StarTalk Radio - Extended Classic: Cosmic Queries - The Science of Love
Episode Date: June 23, 2017What’s love got to do with it? Neil Tyson, co-host Chuck Nice, and Dr. Helen Fisher answer your Cosmic Queries on the science of love. Now extended with Neil, Chuck, and Natalia Reagan discussing In...ternational Transgender Day of Visibility, sexuality, and more!NOTE: StarTalk All-Access subscribers can watch or listen to this entire episode commercial-free. Find out more at https://www.startalkradio.net/startalk-all-access/ Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week early.
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist.
And this is StarTalk.
This is a special edition of StarTalk.
It's our Valentine's Day edition.
Yes.
Yeah, we're going to talk about love.
Oh, yes.
No, no.
Live.
Love.
L-U-U-U-V.
And I know we could probably handle that our own, but we bring in some expertise.
And we're going to bring in Helen Fisher.
She's been on StarTalk before.
And the new book, Anatomy of Love.
The Anatomy of Love.
And what color is it?
It's red.
Well, not mine.
A red cover.
Helen Fisher, you're like the world's expert on love, marriage, relationships.
You work for the Kinsey?
I'm at the Kinsey Institute.
The Kinsey Institute.
This is the famous Kinsey.
This is the famous Kinsey who really studied love.
He did.
It was very good.
Way before everybody else did, he did.
Excellent.
Excellent.
And in this edition, this is-
But sex.
He actually studied a lot of sex more than he did love.
We really broke into studying love.
I mean, people really thought this was part of the supernatural, part of the stars.
But what's love got to do with it?
Exactly.
Everything.
People pine for it, liver it, kill for it, and die for it.
It's one of the most powerful brain systems on earth.
Is that love or sex we're talking about?
I know.
It's what you just said, everybody.
It's sex.
We agree.
We agree that happens for sex. I don't think if you ask somebody to go to bed with you and they say no thank you you
don't kill yourself but around the world speak for yourself helen people kill rejection well
yeah nobody takes rejection well and nobody gets out of love alive no you know we all
as a matter of fact it's an addiction you know a very powerfully wonderful addiction when it's
going well and a perfectly horrible addiction when it's going poorly.
But anyway, you know, you say, is it a sex or is it love?
I've mentioned this to you before.
I think we've evolved three distinctly different brain systems for mating and reproduction.
One is a sex drive.
One is feelings of intense romantic love.
And the third is feelings of deep attachment.
And I think people go—
I got one out of three.
Not bad.
Not bad.
Jesus, now.
All right.
One out of three.
Not bad.
Not bad.
Jesus, now.
All right.
So for this edition of StarTalk, we're soliciting questions from our fan base through our various media platforms. And they're all about sort of Valentine's Day and love.
Yes.
And all that goes with it.
Yes.
I have one love anecdote just to start off with.
I have one live anecdote just to start off with.
So in the medical community, there is a disease of lovemaking, which is collectively called venereal diseases.
And that is actually named after Venus.
Really?
The goddess of love.
So the genitive form of Venus is Venera.
Right.
And in fact, the Russian space missions to Venus were all called Venera. Venera 1, Venera 2,
Venera 3. The medical doctors
said, oh, here's a disease peculiar to
lovemaking and love and beauty and all that go
with it. Let's name it after Venus. So they
called them venereal diseases. Then we astronomers
came along and said, we need a name
of an alien who might be
from Venus. We're not going to call them
venereals now.
The word is taken.
Exactly.
We had to invent a non-legitimate word.
And so you're Venusian if you're from Venus.
But technically, you should be venereal.
Venereal.
Oh, okay.
When the venereals come.
Great.
Say I'm a Venusian.
Say you're Venusian.
Get a little further in the social ladder. The cool thing about that is doctors gave us the term for VD, which actually is the
same Valentine's Day as VD as well.
Ooh.
Ooh.
Ouch.
Think about it.
Ouch.
Valentine's Day, venereal disease.
Ouch.
Wait a minute.
There's good prices for this Valentine's Day.
We're all fine.
Okay.
We're just laying the landscape here. I'm just saying it's never been a good day for me. No, me neither. Okay, we're just laying the landscape.
I'm just saying, it's never been a good day for me.
No, me neither. I'm always working on that day.
So Chuck, you got some questions.
None of us have seen them, and Helen is here to,
you know, I'm just here to direct them to Helen,
because I don't know what the hell do I know.
Yeah, these are our cosmic queries, of course,
like you said. Cosmic queries.
Taken from all over the
internet. So let's start off with Chris Reed coming to us from Twitter.
CD Reed is his handle.
Evolution is about the natural selection of traits.
How has love evolved and what traits were left behind?
So that's a really good question.
I know.
Yeah, that's a really good question.
And I wonder if I can add to that.
Yeah.
Yeah, that's a really good question. And I wonder if I can add to that.
Yeah.
If, you know, we think of love as distinctly human, but does this preclude other animals, especially other mammals, from having the same sentiment?
And why else would we say, oh, look at the love birds?
Right.
It would analogize our love to what we know are two birds.
So there's three questions really on the table.
And let me start with the evolution of it and the brain.
You know, I put people in brain scanners and study the brain circuitry of romantic love.
That's what scares me about you.
Well, I wouldn't say, you know.
Talk about your foreplay.
Put your mate in the brain scanner.
See if he really does love you.
Girl, go ahead and get in that brain scanner.
That's how we start this off tonight.
Get in the brain scanner.
That's what we're doing.
You know, you can know every ingredient
in a piece of chocolate cake, and then when you
sit down and eat that cake, you feel that joy.
In the same way, I can know everything you can
know about love and still make the
same mistakes everybody else can.
Just to be clear, to guys, chocolate cake is really just chocolate cake.
I'm sorry.
It's just chocolate cake.
It's just a brain system. It came from other
mammals. It came from other birds.
All kinds of animals feel attraction to certain creatures and not attraction to others.
You know, too old, too young, too feathers out of order.
Too anything.
Antlers too big, too little, et cetera, et cetera.
You don't want that.
Oh, God, I know that part.
So the bottom line is we did evolve.
Get your antlers out of this.
Sorry.
I want to see your antlers. Show Get your antlers out of this.
I want to see your antlers.
Show me your antlers.
Anyway, the bottom line is this brain system came out of nature.
So long before mankind came down out of the trees, began to stand up on two feet,
began to need to form pair bonds to rear their young,
and the brain circuitry for romantic love began to evolve in order to make us focus on one particular individual and start the mating process.
But you can see that in other mammals, particularly ones that form pair bonds.
You know, you'll see an immediate attraction of one animal for another and, you know, they're
going for it.
In fact, this is the evolution of love at first sight.
