The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish - Kevin Kelly: Excellent Advice for Living
Episode Date: May 16, 2023When Kevin Kelly turned 68 years old, he began writing down notes and thoughts about all the lessons he’d learned in his life and the ones he wished he’d learned earlier. While those notes were or...iginally intended for his young adult children, they eventually became the book Excellent Advice for Living: Wisdom I Wish I'd Known Earlier, which was released in May 2023. On this episode of the Knowledge Project, Kelly goes in-depth on some of the book’s most essential lessons, including learning, setting deadlines, perfection, forgiveness, living a meaningful life, reasoning, and so much more. Kelly is the co-founder of the magazine Wired, which twice won the National Magazine Award for General Excellence while he served as publication’s Executive Editor during the 1990s. He is also the co-chair of The Long Now Foundation, a membership organization that champions long-term thinking, as well as the founder of the popular Cool Tools website, which has been reviewing tools daily for 20 years. He is also an artist as well as the author of 14 books. -- Want even more? Members get early access, hand-edited transcripts, member-only episodes, and so much more. Learn more here: https://fs.blog/membership/ Every Sunday our Brain Food newsletter shares timeless insights and ideas that you can use at work and home. Add it to your inbox: https://fs.blog/newsletter/ Follow Shane on Twitter at: https://twitter.com/ShaneAParrish Our Sponsors: MetaLab: Helping the world’s top companies design, build, and ship amazing products and services. https://www.metalab.com Aeropress: Press your perfect cup, every time. https://aeropress.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I've had the privilege of knowing a lot of accomplished people, successful people,
famous people, super rich people.
And man, the outsides not represent their insights.
And we tend to want to compare ourselves to their outsides to their own ideas of what success is.
I'm better and I do better when I am not trying to imitate someone else's success.
I mean, in a certain way, what you want to do is you want to kind of grow your own metric for what you, what would be successful for you.
You want to have a different metric.
Welcome to the Knowledge Project, a podcast,
about mastering the best of what other people have already figured out so you can apply their
insights to your life. I'm your host, Shane Parrish. If you're listening to this, you're
missing out. If you'd like access to the podcast before public release, special episodes that
don't appear anywhere else, hand-edited transcripts, or you just want to support the show that you
love, you can join at fs.blog slash membership. Check out the show notes for a link.
Today, my guest is the legendary Kevin Kelly, who might just be the most interesting man in the world.
He co-founded Wired Magazine, which along with 2,600 was a regular on my nightstand growing up.
He also co-founded the All-species Foundation, a non-profit aimed at cataloging every living species on Earth,
written a host of books on technology and life, and serves on the board of the Long Now Foundation.
This episode covers a lot of ground.
We start with a dive into some of Kevin's wisdom from his new book,
Excellent Advice for Living, Wisdom I Wish I Had Known Earlier.
And this started on his 68th birthday when Kevin began to write down
for all of his young adult children,
some of the things he had learned about life and that he wished he had known earlier.
He kept adding to this advice over the years compiling sort of like a life's wisdom
that I eagerly seek out and read every year when he publishes his bits of advice
around his birthday. Kevin's timeless advice covers an astonishing range from right living to setting
ambitious goals to optimizing generosity and cultivating compassion. We're going to go deeper on some
of my favorite passages from the book on learning, deadlines, perfection, forgiveness,
living a meaningful life, reasoning, what to do when you're stuck and so much more. Of course,
I couldn't have him on the show without talking about artificial intelligence. And we sort of
explore this through two lenses, what he's excited about and what scares him. It's time to listen
and learn. Where I want to start today is on your 68th birthday, you wrote down 68 bits of
advice for your adult children about what you wish you had known. I read all of your advice
across 68, 69, 70, I want to dive into some of this advice and go to the stories behind them
that created this sort of pithy wisdom that you expose. And so let's start with learn how to learn
from those you disagree with or even offend you. See if you can find the truth in what they believe.
So just to back up, the general thing of what I was doing was in a curious way, I was writing
these bits of advice for myself. I found that I could make a habit out of something by reducing
the idea of it to a little capsule and give it a handle so I can repeat it to myself. I could
remind myself of it. And so I wanted some way to take a lot of big, weighty, large advice and
reduce it into a proverb that I could repeat. So that's sort of the origins I was kind of doing that
in my head, I would hear something and I would repeat it to me to remind myself of it.
