Modern Wisdom - #515 - David & Douglas Kenrick - Evolved Psychology Vs The Modern World
Episode Date: August 20, 2022David Lundberg Kenrick is the Psychology Program Manager at Arizona State University and Douglas Kenrick is a Professor of psychology at Arizona State University. Our brains were designed to exist in ...a very different environment to the one they find themselves in. Managing modern problems with stone-age operating systems causes us to act in strange, suboptimal, silly ways. Which is why it's so important to understand how our minds developed. Expect to learn just how violent humans were ancestrally, why more people die of obesity than starvation in 2022, whether dominance or prestige is more important at getting ahead, whether ancient humans felt love the same way we do now, why human females go through menopause, the relationship between dominance and attraction and much more... Sponsors: Get 10% discount on your first month from BetterHelp at https://betterhelp.com/modernwisdom (discount automatically applied) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours at https://www.drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom (discount automatically applied) Get 20% discount on the highest quality CBD Products from Pure Sport at https://bit.ly/cbdwisdom (use code: MW20) Extra Stuff: Buy Solving Modern Problems - https://amzn.to/3SrnUEb Get my free Reading List of 100 books to read before you die → https://chriswillx.com/books/ To support me on Patreon (thank you): https://www.patreon.com/modernwisdom - Get in touch. Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Hello friends, welcome back to the show. My guests today are David Lundberg, Kenrick and Douglas
Kenrick. David is the psychology program manager at Arizona State University and Douglas is professor
of psychology at Arizona State. Our brains were designed to exist in a very different environment
to the one they find themselves in now. Managing modern problems with Stone Age operating systems
causes us to act in strange suboptimal silly ways, which
is why it's so important to understand how our minds developed.
Expect to learn just how violent humans were, and, cessually, why more people die of obesity
than starvation in 2022, whether dominance or prestige is more important at getting ahead,
whether ancient humans felt loved the same way we do now, why human females go through menopause, the relationship between dominance and attraction,
and much more.
But now, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Doug and Dave, welcome to the show.
Good to be here.
Yeah, thanks for having us.
Doug, you just mentioned that you'd taken two months away from working and this is one
of your first days back.
Talk to me about what it feels like to take such a long break when you're used to doing
so much work.
Do you ever get the compulsion to go and do stuff to get antsy about the fact that you're
not working?
Yes, I like having a bit of fun, but there's only so much of it I can take.
I actually feel better.
I feel better when I'm being productive in some way.
Although my work is writing books and being a college professor and talking to students,
it's a pretty cushy job and you know it's in some ways more pleasant
than actually being on vacation, although being on vacation was fun.
What do you think that says adaptively about humans, the fact that you can take more pleasure
from doing work than from leisure? What do you think Dave? Well, I mean, I think a lot of it is the affiliation factor,
right? I know for me one of the things I like about work is the people I work with and getting
to see them. And that feeling of sort of purpose, right, that it's like, I think we are sort of designed to want to contribute
to those around us. And, you know, hopefully if someone is in a job that they like, then
they'll feel like, oh, I'm working with a group of people to improve the world for people.
So I think, yeah So I think that's.
I like Dave's answer because I wouldn't have pointed to affiliation right away.
I would have thought of status in terms of our little our hierarchy of motives.
But I like what Dave is saying because it strikes me then in the ancestral environment.
If you took two months off, the people in your group might have started to get a little annoyed at you.
You know, what are you going to start to catch some fish?
And so, you know, I like the fact that they've connected to people because it does.
I especially like, I do like that as well.
In fact, the first thing I did after having this, an interview this morning, is I went to a meeting and our graduate students were there and my co-author on a number of papers, Steve Newberg,
was there, and it did feel good.
It felt good to be doing something with the group.
And so I guess we're sort of wired up to connect those two things.
You just mentioned about your new pyramid of human motives.
Why do we need a new one or what's unique or interesting about this one?
So two things.
One is that when Maslow made his hierarchy, he didn't make that pyramid.
It wasn't even a hierarchy, right?
Yeah. Well, no, it wasn't a hierarchy. He did actually say that there that wasn't even a hierarchy, right? Yeah, well, no
It was a hierarchy did actually say that there were
There were a set of goals. He was arguing against behaviorists the behaviorist thought that everything we do
Can boil down to satisfying thirst and hunger even our social motives the behaviorist argued were connected to
secondary reinforcement.
We come to like people because our mother nursed us.
And Maslow was a student of Harry Harlow
who did those classical studies
with the baby monkeys that were separated
from their moms and so forth.
And Harlow was arguing against the behaviorist.
No, we have, we at least primates have other social motives. And Maslow just
made a more complicated model and argued that developmentally, first we have to just get
fed and get, you know, get warm. But then we get stranger anxiety, we have to protect ourselves.
And then we want to make friends. And then we want to steam friends and then we want a steam which is what we would
call status. So we agree with him up to that point where we disagree with Maslow was that
he thought then we move to non-social things we move above that we want to go off and play the
guitar by ourselves or rights poetry just for our own intrinsic satisfaction.
And from an evolutionary perspective, it seems extremely unlikely that we would be designed,
that we got here because our ancestors, once they had managed to solve those lower motives,
went off and beat on a log just for their own entertainment.
If they beat on a log, it was probably to entertain the other members of their groups
so that they could achieve acceptance and respect and find mates.
And the other thing that Maslow skipped out on completely was the importance of mating.
He was an evolutionary psychologist before the modern day.
And he didn't think about the fact that,
in some sense, organisms are all designed to reproduce.
And so at the top of our pyramid is not self-actualization.
It's sort of what unfolds developmentally.
First, after you've gotten some respect,
you find a mate.
After you find that mate, you need to keep the mate.
And then if you have offspring, you need to to keep the mate. And then if you have
offspring, you need to care for your family. And even if you don't have offspring, we're probably
motivated to care for our cousins and the other people in our group. And so we're not arguing in
some sense that it's ideal that we all, in the same sense, it's self-actualization, painting a
beautiful painting is somehow intrinsically
satisfying.
What we're arguing is that that's the natural course of things is to move on to reproduction.
Maslow had, the only time he talked about sex was as a lower physiological need.
And so on that model, you could just masturbate and then be done with
it. And then you can move on to playing the guitar, you know. But we disagree with that
part of it.
Yeah, it seems to me that most people when you ask them about the most meaningful stuff
that they do in their lives, they talk about rearing children. And it seems as well, I don't know whether you guys would agree with this, but we are
grand children optimizers is the nicest summary of what humans are kind of here to do that
I've thought of.
It's like, you need to have some kids, then you need to make sure that those kids have
some kids.
And after that point, you kind of sweet.
After that point, you can pretty much just let everything go.
But the great care and kids are on their own.
Yeah.
I mean, there is, so your lab did some research on that, right?
Like actually asking people what gave them meaning.
And it was split, right?
And there was parenting, and then there was also just general taking care of family
that included also like brothers and sisters and things like that.
So I guess you also have to look out for your nieces
and nephews as well.
So it's actually even a little more comfy in that.
We ask people three kinds.
So there's three ways you can define well-being.
One of them is just hedonic well-being.
I feel good.
There's more rewards in my life than punishments in my life. And then there's what they call you demonic well-being. I feel good. There's more rewards in my life than punishments in my life.
And then there's what they call you demonic well-being, which is a fancy way of saying meaning in life, okay? And then the third is self-actualization, which is a way of saying fulfilling your highest
potential. So what we did in our lab, some research with Jamie Crems, who's at Oklahoma State at Becken-Eel, who's the University of Toronto.
Now, we asked people about each of those things.
What would you be doing right now if you were getting meaning in life, okay?