Is it attraction or is it just they want to mate?
How do you distinguish the two?
Did you ask them?
There's actually academic studies that when a female chimpanzee, for example, is in heat and in estrus,
she'll copulate with actually almost all of the males, but there's some she won't copulate with,
and it's because she doesn't like them.
Because he's a real a-hole, that guy.
The bottom line is these are different systems, and just the sex drive will get you out there looking,
but then it's romantic love or attraction in other animals
or magnetism, animal magnetism,
that enables you to sift between all these other animals
and focus on the one that works for you.
It's one thing if they don't sleep with you
because they're sleeping with only one other person,
but they're sleeping with everybody and not you?
That's bad.
I don't know.
It's all bad.
Didn't they just find out that the reason the pandas that they had wherever in San Francisco that they've been trying to mate,
that the reason they didn't mate was because the female didn't like the male?
There you go.
Yeah.
You just assume.
You put the man.
That is a really important point.
Yeah.
Because no animal on this planet will copulate with anything that comes along.
They all have preferences.
And we evolved that system for preferences.
And then, of course, when we began to stand up on two legs, females began to have to carry their
babies in their arms instead of on their backs. They began to need someone to help them out
at least while they raised the child through infancy. And so this brain circuitry for animal
attraction evolved into what we call today romantic love.
Is there anything that was left behind like the questioner asked?
Oh, that's a beautiful question. Nobody's ever asked me. Sure the ability to share. We're not an animal that shares very well. We're a jealous
animal. Wow. You know I mean I was talking last night to some people who are polyamorous
but and and they really have to work very hard to keep their. Which means several partners? These
people actually believe that you you can have several partners. Swingers, baby! Swingers are the sex, they're
swinging for sex. Polyamorous are romantic. So they want to keep their deep attachment to one
partner and then have a lot of romances on the side. And they say they can overcome this jealousy
and the, you know, the self-deception and all, but they can't. They work very hard on it.
But the bottom line is, no, we're not a good animal.
We don't share well.
And of course, we're also cheaters.
I mean, it's an example.
So in the Mormon tradition of multiple wives for the men,
then you're saying there might be an evolutionary force that makes that not stable?
Because they've been doing it for a hundred something years.
You know, 86% of world cultures permit a man to have several wives.
But actually... I was born in the wrong place.
I don't know.
It can be a toothache.
I can tell you that.
It can be a real panic.
I think I told you last time I knew a man in Highlands of New Guinea who had three wives.
And when I asked him how many he wanted, he said none.
Yeah, there you go.
Be careful what you wish for.
Because it can be a toothache, yeah.
Plus, as I understand it, historically, in particular the Middle East, as I've come to
understand it, that was initially put forth as protection for women so that if you actually
got romantically involved with a woman, you had to then take care of her.
Exactly.
And so it was a matter of accountability for who you were.
It was also ecological reasons. But, you know, most societies permit a man to have several wives,
but only about five to 10% of men in almost all cultures actually have several wives,
because you got to have a lot of money, a lot of cows, a lot of sheep, a lot of education,
something to get to women to share you. So are there any cultures where a woman has multiple husbands?
Only very few.
Among the very rich of southern Alaska, traditionally, these people lived in these archipelagos, and
the men went out fishing every...
To be the native peoples of Alaska, not the...
Native peoples of Alaska, yes.
And a woman...
Not Sarah Palin.
Oh, I have four husbands, you betcha.
You betcha.
But it's very impractical from a Darwinian perspective because, you know, if a woman is sharing several men, you know, she can't have a baby every nine months.
Whereas if a man has several wives, he could have a lot of babies simultaneously.
He can have four babies at one time.
At one time.
Or more. But the problem with polygyny, poly meaning many, gyny meaning women,
is that the women fight.
Sometimes they try to poison each other's children.
Not my problem.
Yeah, that's right.
Keep it that way.
I'm the husband.
I'm the dad.
You guys do your thing.
Don't come bother me with your petty squabbles.
To bond is human.
We're a pair-bonding animal.
But we're also an animal that cheats.
And we seem to do both.
And I think one of the great 21st century issues is to what degree do we want intimacy with one individual and what degree do we want autonomy?
That great balance between the two is something we all have to wrestle with.
What intrigues me is how we cherry-pick the animal kingdom to use as examples of how we want to
behave so we'll say oh an eagle will mate for life swans they'll mate for life okay well but
how about the what's the one that just has sex as often as it can with as many other uh all of them
all the rest of them all the rest of them even e the rest of them. Even eagles. Even eagles.
Even swans.
We have not found a completely...
The naked mole rat.
The naked mole rat has two subspecies.
One of them mates for life.
The other is just whores.
Just as they whore themselves out.
Same thing with...
It's the prairie vole.
Yeah.
Prairie vole.
Sorry.
Maybe that's what I meant.
Not the naked mole rat.
And some of them...
And we know the genes of that.
The genetics of that.
And then you take one of the genes from one of those prairie voles that does mate for life
and put them in a non-parabonding mouse or something, and it'll start to form a parabond, too.
So there is biology to feelings of attachment, yes.
Well, they put the attachment gene in the ones that were not always reattached.
But how about the wandering gene? Does that make them wander?
We haven't really found a wandering gene. We found genes in which you attach less.
There's one gene in which if you have no copies of that gene,
you're the most among men, actually.
It's a study of men.
The least promiscuous?
The least promiscuous.
One gene, they're going to be more promiscuous,
and two genes that are going to be the most.
Actually, not promiscuous, but in unstable relationships
that are going to lead to promiscuity.
So we're finding something. But you know what? That's your promiscuity coefficient but unstable relationships that are going to lead to promiscuity. So we're finding something.
But you know what?
That's your promiscuity coefficient.
Yes.
That should come out in the speed dating rounds, right?
What is your...
But you know what?
It's important.
Even though we have predispositions, you can say no to them, you know, because, you know...
Because we live in civilization.
That's why.
Yeah, you can, you know, people can be, quit their bad That's why. Yeah. You know, people can quit their bad habits.
Yeah.
And then some of it is called age for men as well.
Yeah.
But just to be clear, they're not habits if we're genetically predisposed.
So you can overcome a genetic predisposition because we live in civilization where certain conduct is necessary.
Very well said.
And then you just get too old.
It's amazing how many people don't, though.
I mean, I've looked at adultery in 42 societies, and you find it even in places where you can
get your head chopped off.
Right.
It's not even adultery.
There's murder.
There are things, there's transgressions of a society.
Well, that's, I mean, I think that most of our crimes of passion come because people
have been, they've lost a true love.