And so these things have the origin in a sense of like, did they work for me?
Do they work for me first?
And then I can pass, and then this idea of I should pass it on.
So the second element of this was, I have three kids.
They're all kind of adult now.
And we were not a family that gave a lot of advice.
My wife and I were not preachy.
I very rarely ever would give my kids advice.
I was in the old school that said the kids don't listen to what you say.
They just watch what you do.
So we try to model the behavior that we wanted.
But as I got older, I also realized that some of these little things that I was working on,
I wished I had known earlier.
It took me kind of 70 years.
to kind of arrive at them.
It's like, you know, if I'd had this little thing that I kind of have in my own head now
earlier, it would be so much better.
So I decided to try and write them down for that and give them as a present to my kids.
And so what I'm doing that, when I'm trying to write down, I'm thinking of a way to
kind of encapsulate a lot of information and advice and wisdom into a little tiny device.
that I can hold on to.
And the other thing, just to pause here, because I think this is an important distinction
that I get a lot of times online, you probably get too.
This isn't about precision.
This is about utility.
Right, exactly.
This is practicality.
So I have several filters.
I think through this.
One is like, do I really believe this?
This is something that I think is really works.
And then secondly, is it practical?
Does it? Is it actionable? Would it change how I do my day? And thirdly, was I'm trying to, following my own
advice, uplift and be positive as much as possible. So yes, so giving advice is a really, is a really
tough assignment because it's obvious that this varies tremendously on the content.
of who it is and what the situation is.
And so trying to give it a general vice is definitely not about precision.
It's about a general, what I call direction.
It's about moving in the right direction.
So back to this particular one, trying to learn from others that you disagree with
and maybe even find offensive is I guess I've been surprised in my own life
to find that people that I really fundamental,
disagree with could say something that I found was well yeah that's true like I remember
I remember myself coming around to agree with Dick Cheney about something and what
Dick Cheney said was the climate chamber environmentally was not about personal virtue that had
to be changed at the systems level I was like yeah that's right here I am I'm agreeing with
Dick Cheney because he had, you know, something to say that was true. And so I've sort of
learned to try and to spend some time to listen to people and not to cancel them, basically.
And that is, it's tough because we have a natural evolution. And also there's personality
types. I mean, we're not obligated to like everybody. I feel no doubt.
duty to have to like everybody. But I feel that there is some duty to kind of respect people
in a certain sense. And this idea of kind of respecting someone that you don't like and
disagree with, it's difficult. But for me, it pays off, as I guess what I'm saying, there's a
practical benefit for doing so. Do you feel a need to be liked by other people?
I think everybody has some element where they need to be liked. And so yes, I would like to
be liked by everybody.
Motionally, yes.
Intellectually, I understand that that's not going to happen.
One of the curious things, and this is, I don't think I wrote this down, but this is something
I've learned over time, is that with enough numbers, from the audience of enough numbers,
no matter what it is you do, somebody will not like it.
And vice versa, like this take I have this book of advice, there's 450, when you ask people
their favorite one, the best ones, there's no agreement on the best ones.
Everybody's list of the favorite ones is there's no overlap.
And so I think part of what I've learned is that there's going to be people who, some people,
who don't like what you do all the time, but they're not going to be the same people.
And when I was running a magazine called Co-Evolution and Whole Worth Review, I was the editor,
and we kind of ran a little maybe provocative kind of articles.
And my goal was to piss off one-fifth of the audience, but keep rotating.
Make sure it wasn't the same one-fifth, you know, just like, everybody gets your turn to be riled.
And so that's the kind of idea is that I'm not going to be liked by everybody, but I don't want to kind of be a predictable, I'm liking.
you know i like that it's with your reach it's like you're the mayor of new york right like not everybody
is going to be happy all the time with what you're doing i like the idea of rotating the
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So, you know, by the way, this is one of my bits of advice.