What would be the thing that would produce the most meaning in your life?
And that's what the thing Dave was referring to.
That's when they said, I'd be caring for my family or I'd be hanging with my friends for the most part.
When we asked about self-actualization, what would you be doing if you were achieving your highest
potential? Then they talked about things like writing a book or managing a business.
And they connected that with status and also with affiliation.
And then the one of hedonic well-being, what would I be doing if I wanted to just feel
good?
Their affiliation comes in across the board, but then sex became more finding a mate,
rose up, especially for males. They would feel good. They
feel, you know, he don't have satisfaction if they were in a romantic situation. But
it's funny that those other kinds of well-being are, they're all connected to different motives.
Did you look at the mapiness study that had a ton of data done on it?
The what study? Mapiness. Mapiness. of data done on it. The what study?
Mapiness.
Mapiness, I don't know it, not talk about it.
So this was a study done by a bunch of researchers
who were using mobile phones to pop up and ask people
what they were doing at that point
and their subjective rating and how happy this is.
Yes.
And then Seth Stevens-Davidowitz,
who's a data scientist, has just released a new book
called Don't Trust Your Gut.
And in that, he looks through a bunch of this stuff
and then lays it out in this really easy table.
And the number one thing, plus 20,
in terms of happiness, the most happy thing
that people were doing is having sex.
Now, I couldn't help thinking about the fact
that the only way that that's been able to work
is if someone's paused having sex to check their phone, note down that they were doing it and then write the subjective level of happiness.
But, yeah, I mean, this is an interesting distinction, I think, between Dan Gilbert and Daniel
Carneman. Gilbert was talking about the fact that, you know, lying on a lie low for the rest of
your life drinking cocktails might be a way to spend a life well lived because each individual interval of time is something that's been pleasurable, whereas
Kahneman I think retrospectively would say a good life is one that in retrospect you're
glad you lived it had meaning it had purpose it may you feel retrospectively like something
is worthwhile. And I've come to believe my bro science is that that tends toward people
that are more introspective and retrospective
versus people that are a little bit more impulsive, that really the balance that you have between
those two things, whether you lean more towards a hedonic pleasure or sort of you dimonic
pleasure, is mostly because, okay, what do you think about? When you think about the things
that you value in yourself, do you value, you know,
just time with friends, free flowing and being easy, or do you like hard things that you're
contributing to over a longer period of time?
Yeah, no, I like you're raising an interesting question, I think, you know, about individual
differences in those, in those, and we actually have a scale of that measures in Becken-Neil, who I mentioned before, we developed a scale with us
that looks at the extent to which I am someone
who is currently concerned with each of those motives
we talked about finding mates or finding friends
or, you know, protecting myself from the bad guys.
But what you're suggesting is interesting
that those different kinds of well-being, you know,
what gives me those my various of function of, you know, who I am, and maybe what my major
goal in life is right now.
Yeah, it can also, I imagine, have to do with the sort of situational factors.
If you have kids, right, you might be like thinking more like, no, no, I need a meaningful life because that might tie into also providing for those kids and things like that. Whereas if you
are younger or you don't have kids and you're like, no, the people around me are taking care of,
then you might opt for just, you know, reading a book in the shade. So I could see how those could
change throughout the life history as well. Given the fact that the modern world's more comfortable
for humans, why do you think it is
than that a lot of human problems seem
even more difficult to solve today?
What's your take on that, Dave?
Oh, I mean, there's a bunch of things.
I mean, one is the sort of mismatch, right?
Of between our instincts in the modern world.
And then a big one is we also have with technology,
a lot of sort of things that will remind us,
we have technology that's optimized
to prime all of these motives at once, right?
You're gonna sort of, you're gonna see pictures
of attractive people that your brain will think of
as potential mates, you're going to see news about threats.
You're going to see updates from your friends.
And you can get all of these things in a matter of seconds or minutes, right?
If you're on your phone.
And so it's pretty overwhelming to try to try to like in the ancestral world
You can sort of focus on one thing at a time right you're if you're going out to get food
You might not even see any potential mates. You might have a few friends with you who are also there to get food
But these days I think
We got to do everything at once right and we've got to do everything at once.
And we've got to compete in our minds with,
if you want to compete with status,
you're now competing with Elon Musk
as opposed to just your actual next door neighbor.
And same thing, you see this with girls, with Instagram,
is they have body image issues.
They're competing with like these,
with models all the time.
And they're just, that's intermixed with their friend feed.
And so I think the, the higher arcies have gotten a lot higher.
Like now we're, now we're competing with what seven billion people
as opposed to 10.
And so I think, I think those all combined to make a pretty stressful, pretty stressful
situation. So is there a sense going back to Mazalotayra, I give needs, but you could
map it onto yours, I guess, as well? Is there a sense that because so much of the bottom
area of the pyramid, the immediate physiological needs, the safety, the security and stuff
like that, that that's been filled It is an existential crisis, a luxurious position to be in, basically.
Is it only in a world that's got so many of those safety features already filled in that
you have the opportunity to think, what am I doing with my life? What should I be doing
with my life? How could I contribute better to my sense of wellbeing? Am I really actualizing
my potential here?
That's interesting. I personally am not beyond worrying about those
base motives. Living in Arizona, I'm always reading about our water levels and our drought
and things like that. I don't know.
I think a lot of people are still worried about these.
I know that we no longer have food insecurity
the way our ancestors did, but health is still a major concern
for a lot of people.
And so I'm not sure we're at the point
where we're sort of mindfully
thinking about our higher motives. So I think we just have them stacked on there.
I wonder if an existential crisis is just, it's an attribution for something else. It means
maybe I'm, you know, I'm not achieving the goal that I really want to achieve. Now, I'm not finding a satisfying relationship,
or I'm not doing a satisfactory job,
taking care of my kids, or not getting respect on the job.
And then I attribute that to something higher,
because I've got a college degree.
And so I think, well, I can't just be some sap
who's screwing up
what's really happening is I'm concerned
with the whole meaning of existence.
I see.
Okay.
So it's loneliness, masquerading as a philosophical treatise.
Maybe.
Yeah, yeah.
I could see it being loneliness
and then also sort of status frustration.
If you look at people online, I think that I think these days in the modern era,
there's, I mean, there's all these sort of phenomenon of people who are like, they don't
have friends, right?
They're staying in their room, but they're, they're eating, they're surviving.
And so there's this, there's become this big jump where it's like, okay, I'm surviving, but to get to that next level,
to actually contribute, to give my existence meaning to other people seems too hard.
And so that could be part of what is leading to existential crises, perhaps.
Talk to me about the relationship between ancient fears and desires with modern dangers and opportunities then.
So you, I mean, you've mentioned the concept of mismatch, you know, that in some sense,
we're designed to live in a small village.
You know, people debate about what was the ancestral environment actually like.
And well, there were lots of different ancestral environments,
but they were different from the modern one in certain recurring ways.
They did involve being around your kin.
Okay, even when I was a kid growing up in a little urban village in New York,
I had my grandmother and my aunts.
They all lived in nearby apartments, you know?
And now we spread out so widely
that we can be surrounded by strangers.
And our ancestors were not surrounded by strangers
unless they're about to die, okay?
And that is, I think that's one of the biggest mismatches
and that accounts for many of these problems.
The other kinds of, well, there's mismatches
of different sort at every level.
So at the low level, the one about survival,
we certainly don't have to worry about getting food.
I mean, during my travels, one of the things I was shocked at
is that I could buy wood fired pizza
and find a fine restaurant with local tasty wines
everywhere in the middle of,
you know, in places I would consider
the middle of nowhere, there's this fabulous food.
