clips Guy is your chance.
Yeah, you got this one. With certain world historical figures, I would just feel like this is an opportunity to
learn something that I'm not going to learn.
I think Trump is among the most superficial people we have ever laid eyes on.
He is in public view.
I'm sure there's some distance between who he is in private and who he isn't public,
but it's not going to be the kind of distance that's going to blow my mind. And I think, so I think the liability of that.
So for instance, I think Joe Rogan was very wise not to have Trump on his podcast.
I think all he would have been doing is, he would have put himself in a situation
where he couldn't adequately contain the damage Trump was doing
and he was just gonna make Trump seem cool
to a whole new, you know,
potentially new cohort of his massive audience, right?
I mean, they would have had a lot of laughs, Trump's funny.
The entertainment value of things is so influential. I mean, there was that one debate where Trump got a massive laugh on his line, you know, only
Rosie O'Donnell, right? The truth is, we're living in a political system where if you can get a big laugh during
a political debate, you win. It doesn't matter who you are. That's the level of, it doesn't
matter how uninformed you are. It doesn't matter that half the debate was about what the hell
we should do about, about a threat of nuclear war or anything else. It's, we're monkeys, right?
And we like to laugh.
Well, because you brought up, Joe, he's somebody like you I look up to.
I've learned a lot from him because I think who he is,
privately as a human being, also his,
he's kind of the voice of curiosity to me.
He inspired me that, so,
an ending open-minded curiosity
Much like you are the voice of reason
They recently had a podcast Joe had recently a podcast of Jordan Peterson and he
Brought you up saying they still have a hope for you. Yeah, any chance you talk to Joe again and reinvigorate your friendship.
Yeah, well, I reached out to him privately when I saw that. Did you use the power of love?
Joe knows I love him and consider him a friend, right? So there's no issue there.
He also knows I'll be happy to do his podcast when we get that together.
I've got no policy of not talking to Joe or not doing his podcast when we get that together. You know, so there's no, I have got no policy of not talking to Joe or not doing his podcast. Um, I mean, I think we're, we got a little sideways along these same lines where, you know,
we've talked about bread and Elon and other people.
Um, it was never to that degree with Joe because, um, Joe is in a very different lane, right? He's unconsciously so.
I mean, Joe is a stand-up comic who interviews, who just is interested in everything, interviews,
the widest conceivable variety of people, and just lets his interests collide with their expertise or a lack of expertise.
I mean, he's, again, it's a super wide variety of people.
He'll talk about anything and he can always pull the rip cord saying,
you know, I don't know what the fuck I'm saying.
I'm a comic.
I'm stone.
We're just trying too much, right?
Like, as very entertaining, it's all in, you know, to my eye, it's all in good faith.
I think Joe is an extraordinarily ethical good person.
Also, it doesn't use Twitter.
It doesn't really use Twitter.
Yeah, yeah.
The crucial difference though is that because he is
an entertainer first.
I mean, I'm not saying he's not smart
and he doesn't understand things.
He, I mean, what's potentially confusing is he's very smart and he's also very in for his full-time job.
When he's not doing stand-up or doing color commentary for the UFC,
his full-time job is talking to lots of very smart people at great length.
So he's created the Joe Rogan University for himself and he's gotten a lot of information crammed into his head. So it's not that he's uninformed,
but he can always, when he feels that he's uninformed, or when it turns out he was wrong
about something, he can always pull the rip cord and say, I'm just a comic. We were stoned.
It was fun. You know, Don't take medical advice from me.
I don't play a doctor on the internet, right?
I can't quite do that, right?
You can't quite do that.
We're in different lanes.
I'm not saying you and I are an exactly the same lane,
but for much of Joe's audience,
I'm just this establishment shill,
just banging on about the universities
and medical journals and it's not true,
but that would be the perception.
And as a counterpoint to a lot of what's being said on Joe's podcast or, you know, certainly
Brett's podcast on these topics, I can see how they would form that opinion.
But in reality, if you listen to me long enough, you hear that I've said as much against the
woke nonsense as anyone, even any lunatic on the right who can only keep that bright,
bright shining object in view, right?
So there's nothing that Candace Owens has said about wokeness, that I haven't said about
wokeness as far as she's speaking rationally about wokeness.
But we have to be able to keep multiple things in view.
If you could only look at the problem of wokeness and you couldn't acknowledge the problem
of Trump and Trumpism and QAnon and the explosion of irrationality that was happening on the
right and bigotry that was happening on the right. You were just disregarding half of the landscape and many people took half of the problem
in recent years. The last five years as a story of many people taking half of the problem
and monetizing that half of the problem and getting captured by an audience
that only wanted that half of the problem
talked about in that way.
And this is the larger issue of audience capture,
which is very, I'm sure it's an ancient problem,
but it's a very helpful phrase that I think comes
so as courtesy of our mutual friend, Eric Weinstein.
And audience captures a thing and I believe I've witnessed many casualties of it.
And if there's anything I've been unguarded against in my life professionally, it's been that.
And when I noticed that I had a lot of people in my audience who didn't like my criticizing Trump.
I really leaned into it.
And when I noticed that a lot of the other cohort
in my audience didn't like me criticizing
the far left and wokeness,
I thought I was exaggerating that problem.
I leaned into it because I thought
those parts of my audience were absolutely wrong.
And I didn't care about whether I was gonna lose those parts of my audience were absolutely wrong and I didn't care about whether I was going to lose those parts of my audience.
There are people who have created knowingly or not there are people who have created different incentives for themselves.
Because of how they have monetized their podcast and because of the kind of signal they have responded to in their audience.
And I worry about Brett would consider this a totally invidious
At hominem thing to say but I really do worry that that's happened to Brett
I think I think I cannot explain how you do a hundred with all the things in the universe
To be interested in and of all the things he's competent to speak intelligently about
I don't know how you do a hundred podcasts in a row on on COVID to be interested in. And of all the things he's competent to speak intelligently about,
I don't know how you do 100 podcasts in a row on, on COVID, right? It's just, it makes no sense.
You think in part audience capture can explain that. I absolutely think it can. Yeah.
What about? Do you, like for example, do you feel pressure to not admit that you made
a mistake on COVID or made a mistake on Trump.
I'm not saying you feel that way, but you feel this pressure.
So you've attacked audience capture within the way you do stuff, so you don't feel as
much pressure from the audience, but within your own ego.
I mean, again, the people who think I'm wrong about any of these topics are going to think,
okay, you're just not admitting that you're wrong, but then now we're having a dispute
about specific facts.
There are things that I believed about COVID or worried might be true about COVID two
years ago that I no longer believe or worried might be true about COVID two years ago, that
I no longer believe or I'm not so worried about now and vice versa.
I mean, things have flipped, certain things have flipped upside down.
The question is, was I wrong?
So here's the cartoon version of it, but this is something I said probably 18 months
ago, and it's still true.
You know, when I saw what Brett was doing on COVID, you know, let's call it two years ago,
I, but I said, even if he is right, even if he turned, if he turns out that I've remected in is a panacea, and the mRNA vaccines kill millions of people, right? He's still wrong right now.
His reasoning is still flawed right now.
His facts still suck right now, right?
And his confidence is unjustified now.
That was true then, that will always be true then, right?
And so, and not much has changed for me to revisit any of my time points
along the way. Again, I will totally concede that if I had teenage boys and their, and their
schools were demanding that they be vaccinated with the mRNA vaccine, I would, I would be powerfully annoyed.
I wouldn't know what I was going to do.
I would be doing more research about myocarditis.
I'd be badgering our doctors.
I would be worried that we have a medical system,
a pharmaceutical system, a healthcare system,
and a public health system that's not incentivized
to look at any of this in a fine
grain way and they just want one blanket admonition to the entire population. Just get just take the shot
you idiots. I view that largely as a result a panicked response to the misinformation explosion
that happened and the public, the populist resistance
animated by misinformation that just made it impossible
to get anyone to cooperate, right?
So it's just, part of it is, again,
a pendulum swing in the wrong direction.
Someone analogous to the woke response to Trump
and the Trumpist response to woke, right?
So there's a lot of people who've gotten pushed around
for bad reasons, or but understandable reasons.
But yes, there are caveats to my, things have changed about my view of COVID.
But the question is, if you roll back the clock 18 months, was I wrong to want to platform Eric Topel, you know, a very well-respected cardiologist on this topic
or, you know, Nicholas Christakis to talk about the network effects of, you know,
whether we close schools, right? He's written a book on COVID.
He's, you know, network effects or his wheelhouse, as it both has an MD and as a sociologist.
There was a lot that we believed we knew about the efficacy of closing schools during
pandemics, during the Spanish flu pandemic and others.
But there's a lot we didn't know about COVID. We didn't know, we didn't know how negligible the effects would be on kids compared to older people. We didn't know.
Like, so my, my problem, I really enjoyed your conversation with
Ectopo, but also didn't. So he's one of the great communicators in many ways on
Twitter, like distillation of the current data, but he, I hope I'm not
overstating it, but there is a bit of an arrogance from him that I think it could be explained
by him being exhausted, by being constantly attacked, by conspiracy theory, like anti-vaxxers.