They've lost, from a Darwinian perspective, they've lost a true love they've lost from a darwinian
perspective they've lost life's greatest prize which is a mating partner wow yeah they need to
rethink some things that's what i'm saying you got another you got another let's move on that
was fascinating stuff man all right let's get down to here's one from the teen poet okay coming to us
from twitter that's a twitter handle it's a Twitter handle. That's a Twitter handle.
At The Teen Poet 322 wants to know,
is human love more than chemical reactions as in Interstellar's unrealistic ending?
Well, thanks for the critique inside the question.
Just in case people missed that moment in Interstellar
where Anne Hathaway's character says maybe, I'm paraphrasing, you know, love is something that transcends even dimensions.
Right.
Oh, wow.
It's love that they're using to communicate with us through basically space and time.
Yeah, through the space-time continuum.
Through the space-time continuum.
Love is the language that transcends the space-time continuum.
So if I can tighten the question, how much of your research tells us that love is just electrochemical in your brain and it's nothing more or less than that?
Well, bottom line is everything is electrical and chemical in your brain.
I mean, everything, think of anything, do anything, feel anything, any kind of drive, thirst, hunger, all of them.
Chuck, it doesn't permeate the fabric of the space-time continuum.
And now my heart is broken.
And then we make a whole lot of things out of it.
And we make beautiful things.
I mean, all of the love poetry from around the world.
I mean, our plays, our poems, our novels, our sitcoms, our ballets, our operas, our theater, our myths, our legends.
I mean, the world is cluttered.
Don't forget porn.
Don't forget porn.
That was conspicuously absent from that list.
We got it in there.
Chuck, thank you.
But why isn't that just the spectrum of human emotion of which love is one?
It's actually a drive.
So is hate.
Hate is as big a drive as love.
No question about it.
In fact, they're not even the opposites.
The opposite of love is indifference.
That's deep.
Look at that.
That's deep.
In fact, you can hate and love somebody at the same time.
Oh, now that explains my parents.
Absolutely.
Wow.
That way you get the frenemy.
The frenemy.
Right.
Yeah.
I had a wonderful girlfriend who said of her husband, it was a wonderful marriage, but
she said, you know what?
Sometimes I hate him, but I always love him.
And so these are different brain systems and you can flop from one
to the other it's indifference that's when you are killed when you've killed
the passion but you know what it's a drive this is not even an emotion it
comes emanates from bring a little factory in the base of the brain that is
lies right next to the brain regions that orchestrate thirst and hunger
because this is so essential to survival and it has been for so long because
if you don't have babies you don't form a pair bond you don't pass your dna on to it is that's
the end of your line so it's just it's basically uh the second greatest driving force in in in our
in our being which the first is gotta eat yeah you know eating makes you live another day. You know, having sex will make you live genetically.
Make you want to live another day.
That is for sure.
That's how you really got to do it.
Good for you, by the way. Sex is really good for you if it's with the right person.
Preach it to the choir, baby.
Well, I think so. It is reducible in a fundamental way, too. I came up with three in the list.
So there's there's there's sex, there's food sex, and shelter were three things that we need for our survival.
And so we ought to be pretty energetic in the acquisition of those three.
Absolutely.
And also, if you don't—
I've never seen anybody kill themselves when they couldn't get something to eat.
But I've certainly seen people kill themselves when they couldn't get a particular sweetheart.
Couldn't get the love.
Yeah.
I don't think you go around—well, you might go around murdering somebody for bread, you know, in the right place when you're starving.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
You won't kill yourself.
You kill somebody else, and that's why.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Okay.
I bet there's – our jails are much more filled with people who have committed a crime of passion.
I mean, this is a powerful brain system.
What people will do for love is out of this world.
Okay.
And particularly around right now, you know,
I am the chief scientific advisor to Match.com,
and between the day after Christmas and Valentine's Day,
the amount of people going onto that site and other sites
increases everywhere from 30% to 60%.
This is the time.
This is the season for love.
You're listening to StarTalk.
Stay tuned for another segment.
Welcome back to StarTalk.
Here's more of this week's episode.
So Chuck, what questions you have called from our listening audience?
Well, you know, I recognize this handle as somebody I know on Twitter, so I figured I would go ahead and read this.
This is from at Ben Makes TV.
And he wants to know this.
Why does no one love me?
Oh, yeah.
And I'm going to say it's because you pleasure yourself publicly on the train.
People just can't forgive that, Ben.
They can't forgive you for it.
Let me broaden the question, Helen, and ask, is there someone for everyone?
Sure.
If there is, then the person who can't find love is not looking hard enough.
They're not looking hard enough.
You know, if you go on these dating sites, it does require some work.
First of all, he's probably too picky.
You know, lower your standards.
The guy who's looking for love.
When in doubt, lower your standards. Is this advice you're's looking for love. When in doubt, lower your standards.
Is this advice you're giving us, Helen?
I got your book here, The Anatomy of Love.
Think of reasons to say yes.
You know, there's a huge part of the brain that enables us
to overlook the negative and focus on the positive.
Do it all the time. When we want to.
Yeah, but one of the problems
when you're meeting people online is you know
so little about them when you start out
that you over, you know, you overweight those few things that you know.
And you break it up before you, the more you get to know somebody, the more you like them.
You got to give people the chance, you know.
But see, now that is a chemical thing because, and I'm probably going to get in trouble if I say this.
We can edit this, Chuck.
Okay, good.
So here's the truth. I have often
sat and said to myself,
why after
18 years of marriage...
Okay, stop there.
Let me protect
Chuck from himself.
I'm not going to say this.
I've got to protect Chuck
back away from the microphone, Chuck.
But I've put people in scanners.
It's possible to remain in love long term.
I and my colleagues have put 17 people into the scanner who were married an average of 21 years.
So you're behind the game.
I'm still in love.
No, that's my point. Back away from the mic, Chuck. You're right. Okay,. I'm still in love. No, that's my point.
Back away from the mic, Chuck.
You're right.
I said, okay, but I'm still in love.
I mean, however, no, no, listen to me.
Don't, you know what?
Listen, if I were to put it down on paper, I should not be in love.
Yeah.
I should not be.
Really?
I should not be.
This woman, I love her to death and there's nothing she can do that's wrong.
And if I were to actually go and say all this stuff that I probably would be like, no, I don't like that.
No, I don't like that.
I should have left long ago.
So if you deconstruct your relationship.
If I deconstruct my relationship.
There's nothing there, but in total, it's working for you.
Oh, my God.
It's the best thing that ever happened to me in my life.
So, Helen.
We evolved it. Thanks. Thanks a you. Oh, my God. It's the best thing ever happened to me in my life. Okay, so, Helen. We evolved it.
Thanks.
Thanks a lot.
We evolved to deceive.