And every little convenience store has Ben and Jerry's ice cream.
Everywhere you go, I could get some really delicious ice cream.
I could get a six pack of India PLL.
Can I just say one thing though?
But this is all contingent on having money, right?
And this one of the other ways that the modern world is different.
You had mentioned that you weren't likely to get, you weren't likely to be around strangers
unless you were about to get killed. There's also this thing of you weren't likely to get killed unless you were around strangers.
Like the people around you would help you out. But nowadays when we're traveling all over the
place, if you run out of money, right, which for somebody who has a good solid bank account
may not be a risk,
but for a lot of people, you're in the middle of nowhere
and you run out of money, the risks are really high, right?
If you try to steal food, you're gonna go to jail.
Like you're not going to, somebody is not going to be
as forgiving as if you borrow food from a relative.
And so.
That's interesting, Dave,
because actually, you know,
despite having a reasonable bank account,
I lived petrified of losing my wallet.
Because if I was in Banff, Alberta, beautiful place,
but I didn't have a wallet, I would have been screwed, okay?
Because I kept thinking that, what would I do?
What would I do for food?
What if somebody steals my wallet?
So one of my friends, a couple of years ago,
we went on a stagdoo to Barcelona.
Actually, no, sorry, it was the wedding.
The stagdoo was wild, but the wedding was even worse.
So we went to a wedding in Barcelona,
and I don't know whether you know,
but Barcelona is the robbery capital of Europe.
Yes, I've been warned when I went to Barcelona
and believably...
Hockets, zipped.
Sophisticated.
These kids that can do Lionel Messi style tricks
where the football will come over and accidentally bump into you.
And before you know it, they've dribbled the ball between your legs,
but they've also taken your car keys too.
So we went to this thing.
One of the guys came back.
Anyway, he, one of the lads had a bit too much to drink.
He doesn't usually drink.
He fell asleep and Barcelona train station woke up the next morning to find out
that his phone, his wallet and his shoes had been stolen.
His shoes had been stolen from him.
And then he was trudging around, but he was a CrossFit coach.
So the thing that he went back to, this is a point where you
basically don't have any of the no trust required transactional proofs of status or legitimacy, which is what
paper, paper money could be seen as, right? None of that existed, but he's a CrossFit coach.
So, he walked into a CrossFit gym. He knew that there was a CrossFit gym somewhere in Barcelona,
walked into a CrossFit gym and said, hey guys, I know that I look like, I've walked a hole in my
socks, I'm dressed for a wedding that was yesterday, no phone, no money, no shoes. However, if you go on Instagram, you'll
see that I'm that guy and I'm that guy that you've probably seen coaching some of your
favorite athletes. So what he did was he gravitated toward the closest thing that he
could find to kin.
That's interesting. Yeah, I like that. That's a great story. Who was that? I saw a stat from your book that said, more people die from obesity than starvation
now, according to UN. Yeah. Yeah. That was a fascinating thing to run across as we were
preparing that. That is wild. Yeah. That's a example of of Miss Bats because even Dave, even despite the fact that
we do worry about, even if we're poor now, we have enough money that we can afford Twinkies and other,
you know, unhealthy foods. And so I was amazed that I got as I got away from the less wealthy parts
of, you know, Canada and into the sticks. I would see more obesity
there. It's almost like it's almost now wealthy people, I think, are thinner. I don't
know if that statistically bears out, but I feel like it does hold when I...
Would you say the threshold for having enough money in order to be able to make yourself fat is actually pretty low.
You don't need a lot of money in order to be able to make yourself fat.
You actually need more money to buy organic vegetables and fruits, like blueberries, cost
more money than a similar number of calories and a loaf of cheap bread or some hostess twinkies, which
I definitely know what hostess twinkies are, but they're the classical fast food of my
generation. They're in the empty calories as they say.
Is it true that they're supposed to be able to survive a nuclear apocalypse and they basically
never go off?
Apparently. We haven't tested it. But yeah. I know that
you guys looked at suicide here as well. Have you ever seen any data around how many people
committed suicide? Ancestrally, how common it was. I have, I actually thought of that.
Do you have you come across that? I mean, I know that there are, you know,
you can think about like samurai sort of like,
there are traditional societies where suicides
were part of a thing you would do
if you brought shame to your tribe.
So it's not unheard of.
I don't know that we have, I mean,
I certainly don't know of statistics
the way we have modern statistics to compare.
I mean, I think there were also,
there were a lot more ways to risk your life
rather than just kill yourself, right?
If things aren't going well, you can-
Beats are the punch by the environment, yes.
Yeah, you can go out and,
and this is, I think, one of the things we sort of talk about
is this idea that suicide might actually
that desire or that lack of desire for self-preservation
might come from this place of, you've
got your sort of basic needs met, but you're not
meeting those social needs, right?
And so it might actually be your brain's way of saying, all right, go take some risks. It's time to, you know,
it's time to go out there and maybe get yourself eaten by a lion or whatever, but maybe you'll find a
really cool oasis, you know? And so of the one of the possibilities we've discussed is that this that really what people are they're feeling like
These other meat needs are not being met and they're sort of overvaluing survive a little bit
So you know it's cool about what you're saying, Dave is that like
I think it's there's no doubt that people acted what we call suicidal in the answer.
They might not have actually gone out and conscious they, well, they couldn't have taken
pills.
They could have thrown themselves off a cliff, but they could certainly have gone out
and screamed at a member of another tribe and gotten themselves killed or ended up looking
good if they won the fight. As we were driving through
Montana, Dave was born in Montana, and as we were driving through, I got the audio tape of
a book called The River Runs Through It, which is a very beautiful book. It's a sort of poetic
depiction of this relationship between a guy and his younger brother. And if you haven't ever read it, Chris, it's one of the most beautifully written English books
in English literature.
And it was recommended to me by the department chair
of the University of Chicago, who said he had a colleague,
who never did anything, his whole life.
And they thought, maybe we shouldn't have given him tenure.
And then he wrote this book.
And this guy said, this old professor said,
it should have won the Pulitzer Prize,
except that it came out the year of roots,
but it's a beautiful depiction.
And I remember it was a beautiful depiction
of the nature and of fly fishing,
but a lot of it involves, these are guys in the 1930s,
going out into bars, getting plastered drunk
out of their mind and getting into fist fights and you know going out into the wilderness and doing crazy shit, you know
and you know the brother who ends up dead in the end
does have a what we would call a suicidal
tendency to it isn't like he's thinking of ending his own life purposely
but he's certainly putting himself in situations where he's either going to look really good or he's going to die, you know. And it's a true story, in fact, in the
end, he gets murdered by some people who he probably pissed off.
Well, I mean, the equivalent ancestry wouldn't have been death by enemies or death by cop.
It might have been death by lion or something death by goreng from some
exactly. It could be death by, you know, fighting other tribes. It could also be death by
challenging people in your tribe, you know. And so, although that probably would have been
less likely to end in actual death, but, um, but yeah.
Talk to that by cop. That's a nice association, Chris, when you say that,
because I actually think that that's a good, that's a nice way of capturing what I was just talking
about, I think that a death by cop is probably some macho guy. There's probably an out of women
who die by cop, but it's probably a lot of young guys with a lot of tests to austro that decide
they're going to show
people how tough they are.
That's the thing that you see as well, right?
Over time testosterone decreases with a decrease in testosterone, less risk taking behavior.
When men get into relationships, testosterone drops, when they get married, it drops,
when they have kids, it drops again, because the guy that continues to take tons of risks
and gets death by lion is of little use
to the three children that he's just brought into the world
or the wife that's waiting back at the cave for him.
Right, yeah.
The math changes for what?