To me, the same thing happens with people that start drifting to being right
wing is to get attacked so much by the left. They become almost irrational and arrogant in their beliefs.
I felt your conversation with the October did not sufficiently empathize with people that
have skepticism, but also did not sufficiently communicate uncertainty
we have. So like many of the decisions you made, many of the things you were talking about
were kind of saying there's a lot of uncertainty, but this is the best thing we could do now.
Well, it was a forest choice. You're going to get COVID. Do you want to be vaccinated when you get it?
Right. That was always in my view, an easy choice. And it's up until
you start breaking apart the cohorts and you start saying, okay, wait a minute, there is this
myocarditis issue in young men. Let's talk about that. When that's, before that story emerged,
it was just, it was just clear that this is, if it's not that if it's not knocking down transmission as much as we
had hoped, it is still mitigating severe illness and death. And I still believe that it is the
current view of most people competent to analyze the data, that we lost something
like 300,000 people unnecessarily in the US because of vaccine hesitancy.
But I think there's a way to communicate with humility about the uncertainty of things
that would increase the vaccination rate. Right. I do believe that it is rational and sometimes effective
to
signal impatience with certain
bad ideas, right? And certain conspiracy theories and certain forms of misinformation. I think so.
Because it's just I just think it makes you look a douchebag most times. Well, I mean certain people are persuadable, certain people are not persuadable, but it's, no, because there's not enough, it's the opportunity cost. It's
not everything can be given a patient hearing. So you can't have a physics conference and
then let people in to just trumpet their pet theories about, you know, the granny unified
vision of physics, when they're obviously crazy, or when
they're obviously half crazy, or they're just not, you know, the people, like you begin
to, you begin to get a sense for this when it is your wheelhouse, but there are people
who kind of declare their, their irrelevance to the conversation fairly quickly without knowing that they have done it.
Right.
And the truth is, I think I'm one of those people on the topic of COVID, right?
Like it's like, it's not, it's never that I felt, listen, I know exactly what's going
on here.
I know these mRNA vaccines are safe. I know exactly how's going on here. I know these mRNA vaccines are safe.
I know exactly how to run a lockdown.
No, this is a situation where you want the actual pilots to fly the plane.
We needed experts who we could trust.
And in so far as our experts got captured by all manner of thing,
some of them got captured by Trump.
Some of them were made to look ridiculous, just standing next to Trump while he was bloating
about whatever.
It's just going to go away.
There's just 15 people in a cruise ship and it's just going to go away.
There's going to be no problem.
Or it's like, when he said, many of these doctors think, I understand this better than them.
They're just amazed at how I understand this.
And you've got doctors, real doctors, the heads of the CDC and NIH standing around just ashen
faced while he's talking, you know, all of this was deeply corrupting of the public
communication of science on bull.
And then again, I've banged on about the depredations
of wokeness. The woke thing was a disaster. Right. Still is a disaster. But it doesn't
mean that I mean, but the thing is there's a big difference between me and bread in this
case, I didn't do a hundred podcasts on COVID. I did like two podcasts on COVID. The measure
of my concern about COVID can be
measured in how many podcasts I did on it, right? It's like once we had a sense of how
to live with COVID, I was just living with COVID, right? Like, okay, if you get faxed or
don't get faxed, wear a mask or don't wear a mask, travel or don't travel. Like you've
got a few things to decide, but my kids were stuck at home on iPads for too long. I didn't
agree with that. It was obviously not functional. I criticized that on the margins, but there
was not much to do about it. But the thing I didn't do is make this my life and just
browbeat people with one message or another. We need a public health regime where we can trust what the
confident people are saying to us about what medicines are safe to take. And in the absence of that
craziness is going to, even in the presence of that craziness is going to proliferate,
given the tools we've built. But in the absence of that, it's going to proliferate for understandable
reasons. And that's going to, it's not going to be good
next time when, when something orders of magnitude more dangerous hits us. And that's, I spent,
you know, in so far as I think about this issue, I think much more about next time than this time.
Before this COVID thing, you and Brad had some good conversations. I would say we're friends.
What's your, what do you admire most about Brad outside of all the criticism we've had
about this COVID topic?
Well, I think Brad is very smart and he's a very ethical person who wants good things for
the world.
I mean, I have no reason to doubt that.
So the fact that we're on, you know,
we're crosswise on this issue is not does not mean that I think he's a bad person. I mean,
the thing that worried me about what he was doing, and this was true of Joe, and this was
true of Elon's true of many other people, is that once you're messaging at scale to a vast audience,
you incur a certain kind of responsibility not
to get people killed.
And I did worry that, yeah, people were making decisions
on the basis of the information that was getting shared there.
And that's why I was, I think fairly circumspect.
I just said, okay, give me the center of the fairway expert opinion at this time point
and at this time point and at this time point.
And then I'm out.
Right.
I don't have any more to say about this.
I'm not an expert on COVID.
I'm not an expert on the safety of mRNA vaccines.
If something changes, so as to become newsworthy,
then maybe I'll do a podcast on the lab leak.
Right?
I was never skeptical of the lab leak hypothesis.
Brett was very early on saying,
this is a lab leak, right?
At a point where my only position was,
who cares if it's a lab leak, right?
Like this, the thing we have to get straight is, what do we do given the nature of this pandemic?
But also, we should say that you've actually stated that it is a possibility.
Oh, yeah.
And you just say it doesn't quite know.
I mean, the time to figure that out.
Now, I've actually, I have had my, my podcast guest on this topic changed my
view of this because that, you know, one of the guests, Alina Chan, made the point that,
no, actually the best time to figure out the origin of this is immediately, right? Because
in the event you lose touch with the evidence, and I hadn't really been thinking about that.
Like, I didn't, if you come back after a year, a year, there are certain facts you might not be able
to get in hand, but I've always felt that it didn't matter for two reasons. One is we
had the genome of the virus and we were very quickly designing immediately, designing
the vaccines against that genome, and that's what we had to do. And then we had to figure out how to vaccinate and to mitigate and to develop treatments and all of that. So the origin story didn't matter.
Generically speaking, either origin story was politically inflammatory and made the Chinese
look bad, right? And the Chinese response to this look bad,
whatever the origin story, right? They're not cooperating, they're stopping their domestic flights,
but letting their international flights go. I mean, it's just they were bad actors,
and they should be treated as such regardless of the origin, right? And, you know, I would argue
that the wet market origin is even more politically
and videos than the lab leak origin.
I mean, why do you think?
Because for the lab leak, to my eye, the lab leak
could happen to anyone, right?
We're all running, all these advanced countries
are running these dangerous labs.
That's a practice that we should be worried about,
you know, in general.
We know lab leaks are a problem. There have been multiple
lab leaks, even worse things that haven't gotten out of hand in this way, but, you know,
worse pathogens. We're wise to be worried about this, and on some level, it could happen
to anyone, right? The wet market makes them look like barbarians
living in another century.
Like you got to clean up those wet markets.
Like what are you doing putting a bat on top of a pangolin,
on top of a duck?
It's like get your shit together.
So like if anything, the wet market makes them look worse
in my view.
Now I'm sure they're, I'm sure that what they actually did
to conceal a lab leak.
If it was a lab leak, all of that's going to look odious.
Do you think we'll ever get to the bottom of that? I mean, one of the big negative,
I would say failures of Anthony Foulchie and so on is to be transparent and clear and just
a good communicator about getting functional research to the dangers of that the success like the you know
Why it's a useful way of research, but it's also dangerous, right? You know just being transparent about that as opposed to just coming off really shady
Of course the conspiracy theorists and the the politicians are not helping but this just created a giant mess
Yeah, no, I would agree.
So that exchange with Fauci and Rand Paul, they went viral.
Yeah, I would agree that Fauci looked like he was taking refuge in kind of very layered language
and not giving a straightforward account of what we do and why we do it.
So, yeah, I think it looked shady. It played shady and it probably was shady.
I don't know how personally entangled he is with any of this,
but the gain of function research is something that I think we're wise to be worried about.
And so far as I judge myself adequate
to have an opinion on this,
I think it should be banned, right?
Like I probably, a podcast I'll do,
if you or somebody else doesn't do it in the meantime,
I would like a virologist on to defend it
against a virologist who would criticize it. Forget about just the gain of function research. I don't even understand virus hunting at this point. It's like I don't know
I don't even know why you need to go into a cave to find this next virus that could be circulating among bats that made jump
zoonotically to us.
Why do that when we can make, when we can sequence in a day and make vaccines in a weekend?
I mean, like what kind of head start do you think you're getting?
That's the surprising new thing.
How could you develop a vaccine?
Exactly.
That's really interesting, but the shading us around lab leak.
I think the point I didn't make about Brett's style of engaging this issue is people are
using the fact that he was early on lab leak to suggest that he was right about Iver
Mecton and about mRNA vaccines and all the rest.
No, that's none of that connects.
It was possible to be falsely confident. Like you shouldn't have
been confident about lab, no one should have been confident about lab leak early, even if it turns
out to be lab leak, right? It was always plausible. It was never definite. It still isn't definite.