Chuck, you are lying to yourself.
No, you're not.
No, here is why you are in love with your wife.
You are overlooking the negative, and there's a huge part of the brain that enables you to do that, and bless it.
So, but let me come in the back door there.
But let me come in the back door there.
If you do have a list of what you like in someone, and then you put it on one of these websites,
and then you find someone that matches it, the premise is that's your soulmate.
But what Chuck is saying is if you laid out the inventory, if you laid out the portfolio,
then no, he would have never met her in this way.
I would have never met her this way. I bet that there are real—no, you wouldn't have met her. I would have never met her in this way. I would have never met her this way.
I bet that there are real... No, you wouldn't have met her.
But once you did meet her, there are things about that woman that you really like
that ring deep into your
love map.
Then what of these websites that are matching
people up and slicing and dicing them
in these very... What is it? Farm...
Farmers.com.
Farmers.com. Farmers can mate other
farmers, meet and mate with other farmers. Lifestyle so that you can understand it. But
the bottom line is these are not dating services. These are introducing services. The only true
algorithm is your own human brain. So the faster you can get out and meet the guy or girl in the
bar, on the street, you know, it's just giving you a whole range of people, and then you've got to do the job.
We can give you the people, but you've got to do the job.
And that's what's really thrilling.
But would you agree that if you proscribe what you think you're going to be attracted to, that is greatly restricting your options?
Or it could be, at least.
At least there's a potential for that right
it's listen staying at home uh and looking for somebody under the couch is certainly gonna uh
you know not do much for your options i mean the bottom line is you know how many people do you
meet through your friends how many do you meet at work how many people do you meet when you're
at the fitness center and you run through all that and then how are you going to meet people
no i think these dating services, introducing services, give you a
much broader range than we've
ever had in all of our human history.
I would agree. Even the ones that specify,
because there's J-Date for Jews,
and lately there's like a white people one.
White people meet?
Do they really have a hard time
finding... Black people meet, to which I told
a friend, how could I ever meet a white girl on Black people
meet?
No, but the kind of craziness is that.
But do white people actually have a problem finding other white people in a country that's...
Apparently, all these white people live in Detroit.
Is that what it is?
It's like, I don't know where I'm going to find another white person.
Every time I look around, I'm here in Detroit, and I can't find any white people.
I need a web service to help me, by the way.
A web service to help me.
But you do meet many more people on these dating sites than we ever did through all of history, plus throughout your life.
I mean, we've got things like Our Time, which is for people over 50.
I mean, I can't stand in a bar and have the perfect boy walk by.
You're selling yourself short there, Helen.
Thank you.
I love you right Helen. Thank you.
What party do you have in mind?
So Chuck, what other questions you got there?
Let's get back to this.
We told our boy here to get out.
Get the hell off the couch. Get out the house, Ben.
That's the answer to your question.
Wait, wait, wait.
I'm sorry. Just to round that out. Round out your question. Wait, wait, wait. I'm sorry.
Just to round that out, round out that question.
Go ahead. Should someone
change themselves
to be more attractive to other people?
Should they go through a makeover?
Should they change their hair?
Other than the minimum
hygiene that we expect in society.
Should someone do that
if they're desperate for love? And then if they find that person, did that person expect in society. Should someone do that if they're desperate for love?
Then, if they find that person,
did that person fall in love with what they created
for themselves?
We do fall in love with what we created for ourselves,
no matter what. Even if somebody fits
somewhat within your love map, you overlook
what doesn't fit, and you focus on what you do.
Your love map, I like that.
Yeah, that's what it is.
As small children, we grow up and we create a list,
an unconscious list of what we're looking for in a partner.
And then you see the perfect person at the perfect time,
and they fit pretty much in your love map.
And you get rid of, excuse me, what you don't like,
and you just focus on what you do.
So that's good.
But what was that other question?
What were you going to say?
No, I'm saying that, you know, what you're saying makes a lot of sense.
Should you change yourself?
All right.
You know, and on the one hand, the answer is no.
Well, yeah.
If you're a man, because don't worry, she's going to do that for you.
You do not have to worry.
It's in the card.
Be yourself, man, because whatever you are and whoever you are, that is not what you are going to be in two years.
Right.
It's a good project for us girls. Yeah, believe me. We have a lot of work to do. whatever you are and whoever you are, that is not what you are going to be in two years. Right. Okay.
It's a good project for us girls.
Yeah.
Believe me.
We have a lot of work to do.
Let me tell you, I have a friend that I saw that has been 20 years since we've seen each
other.
And we got to hang out.
I was in Philadelphia and we got to hang out.
We haven't seen each other in 20 years.
Philly's your place.
That's right.
That's my hometown.
And at the end of the night, he was like, wow, man, you really have changed.
And he really hadn't.
He's not married.
How did you change?
He's just me.
What did you change?
Mostly now that I'm married, I'm gay.
That's the most thing, you know, because...
I think you need to just change.
Listen, if it's not working, you ought to make some changes.
But I wouldn't certainly make any changes.
I mean, first of all, it's very hard to make changes in personality.
You can be somebody else, but it's tiring.
Yeah.
OK.
It's an investment of energy at all times.
And as it turns out, you know, you'll turn off.
I mean, by being who you are, you will turn off some people.
But when you find the right one, that person is going to really love you.
So I wouldn't make huge changes. Sure. You know, you can you can change your hair and and maybe
stop swearing or or, you know, read a little bit more so that you're better educated.
So you can call them comfort changes that might make the other person comfortable.
Good. Without really totally messing with you.
Exactly. And that's just parts you don't like of you. And, you know, you can work on that,
too. But, you know, as you say, she's going to work on you. Exactly. It's your profile. Unless there's parts you don't like of you and you can work on that too.
But as you say,
she's going to work on you too.
Oh, rest assured.
Next question.
Next question.
Let us move on.
But men do their work too.
Women are always
scrambling to please.
Okay.
But we don't know
that that's what
you're doing for us.
You just appear that way
and we think,
hey, wow,
I really like that.
Not knowing that you spent
five hours creating that
which we just said we like. That was very, I really like that. Not knowing that you spent five hours creating that, which we just said.
That was very profound what you just said.
Because that is the difference between what makes a woman appreciate you.
Because you noticed what she did.
You just gave the true male perspective, which is we're appreciative of it.
We just think like, wow, look at you.
This is how you look.
We're completely oblivious.
Completely oblivious that you actually took effort and time to make yourself look that way.
We're just like, wow, okay, that looks good.
We're idiots, basically.
I don't know.
I am for men, and I don't think you're idiots.
But, yeah, I'll keep to my self-deception on that one.
Okay, exactly.
Exactly.
All right, all right.
Here we go.