So this, like going back to this sort of like pyramid of motives,
like this is part of why I sort of always
and like a little hesitant to even call it a pyramid
because it's like you've got, you know, protection,
friendship, needs, mating mating taking care of kin. That math is constantly changing right
you have kids and then suddenly it makes less sense for you to run out and go do something super risky
when instead if there's a way for you to just sort of
find a little bit, a little bit of food
will hear and a little bit of food there
and keep your kids alive.
You know, so, and our physiology changes
to sort of accommodate that,
like these testosterone level drops.
So, yeah.
Do you know the, go ahead.
I was just gonna refer to, there's a study that you may know, Chris by
Martin Daly and Margot Wilson. They did a paper on the young male syndrome, and it was about
it was about the
tendency to
like die in homicidal conflicts and what they found is in fact, it's very high for young guys of
mating age and, you know, and in subsequent research, they found it's especially guys
in situations of desperation. Okay, like upper middle class kids who went to college, they
don't go out and do this kind of thing. But if you don't have any other way to prove
that you're, you know, that you're, you've got something special about you, then you take these
desperate acts.
And so in fact, it fits with all of what we've been talking about, that the, that it's
young desperate men that are, in fact, we talked about in the book, there are the people
that you want to watch out for.
And if you're one of them, you kind of want to watch out for yourself. Just how violent a human's evolutionarily.
Compared to what? Like compared to how we are now?
Yeah.
Oh, I mean, I think now is the most peaceful time pretty much in human history, right?
And like, what we have, we have statistics of the murder rates
of do you know those off the top of your dead?
Well, so there's this big debate
because some people like to argue, oh no,
it was, you know, that it's exaggerated.
But I talked to Kim Hill,
who's one of the world's prominent anthropologists
who's done studies of like the Ache,
and what he found in one of his studies
of a South American group, is the homicide rate was like 40, 50 percent. And the people came in
and said, oh, no, that's only because they got killed by the Spanish agricultural people around.
But I went and re-looked at his data when you took out the murders by the non-native groups.
out the murders by the non-native groups. It was still a 25 or 30 percent homicide rate. And so that's a high. But even amongst the Eskimos and the Bushmen, Stephen Pinkert talks
about this and a couple of his books, but particularly the one, the better angels of our nature,
where he compares all of the known data on violence in, you know, in hunter-gatherer groups,
and the least violent hunter-gatherer groups,
the Bushmen and another group whose name I'm forgetting,
their homicide rates were about similar
to the city of New Orleans,
which is the most violent city in the United States,
which is the most violent,
developed country in the world. And so it was,
yeah, it was dangerous. Why is it then that we feel so unsafe day to day if the world
is objectively safer than ever before? I'll let you take that. Well, part of it is, I mean, it's advantageous to feel unsafe, right?
There's an advantage to just looking for threats and to being hyper aware of threats.
And there hasn't been enough time evolutionarily for that to go away, right?
Because you don't want to miss a threat. And, and then beyond that, there are these sort of because we don't want to miss a threat.
You know, I think you can certainly see with news and things like that.
There are things that command that attention for profit or for views or whatever.
And so we still, we hear about probably more murder,
well certainly more murders because we hear about more murders
than our ancestors would hear about people, right?
So we're constantly aware of things like,
you know, like, I mean, the war in the Ukraine,
which is a very serious thing,
but it's also very far from me right now,
but I'm paying attention to it, right?
Because I want to know what's happening.
And so I think, so that there's that interplay
between our evolved mechanism and the technology
that taps into it.
So let me just back to the concept of mismatch
that we're designed to look for threats in a world where there
aren't that many people. And even though there were homicides, they weren't every day. But
the news media, capital, we have that powerful mode of the day, which is referring to. I
want to know if there's a threat. And so if I'm even the New York Times, you know, which is the
sort of the liberal media, or if I'm Fox News,
which is the more conservative media in the US, it's like, they're both going to want
to give us some bad news.
They're going to want to talk about threats.
Why?
Because we want to know about it.
We may say, oh, gee, why don't they put more good news?
We don't click on the good news links.
We click on the Ukraine.
We click on, there was a murder in Chicago.
We, you know, it's like I know about murders in Africa, you know, and it's like we would
have never known about murders in the, you know, in distant places.
So it seems like holy crap.
What a dangerous world we live in.
But now I ask the question of,
well, it might be different from you, Chris,
but I doubt it.
Do I know anybody who was murdered?
I do not know a single person.
I grew up in New York City around lots of people.
And I know more people than most of my ancestors ever knew I don't know any I did know people who went to war
Okay, but I don't know anyone who was like murdered in a kind of violent
You know urban or suburbans. Do you know anybody who was murdered either one of you guys? No, not me
I had my my neighbors brother was murdered. I didn't know him personally, but that's the closest I could think of.
So thinking about the fact that we've got this evolutionary mismatch and how do you say,
vestigial negativity bias, perhaps that carries over from our ancestral past, I'm sure that you
guys must have thought about what happens in future. If humans continue,
if we were able to keep around about 2022-ish as the level of environment that we're going to be in
for the next 100,000 years, what sort of changes do you think we would see to the human psyche?
Have you got any idea about what would be adaptive? Obviously, the problem that we have and the reason
I need to keep us at 2022 is that technology is going to move more quickly than
our revolution can catch up with it. But if we were to hold ourselves where we're at now, would that
would the negativity bias come down? Would there be other changes that you might expect to see?
I would think you probably would. There probably be, because imagine it takes resources to, I mean, it definitely takes resources to be on alert, right? And so being
less nervous would have, I think it would have enough of a evolutionary benefit. This
is not really a thing that we've ever, I think, discussed before. But just thinking about it right now, I mean, we would, yeah, we would, we would redirect that part of our
brain to figuring out how to get it more likes and how to, how to program better, probably,
like, it is, it is possible. We'll use the technology to. I actually don't think there's going to be enough of a selection pressure.
Against it.
Because technology changes so quickly, but I do think we could use the technology.
I mean, Dave, you and I have talked about this developing apps, for example, that are
much, much more effective at preventing us from spending too much screen time.
You know, and I know that I personally will turn off my New York times.
They used to give me, you know, they would give me a daily reminders of the news, okay?
And political parties who asking for my money would give me daily reminders of all the dangerous stuff
that the other side is doing out there.
And what I do is I close those apps,
I disconnect from them,
but I think in the future that there maybe we'll be able
to get some executive control,
sort of IA working where I can say,
how much of the shit do I want to hear?
And I don't want to hear about it more than once a week.
And maybe you guys are younger and you
may have a different opinion.
But do you think there might be a market
for that kind of technology?
In my opinion, I think we're going to look back, hoping,
I hope this is the case, that people in about 50 to 100 years
are going to look back on what we do with technology
now or more accurately what technology does to us in the same way as when we can generate
our own meat in a lab, people are going to look at factory farms. I think they're going
to see it as a complete aberration. What on earth were they doing? Look at all of this
wasted time and focus and attention. Look what they did to young girls and their body image, look at the levels of anxiety and self-harm and all of these perverse
incentives that we had. I wonder as well, because one of the constraints that you had around
psychopathy and Machiavellianism was the fact that your group was so small that you could only
get away with a small number of those people per group. I also found out that psychopathy
is actually adaptive on a group level, but not
necessarily on an individual level, because if you're a Viking tribe, it's pretty useful
for you to have a few psychopaths that you can send over to Lindos Farm to go and sack
it, kill everybody, and come back with a ton of gold. But you don't want too many so that
it actually makes the group unstable. My thinking being that because we're no longer as at
the mercy or as visible, and people can bounce around,
you know, the snake oil salesman can go from town to town now, that you may have more incentives,
more adaptive pressures that allow people to take advantage of Machiavellian or psychopathic
traits. So the world is certainly set up, you know, we talk about this in the book, even though automobile, right, does allow for
it makes Machiavellian strategies more effective, right?