Zoonotic is is is also quite plausible. It certainly was super plausible then both are politically uncomfortable.
Both of the time were inflammatory to be banging on about when we were trying to secure
some kind of cooperation from the Chinese. So there's a time for these things and it's
possible to be right by accident, right? That's the, it's,
it met your reasoning, the style of reasoning matters, whether you're right or not.
You know, it's like because your style of reasoning is dictating what you're going to do
on the next topic. Sure, but this is a, this multivariate situation here. It's really difficult to know what's right on COVID given all the uncertainty of the chaos, especially when you step outside
the pure biology, virology of it, and you start getting to policy. It's really, it's
just trade-offs. Like transmissibility of the virus. Sure, just knowing if 65% of the population
gets vaccinated, what effect would that have?
Just even knowing those things, just modeling all those things.
Given all the other incentives, I mean Pfizer,
I don't know what to say.
You had the CEO of Pfizer on your podcast.
Did you leave that conversation feeling like
this is a person who is consciously
reaping windfall profits on a dangerous
vaccine and putting everyone at intolerable risk? or do you think this person, did you think
this person was making a good faith attempt to save lives and had no, no bad, no, no,
a taint of bad incentives or something.
I, the thing I sensed and I felt in part, it was a failure on my part
But I sense that I was talking to a politician
so it's not
Thinking of there was malevolence there or benevolence
There was um, he just had a job. He put on a suit and I was talking to a suit not a human being
Now he said that his son was a big fan of the podcast, which is why he wanted to do it so I thought I will be talking to a human being. Now, he said that his son was a big fan of the podcast, which is why
he wanted to do it. So I thought I would be talking to a human being. And I asked challenging
questions, but I thought the internet thinks otherwise, every single question in that interview
was a challenging one. But it wasn't grilling, which is what people seem to want to do with
pharmaceutical companies. There's a want to do with pharmaceutical companies.
There's a deep distrust of pharmaceutical companies.
Well, what's the alternative? I totally get that windfall profits at a time of public health
emergency. It looks bad. It is a bad look. But how do we reward and return capital to risk takers who will spend a billion dollars to design a
new drug for a disease that may be only harms a single digit percentage of the populations.
Like, what do we want to encourage?
And who do we want to get rich?
I mean, so like the person who cures cancer, do we want that person to get rich or not? We want the, we want the person who gave us the iPhone to get rich, but we don't
want the person who, who cures cancer to get rich. What are we trying to do? It's a very gray area.
So what we want is the person who declares that they have a cure for cancer,
devil authenticity and transparency. This, like, I think we're good now as a population smelling bullshit.
And there is something about the Pfizer CEO, for example,
just CEO of the pharmaceutical companies in general,
just because they're so lowered up,
so much marketing RPR people,
that they are, you just smell bullshit.
You're not talking a real human.
That it just, it just feels like none of it is transparent to us as a public.
So, like, this whole talking point that Pfizer is only interested in helping people,
just doesn't ring true. Even though it very well could be true.
It's the same thing with Bill Gates, who seems to be at scale, helping a huge amount of people in the world.
And yet there's something about the way he delivers that message,
where people like, this seems suspicious.
What's happening underneath this?
There's certain kinds of communication styles
that seem to be more service-better catalysts
for conspiracy theories.
And I'm not sure what that is, because I don't think there's an alternative
for capitalism in delivering drugs that help people.
But also at the same time,
there seems to need to be a more transparency.
Plus, regulation that actually makes sense versus,
it seems like pharmaceutical companies are susceptible to corruption.
Yeah, I worry about all that, but I also do think that most of the people
go into those fields and most of the people go into government.
They want to do good.
Doing it for good, and they're non-cycle paths trying to get good things done and trying to solve
hard problems, and they're not trying to get rich. I mean, many of the people are, it's like, they're bad, I mean, bad incentives
or something. Again, I've, I've, I've heard that phrase 30 times on this podcast, but it's,
it's just almost everywhere it explains normal people creating terrible harm. It's not that there are that
many bad people. Yes, it makes the truly bad people that much more remarkable and worth
paying attention to, but the bad incentives and the power of bad ideas do much more harm.
That's what gets good people running in the wrong direction or doing things that are
clearly creating unnecessary suffering.
You've had, and I hope still have, a friendship with Elon Musk, especially over the topic of AI.
You have a lot of interesting ideas that you both share, concerns you both share.
Well, let me first ask, what do you admire most about Elon?
Well, you know, I had a lot of fun with Elon. I like Elon a lot. I mean, Elon, I knew as a friend. I like a lot. And
I, you know, it's not going to surprise anyone. I mean, he's done and he's continuing to do amazing
things. And I think he's, you know, I think a lot of many of his aspirations are realized the
world would be a much better place.
I think it's just, it's amazing to see what he's built and what he's attempted to build
and what he may yet build.
So, would Tesla, would SpaceX, would...
Yeah, I'm a fan of almost all of that.
I mean, there are wrinkles to a lot of that, you know, or some of that.
And...
And humans are full wrinkles.
There's something very trumping about how he's acting on Twitter.
I mean, Twitter, I think Twitter, he thinks Twitter is great.
He bought the place because he thinks it's so great.
I think Twitter is driving him crazy, right?
I think he's, I think he's needlessly complicating his life and harming his reputation and creating
a lot of noise and harming a lot of other people.
I mean, so like he, the thing that I objected to with him on Twitter
is not that he bought it and made changes to it.
I mean, that was not, again, I remade agnostic as to whether
or not he can improve the platform.
It was how he was personally behaving on Twitter,
not just toward me, but toward the world.
I think when you
forward an article about Nancy Pelosi's husband being attacked not as he was by some lunatic, but that it's just some gay, gay, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, campaigning in her place, that thing was exploding in Trumpistan as a conspiracy theory,
right? And it was having its effect. And it matters that he was signal boosting it in front
of 130 million people. And so it is with saying that your former employee,
you all Roth is a pedophile, right?
I mean, that has real consequences.
It appeared to be complete bullshit.
And now this guy's getting in and data with death threats,
right?
And Elon, it's all that's totally predictable, right?
And so he's behaving quite recklessly.
And there's a long list of things like that that he's done on Twitter.
It's not ethical. It's not good for him.
It's not good for the world. It's not serious.
It's just it's it's it's it's a very adolescent relationship
to real problems in our society.
And so my my problem with how he's behaved is that he's he's purported to touch real
issues by turns like, okay, do I give the satellites to Ukraine or not? Do I, do I minimize
their use of them or not? Should I publicly worry about World War III or not? Right? He's
doing this shit on Twitter, right? And at the same moment, he's doing these other very impulsive ill-considered things,
and he's not showing any willingness to really clean up the mess he makes. He brings Kanye on,
knowing he's an anti-Semite who's got mental health problems, and then kicks him off for a swastika,
which I probably wouldn't have kicked him off for a swastikers.
That's even, can you really kick people off for a swastikers?
Is that something that you get banned for, I mean, you a free speech absolutist if you
can't let a swastika show up?
I'm not even sure that's enforceable terms of service, right?
There are moments to use swastikers that are not conveying hate and not raising their
risk of violence clip that yeah
any
But so much of what he's doing given that he's again scale matters
He's doing this in front of 130 million people. That's very different than a million people and that's very different than a hundred thousand people as and
So when I went off the tracks with Elon he was doing this about COVID and
went off the tracks with Elon, he was doing this about COVID. And again, this was a situation where I tried to privately mitigate a friend's behavior. And it didn't work out very well.
Did you try to correct him sort of highlighting things he might be wrong on?
Yeah. Or did you use the Lex Power Love method? I should write like a pamphlet for Sam Harris.
Well, no, but it was totally coming from a place of love because I was concerned about
his reputation.
I was concerned about what he, I mean, there was a twofold concern.
I could see what was happening with the tweet.
I mean, he had this original tweet that was, I think, was panic over COVID as dumb or
something like that.
Right.
This is, wait way this is in March
Is it early March 2020 oh super early is super early so when nobody knew anything
But we knew we saw what was happening in Italy right was totally kicking off
God does a wild time that's when the toilet paper is totally wild But that became the most influential tweet
On Twitter for that week. I mean it had more engagement than any other tweet, more than any crazy thing.
Trump was tweeting. I mean, it was, it went off.
Again, it was just a nuclear bomb of, of, um, information.
And I could see that people were responding to it like, wait a minute.
Okay, here's this genius technologist who must have inside information about everything,
right? Surely he knows something that is not on the surface
about this pandemic. And they're reading, they were reading
into it a lot of information that I knew wasn't there, right? And
I, and I, at the time, I didn't even, I didn't think he had
any reason to be suggesting that. I think he was just firing
off a tweet, right?
So, I reached out to him in private.
And I mean, because it was a private text conversation, I won't talk about the details, but I'm
just saying, that's a case, among the many cases of friends who have public platforms and
who did something that I thought was dangerous
and ill-considered, this was the case where I reached out in private and tried to help,
genuinely help, because it was just, I thought it was harmful in every sense, because it
was being misinterpreted.
And it's like, okay, you can say that panic over anything is dumb, fine.
But this was not how this was landing.