If your views on other things can be predicted from your views on one thing, you need to be
very careful that you're not in the grip of an...
idea a lot, because that's what it is. It means that your opinions are too highly correlated
with each other. And that's suspicious because most people are much more complicated. If you're
really genuine, you're going to be much more complicated than that. And also, by the way,
this is a new piece of advice. If you're unpredictable, in that way, you're much less likely
to be taken over by an AI. You want to live your life.
a way that the AI cannot predict what you're going to do. They cannot kind of fake you or cannot
imitate you. Go deeper on that a little bit in terms of AI and disruption about how you think.
Yeah. So there's a lot of concern about artists and even writers about training in AI to produce
work, to generate work, to creative work. And the concern is, well, you know, my material
that I've worked really hard for has been used to train this AI and people can use it to imitate
me. And sometimes those imitations are quite amazing. Really, what you want to be able to do
is to have a style, so to speak, to have something that's unpredictable, that's inimitable, that
you can't be imitated. And this, again, goes back to my other piece of advice about don't aim to be
the best aim to be the only. So if you are in this category that it's hard to imitate you,
that's a really good place to be in the human world and also a really good place being in the
AI world because AIs will have difficulty in imitating you. I think I'm in trouble. My kids went
into chat G-G-T the other day and they drafted this email and watched they should get more video
game time, but they did it in the style of Shane Parrish. Yeah. So they basically
like it was an email from myself to me. And I was like, this sounds awfully familiar. I was like,
what was your, what was your query here? And they were like, draft an email to dad about, in the style
of Shane Parrish, I was like, oh my God, this is, I'm in trouble. Yes, yes. So, so yeah, so you, you,
if you were, if that was hard to do, then you have an advantage because your, your job is not going to be
taken by an AI. And so the idea is to not be so predictable in the sense, particularly, again,
if you have, if your views on the environment can be deduced from your views on religion or
something, that's going to be, that means that you're kind of not really that much of an
independent thinker. And that's going to become more valuable because AI, at least at first, is going to
give away standard thinking for free.
So it'll raise the bar for some people, but it'll be so conventional for independent
and original thinkers.
Right.
Exactly.
Right now, the best way to think of these AIs, the chat training, the LLMs, is that
they're the epitome of the crowd.
Okay, they're wisdom of the crowd thinking.
That's what it is.
It's the collective, all the average people in the world and all their average foibles and
all the average genius.
and it's going to get a very kind of average thing
that is often very correct
but oftentimes not because it's the average
and so it's the wisdom of the crowd AI
which is really good if that's where you want to be
I've been trying to figure out the practical use of these things
and how people are actually using him
I have a friend who runs a very very popular blog site
and he uses them to help them write headlines
to write a punchline at the end.
And he said it's often very generic
and he has to kind of push them
to be snarky.
He'll say, no, no, no, make it more snarky.
Or pretend you're a snarky editor
or pretend that you're a conspirator.
I have to kind of push them
to not be that standard average.
Deliberately say, no, you need a little bit
on a little fringier.
You've got to be a little bit angry
or you've got to be something.
And then the role play.
If you don't do that, you don't get the kind of, as you said, the standard average.
I want to come back to AI a little later because I think we'll have a broader conversation on it.
I want to go to the next piece of advice that sort of stood out as I was reading these,
which is always demand a deadline because it weeds out the extraneous and the ordinary.
A deadline prevents you from trying to make it perfect.
So you have to make it different.
Different is better.
It is, right.
different is better so so deadlines this again took me a long time to kind of figure out that I
needed deadlines and deadlines were the difference between you know a dream and a something that you
complete and what happens with deadlines for me anyways you've got a ship you're you're you have to
abandon the project and it's not perfect oh my gosh it's not perfect but because it's not perfect
you kind of have to be ingenious about making a little different and that and and and and and I find
the deadlines force me to make decisions that you you you don't have enough time you never have
enough time and so you you you think of something to it wouldn't say it's a shortcut you think of a way
to finish it and that little those little decisions are what make it a little different one of
the shocks to me about working on Wired on a monthly magazine was every single issue after years and
years and years was a miracle that it got done on time. It was like you would think it would come down to
some formula and you'd be done on Friday afternoon. But no, it was this last second getting it out
the door every single time. And part of that was because we kind of kept upping the
the goal, the quality, you know, we're trying to make it better than last time. And so you come
down to the same thing where you are being driven by the deadline to try to excel but not
making it perfect by doing something a little differently than you did before. Because without a
deadline, you can convince yourself that you can always make it a little bit better, but then you
never ship. Right. How do you find that balance between in a world of leverage,
right, like where an internet article can go viral and reach 100 million people or it can reach
10 people. How do you find that point at which I've done enough? I'm comfortable with this
versus the trade-off of do I raise the bar? Do I make this better? What is the advantage to doing that?