And so actually, just to tie this real quickly back to what you're just asking about how we
would evolve, I could see countermeasures to those sorts of things, countermeasures to cheater detection,
becoming more salient.
Also, we've been talking about this sort of, I think, from the perspective of guys being
worried about other guys.
I think for women, there's still a lot of the same sort of threats that they faced, threats
of sort of pregnancy, unwanted unwanted pregnancy and things like this.
Those might be getting worse because of some of this technology. Um, and so those sorts of things,
I feel like those countermeasures are going to, we're going to become more and more
aware of, wait, is this person, is this person going to rip me off? Not necessarily, they're going to beat me up,
but they're going to convince me to engage in a pyramid scheme or something like this. Or,
is this person who is approaching me as a potential mate, are they really trustworthy?
So I think those sorts of risks
are possibly even higher than they've ever been.
But I think that's more like cultural evolution
than biological evolution, in some sense.
So I know growing up in New York City,
I learned not to trust strangers in a way that,
you know, my mother-in-law, who grew up in a little
town in Delaware, when she moved out to Arizona, she would leave her doors unlocked, she
would leave her keys in her car.
My car got stolen from her parking lot. But for me, it was very easy for me
to be suspicious because I had grown up around strangers.
And so some of it might simply be that we pick it up.
We basically use those old mechanisms
and just set them to a lower threshold than we would have.
And that may continue. What did you learn about how friendships work?
In the book, okay, yes. So...
I'm going to just jump in here because I think one of the things sort of thinking
about how friendships work in the ancestral world is they're very goal-oriented, right?
This sort of affiliation motive is it can be designed, it can be based on sort of not
quite altruism, but like, kin care and like care of people around you, like sharing food,
but it can also be based on teaming up to either take down
a man at this sort of the classic idea.
And so that is the thing that in modern days,
we have a lot of competitive activities.
And some of those are sort of team-based, right, sports, right? If you're
playing sports, you are still with your team against the other team. But one of the things
we sort of discuss a lot is this idea that working together, working together is a good
way of matching that. That's what our ancestors used to do, right? It's like, instead of getting
together to play board games, you get together to build a hut.
And so.
Or to fish.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah.
And so that I think is something that we,
you know, it's kind of fun writing this book
because it's like you think a lot of this stuff
would come automatically, right?
But I don't think it did because our ancestors
didn't need to think about it.
They would wake up in the morning and that their cousins would say, we're going fishing today
and you're coming.
That doesn't happen.
So in the modern world, I think sometimes when we think about making friends, we think,
all I have to do is just go talk to people and then I'll, but in reality, I think we do
have to do something significant
with them, you know, like it's much easier to maintain friendships when you have common
goals to accomplish.
And yeah, and we're skipping the biggest difference in recent modern times, which is these
days friendships are often virtual, right?
Which was obviously never the case. And there's data showing that spending more time online
like actually makes people less happy
versus spending time in person.
So one of the most simple things is just
you need to be hanging out with real people in real life.
So.
I certainly think that for men, bonding through shared efforts seems to deepen friendships
in a pretty profound way.
I had a guy called Max Dickens, who's just written a book called Billy No Mates about why
men have a difficulty with friendships at the moment.
And he seemed to come across the same conclusion, which is that women are really good at maintaining friendships
over time, men's friendships peak around about 18,
the maximum amount of time that they spend socially,
and then that just get frited away and frited away.
And one of the reasons is that men need to see other men
making effort, not only for them, but with them.
You know, they need to be contributing.
And that kind of makes sense.
I think about what the friendships would be
ancestrally.
The men would go out, they would hunt,
they would do something hard together,
they would bond over the fact that they were doing
the hard thing together, but they wouldn't get quite
as attached as a woman would to her friends,
because that guy that you're out hunting with might get killed.
You're out on a hunt.
It's pretty likely that they're gonna, it's certainly more guy that you're out hunting with might get killed. You're out on a hunt, it's pretty likely that they're going to, it's certainly more likely
that they're going to die than one of the other mothers that's back in the cave.
So I think it's called, is it alloparenting where you kind of do shed, shed care of children
and stuff like that?
Yeah, I think even on top of the guys dying, there are other aspects of female friendship.
There's sort of like an information economy, you know, that like in female friendships
where knowing somebody, they can help you, they can help you assess potential mates, right?
They can help you raise kids as you're saying.
And so I think it could also be partly for guys, the skill set to get somebody to come and help you, right?
If you see a guy who can throw a spear
and you're like, hey, you can throw a spear,
I can throw a rock.
Let's go hunt a thing.
Whereas if you want somebody to say,
hey, can I trust you to tell me who else I can trust around here
knowing them for a long time really adds value to that.
So back then.
What about dominance?
You looked at the difference between dominance
and prestige when it refers to being effective
at getting ahead and becoming statusful in life.
What did you learn there?
Well, so people like prestigious leaders, right?
Dominant leaders are, they're appealing like
if you're thinking about going to war. But if you're
thinking about just working together as a group, people prefer prestigious leaders. People also
often, when they conceptualize their ideal boss, will prefer a female leader. And so it really depends on the situation at hand.
But often, if you're talking about getting along
or a thing where resources are gonna be shared,
a workplace environment, things like that, prestige,
which is the idea that they can teach you skills
and help guide you is pretty key.
Yeah, let me just expand on what you just said.
Let's define those terms.
A prestige leader is someone who, as Dave just said, it's somebody, there was a paper by
Joe Henrick and Francisco Gil White that made this distinction and said that as far as
they could tell, at least among chimpanzees and most other mammals, the top of the status hierarchy
is occupied by an aggressive, competitive individual who you won't mess with. You don't
want to go near them because they'll bite your head off, you know. And we do have that.
We have that kind of, you know,
adopt the tough school yard bully type of thing
in human beings as well.
And that individual, if they wanna take something from you,
you know, they're in a better position to do that.
They're the big tough bully.
And a lot of times, for a long time,
people would read evolutionary literature like chimpanzee
politics.
There was the head of the Newt Gingrich.
He used to give it to incoming Republican representatives and say, this is the way it
is, man.
It's all about blood, you know, and take what you can.
Don't give, don't give, and bond together to kick ass on anybody who gets
in your way.
That's one view of things.
It may be why the American Congress doesn't do so well.
I'm getting anything done.
Another thing that's unique to humans is that we share information with one another. And so a prestigious leader is someone who is given status
because we want them to be in the decision making.
We want them to be at driving the car
because they've got the skills.
And you get prestige if you deliver goods
and if you can train other people.
And so that's just to kind of clarify
that distinction. And so as Dave was saying, the research evidence suggests that we do
like the bullies as leaders if we're about to go to war. And that's Mark Van Vook to
did a lot of that research. He said the Veef Free University and Amsterdam.
But we've done a lot of research here and a number of people
who've like Hendricks colleagues and John Maynard have done research,
suggesting that we really do like Prestigious leaders.
If I'm going to work for you, if you're going to be in my boss,
I don't want you to be the
big bully.
I want you to be somebody I can get close to who can take me and show me the ropes and
how to get things accomplished and can lead me in a direction I'll trust.
So our preference for leaders responds to the local demands of whatever situation or
ecology or environment we're in.
Yeah, and most of the time in the modern world, we're not at war.
And if you're running a corporation, I think it's probably better not to think of yourself as
a dominant alpha male, chimp, but to think of yourself as a prestigious human being. Who was that guy that ended up in a ton of different marriages?