This is Ray coming to us from Twitter as well.
And Ray has a very simple,
succinct question, but I think
it's quite
in-depth when you look at it.
Why does love
hurt? Oh, boy.
That's all he asked, but I gotta say
that's pretty prolific what he just said.
He just asked.
It really does.
So we've put a lot of people into a scanner who have just been dumped,
and the brain regions that become active when you've been dumped is three brain regions linked with intense craving,
a brain region linked with physical pain.
Physical pain.
Physical pain, a brain region, and actually aspirin helps when you're rejected in love.
There's an academic article on that.
Wow.
And also anxiety that goes along with the physical pain. And you're also brain regions
linked with trying to figure out what went wrong, the cost, the benefits, what happened
here. And I think so the brain is in overdrive. It's in a terrible state. This is why we have
all these crimes of passion, you know? And why does it hurt? It hurts because you've
lost, once I said, you know, life's greatest prize, a mating partner.
You've lost the ability to pass your DNA on to eternity.
I think nature overdid it, to be perfectly honest.
You really suffer terribly.
And there's basically two stages of getting rejected.
The first is protest.
You just try to win the person back.
You'll try to seduce.
You'll try to threaten.
You'll try to make them jealous and all that.
And then you slip into this incredible depression.
Unless you get them back.
Then you get them back.
In which case you slip into indifference.
Like, why did I ever want you in my life?
Why do I keep doing this?
You've heard that other people say this.
Yes, exactly.
Read about it, Chuck.
But I think it hurts to do it.
It's a real part of the brain center that is responsible.
There's no question about it.
Big parts of the brain become incredibly overactive.
You know, you can't eat, you can't sleep, you can't stop crying.
So it's disruptive to your human physiology.
Yes, and to your social relations.
So lovesick is an actual sick.
It's an actual sick.
And you can die from being rejected.
Wait, don't tell me you die from a broken heart.
You die from heart attacks and strokes.
So the stress.
Okay, so your heart did break.
There was a great deal of anxiety.
Stress actually manifests itself physically, and you end up dying of a stroke or a heart attack because of it.
Yeah, it drives up the dopamine system in the beginning.
That gives you all that energy and focus and motivation and craving.
And then after a while, you can't get them.
You finally give up, and you slip into sort of a profound.
How about.
OK.
As a corollary to this, there are people who are in love with people they've never met.
Yes.
Isn't that.
So now are they.
They're not.
They're practicing.
They're not the mating partner that they got to know intimately.
Right.
But nonetheless, that sentiment is still there.
It's a crush.
It's most largely teenagers.
But it can be somebody at work you don't ever dare come close to, but you feel all that.
It'll go away.
They're grown.
I agree with the teenager thing.
But isn't that more women?
And when you get older, it's the male stalker of the women?
No, men fall in love faster than women do.
They fall in love more often than women do.
When they meet somebody that they really like, they want to introduce them to friends and family sooner. Men want to move in sooner. Men
have more intimate conversations with their wives than women do with their
husbands because women have their intimate conversations with their
girlfriends and men are two and a half times more likely to kill themselves
when a relationship is over. So men are the more... Wow! So basically... Wait, just to be
clear, I think we're more likely to commit suicide in all categories.
Probably, yes. I think so. And homicide, you know. Right. Right.
It's a more delicate. Men are just completely messed up.
I was going to say, it sounds like we're a bunch of love pussies.
That's what it comes down to. Oh, my God. I can't live without you.
Women are pretty bad. Believe me, I've had them on my couch.
So, OK, so we've established it's
real. It's real. Pain is real.
It's not imagined. You can't just say, get over
it. It's like breaking your leg and saying, get over it.
Exactly. As a matter of fact, a week later
you can't remember any physical pain
in your tooth, but a week later you're still
really suffering from romantic rejection.
Wow. So that's baggage,
I think. That's evolutionary baggage. Is there any truth
to the fact that they say for every year you're together, it takes six months to get over?
I don't know.
That's interesting.
Yeah, they say so forever.
If you're together with somebody.
So at some point, it would take longer than your life, your actuarial life expectancy.
Exactly.
To get over it.
It's going to depend on who you are, what your other alternatives are, how much you invested in it, how well you are.
There's going to be many forces
in how you get over it.
You bought the couch together because then you'll have to take the
chainsaw and cut it in half when you
split up. Oh, thank God we didn't buy the dog
together.
Oh, God.
You're listening to StarTalk Radio.
Stay tuned.
More up next.
Welcome back.
Here's more of StarTalk.
Chuck, you've got questions from the Internet.
Yes, I do.
All right, what do you have?
Let's jump right back on this.
Melissa McCurdy from Facebook says,
Is the state of being in love considered mental illness or chemical imbalance?
In other words, are you crazy to be in love with somebody?
I don't think so.
I mean, it's the most important thing we do with our
lives. But you are a little crazy. I mean, you can't eat, you can't sleep, you forget your coat,
you don't get to work, you forget to feed the cat, you don't call your mother, you're obsessed. It's
an obsession. Right. So why doesn't it count as some kind of mental disorder? Because you're not
otherwise... It's a natural drive. It's a natural obsession.
In fact, I think that all of the chemical addictions hijack this basic brain system that evolved for natural craving.
So we're trying to actually say to the medical community that it's a very positive addiction when it's going well and a perfectly horribly negative addiction when it's going poorly.
But it is an addiction.
Addiction centers become activated.
But I don't want to call it a mental illness.
Addicted to love.
Isn't there like an album or a song with that title?
Yes, it is.
Who is that?
Robert.
Robert Palmer.
Robert Palmer.
Might as well face it.
You're addicted to love.
He's got the models.
Yes, all the red lips.
And I'm like, I see why you're in love.
I remember that video.
Pretty hot chicks behind you.
That was an early MTV video.
Oh, my gosh.
That was like. Our poets. Oh, my gosh. That was like.
Our poets have said it for centuries.
I mean, the oldest love poetry is over 4,000 years old.
And it's describing love exactly the way we describe it today.
Right.
Okay.
So even though it disrupts our normal functioning.
Right.
Our responsible functioning as members of society.
Because of its frequency among we humans, you're not going to say...
And it's a essential purpose.
And you're not going to say it's a disorder.
We're going to say it's something...
It's like today where they have drugs, living with this disease.
Right.
We're not going to cure it.
We're just going to live with it.
Because they want to teach us how to live with our love.
That's what you're saying.
Well, I would basically say that an awful lot of people would be happy to live with
their love.
I mean, people are madly in love. Think of nothing
else. They don't care if they forget to feed the cat.
They're just happy. Happy, really.
The cat will care if you forget to feed the cat.