This was like non-issue conspiracy.
There's gonna be no COVID in the US.
It's gonna peter out.
It's just gonna become a cold.
I mean, that's how this was getting received.
Whereas at that moment, it was absolutely obvious
how big a deal this was gonna be.
No, or that it was gonna add minimum
going to be a big deal.
I don't know if it was obvious,
but it was obvious there was a significant probability
that it could be a big.
I remember it was unclear.
How big?
Because there were still stories of it.
It's probably going to like the big concern,
the hospitals my overfill,
but it's going to take out in like two months or something.
Yeah, we didn't know, but it was, there was no way we weren't going to have tens of thousands
of deaths at a minimum at that point.
And it was, it was, it was, it was totally rational to be worried about hundreds of thousands.
And when Nicholas Christakis came on my podcast very early, you know, he predicted quite
confidently that we would have about a million people dead in the US.
That didn't seem, I think it was appropriately hedged, but in me it was still, it was just like,
it's just going to, you just look at the, we were just riding this exponential and we're
and it's going to be, it'd be very surprising not to have that order of magnitude and not something much, much less.
And so anyway, I mean, again, to close the story on Elon, I could see how this was being received and I tried to get him to walk that back.
And then we had a fairly long and detailed exchange
on this issue.
And that, so that intervention didn't work.
And it was not done, I was not an asshole.
I was just concerned for him, for the world, for, and, you know,
um, and then there are other relationships where I didn't take that, again, that's an
example where taking the time didn't work, right?
Privately.
There are other relationships where I thought, okay, it's just going to be more trouble
than it's worth.
And I just just ignored it, you know. And there's a lot of that.
And I, again, I'm not comfortable with how this is all
netted out because I don't know if, you know,
I'm not, frankly, I'm not comfortable with how much time
in this conversation we've spent talking about
these specific people.
Like what good is it for me to talk about Elon
or Brad or anything?
I think there's a lot of good because those friendships,
listen, as a fan, these are the conversations I, I, um,
loved, love is a fan.
And it feels like COVID has robbed the world of these conversations
because you were exchanging back and forth on Twitter.
But that's not what
I mean by conversations like long form discussions, like a debate about COVID, like a normal
debate.
But there's no, there is no, Elon and I shouldn't be debating COVID.
You should be.
Here's the thing with humility, like basically saying, we don't really know, like the
Rogan method.
Right.
We're just a bunch of idiots like one is an engineer
You're a neuroscientist, but like it just kind of okay. Here's the evidence and be like normal people
That's what everybody was doing the whole world was like trying to figure out what the hell what yeah
But the issue was that at that so at the moment I had this collision with Elon
Certain things were not debatable. It was absolutely clear where this
was going. It wasn't clear how far it was going to go or how quickly we would mitigate it,
but it was absolutely clear that it was going to be an issue. The train had come off the
tracks in Italy. We weren't going to seal our borders. There were already people, you know, there are already cases known to many of us personally
in the US at that point.
And he was operating by a very different logic that I couldn't engage with.
Sure, but the logic represents a part of the population and there's a lot of interesting
topics that have a lot of uncertainty around them like the effectiveness of masks like
but no, but where things broke down was not at the point of oh, there's a lot to talk about a lot of
debate. This is all very interesting and who knows what's what it broke down very early at this is,
you know, we there's nothing to talk about here. Like either there's
a water bottle on the table or there isn't, right? Like, technically there's only one fourth
of a water bottle. So what defines a water bottle? Is it the water inside the water bottle?
Is it the water bottle? Well, I'm giving you an example of its worth of conversation.
This is difficult because this is, we had an exchange in private and I want to honor not exposing
the details of it, but the details convinced me that there was not a follow-up conversation
on that topic. On this topic.
That said, I hope, and I hope to be part of helping that happen,
that the friendship was rekindled because one of the topics I care a lot about,
artificial intelligence, you've had great public and private conversations about this topic.
And Elon was very formative in my taking that issue seriously. I mean, he
and I went to that initial conference in Puerto Rico together, and it was only because he
was going and I found out about it through him. And I just wrote his co-tales to it, you
know, that I that I got to dropped in that side of the pool to hear about these concerns at that point.
It would be interesting to hear how is your concern concern
evolved with the coming out of Chad GPT and these new, large language models that are fine-tuned
with reinforcement learning and seemingly to be able to do some incredible human-like things.
There's two questions.
One, how is your concern in terms of AGI and superintelligence evolved?
And how impressed are you with Chad GBT as a student of the human mind and mind in general?
Well, my concern about AGI is unchanged.
So I did a, I've spoken about it a bunch of my podcasts, but I did a TED Talk in 2016,
which was the kind of summary of what that conference and various conversations I had
after that did to my brain on this topic.
Basically, that once superintelligence has achieved there's a take-off, it becomes exponentially
smarter, and in a matter of time, there's just where ants and their gods.
Well, yeah, unless we find some way of permanently tethering a super intelligent, super intelligent, self-improving AI to our value system.
I don't believe anyone has figured I had to do that or whether that's even possible in principle.
I mean, I know people like Stuart Russell, who I just had on my podcast,
have you released it?
I haven't released it.
He's been on previous podcasts, but we just recorded this week.
Because you haven't done an app podcast in a while.
Yeah, great.
He's a good person to talk about alignment with.
Yeah, so Stuart, I mean, Stuart has been probably more than anyone, my guru, on this topic.
I mean, like, you're reading his book and doing, I think I've done two podcasts with him
at this point.
I think it's all the control problem or something like that.
His book is human compatible.
Human compatible, right?
He talks about the control problem.
And yeah, so I just think the idea that we can define a value function in advance that
permanently tethers a self-improving super-intelligent AI to our values as we continue to
discover them, refine them, extrapolate them in an open ended way.
I think that's a tall order and there I think there are many more ways there must be many more ways of designing
super intelligence that is not aligned in that way and it's not ever
approximating our values in that way.
So Stuart's idea to put it in a very simple way is that he thinks you don't want to specify the value function up front.
You don't want to imagine you could ever write the code in such a way as to admit of no loophole, you want to make the AI uncertain as to what human values are and perpetually
uncertain and always trying to ameliorate that uncertainty by by huing more and more closely
to what our professed values are.
So like it's just, it's always interested in saying, oh, no, no, that's not what we want.
That's not what we intend.
Stop doing that.
Like no matter how smart it gets,
all it wants to do is more perfectly approximate human values.
I think there are a lot of problems with that,
you know, at a high level, I'm not a computer scientist,
so I'm sure there are many problems at a low level
that I don't understand or...
Like how to force a human into the loop always,
no matter what.
There's that and like what humans get a vote and just what is what do humans value and what is the
difference between what we say we value and our revealed preferences which I
mean if you just if you were a super intelligent AI that could look at humanity
now I think you could be forgiven for concluding that what we value is driving
ourselves crazy with Twitter and living perpetually on the brink of nuclear war and just watching
hot girls in yoga pants on TikTok again and again and again.
And you're saying that is not?
This is all revealed preference.
And it's what is an AI to make of that right
like what should it optimize like so and part of this is also stewards observation that one of the
insidious things about like the YouTube algorithm is it's not that it just caters to our preferences
it actually begins to change us in ways so as to make us more predictable.
If I get finds ways to make us a better reporter of our preferences and to trim our preferences
down so that it can further train to that signal.
So the main concern is that most of the people in the field seem not to be taking intelligence seriously.
Like as they design more and more intelligent machines
and as they profess to want to design true AGI,
they're not, again, they're not spending the time
that Stuart is spending trying to figure out
how to
do this safely above all.
They're just assuming that these problems are going to solve themselves as we make that
final stride into the end zone, or they're saying very polyannish things like an AI would
never form a motive to harm human, like why would it ever form a motive
to be malicious toward humanity, unless we put that motive in there. And that's not the concern.
The concern is that in the presence of vast disparities in competence, and certainly in a
condition where the machines are improving themselves,
they're improving their own code, they could be developing goal, instrumental goals that are
antithetical to our well-being without any, without any intent to harm us, right? It's analogous to
what we do to every other species on Earth. I mean, you and I don't consciously form the intention to
harm insects on a daily basis, but there are many things we could intend to do that would,
in fact, harm insects because, you know, you just had to repave your driveway or whatever
whatever you're doing, you're like, you're not, you're just not taking the, the interest
of insects into account because they're so far beneath you in terms of your cognitive horizons. And so that, the real
challenge here is that if you believe that intelligence, you know, scales up on a continuum
to toward heights that we can only dimly imagine. And then I think there's every reason to
believe that. There's no reason to believe that we're only dimly imagine. And I think there's every reason to believe that.
There's no reason to believe that we're near the summit
of intelligence.
And you can define, maybe there's some forms of intelligence
for which this is not true, but for many relevant forms,
like the top 100 things we care about cognitively.
I think there's every reason to believe that many of those things, most of those
things are a lot like chess or go where once the machines get better than we are,
they're going to stay better than we are.
Although they're, I don't know if you caught the recent thing with go where,
where it actually came out of Stuart's lab.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
One time a human beat a machine.
Yeah.