Giovanni, to the real deal.
Yeah.
Oh, yes.
And this was before dating apps, right?
But he just would do this.
He had a car.
And so he would go from town to town.
And he met women at things like antique shows and would sort
of get them to fall in love with him and also get them to lend or give him their assets,
their car, their bank accounts and went around and did this to over a hundred women was married to them.
I think and was like stealing their stuff.
Oh, so right.
This was the ultimate sort of like Machiavellian dating strategy, right?
Oh, so which could not have happened in the ancestral environment because you would have had
some brothers hunting you down and killing you.
But he was able to drive to another state and start again.
How much evolutionary evidence do you think there is for humans feeling love and thinking about love in the way that we conceive it now in the modern world?
So the myth and my field of psychology used to be, well, in the social sciences, used
to be that love was something that was invented in the Middle Ages, and it's like about romantic
love and chivalry and so forth, and before that love didn't exist, that turns out to
be BS, there's an anthropologist, Jan Koviak,
and Fisher, they did a study,
what they actually did, a meta analysis sort of a thing
where they got a whole,
they looked at all the societies they could find,
and they were anthropologists,
they looked at the anthropological reports,
and looked at, are there ever powerful bonds
between romantic partners in this society?
And what they found is that,
and I'm gonna make this number up,
but in the say 120 that they could look at,
they found that the answer was definitely yes
and 110 of them,
and we don't really know in the other 10.
And so they guessed that powerful bonds
are something that happened even in hunter-gatherers.
And so there, I would argue that they are part of human nature, the bond between
lovers. What's the difference between strong pair bonding and love?
Is it just a semantic difference? That's what I mean. Yeah. I agree. It's just the words
That's what I mean. Yeah. That's what I would say. Yeah. I agree. It's just the words we're using. Yeah. I mean, I think love is a sort of common term that we use that is primarily used for sort
of pair bonding and then also sort of parental familial love. But there is that distinction.
No, I'm actually just agreeing with you.
There is, there's actually studies that have been done where they ask people to think of
someone you're in love with.
And they do think of people in two categories.
They think of romantic partners.
And for that kind of love, they talk about feeling passion and arousal and longing. And then they talk about familial love or, you know,
affiliates of love. And then there they just talk about bonding and being close. So there are two,
those are two different ways we use the word love. But I think what you refer to Chris was
romantic love. It's that passionate. It also, it also sometimes I think is used to refer to that
sort of initial feeling of euphoria at a sort of early stage of a relationship. Oh, and so,
which whereas pair bonding includes that, but also includes the sort of longer term.
the sort of longer term. Well, yeah, I remember, I remember hearing Jonathan Hyte talk about passionate love and
companion love as being to like a life cycle that you go through.
Well, yes, romantic relationships do shift to those companion relationships.
So we have, we have the companion at love with our family members, where we never felt any passion
for them, okay?
But romantic, as Dave just pointed out, romance tends to peak at the beginning of a relationship
and you really wouldn't want to go on for years with this pounding of heart and sweating
palms and anticipation every time you see
your wife, okay, because you die of a heart attack, you know.
And so, turns out that in fact it does go away and get replaced with that more kind of familial,
you know, what you might call brotherly love, you know.
Just this is a person who's my mate in the sense that you years the term before as a friend.
Doug, did you do some work on the relationship between dominance and attraction at some
point?
Yes, many, many years ago, it was one of the, one of the first studies that was published
in our major journal, the Journal of Personality and Social Psych, from an evolutionary perspective.
And it took us 10 years to get it published because people didn't like the idea of comparing
us to other animals.
With Ed Siddhala, did some research where we actually just, we had been, you know,
Ed had been reading sociobiology and I'd been reading a book by Jane Lancaster called
Primate Behavior in the Emergency of Human Culture.
We thought, well, let's start to apply this to humans.
And so we did some, what we're now seeing, very simple studies where we showed people,
potential partners who were either dominant in the sense of they'd go into an office,
they'd sit up, right, they'd lean in towards the person in the desk, or they sit neatly over in the corner.
And we did a number of ways.
We had, sometimes we had a psychologist
described you as dominance.
And what we found in all of those studies
is that for women judging men, they judge the guy as sexier
when he was dominant, not when he was
domineering incidentally, not when he was pushy and aggressive,
you know, and nasty kind of dominant, but when he was confident and, you know, that kind of dominant,
you know, men didn't care one way or the other. They asked the question of, what's he attractive?
I don't know if you know the study by John Marshall Townsend, I think his name is he, he did a study where he brought people into the lab and showed them potential, I think maybe it
was like a simulated dating study and I'm not exactly sure the context, but you would
look at a photograph of if you're a man
you would look at a picture of a woman who either looked gorgeous or who looked average and she
was either wearing a Burger King server's outfit okay or she was wearing a you, dress to the Nines Wall Street, you know, fancy suit and, you know, Rolex
watch the female guy, or the guy, same thing.
You see a guy and he either looked like a movie star, or he looked like a dorky guy, but
he'd be dressed for Wall Street or for the Burger King server.
And it turns out that the, when people were asked, would you want
to date this person or have, you know, amorous relationships with this person? For women, it
mattered. They would actually prefer to date the dorky looking guy and the Wall Street clothes to the handsome guy who was working
in Burger King. For men, they didn't care what, you know, if she was good looking, they
preferred the good looking woman who worked for Burger King to the less attractive woman
who was stressed to the nines.
Something else that I learned in Seth's book was about the difference in mate value and perceived mate value of men by women based on the amount of money that they earned related
to the job and the type of job that they had.
And what a lot of the time men say that because women are hypergamous and they're resource-seeking
creatures that it's hard because I need to climb up the corporate ladder
and I need to get myself to $160,000 a year
before anyone who's gonna look at me.
And the data doesn't seem to suggest that.
What it suggests is that you can actually pivot
from one career into another career
and that women value a cooler job,
a lot more than they value a high-paying job.
In fact, they found that a man who works in hospitality
and was being paid $200,000 a year
would be equally attractive as a fireman who was getting paid $50,000 a year. Wow.
So that's it. Well, the fireman still, that's a protective sort of job, right? That's a
and whereas, I guess hospitality, it's still, there's a way in which it's like you're helping other people.
So for one reason or another, it's just not seen as state as full.
Yeah, so I always remember this example. I think it's in Robert Wright's The Moral Animal,
which is what, like 30 years old now or something, nearly.
Yes, it is. nearly, still spectacular. And he was talking about why do women fall in love
with the starving artist, you know,
the guitar singer that plays acoustic sets on the night
but sleeps on his friend's couch.
And his justification for that was that it's basically
buying a penny stock, that it's a future projection
of potential make value over time.
I think that if you were to look at the fireman and the value not in terms of monetary outcome,
but in terms of status over time, you would think that guy is probably going to accumulate a ton
of goodwill. Everyone's going to be really altruistic toward him. If he saves a cat from a
burning building, that's the people are going to owe him.
Whereas the hospitality industry, that being said, lawyer was the highest rated in terms
of category.
And I don't think that many people see lawyers as being super altruistic creatures either.
But dominant, right?
They, they, they will fight.
So that could be part of it. Um, and so there's that
because both of those have the this person has the ability to protect me, which I think is a
you know, an attractive legally and from a fire. Those are the two ways that women primarily need. But why the rock star?
Why the local rock star?
Because Jeffrey Miller would argue, he wrote a beautiful book
called The Maiden Mine.
I was with Jeffrey in Diana last night.
Oh, where are you?
OK.
So you know about The Maiden Mine then.
And what he would argue there is that in some sense,
if I can show off my brilliant mind,
it indicates that I have good genes.