You know, what you just did there, you actually
described the
textbook case scenario
for a person
addicted to drugs. I don't
care about anything. I don't care if I feed the
cat. I don't care if it's right. There's a big difference. There's many big differences, though.
I mean, you know, the right love affair is going to give you tremendous pleasure. It's going to
give you optimism. It's going to give you hope. I mean, as you drive that dopamine system up,
when you're madly in love, you get energy, focus, motivation. You know, when you take drugs,
you're not getting necessarily. And by the way, the drug's
going to be gone tomorrow morning when you wake
up. You don't party with me
tomorrow morning. You mean
nine o'clock tonight.
Well, that sounds good.
So that's a fascinating
point. There are upside, the upside
of this. It's a wonderful addiction. It's a fundamental
contribution to society
and people's happiness. Okay.
All right.
We got that.
Here we go.
Let's move on.
Move on up.
This is Joe Pettengill from Portland, Oregon, coming to us through Facebook.
He wants to know this.
Biologically, how does the love of a pet differ from the love of a person or love of an object?
Does it mean a person's love of a pet, not a pet's love of the person? Not a pet's love of a person or love of an object?
Does it mean a person's love of a pet, not a pet's love of the person?
Not a pet's love of a person.
But even though that's a very interesting, I'd like to know about that now that you brought it up.
Like, you know.
I don't know if she studies non-human animals.
Well, I do.
I do, because you have to understand.
You scare me every day you keep talking and telling me what you put in your machine.
I think that's very cool.
I think my dog wants to bang me.
But, you know,
there's a constellation of traits that are
linked with feelings. You have permission to use that word
in that way for me. Oh, thank you.
A constellation, yes, good. And among those
things are the
drive to actually have sex with the person.
And you really don't. Most people want to have sex with their dog.
So you have many of the traits linked with romantic love. I mean, the obsession,
the focus, the, you know, you think your dog's the best looking dog in the whole universe. It's
the only dog that's alive that counts, et cetera, et cetera. So it has some of the characteristics
of intense romantic love and feelings of deep attachment, that second brain system,
but you don't have any of these sex, sexual things.
So it's the intimacy or physical intimacy that sets that apart.
Yes.
Okay, so here's an interesting—
You can fall in love with your small baby, too, and, you know, you can fall in love with all kinds of things.
But, yes, it's that sexual component that's missing.
Fall in love with a toaster.
Yeah, yeah.
Just don't have sex with—
Chuck!
It'll be hot.
Chuck! it'll be hot right so i have a question and on that animal frontier dogs were basically bred for their loyalty to humans among other properties so uh you know there's an old saying be the person
who your dog thinks you are oh how wonderful, because your dog thinks you're the greatest thing ever.
You come home, no matter what, no matter the day the dog had, no matter the day, you are the best person there ever was to happen to them.
So that might fool you into thinking that this is a relationship.
Right.
And the person appreciates you for who and what you are.
Now, cats, not so much.
So do we have data to show that people have stronger relationships with the dogs than they
do with their cats? Because the dog is reciprocal in its... Yes. Yes. And in fact, you know,
they call it chick bait. I mean, a man with a dog walking down the street picks up more girls than
if he's walking along with a cat. Must Love Dogs, the whole movie with that title.
Must Love Dogs.
He's basically advertising that he can take care of something.
That's a pretty low bar.
Take care of a pet.
Maybe he's good mating material.
Actually, we've got data on that.
He picks up the poop.
That's good.
But, you know, dogs are pair bonding animals naturally.
Only 3% of mammals form a pair bond to rear their young.
And all the wild wolves, foxes, coyotes, dingoes, you know, and dogs form pair bonds.
I thought they travel in packs with one alpha.
They do, but there's one male and one female who are the breeding pair,
and everybody else is a helper at the nest.
Oh, so it's not one male mating multiple females.
Okay, like a pride of lion.
Exactly.
I didn't know that.
Exactly.
So this is why we bond so easily with them.
As a matter of fact, anthropologists think that it's dogs that picked the bonding with us
and followed along with us.
Because we left food behind.
We did that on on cosmos we did
like a whole episode and it's titled and the wolf shall become the shepherd oh yeah yeah well um you
know dogs uh i mean that's andrean's poetic uh she's got the there's a poetry side of her that
contributes to the scripting so that's where that came from. Yeah. Yeah. So,
so, okay. So that's real. Oh yeah. It's real. And it's probably creates a lot of the oxytocin,
you know, the brain system for attachment is the oxytocin system in the brain. I think what people,
men and women get out of their relationship with their dog is all the hugging and touching and
everything. And all of that drives up the oxytocin system in the brain linked with feelings of attachment.
Attachment.
Yes.
And it probably is the same in the dog, but it's certainly in that feeling in a human
being.
So, you know, as you put your arm around somebody, as you hold hands with them, as you hug them,
as you learn to sleep in their arms, you're driving up this oxytocin system, and it's
a feel-good chemical.
No question about it.
Okay.
You're good.
All right. Feel good.
I don't need you.
I got my oxytocin pills.
I don't need you for nothing.
I'm just thinking about my own name.
Just don't crush it up and snort it.
All right, Chuck, we got five minutes left.
We're going into lightning round.
Lightning round.
No longer the luxury of long answers.
Long answers.
I'm going to try to get through the list because we have multiple pages of questions here.
I do. I've got quite a few.
I'm going to test my bell.
Good. There it is.
Okay.
So you're going to give soundbite answers.
Pretend you're on the evening news and you have two minutes to give your entire interview.
Okay.
Okay. You ready? Chuck, go.
Here we go.
Jeffrey Clark on Twitter says,
What's the science behind attraction?
Am I pre-programmed to be attracted to certain traits or is attraction a learned behavior? Love it. Go for it. It's not a learned behavior. I mean, some of it is learned,
but chemically we're drawn to certain people rather than others. I've figured out when people
say we have chemistry, I understand what that means now. So that's real. Yes. We're going to
be naturally drawn to some people rather than others, basically because of body chemistry.
Body chemistry. That's called BO, I think.
Let's keep going. Go. Next question.
This is from Dan Larkins on Facebook. Wants to know this. If evolution
favors individuals who seek out the strongest
and the best suited mates to pass on their
genes, is there a biological
advantage to falling in love over choosing
the most advantageous partner gene-wise?
No insult intended
to my beloved.
Okay.
Okay.
All right, Dan, there you go.
So, yeah, that's a pretty clean question.
So if you just want to propagate survival,
you pick the person and then you do that,
what's love got to do with it?
Why do we fall in love with a guy
who looks like the penguin from Batman
and he's not rich and you're a supermodel.
How does that even...
That doesn't happen too often.
Basically...
Thank you for your honesty.