They found a hack for that.
But anyway, ultimately, there's going to be no looking back.
And then the question is, what do we do in relationship
to these systems that are more competent
than we are in every relevant respect?
Because it will be a relationship.
It's not like the people who think we're just gonna figure
this all out, you know, without thinking about it in advance,
it's just gonna, the solutions are just gonna find themselves.
Seem not to be taking the prospect
of really creating autonomous superintelligence seriously.
Like, what does that mean?
It's every bit as independent and ungovernable, ultimately, as us having created,
I mean, just imagine if we created a race of people that were 10 times smarter than all of us.
Like, how would we live with those people?
They're 10 times smarter than us, right?
Like, they begin to talk about things we don't understand.
They begin to want things we don't understand.
They begin to view us as obstacles to them, to their solving those problems or gratifying
those desires.
We become the chickens or the monkeys in their presence.
And I think that it's, but for some amazing solution of the sort that Stewart is imagining
that we could somehow anchor their reward function permanently, no matter how intelligent
scales, I think it's really worth worrying about this.
I do buy the sci-fi notion that this is an existential risk if we don't do it well.
I worry that we don't notice it. I'm deeply impressed with Chad G.P.T. and I'm worried that it will
become super intelligent. These language models will become super intelligent because they're
basically trained in the collective intelligence through the human species and then it will start controlling our behavior if
they're integrated into our algorithms, the recommender systems, and then we just won't
notice that there is a super intelligent system that's controlling our behavior.
Well, I think that's true even before, far before superintelligence, even before general
intelligence.
I think just the narrow intelligence of these algorithms and of what something like,
you know, chat GPT can do. I mean, it's just far short of it developing its own goals and that are across purposes
with ours, just the unintended consequences of using it in the ways we're going to be
incentivized to use it.
And the money to be made from scaling this thing. And what it does to our information
space and our sense of just being able to get the ground truth on any facts, it's super
scary.
Do you think it's a giant leap in terms of the development towards a GI, Chad GBT, or we still, um, is it just an impressive,
little toolbox?
So like, what, what do you think the singularity is coming?
Or the T doesn't matter.
I have, I have no intuitions on that front, apart from the fact that if we continue
to make progress, it will come.
Right. So it's just, you just have to assume we continue to make progress. There's only two assumptions. You have to assume substrate
independence. So there's no reason why this can't be done in silico. It's just we can build arbitrarily
intelligent machines. There's nothing magical about having this done in the wet wear of our own brains.
I think that is true and I think that's scientifically parsimonious to think that's true.
And then you just have to assume we're going to keep making progress. Doesn't have to be any special
rate of progress, doesn't have to be Moore's Law. It can just be, which keep going, at a certain point, we're going to be in relationship to minds,
leaving conscience to the conscience of society. I don't have any reason to believe that they'll
necessarily be conscious by virtue of being super intelligent. And that's its own interesting
ethical question. But leaving conscience to the side, they're there can be more competent than we are.
And then that's like the aliens have landed.
That's an encounter with, again, leaving aside the possibility that something like Stewart's
path is actually available to us. But it is hard to picture
if what we mean by intelligence, all things considered and it's truly general.
If that scales and
begins to
build upon itself, how you
maintain that perfect, slavish devotion begins to build upon itself, how you maintain
that perfect, slavish devotion until the end of time
in those systems.
That's how they're the humans.
Yeah.
I think my gut says that that tether is not,
there's a lot of ways to do it.
So it's not this increasingly impossible problem.
Right, so I have no, as you know, I'm not a computer scientist. I have no intuitions
about just algorithmically how you would approach that and what's my many tuition is maybe
deeply flawed. But the many tuition is based on the fact that most of the learning is currently happening on human knowledge.
So even Chagy Parties just trained on human data.
Right.
I don't see where the takeoff happens
where you completely go above human wisdom.
The current impressive aspect of Chagy Parties,
that's using collective intelligence of all of us.
In terms of...
From what I clean, again, from people who know much more about this than I do, I think
we have reason to be skeptical that these techniques of deep learning are actually going
to be sufficient to push us into AGI.
So they're not generalizing in the way they need to.
They're certainly not learning like human children.
And so there's brittle and strange ways.
They're, it's not to say that the human path is the only path.
And maybe we might learn better lessons
by ignoring the way brains work.
But we know that they don't generalize and
use abstraction the way we do.
And so, although they have strange holes and they're competent.
But the size of the holes is shrinking every time.
And that's so the intuition starts to slowly fall apart.
The intuition is like, surely can't be this simple.
To achieve the intelligence.
Yeah.
Where it's becoming simpler and simpler.
So I don't know.
The progress is quite incredible.
I've been extremely impressed with chat GPD
and the new models.
And there's a lot of financial incentive
to make progress in this record.
So we're going to be living through some very interesting times.
In raising a question that I'm going to be talking to you, a lot of people brought up this topic probably because Eric Weinstein talked to Joe Rogan recently and said that he and you were
contacted by folks about UFOs. Can you clarify the nature of this contact? Yeah, yeah, that you are
contacted by. I've got very little to say on this. I mean, he has much more to say. I think he,
I think he went down this rabbit hole further than than I did, which wouldn't surprise anyone.
He's got much more of a taste for this sort of thing than I do, but I think we're contacted by
the same person.
It wasn't clear to me who this person was
or how this person got that my cell phone number.
They didn't seem like we were getting punked.
I mean, the person seemed credible to me.
And they were talking to you about the release
of different videos on your phone.
Yeah, and this is when there was a flurry of activity
around this.
There was a big New Yorker article on UFOs, and there was rumors of congressional hearings,
I think, come in, and then the videos that were being debunked or not.
And so this person contacted both of us, I think around the same time. And I think
he might have contacted Rogan or other Eric is just the only person I've spoken to about
it. I think who I know was contacted and the what happened is the person kept, you know,
writing a check that he didn't cash.
He kept saying, okay, next week, I understand this is sounding spooky and you have no reason
to really trust me.
But next week, I'm going to put you on a Zoom call with people who you will recognize.
They're going to be former heads of the CIA.
Within five seconds of being on the Zoom call,
you'll know this is not a hoax.
And I said, great.
Just let me know.
It'll just send me the Zoom link.
And I went, that happened maybe three times.
You know, there was just one phone conversation and then it was just texts, you know, there's
just a bunch of texts.
And I think air-expandent more time with this person.
And I'm not, I haven't spoken about it.
I know he's spoken about it publicly.
But so, I, you know, it's not that my bullshit detector
ever really went off in a big way.
It's just the thing never happened.
And I lost interest.
So you made a comment, which is interesting, that you ran the, which I really appreciate,
that you ran the thought experiment of saying,
okay, maybe we do have alien spacecraft,
or just the thought experiment that aliens did visit.
Yeah. And then this is very kind of nihilistic, sad thought
that it wouldn't matter.
It wouldn't affect your life.
Can you explain that?
No, I was, I think many people noticed this. I mean, this was a sign of how crazy the news cycle
was at that point, right? Like we had COVID and we had Trump and I forget when the UFO thing was
really kicking off, but it just seemed like no one had the band with even being interested in this.
It's like I was amazed to notice in myself
that I wasn't more interested in figuring out
what was going on.
It's like, and I considered,
okay, wait a minute.
This is, if this is true,
this is the biggest story in anyone's lifetime. I mean contact with alien intelligence
is by definition the biggest story in anyone's lifetime in human history
Why isn't this just
totally captivating and it not only was it not totally captivating it was just barely rising to the level of
not only was it not totally captivating, it was just barely rising to the level
of might be able to pay attention to it.
And I view that, I mean, one as a,
to some degree, an understandable defense mechanism
against the bogus claims that have been made
about this kind of thing in the past,
the general sense has probably bullshit,
it probably has some explanation
that is purely terrestrial and not surprising.
And there is somebody who, what does his name is?
Mick West, I forget, is it a YouTuber?
Yeah, he debunks stuff.
Yeah, I've since seen some of those videos, I mean now this is going back still at least a year
But some of those videos seem like fairly credible debunkings of some of the optical evidence
And I'm surprised we don't haven't seen more of that like there was a
Fairly credulous 60 minutes piece that came out around that time looking at some of that video
And it was the very video that he was debunking on YouTube and you know his his video only had like
50,000 views on it or whatever. But again, it seemed like a fairly credible debunking. I haven't
seen debunkings of his debunkings but I think there is but he's basically saying that there is
there is possible explanations for it. Right. And usually in these kinds of contexts, if there's a possible explanation, even if it seems
unlikely, it's going to be more likely than an alien civilization visiting us.
Yeah, it's the extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence principle, which I think
is generally true.
Well, with aliens, I think generally, I think there should be some humility about what they would look like when they show up
But I tend to think they're ready here. The amazing thing about this AI conversation though is that we're talking about a circumstance where
We would be designing the aliens. Yeah, and they would and there's every reason to believe that eventually this is gonna happen
Like I saw I'm not at all skeptical about the coming reality of the aliens that we're
going to build them.
Now here's the thing.
Does this apply to when super intelligence shows up?
Will this be trending on Twitter for a day?