So even if I don't currently have resources,
if you mate with me,
your kids will be peacocks too.
Your kids will be the human version of a peacock is someone who can speak eloquently or who
can play the guitar and you know, he'll be able to charm women even though he doesn't
have money in the next generation.
I'd be curious if they ever look to see how much more or less attractive a guy is with
a guitar versus being in a band?
Does the ability to sort of put together a band and work as a group seems like it would
add an extra level?
Yeah, maybe, but maybe it dilutes down where the success is coming from.
Perhaps it's less to do with you and perhaps it's more to do with, I don't know,
sort of Machiavellian, I don't know, coordination and stuff like that.
Because by that virtue, maybe the guy that's the agent of the band or the manager of the band
should be the one that's the most important because he's the guy that puts them all together.
And yet he's not.
So yeah, I would be, but you don't see him doing that, right?
Like, when you see the band, I'd be really curious to see whether a single guy,
like a guy up there with a guitar by himself, how he does compared to a guy with a band.
And I would bet on the guy with the band.
Actually, a very good question, Dave.
You could probably talk a couple of the graduates to the right.
And I had a question actually. question they probably talk a couple of the graduates to run that.
Easy word.
I had a question actually.
Why is it that human females go through menopause?
Because I don't think that many other animals or most other
animals do.
Hardly any, hardly any of those.
I heard of one, one citation, in other words, some sort
of a dolphin goes through menopause. That's the only other
species I've ever heard of. The theory is that at some point a woman reaches an age that humans
over time began to become more and more long-lived. And at a certain age, it's more, if a woman, if we live in social groups,
we take care of the members of our group. And if the mother is taking care of her children,
and then her grandchildren, her bearing another child, there's the danger she'll die in child
birth, or the shield die when that child is young.
And so it actually is an economic sense
that our genes making and economic like,
like Dawkins talked about in the self as Jean,
it isn't like that our genes actually make decisions,
but we can think of them as saying click.
Now let's switch to this strategy
where it's better off me being a grandmother than dying in childbirth
or dying while I have a very young child.
And so better to just invest.
I think the reason that it's sort of unique to humans comes from because of our brains
pregnancy is particularly dangerous for moms, right?
Labor labor is dangerous.
And also we just need a lot of,
like, or we benefit a lot
from long-term social support,
more so than most other animals.
So.
The back, we've talked about this,
I think they, but Kim Hill also did some data
where they actually, you know,
Kim Hill and Hillary, Hillary, Hillary
Hillary Kaplan and a number of people have analyzed things like the calories that are brought
in by people over there, lifespan in these kind of horticultural, you know, groups living
sort of close to the ancestral circumstances, living in the jungles of South America.
And they, one of the things that they tell me is that, first of all, the average couple doesn't really
bring in enough calories to care for themselves and their children.
They're so busy taking care of the kid, they can't bring enough calories.
And so they need their relatives to help them out and their neighbors to help them out.
And the average male doesn't bring in enough calories until he's like 20 years old to really to be a guaranteed
source of protein. And so because we're so incredibly dependent in ways that most other animals were so incredibly dependent on that
risk pool group that you know that that's what makes us
The special species in which it pays for the female to
to stop reproducing because she's still in this group, she's still caring for she's
still sharing calories and time and resources on her second generation offspring.
But she's no longer continuing to produce more mouths that need feeding.
Right. Exactly. Right. And she's, yeah, and she's no longer, she's not taking the risk
because if a woman has a kid three years before menopause, right, and she would have died
three years later, that, that young three-old is going to be essentially helpless, right?
So those younger kids, especially the more recent the kid was born compared to menopause,
if there was a risk of death, the better.
Does this mean that menopause would have only emerged after a time when human females
were growing up to be on average older than 40 years old or 45 years old or something like
that?
Would have to.
Would there have to have been selection pressure operating at that age?
Because it's a universal feature of humans. So there would have
had to been some selection pressure. I guess one other theory is there could have been a weird
bottleneck where there was only a small number of human beings and there was a genetic switch
and one of the females, the only one that survived, that would be the other possible theory and it
was an accident. Oh, that is cool.. I guess that could potentially explain a whole bunch of phenomenon that we
can't really come up with an explanation or that there's adaptive explanations that are sometimes
contested. Wasn't there a, there was a period that we got to where there was less than 10,000
homo sapiens on the planet, right? And everybody was in Indonesia or something.
I don't know that, but that's interesting.
If that were true, it would have led to a lot of bottle
meching.
And we might have some unique characteristics
that we don't really have to have.
I mean, it's also possible.
I don't know the anthropological literature on this,
but it's possible that, say, it was a mutation that worked in a small group.
And then it just sort of lived among humans until we got to the point where by and large
women tend to live a past 40, then it suddenly becomes incredibly and
advantageous. And that's when it spreads, right?
That's when it sort of becomes.
That's a good point, then.
That's the way it works.
If it had a cost, then it would have been selected out at some point.
But if it actually had an advantage, that advantage could have been magnified. It's like a latent benefit almost that sort of sat idling away and then becomes significantly
more beneficial at some point. And it's the fortunate timing of both of those things coming together
that you have the genetic mutation perhaps at a time when there's an explosion of that genetic
mutation being advantageous. But I suppose that's what all mutations are at, right?
That's the name of the game. Random variation and selector pretension.
That is evolution.
I mean, it's also, but it's kind of wild to think that that still happens.
You know what I mean?
Like, that these sorts of things, I think, even as we've been to discussing this book of like,
our evolved brains, like, I think it's almost, it's easy to imagine.
Oh, back in the day, everyone had our current brains, and those current brains were perfectly
matched.
And it turns out, well, that wasn't true, because there were other people whose brains
were not matched to then, and they died off.
And then even now, there's so many different variations on sort of human genes out there,
you know, that there are different things that
could, in a relatively short number of generations, become very advantageous.
What was that story about the guys who had brothers that were on the FBI's most wanted list?
Yeah, so that...
Sure, sure. Whitey Bulger, right, and his brother,
and then the Unibomber.
So we talk about these sort of two stories of brothers
with a very similar choice.
And you want to tell us a little bit about it, Dad?
Sure.
So Whitey Bulger was on the FBI's 10 most wanted list.
But his brother was the, he was
the president of the University of Massachusetts, and he was also the president of, he was
a lawyer, law professor, so he was the president of the Massachusetts State Senate for some
period of time, or the state representative, House of Representatives, I have to get
which, but it's a very prestigious, very successful guy. And his brother was a very successful mobster in Boston, killing people.
And the question came when the FBI, they went to a whitey and said,
do you know where your brother is? And he did, but he refused to speak to them.
He lost his job because of it, you know, and it took 20 years for them to find his brother.
And the other one is David Kaczynski, who was a guy who studied English and was, you know,
I don't know if he ever, what he did for a living, was a teacher or something, but he had
a brother who was just brilliant, okay?
Ted Kaczynski was a professor at Berkeley, which is, you know, in the US,
one of the most prestigious universities,
probably in the world, one of the most prestigious universities.
But he kind of cracked up and he went to live in Montana.
I just drove through by there the other day.
It's really beautiful where he chose to live
in Lincoln, Montana.
But he became, he started sending bombs to people who we thought were destroying nature,
you know.
And his brother turned them in.
Right.
And so this was, I think this, I really like this dilemma and these two stories of these,
because these are two,
if you think about each of these guys' brothers, right?
They're in a similar situation
of you're sort of trying to live a law abiding life
and you assuming they both knew.
I mean, I know with Ted Kaczynski,
there was a point where David's wife was like,
I feel like these letters are written
like they were written by your brother, right?
And he's like trying to figure it out.