Thank you.
I mean, penguins go for penguins.
I mean, we tend to fall in love with somebody
from the same socioeconomic background,
same general level of intelligence,
same general level of good looks,
same religious and social values.
We are drawn to people to some extent like ourselves.
But that's environmental, of course.
Your religion that you're born into is you're born into it.
Yes, exactly.
And so socioeconomic, those are the people you hang out with.
But I do think people who are very novelty-seeking and risk-taking go for people like themselves,
people who are very traditional go for people like themselves.
Helen, except some of the greatest stories ever told were people falling in love who were completely
not the same anything from romeo and juliet right to to in in in to hillary and bill clinton i mean
hillary's high testosterone and bill is i think Look at that. So I can't accept the blanket statement that people tend, I mean, yes, statistically perhaps,
but the exceptions to that are so extraordinary.
So sociologically.
I think it would be a lesson to us all.
There's always exceptions.
Okay.
We are an animal that's flexible.
No question about it.
An environment always plays a role.
Next question.
Boom.
There we go.
All right.
That was a good one.
Quick.
Here we go.
This one is for Dr. Tyson from. There we go. All right. That was a good one. Quick. Here we go. This one is for Dr.
Tyson from Joy Green on Facebook.
Dr. Tyson, my question revolves around the following topic. How can an
average everyday citizen get others
to fall in love with
science?
Oh.
Look at Joy Green. Good
one. Going outside the
box. Outside the box. Outside the box.
Outside the box.
I got to team up with Helen here to find out, can you fall in love with things that are not other members of your species?
Can you fall in love with an idea, a principle, a philosophy, a pursuit?
People who are serious hobbyists, the only word you can say is that they're in love with their craft.
I agree with you. These are basic, all-purpose
systems in the brain. So you've got your oxy...
Well, that's the dopamine system
when you fall in love. It's the oxytocin system
with feelings of attachment. But sure, these are, you know,
the attachment system in the brain.
You can be attached to your motorcycle, you can be attached to your
girlfriend. But are those same chemicals being
excited when you're
waxing your motorcycle?
Yes, probably, yes.
Or to lesser extents.
Yeah.
So can there be measured releases of these, you know, when you say dopamine,
like, for instance, you do cocaine, your brain floods with dopamine.
Yeah, absolutely.
It does.
Absolutely.
And you can fall in love.
All right.
With cocaine.
Last question.
I don't love it.
Just the way it smells.
Time for one more question.
Here we go.
One more.
Here we go.
From DeWarmo Dave on Google Plus says, is chastity healthy, and what are the effects
of chastity?
Go for it.
To each his own.
To each his own.
That's it.
That's an awesome cop-out answer.
I mean, I think you learn a huge amount about somebody when you when you make
love to them and it triggers the brain circuitry for romantic love it triggers
some of the brain circuitry for attachment and it drives up the
testosterone system so that you want more sex with them but I can tell I can
have sex and fall in love and I can tell you this if you have a gene for chastity didn't inherit it. Very nice.
You're listening to StarTalk.
Stay tuned for another segment.
This is StarTalk.
I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson, your personal astrophysicist.
And for this StarTalk Live, we are going to explore transgender visibility today.
And I've got Natalia Regan here.
Hello, Natalia.
She's one of our StarTalk All-Stars.
And she's an anthropologist who's thought deeply about that.
And Chuck.
Yeah.
Hey, buddy.
How are you?
Hey, guys.
So Transgender Visibility Day.
First of all, who declares these days?
Well, that's OK.
So the transgender community did not have a day celebrating those that had worked so hard in the past to become visible.
So in 2009, they created it's actually Transgender Day of Visibility.
And so basically.
It's been around for eight years.
Yeah.
OK.
And it's finally I mean, obviously, with the internet, with Twitter and with Facebook and
all these things, it's getting more and more steam.
I mean, people, we're talking more about these issues.
And of course, it's more...
Getting steam.
That's a very dated source of energy.
Cool.
It's coming back, guys.
Coming back.
Dated thermonuclear fuel.
Dated solar power.
Okay.
So just, we'll be taking inquiries from Facebook live.
Yes.
But if you just set the stage here.
Okay.
There are people above whatever age who are just perplexed by this.
Exactly.
And people now describing not gender being male or female, but that there's a spectrum.
It's non-binary.
So humans.
Genetically, in terms of your sexual preference,
in terms of every dimension that's there.
And to be clear, gender and sexuality
are two totally different things.
And gender and sex are two totally different things.
Gender is generally, it's a social construct.
It's in the brain.
Sex is what's going down below the waist,
which can vary.
There are people that have,
or intersex individuals that have differences.
No longer called hermaphrodites?
Yeah, it's now generally intersex.
Intersex, okay.
But there's also varying versions of what that can be. But as far as transgender individuals,
they basically wanted to celebrate people in the past that had fought for visibility. But to be clear, gender, again, in the head, sex below the belt.
Cisgender, which is what somebody that identifies as their – what's going on in their brain matches what's going on downstairs typically.
Cisgender.
Yes, cisgender.
Transgender is where that does not fit.
So if you're –
It doesn't match.
It doesn't match.
It fits. It just doesn't match.
Exactly.
Well, yeah.
Again, that's what we're changing our way of looking at it.
It's no longer a problem.
It's actually being celebrated.
You're not a mistake.
You are just as good as everybody else.
just as good as everybody else.
There's also people that identify as non-binary or genderqueer,
which are those that don't feel like they fit in a traditional male-female gender.
Well, they can be either at a different time according to. So they're fluid, basically.
Yeah, exactly.
Gender fluid.
Gender fluid.
And that's the thing is gender people have even identified as certain genders
at certain parts of like different parts of their life, you know.
Fluid has an official physics definition. It is a substance that takes the shape of its container wow so air
is a fluid as is a liquid uh in that context so you're fluid there's a different container here
i'll fit that right you want to hear it sometimes we're different at different points of our life
so we got our questions coming in yeah well questions are already coming in and i actually
left one up because this was the very first question.
And before we take any questions, the reason why we do this is so that we can tell you guys that for everything that you want to find StarTalk, there's a place to go called startalkallaccess.com.
And that's where we have things that are original content that you can't find anywhere else.
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wait till i get my six-pack abs let's get our first question and the first question comes from
eric fiore and eric says this please answer how does gender identity and sexual orientation work
in the brain why can two siblings have so much in common and one prefers their own sex and the
other prefers the opposite? Thanks. That's like the million dollar question because there isn't,
I think, a clear cut answer at this point. How, you know, some people say that it's a choice and
no. We're hearing you live here. So there isn is an I personally do not know the answer to that question because I don't think there is an answer of exactly the mechanism of how one chooses.