And then we'll go on to complain about something Sam Harris once again said in his podcast
things there.
You tend to turn it on Twitter. Even though you're not on Twitter, which is great.
Yeah, I haven't noticed. I did notice when I was on, but...
You have this concern about AGI, basically, the same kind of thing that we would just look the other way.
Is there something about this time where even World War III, which has been throwing
it out very casually, concernedingly so, even that the new cycle website away?
Yeah.
Well, I think we have this general problem that we can't make certain information, even unequivocally certain information
emotionally salient.
We respond quite readily to certain things, and as we talked about, we respond to the little girls who fell
down a well. I mean, that just, that gets 100% of our emotional resources. But the abstract
probability of nuclear war, even a high probability, even just even an intolerable probability,
even if we put it at 30%. Right? It's just like that's a Russian roulette with a gun with three chambers.
And it's aimed at the head, not only your head, but your kid's head and everyone's kid's head.
And it's just 24 hours a day.
I think people who have this pre-Ukraine, I think the people who have made it their business to,
you know, professionally to think about the risk of nuclear war and to mitigate it, you
know, people like Graham Allison or William Perry or.
I mean, I think they were putting, like, the ongoing risk, I mean, just the risk that we're
going to have a proper nuclear war at some point in the next generation,
people are putting it at something like 50 percent, right?
They were living with this sort of damacles over our heads.
Now you might wonder whether anyone can have reliable intuitions about the probability
of that kind of thing. But the status quo is truly alarming.
I mean, we've got ICBMs on, I mean, leaf aside, smaller exchanges and tactical nukes and
how we could have a world war based on incremental changes.
We've got the biggest bombs aimed at the biggest cities in both directions, and
it's old technology, right? And it's vulnerable to some lunatic deciding to launch or
misreading bad data. And we know we've been saved from nuclear war. I think at least twice by
Soviet submarine commanders deciding, I'm not going to pass this up the chain of command, right?
Like this is, this is almost certainly an error and it turns out it wasn't error. And it's like,
certainly an error, and it turns out it wasn't an error. And we need people to, I mean, in that particular case, like he saw, I think it was five, what
seemed like five missiles launched from the US to Russia.
And he reasoned, if America was going to engage in a first strike, they'd launch more than
five missiles, right?
So this has to be fictional.
And then he waited long enough to decide
that it was fictional.
But the probability of a nuclear war happening
by mistake or some other species of inadvertence,
a misunderstanding, a technical malfunction,
that's intolerable.
Forget about the intentional use of it by people who are driven crazy by some ideology.
And more and more technologies are enabled at a kind of scale of destruction.
And misinformation plays into this picture in a way that is especially scary. I mean, once you can get a deep fake of,
you know, the any current president of the United States claiming to have launched a first strike,
you know, and just send that everywhere.
But I can change the nature of truth and then we, that might change the engine we have for skepticism,
that might change the engine we have for skepticism
is sharpen it. The more you have deep faith.
Yeah, and they might have AI and digital watermarks
that help us, and it may be will not trust any information
that hasn't come through specific channels, right?
I mean, so in my world,
it's like, I no longer feel the need to respond to
anything other than what I put out in my channels of information. It's like there's so much
there's so many people who have clipped stuff of me that shows the opposite of what I was
actually saying in contact. I mean, the people have like re-edited my podcast audio to make it seem like I said the opposite of what I was saying.
It's like, unless I put it out, you know, you can't be sure that I actually said it, you
know, I mean, it's just, but I don't know what it's like to live like that for all forms of information. And I mean, strangely, I think it may require a greater
siloing of information in the end. You know, it's like it, it's, we're living through
this sort of wild west period where everyone's got a newsletter and everyone's got a blog
and everyone's got an opinion. But once you can fake everything, there might be a greater value for expertise for experts,
but a more rigorous system for identifying who the experts are.
Yeah, or just knowing that, you know,
it's gonna be an arms race to authenticate information.
So it's like, if you can never trust a photograph,
unless it has been vetted by getty images because only getty
images has the resources to authenticate the provenance of that photograph and a test
that hasn't been meddled with by AI.
And again, I don't even know if that's technically possible.
And maybe whatever the tools available for this will be,
commodified and the cost will be driven to zero so quickly that everyone will be able to do it,
it could be like encryption.
But.
And it would be proven and tested most effectively first,
of course, as always in porn.
Yeah, right.
Which is where most of human innovation technology happens first.
Well, I have to ask because Ron Howard, the director, asked us on Twitter, since we're talking
about the threat of nuclear war and otherwise, he asked, I'd be interested in both your expectations
for human society if, when we move beyond Mars.
With those societies being industrial-based, how will it be governed, how will criminal infractions be dealt with when you read or
watch sci-fi what comes closest to sounding logical.
Do you think about our society beyond earth, if we colonize Mars, if we colonize space?
Yeah, well, I think I have a pretty humbling picture of that.
So because we're still going to be the apes that we are. So when you imagine colonizing
Mars, you have to imagine a first fist fight on Mars. You have to imagine first murder on Mars.
Also, infidelity. Yeah. Somebody extramarital affairs on Mars. So it's going to get
really homely and boring really fast, I think. It's like only the space suits or the other
exigencies of living in that atmosphere or lack thereof will limit how badly we can behave on Mars.
But do you think most of the interaction will be still in meat space versus digital? Do you think
there will be, do you think we're like living through a transformation
of a kind where we're going to be doing more and more interaction than digital space? Like
everything we've been complaining about Twitter, is it possible that Twitter's just the early
days of a broken system that's actually giving birth to a better working system that's ultimately
digital? better working system that's ultimately digital. I think we're going to experience a pendulum swing back into the real world.
I think many of us are experiencing that now anyway.
I mean, just wanting to have face-to-face encounters and spend less time on our phones and
less time online.
I think maybe everyone isn't going
in that direction, but I do notice it myself,
and I notice, I mean, once I got off Twitter,
I then I noticed the people who were never on Twitter,
right, and the people who were never,
I mean, I know I have a lot of friends who were never
on Twitter.
And they actually never understood
what I was doing on Twitter.
It's like, like, they just, like, it wasn't that they were seeing it. And then reacting to it, they just didn't know, it's
like, it's like being on, like, I'm not on Reddit either, but I don't spend any time thinking
about not being on Reddit, right? So I just, I'm just not on Reddit.
Um, do you think the pursuit of human happiness is better achieved more effectively achieved outside of
Twitter world?
Well, I think all we have is our attention in the end and we just have to notice what these various
tools are doing to it and it's just it became very clear to me that
it was an unrewarding use of my attention.
Now, it's not to say there isn't some digital platform that's conceivable, that would be
useful and rewarding, but yeah, I mean, we just have, you know, our life is doled out to
us in moments and we have, and we're continually solving this riddle of what is going to suffice to make this moment
engaging and meaningful and aligned with who I want to be now and how I want the future
to look.
We have this tension between being in the present and becoming in the future.
And, you know, it's a seeming paradox. Again, it's not really a paradox, but it can seem like,
I do think the ground truth for personal well-being is to find a mode of being where
you can pay attention to the present moment,
and this is meditation by another name,
you can pay attention to the present moment
with sufficient gravity that you recognize
that just consciousness itself in the present moment,
no matter what's happening,
is already a circumstance of freedom
and contentment and tranquility.
You can be happy now before anything happens.
Before this next desire gets gratified, before this next problem gets solved, there's this
kind of ground truth that you're free.
That consciousness is free and open and unencumbered by really any problem until you get lost and thought about all the
problems that may yet be real for you.
So the ability to catch and observe consciousness that in itself is a source of happiness?
Without being lost and thought.
This happens haphazardly for people who don't meditate because they find something in their life that's so captivating,
it's so pleasurable, it's so thrilling, it can even be scary, but it can be
even being scared is captivated. It gets their attention, right? Whatever it is.
You know, Sebastian Younger
wrote a great book about
people's experience in war here. You know, it's like, like, you can strangely,
it can be the best experience anyone's ever had because everything,
it's like only the moment matters, right?
Like the bullet is whizzing by your head.
You're not thinking about your, your 401k or that thing that you didn't say last week
to the person you shouldn't have been talking about.
You're not thinking about Twitter. It's like like you're just fully immersed in the present moment. Meditation is the only way,
I mean, that word can mean many things to many people. But what I mean by meditation is simply
the discovery that there is a way to engage the present moment directly regardless of of what's happened and you don't need
to be in a war, you don't need to be having sex, you don't need to be on drugs, you don't
need to be surfing, you don't need nothing, it doesn't have to be a peak experience, it
can be completely ordinary, but you can recognize that in some basic sense, there's only this
and everything else is something you're thinking.
You're thinking about the past,
you're thinking about the future,
and thoughts themselves have no substance, right?
It's fundamentally mysterious that any thought
ever really commandeers your sense of who you are
and makes you anxious or afraid or angry or whatever it is.
And the more you discover that, the half-life of all these negative emotions that blow all
of us around get much, much shorter, right?