So, no, no, he's for the first time.
It's a denial.
No, no, that's not my brother.
And he's like, yeah, you know,
and then she found some exact passage.
And so, so then he went and showed it to the FBI.
Yeah, but it's a really interesting question of trade offs,
right, this trade off between sort of getting along
with society and kinoffs, right? This tradeoff between sort of getting along with society and kind of kind of protecting your family.
And the question is Dave, what would you do
if you found out that I'm a mod of unibomber?
Would you?
Which are out would you go?
Well, the answer I think I'd sort of,
I mean, I hate to be like, yeah, I would go
the whitey bulger route.
But there is a sort of feeling of like,
oh, do you work it out internally, right?
Do you keep, is it as a family,
do you keep your family in check rather than
turning to the outside world?
Oh, yeah.
You have a debt to society.
Another interesting case of where our genetic interests
are one thing, and then there's our obligation to society,
which isn't completely independent of our genetic interest,
because if our brother was discovered to be a murderer,
it would hurt our social standing too.
So it isn't like they're completely,
doesn't like genes versus culture. But, you know, in both cases, there's a decision to be made.
What's the best, what's in your best interest and what's in the best interest of the rest of society?
And I think it's a fun question of why did the Unibomors brother turn him in, but why
did Bulger's brother didn't turn him in?
What do you guess on that, Dave?
Well, part of it might be they didn't live in the same place, right?
Like Ted and David Kaczynski, when people move away, those sort of that feeling of being
part of the same tribe gets harder to maintain.
Which is one of the things we actually discussed,
not just so that your family doesn't turn you in for crimes,
but we do sort of talk about there's a lot of benefits to
staying geographically close to your family.
I think that a lot of that comes down to,
you guys help each other out when they're nearby. And so, and I think that that, a lot of that comes down to,
you guys help each other out, right, when they're nearby. So, um,
I wonder as well whether the fact that in the modern world,
status is probably held in higher regard,
but any of the actual physical fallout and consequences
of your brother being the unibomor or whatever,
are less. So previously, you said that there's this sort of cohesion between genetic
interest and environmental interest or community interest. But let's say that your brother
was a dangerous murdering psychopath. If you're in a group of 150 people, he may threaten one of your
children. He may threaten your wife or one of your brothers-in-law or something like that.
He may threaten your wife or one of your brothers-in-law or something like that. That is no longer, that sort of fallout is no longer a concern, but the statusful side
of things is potentially even more of a concern because that is one of the commodities that
we're playing about with now.
Yeah, although I think a lot of times people who are aggressive in nature are still less likely to be aggressive, or at
least murderous to biological relatives. So it actually may be that if you have a
murderous sibling, you, who lives nearby, you reap the benefits, sort of as we're
going back to this idea of sort of having a dominant person on your
team, there may be some advantages to having an aggressive person. Is there not a potential risk
here that most murders of partners are committed by the first place that they look is the spouse?
I wonder whether you would be safe, but you're immediate, non-biological to them, but biological to you.
Genetic relatives maybe. Yeah, no. Again, back to Martin Daly and Margot Wilson, who I mentioned
before, they wrote a book called Homicide. And one of the the counter, people always used to say,
oh, well, if genes are the thing, why is it that people always kill their relatives? And what it turns out is that they don't kill their relatives, they kill their spouses,
okay?
And they kill people who they live with who are not related to them, but they hard, even
though their relatives pissed them off more than anybody else, you know, we're doing some
research now, which indicates that people are more likely to get hit and even hurt by their brothers
and sisters as they're growing up, but they don't kill one another.
They almost never, despite the opportunities and despite the annoyances, killings between
siblings are so rare as to be, you know, an anomaly when they do.
What about, what about like in laws are,
because I know killing's between step parents
and kids are less rare, right?
But I've never actually heard this question
of do people kill their brother-in-law or not?
Yeah, I don't know, that's a good,
I bet you Martin Deli knows the answer.
My prediction is yes, that's a dangerous position to be in.
If you're in a house, if a child's in a house with a parent that is non-biological,
there's 100 times risk that that child is going to be killed.
I think that that shows just how hard it is to raise a kid, and the fact of the matter
is that a lot of the reason that you put up with raising them is because they're yours.
Exactly.
Right.
So rounding all of this out, you guys come up with an evolutionary justification
for being kind, which given some of the areas that we've gone into today might seem a verse
to part of our nature. What, give me the evolutionary justification for being kind?
Well, I think the justification is that it will help you solve your, it will help you meet your evolved needs in the modern world.
And one of the ways that I think that we're immediately mismatched is often, our selfish
desires ring really loudly, right, in our heads. And we don't really necessarily need people out there saying, oh, you should really look out for yourself, right?
Like we'll generally do that. There are a lot of ways that by helping other people meet these needs, you really benefit.
And this is a thing that was true in the ancestral kingdom.
You know, we've talked about this with status, you know, one of the things I think people
see all the time these days is status is how big your boat and your house are.
But really those are signs of status that generally in a system that works, those
will come from your contributions to the group, right?
And that is what, even when you think about animal kingdoms, when we've talked about
like a dominant, like eight or something, they still can contribute.
They still can protect the other members of the group. They can still, you know, and so by thinking about how you can help the other members of
your group and the people around you achieve their fundamental motives, that turns out to be
a really good way to achieve yours. Right. I mean, we're not saying to be totally on selfish.
That's an important fact. I was just
relistening to the book, The Selfish Gene.
And one of the things, and Dawkins had a 25th
anniversary edition in which he defended himself and said,
you know, I didn't say that selfish genes
produce selfish people, selfishness itself,
is not a good thing in a whole human being.
It's, but it's, it's there in our genes,
but our genes may instruct us to be cooperative
in order to promote their survival.
And in fact, if you're living in a social group,
there's reasons to be nice to other people,
and it's sometimes sometimes it is hard.
The reason, part of the reason we put that in there
is that when Dave's younger brother was 10 years old,
I asked a bunch of my colleagues, some of whom
are famous biologists and positive psychologists.
And I asked them, if you had one piece of advice
for a 10-year-old kid, what would it be?
And none of them said, even though they're biologists,
they know the theory of evolution.
They didn't say, go out and conquer,
and do the best for your genes.
Find them, feel them, and forget them,
and I'll skip the third F in there.
And none of them said that.
All of these people who are very successful,
they said, most commonly, be nice to other people.
Yeah. And my colleague, Mark Schaller, said it best. He said, look, you know, being nice to
other people is actually in some level being nice to yourself because if you're nice to other
people, they'll trust you. They'll be your friends. They'll give you things. And so in some sense,
it's the best way
to be nice to yourself.
So I do want to just sort of qualify one last thing,
because we keep using the word nice.
And I think throughout the book,
because there's ways that you can be nice
that allow you to be taken advantage of, right?
And I actually think the word that I would use,
instead of nice, is helpful, right?
Like if you find ways to be,
so it's not always like, you don't wanna agree
with every bad idea somebody suggests to you
because that's a way you could be nice
that's not necessarily gonna help you or help them.
But consciously thinking about how to be sort of useful
to your friends, useful to your co-workers,
useful to your partners, useful to your family, that, I think, is the key.
Doug and Dave, ladies and gentlemen, if people want to check out the work that you do and
keep up to date with stuff, where should they go?
I'll read the book.
I would say, based upon what Dave just said, buy a copy of the book for your sons or your
fathers or your brothers or your mothers.
Yeah, I think that would be great.
And we would appreciate people buying it, solving problems with the Stone Age brain, solving
modern problems with the Stone Age Brain.
So.
Gentlemen, I appreciate you.
Thank you for the day.
Good talking to you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
you