You're absolutely right.
The reason why you don't know the answer to that question is because we haven't found the answer to that question.
If we had, even though researchers are looking at whether or not there is a genetic link to your sexuality and your preferences.
Because even sexuality, to be fair and to be clear, is on a spectrum and people are fluid.
People prefer certain things at different times in their life for whatever reason.
Doesn't that bring up a morality question? Suppose we learned that there's a part of
the brain that generates sexual preference and there are societal pressures that you should be one way and not another
and then someone says i can go in and operate and tweak that that well it's like those camps
they used to have to try i think they still have them to try to change you know kids or
reorientation exactly yeah um but yeah i mean that's a moral question and i also think that
it's it means society is in denial of who you actually are and then says, but we can fix that. That that's that's a peculiar world. layer on top of sex and sexual orientation. You know, you don't see a chimpanzee struggling like, oh, God, I don't know.
Should I ask Steve out?
I know I'm a male.
But, you know, you don't see that same sort of.
Dogs don't have that problem either.
They hump whatever.
They hump anything.
A couch, my leg, gym, Beverly.
What else you got?
And I apologize for all of that.
I'm having trouble.
I got one here.
Are there instances of brain switching during development later in life?
This is Cole Primo from Facebook.
Are there instances of brain switching during development later in life?
Or is it something you're born with?
As far as I mean, so one of the things that happened a lot in the past was like, say, for instance, if you were dealing with a if you had a child that was intersex, a lot of times parents would might choose at the time of birth what sex to, you know, what gender you would assign.
Or surgically.
Surgically.
And sometimes they make mistakes.
And so that child is left to grow up in a in a body that does not match the brain. So the mistake means they left them with plumbing that is different from their brain's expectation
of their plumbing should be.
So something that they're doing now is waiting, waiting until the child can choose what feels
right.
What age is that?
Because we saw pictures of someone who was like 11, who was born male, but is expressing
female in middle school.
Do we know enough about our gender identity by then?
I think they can say like the tween ages is when they're really starting to kind of –
Tweens.
Tweens.
I think that's sort of solid choices.
But as far as making sort of a gender reassignment or any sort of surgical,
I think they're waiting and not doing it that age.
That's very young.
There's another question.
Malcolm Oliver Marfan.
Malcolm.
Oliver Marfan.
We got from Malcolm.
So are the brains of men and women wired differently?
And have we found this to be true also for transgender individuals? Because the extent to which we know it's in the brain, maybe we can't figure out where it is or what it's doing, but we can show that it's different.
That's a base level of information.
So males and females, as far as sex goes, are far more similar than dissimilar.
Let's get that out there.
We want the same things.
Oftentimes we strive for the same things.
Except you guys are often left disappointed and we're not.
Oh, true.
I mean, that's pretty much how it goes.
So sorry.
But there's things that affect our behavior sometimes, like different hormones.
And if someone has more estrogen or more testosterone in their body, they're going to behave differently.
But I don't think there's been actual studies about the hard wiring of transgender individuals
versus those that are not.
You've studied other primates.
So do you see any gender spectrum behavior in other primates?
You know, I mean-
The bonobo chimps and these sort of folks?
See, that's, we talked about a little bit, which is really interesting.
Bonobos are funny because they're all about having lots of sex.
And they're also female dominant.
We talked about-
What kind of animal?
Right? That's all I'm saying. sex. And they're also female dominant. What kind of animal? Right?
That's all I'm saying.
That's how they diffuse tension.
Like, say, for instance, there's a piece of fruit on the ground.
Like, you know, if we have to go, we want to choose who gets that piece of fruit,
there would be lovemaking.
And then we'd probably forget that there was fruit there to begin with.
Wow.
They are the most genius creatures ever.
Let's settle disputes by making, I'll make love for it.
Let's love it out.
Sword fight.
Let's love it out, bitches.
Come on, let's do it.
But, but, but what we should say, one of the things that makes bonobos different from their
cousins chimpanzees, female dominant social group.
So the females are in charge, which means, hey, maybe if we let a woman be in charge of the United States.
I guarantee you.
I don't know.
I'm not saying.
I guarantee you if the answer to a conflict resolution is let's make love, we would give over the power to females.
OK, I'm just letting you know.
It might be hugs.
We got it, you know, and it's going to be consensual.
No, no, no, no.
That's not the right joke.
The right joke is if you let a woman be president, she'll be tweeting all day about everything she feels about.
Then I think we have a woman president, guys.
Let's go another one.
So, Tony Allen, is there a particular age when someone realizes their orientation?
Is there an average age where you can then say, pretty much you know where you're coming from
and where you're going by that?
I mean, I think it has a lot to do with just individuals,
but I think a lot of people,
I mean, by orientation,
I'm assuming they mean sexual orientation.
Yes.
Not how they feel gender-wise.
What turn you on?
Yeah.
People talk about it as early as like three, four, five.
I have several friends who tell me, I was four years old and I knew for a fact.
Four years old.
Four years old.
And I said to a friend of mine, I'm like, how did you know you were gay when you were four?
And he said, let me ask you this.
When you were four, did you like women?
And I was like, you know, I absolutely did.
I knew then that he was like, it's the exact same thing.
I didn't know what I was for.
You didn't know what you were for.
That's because you were too busy loving science, Neil.
I'll say this and I'll wrap it up real quick.
But when I was eight, I thought I was gay because I actually thought I was attracted to women at one point.
I was like, oh, my God, that means I didn't realize that there was a spectrum.
You know what I mean?
And now that visibility and now that we're seeing that, you know, very courageous people, people coming out and so showing that there are alternatives and that this is not a spectrum. You know what I mean? And now that visibility, and now that we're seeing that, you know,
kids are not-
Very courageous people.
People coming out
and showing that there are alternatives
and that this is not a spectrum,
then you know it's okay and it's safe.
Wherever you are, it's okay.
You're fine.
If you fall in that spectrum,
good for you.
We have a Facebook live viewer
called Albert Einstein
who says,
nice shirt, Chuck.
That's a little narcissistic, don't you think, Albert Einstein?
There you go, buddy.
All right, we got to wrap this up.
This was quick.
This was a quick one, yeah.
Quick and fast, but Transgender Day of Visibility.
Yes.
That's new to me, even though it's been around eight years.
Thank you to Laverne Cox's and all the activists out there.
Follow them on Twitter.
Right, right.
Excellent.
Thanks for that suggestion.
So, Natalia Reagan, thanks for
doing this. And Chuck, always good
to have you here. We've got to sign out on
Facebook Live. They give us like 10 minutes
at most for this. And so,
yeah, we will find us in the
universe. Yeah. StarTalk signing
out.