And you can literally just, you know, the anger that would have kept you angry for hours
or days lasts, you know, four seconds because you just, the moment it arises, you recognize
it and you can get off the, you can decide at minimum
you can decide whether it's useful to stay angry at that moment and you know, obviously it usually isn't and the illusion of free will is one of those thoughts.
Yeah, it's all just happening right like even the mindful and
meditative response to this is just happening happening. It's just like even
the moments where you recognize or not recognize is just happening, it's just like even the moments where you recognize
or not recognize is just happening.
It's not that this does open up a degree of freedom for a person, but it's not a freedom
that gives any motivation to the notion of free will.
It's just a new way of being in the world.
Is there a difference between intellectually knowing free will as an illusion and really
experiencing it?
What's the longest you've been able to experience?
The escape, the illusion of free will.
Well, it's always obvious to me when I pay attention.
I mean, whenever I'm mindful,
the term of jargon in the Buddhist
and increasingly outside the Buddhist context is mindfulness, right?
But there are different levels of mindfulness and there's different
degrees of insight into this. But yes, I mean, what I'm calling evidence of lack of free will and lack of,
you know, lack of the self. I mean, I get two sides of the same coin. There's a sense of being a
subject in the middle of experience to whom all experience refers a sense of eye the sense of me and
That's almost everybody's starting point when they start to meditate and it's that's almost always the place people live
Most of their lives from I do think that gets interrupted in ways they get unrecognized. I think people are constantly losing the sense of eye, they're
losing the sense of subject object distance, but they're not recognizing it.
And meditation is the mode in which you can recognize. You can both consciously
precipitate it, you can look for the self and fail to find it, and then
recognize its absence.
And that's just the flip side of the coin of free will.
I mean, the feeling of having free will is what it feels like to feel like a self who's
thinking his thoughts and doing his actions and intending his intentions.
And the man in the middle of the boat who's rowing, that's the
false starting point.
When you find that there's no one in the middle of the boat, right, or in fact, there's no
boat, there's just the river, there's just the flow of experience, and there's no center
to it, and there's no place from which you would control it.
Again, even when you're doing thing, this does not negate the difference between voluntary and involuntary behavior. It's like,
I can voluntarily reach for this, but when I'm paying attention, I'm aware that
everything is just happening, like just the intention to move is just arising, right? And
I'm in no position to know why I didn't arise a moment before or a
moment later or a moment or you know 50% stronger or weaker or you know so as to be ineffective
or to be doubly effective or where I lurched for it versus I move slow. I mean, I'm not,
I can never run the counterfactuals. I can never, all of this opens the door to a,
an even more disconcerting picture along the same lines,
which is, subsumes this conversation about free will,
and it's the question of whether anything is ever possible.
Like, what if, this is a question I haven't thought a lot
about it, but it's been a few years I've been kicking this question around.
I mean, what if only the actual is possible? What if there was, what if, what if,
we live with this feeling of possibility, we live with a sense that
I'm gonna take a so you know, I have two daughters.
I could have had a third child, right? So what does it mean to say that I could have had a third child or is that you don't have kids?
I don't think so not that I know of yes, so the possibility might be there.
So what do we mean when we say you could have had a child or you might have a child in
the future?
Like what is the space in reality?
What's the relationship between possibility and actuality and reality. Is there a reality in which non-actual things are nonetheless real?
And so we have other categories of non-concrete things.
We have things that don't have spatial, temporal dimension, but they're nonetheless exist.
So like, you know, the integers, right? So numbers, there's
a, there's a reality, there's an abstract reality to numbers. And this is, it's philosophically
interesting to think about these things. So they're not like, in some sense, they're, they're
real. And they're just, they're not merely invented by us. They're discovered because
they have structure that we can't impose upon them, right? It's not like, they're not merely invented by us, they're discovered because they have structure that we can't impose upon them.
It's not like they're not fictional characters like, you know, a hamlet and Superman also exist in some sense,
but they existed at the level of our own fiction and abstraction, but it's like they're true and false statements you can make about hamlet.
They're true and false statements you can make about Superman because our fiction, the fictional
worlds we've created have a certain kind of structure.
But again, this is all abstract.
It's all abstractable from any of its concrete instantiations.
It's not just in the comic books and just in the movies.
It's in our ongoing ideas about these characters. But natural numbers or the integers don't function quite that way.
I mean, they're similar, but they also have a structure that's purely a matter of discovery.
It's not, you can't just make up whether numbers are prime.
You know, if you give me two integers, you know, of a certain size, let's say you mentioned two enormous integers.
If I were to say, okay, well, between those two integers, they're exactly 11 prime numbers,
right?
That's a very specific claim about which I can be right or wrong.
And whether or not anyone knows I'm right or wrong.
It's like, that's just, there's a domain of facts there, but these are abstract, it's
an abstract reality that relates in some way that's philosophically interesting, you know, metaphysically interesting to what we
call real reality, you know, the spatial temporal order, the physics of things. But possibility,
at least in my view, occupies a different space. And this is something, again, my thoughts on this are pretty
in code. I think I need to talk to a philosopher or physics and or physicists about how this
may interact with things like the many worlds interpretation of quantum.
Yeah, that's an interesting right exactly. So I wonder if discovery is in physics like further
proof or more concrete proof that many wells interpretation
quantum mechanics has some validity, if that completely starts to change things.
But even that's just more actuality.
So if I took that seriously, that's a case of, and truth is, that happens even if the
many worlds interpretation isn't true, but we just
imagine we have a physically infinite universe.
The implication of infinity is such that things will begin to repeat themselves, you know,
the farther you go in space, right?
So, you know, if you just head out in one direction eventually, you're going to meet two people
just like us having a conversation just like this, and you're going to meet two people just like us having a conversation just like this and you're going to meet them an infinite number of times in every, you know, infinite variety of permutation
slightly different from this conversation, right? So, I mean, infinity is just so big that
our intuitions of probability completely break down. But what I'm suggesting is maybe probability
isn't a thing, right? Maybe there's only actuality.
Maybe there's only what happens.
And at every point along the way, our notion of what could have happened or what might
have happened is just that.
It's just a thought about what could have happened or might have happened.
There's no, so it's a fundamentally different thing.
If you can imagine a thing that doesn't make it real.
So that's
where that possibility exists in your imagination.
Right.
And possibility itself is a kind of spooky idea because it too has a sort of structure.
Right. So like if I'm going to say, you know, you could have had a daughter, right, last year.
So, we're saying that's possible, but not actual, right?
That is a claim.
The things that are true and not true about that daughter, right?
Like it has a kind of structure.
It's like, I feel like there's a lot of fog around that, the possibility.
It feels like almost like a useful narrative.
But what does it mean?
So like, what does it mean?
If we say, you know, I just did that, but I might, it's conceivable that I wouldn't have
done that, right?
Like it's possible that I, I just threw this cap, but I might not have done that.
So you're taking it very temporarily close to the original, like what would appear as a
decision.
Whenever we're saying something's possible, but not actual, right?
Like this thing just happened, but it's conceivable.
It's possible that it wouldn't have happened or that would have happened differently.
In what does that possibility consist?
Where is that?
What is for that to be real, for the possibility to be real, what claim are we making about
the universe?
Well, isn't that an extension of the idea that free will is an illusion that all we have
is actuality, that the possibility isn't there?
Right, yeah, I'm just extending it beyond human action.
Like it's, it's, it goes to the physics of things.
This is just everything.
Like we're, we're always telling ourselves a story
that includes possibility.
Possibility is really compelling for some reason.
Well, yeah, well, because it it's I mean, so this yeah, I mean this could sound just academic, but it every
backward-looking regret or disappointment and every forward-looking worry is
Completely dependent on this notion of possibility like every regret is based on the sense that something else,
I could have done something else.
Something else could have happened.
Every disposition to worry about the future
is based on the feeling that there's this range of possibilities.
It could go either way.
And, you know, whether or not there's such a thing as possibility,
you know, I'm convinced that worry is almost never psychologically appropriate because the reality is in any given
moment, either you can do something to solve the problem you're worried about or not.
So if you can do something, just do it.
You know, and if you can't, your worry is just causing you to suffer twice over, right?
You're going to, you're going to,? You're gonna get the medical procedure next week anyway.
How much time between now and next week
do you wanna spend worrying about it, right?
It's gonna, the worry doesn't accomplish anything.
How much do physicists think about possibility?
Well, they think about it in terms of probability more often,
but probability just describes,
and again, this is a place where I might be
out of my depth and need to talk to somebody to debunk this, but the...
Do therapy with the physicist.
Yeah, but probably it seems just describes a pattern of actuality that we've observed,
right?
I mean, there are certain things we observe, and those are the actual things that have happened.
And we have this additional story about probability.
I mean, we have the frequency with which things happen, have happened in the past.
You know, I can flip a fair coin, and I know in the abstract that I have a belief that
in the limit, those tosses should converge on 50% has and 50%
tails. I know I have a story as to why it's not going to be exactly 50% within any arbitrary
time frame. But in reality, all we ever have are the observed tosses. And then we have an additional story that,
oh, it came up heads, but it could have come up tails. Why do we think that about that last
toss? And what are we claiming is true about the physics of things if we say it could have been otherwise.
I think we're claiming that probability is true.
That it just allows us to have a nice model about the world, gives us hope about the world.
It seems that possibility has to be somewhere to be effective.
It's a little bit like what's happening with the laws of nature, too, because
the laws of nature impose their work on the world. We see their evidence, but they're not reducible
to any specific set of instances. There's some structure there, but the structure isn't
Just a matter of the actual things we have the actual billiard balls that are banging into each other
All of that actuality can be explained by what actual things are actually doing
But then we have this notion that in addition to that
We have the laws of nature that are making that are explaining this act but but how are the laws of nature nature an additional thing in addition to just the actual things that are actually affect costly?
And if they are an additional thing, how are they effective?
If they're not among the actual things that are just actually banging around.
And so to some degree, possibly, possibly has to be hiding somewhere for the laws of
nature to be possible. To be possible. For anything to be possible, it has to be, it has to have...
It has to be a closet somewhere, I'm sure.
We're all the possibility codes.
It has to be attached to something.
You don't think many worlds is that.
Because many worlds still exist.
Well, because we're in this strand of that multiverse.
Still, you have just a local instance of what is actual.
Yeah.
And then if it proliferates elsewhere where you can't be affected by it, many worlds as well,
that you can't really connect with the other.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so many worlds are just a statement of basically everything that can happen, happen somewhere.
Yeah. Basically, everything that can happen happen somewhere.
And that's, I mean, maybe that's not entirely kosher formulation of it, but it seems pretty close.
But there's whatever happens.
In fact, there's, you know, relatively, there's a,
the Einstein's original notion of a block universe seems to suggest this.
And I it's been a while since I've been in a conversation with the physicist where I've
gotten a chance to ask about the standing of this concept in physics currently. I don't
hear it discuss much, but the idea of a block universe is that, you know, space time
exists as a totality. And our sense that we are traveling through space time, where there's a real difference
between the past and the future, that that's an illusion of just our, you know, weird,
the weird slice we're taking of this larger object.
But on some level, it's like, you know, you're reading a novel, the last page of the novel
exists just as much as the first page
When you're in the middle of it and they're just you know if that's if we're living in anything like that then there's no such thing as
Possibility I would it would seem there's just what is actual so
As a matter of our experience moment to moment I
Think it's totally compatible with that
being true, that there is only what is actual, and that sounds to the naive ear, that sounds
like it would be depressing and disempowering and confining, but it's anything but it's actually
a circumstance of pure discovery.
You have no idea what's gonna happen next.
You don't know who you're gonna be tomorrow.
You're only by tendency,
seeming to resemble yourself from yesterday.
And there's way more freedom in all of that
than it seems true to many people.
And yet, the basic insight is that you're not, you're not in, the real
freedom is the recognition that you're not in control of anything. Everything is just
happening, including your thoughts and intentions and moves.
So life is a process of continuous discovery.
You're part of the universe. You are just this, I mean, it's, it's the miracle that the
universe is illuminated to itself, as itself, where you sit, and you're, and you're continually
discovering what your life is. And then you're, you have this layer at which you're telling yourself a
story that you already know what your life is. And you know exactly who you should be and what's about to happen or you're struggling to form a confident
opinion about all of that. And yet there is this just fundamental mystery to everything, even the
most familiar experience. We're all NPCs in a most marvelous video game.
Maybe, although my sense of gaming
does not run as deep as to know what I'm committing to there.
A non-play in character.
Yeah, not play.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, more of a Mario Kart guy.
I went back, I was an original video gamer,
but it's been a long time since I was there for Pong.
I remember when I saw the first Pong in a restaurant
in I think it was like Benny Hanna's
or something they had a Pong and it was a table.
And that was amazing.
It was an amazing moment.
When you use Sam Harris, my live from Pong
to the invention and deployment of a super intelligent system.
You know, that happened fast.
If it happens any time in my lifetime.
From Pong to AGI.
What kind of things do you do purely for fun that others might consider a waste of time?
Purely for fun.
Because meditation doesn't count because most people say that's not a waste of time.
Is there something like Pong? That's a deeply embarrassing thing
you would never admit?
I don't think, well, I mean, once or twice a year,
I will play around with golf,
which many people would find embarrassing.
They might even find my play embarrassing, but it's fun.
Do you find it embarrassing?
No, I mean, golf just takes way too much time,
so I can only squander a certain amount of time on it. I do love it. It's a lot of fun.
Well, you have no control over your actual performance.
You're ever discovering. I do have control over my mediocre performance, but it's
I don't have enough control as to make it really good. But happily, I'm in the perfect spot
because I don't invest enough time in it to care how I play.
So I just have fun.
I hope there'll be a day where you play it on golf with the former president Donald Trump.
And I would love to be.
I would bet on him if we play golf.
I'm sure he's a better golfer.
I miss the chaos of human civilization in modern times as we've talked about.
What gives you hope about this world in the coming
year in the coming decade in the coming hundred years maybe a thousand years
What's the source of hope for you?
Well, it comes back to a few of the things we've talked about I mean I think I'm
I'm hopeful it I know that most people are good and are mostly converging on the
same core values.
Right?
It's like we're not surrounded by psychopaths.
And I, the thing that finally convinced me to get off Twitter was how different life was
seeming through the lens of Twitter.
It's like I just got the sense that there's way more psychopaths or effective psychopaths than
I realized and then I thought okay, that's this isn't real. This is this is either a strange
context in which actually decent people are behaving like psychopaths or it's you know or it's a bot army or something that I don't have to take seriously.
So yeah, I just think most people, if we can get the incentives right, I think there's
no reason why we can't really thrive collectively.
So there's enough wealth to go around, there's enough, there's no
effective limit, I mean, again, within the limits of what's physically possible, but
we're nowhere near the limit on abundance. I forget's like we we could make this place incredibly beautiful and stable.
If we just did enough work to solve some, you know, you know, rather long-standing political problems.
The problem of incentives. So the two. So the basic characteristics of human nature, such that will be okay if the incentives
are okay.
We'll do pretty good.
I'm worried about the asymmetries that it's easier to break things and to fix them.
It's easier to light a fire than to put it out. And I do worry that as technology gets more and more powerful,
it becomes easier for the minority who wants to screw things up to effectively screw things up
for everybody. So it's easier. A thousand years ago, it was simply impossible for one person
A thousand years ago, it was simply impossible for one person to arrange the lives of millions, much less billions.
Now that's getting to be possible.
So on the assumption that we're always going to have a sufficient number of crazy individuals
or malevolent individuals, we have to figure out that asymmetry somehow.
There's some cautious exploration of emergent technology that we need to get our headscrew
on straight about.
It's going to gain a function research.
Just how much do we want to democratize all the relevant technologies there? Do we want
really, really want to give everyone the ability to order nucleotides in the mail and give them
the blueprints for viruses online because of your free speech absolutist and you think all PDFs need to be, you know, exportable everywhere.
So I'm much more, so this is where, yeah, so there are limits to,
I'm not, you know, many people are confused about my take on free speech because I've come down on, on, on the unpopular side of some of these questions.
But it's been my overriding concern is that in, in many cases,
I'm worried about the free speech of
individual businesses or individual platforms or individual media people
to decide that they don't want to be associated with certain things. So if you own Twitter, I think you should be able to kick off the Nazi you don't want to be associated with,
because it's your platform, you own it. That's your free speech right that's the side of my free
speech concern for Twitter right it's not that every Nazi has the right to to be to algorithmic speech
on Twitter I think of you own Twitter you should be you or the you know whether it's just Elon or
in the world where it wasn't Elon just the the people who own Twitter the the and the board and the
shareholders and the employees, these people should be
free to decide what they want to promote or not.
I view them as publishers more than as platforms in the end and that has other implications.
But I do worry about this problem of misinformation and algorithmically and otherwise supercharged misinformation.
And I think, I do think we're at a bottleneck now.
I guess it could be the hubris of every present generation
to think that their moment is especially important.
But I do think with the emergence of these technologies,
where some kind of bottleneck where we really have to figure out how to get this right.
And if we do get this right, if we figure out how to not drive ourselves crazy
by giving people access to all the possible information and misinformation at all times,
I think, yeah, we could, there's no limit to how happily we could collaborate
with billions of creative, fulfilled people. You know, it's just.
And trillions of robots, some of them sex robots, but that's another topic.
Robots that have are running the right algorithm, whatever that algorithm is, whatever you
need in your life to make you happy.
So, the first time we talked is one of the huge honors of my life.
I've been a fan of yours for a long time.
The few times you were respectful but critical to me means the world.
And thank you so much for helping me and caring enough,
and caring enough about the world and for everything you do.
But I should say that the few of us that try to caring enough about the world and for everything you do. But I should say
that the few of us that try to put love in the world on Twitter miss you on Twitter, but
enjoy yourselves. Don't break anything. Have a good party without me.
Thanks for watching. Very happy to do this. Thanks, thanks for the invitation.
Thank you. Great to see you again. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Sam Harris.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now, let me leave you with some words from Martin Luther King Jr.
Love is the only force capable of transforming an enemy into a friend.
Thank you for listening.
I hope to see you next time. you