So there's a couple things, a couple bits of advice buried in a book about that. One is this rule,
which was actually based on some research
in various different fields of life
that when you're trying to optimize something
versus trying to explore,
where you have something that works
and you just want to make it kind of better
and go and optimize it
versus doing the inefficient thing
of going out to try and try something new
and comes down to something like
when you go out to eat at a restaurant,
do you get your favorite thing that you know works or do you try something that is a new dish
that may not work?
And so the ratio is actually one to three, two to three, one to three.
So you actually want to spend two thirds of time trying to optimize things that you want to go deeper
and better and then a third trying new things.
And that's been shown in many, many ways to be roughly true.
So that's one answer is, yes, lots of times you're going to just try and make it really, really better or not thing.
But on third of the time, you want to be taking a chance.
The second thing is this idea that I learned from doing art.
There was actually a book called Writers' Time about how to write a book.
And it said that basically, look, the amount of work to write a book is infinite.
It just could go on and on.
and that's true of almost any project in terms of perfecting it's bottomless so really the only thing
you control is your time you say i have this much time to give to it i'm going to do the very very
best in this amount of time and that's sort of what it deadlines about it's saying like yeah i mean
it could go on forever but but i have a deadline so i'm going to do the best i'm going to write the best
book i can in a year or a year and a half whatever it is or i'm going to do the best podcast i can
make in a week. And so that is a deadline. And what it's doing is it's giving you some way to
control because you can't control the amount of work, which is infinite because you always
can find some way to perfect it. So this is the idea that you control things by controlling the
time. I wonder if part of us is hiding behind fear too. We don't want the deadline because we actually
don't want to put the work out there. We can convince ourselves that hiding, you know, making it
better, hiding behind this perfection is in and of itself work and that we're accomplishing
something. We don't have to put it out in the world and get feedback. Right, right, right, right.
Yeah, yeah, that's true because it's not good enough yet. One of the things I have become a really
big proponent of, which is, you know, doing things on a regular basis. So the advantage of someone like you
doing a podcast on a very every good basis.
Like, if this one is a complete flop, that's okay.
Tomorrow you have another one.
We'll try it again.
And you just do it over and over again, and you put out whatever it is that you do.
You know, you're trying your very best.
But you know that there's more from where that's come from.
And that gives you some kind of freedom to fail in a certain sense because I'm going to do it again.
And that's true of making art, which I do every day.
I'm making a piece of art every day.
So I'm going to put it out no matter what.
And if it isn't up to the best standards, it's okay because tomorrow I'm going to do it again.
And that's true about writing or anything else is this idea that you want to do things on a regular basis because that is the source of great stuff, but also gives you that confidence and liberty to put out something that's not quite the best and not get really hung up on it because we're going to do it again.
You get another up at, you get another crack at it.
Right.
The next piece of advice I want to talk about is when you forgive others, they may not notice,
but you will heal.
Forgiveness is not something we do for others.
It's a gift to ourselves.
That one's profound.
Talk to me about that.
It's just something I've seen in my life.
And I found that the easier I was to forgive, the better I felt.
You know, a lot of the golden rules are this weird.
weird, weird thing that don't make any logical sense at all, but happens, the universe somehow seems to be constructed this way.
The most selfish thing you can do is to forgive other people.
The most selfish thing you can do is to give money away.
The most selfish thing you can do is to help other people and you'll be, you know, you'll get.
It's like, that's weird, but that seems to be how the universe is set up.
There's this kind of paradox at its core.
And that's, all these principles are somewhat based on the same weird logic of the universe, which is, yes, the most selfish thing you could do is to be selfless.
This is kind of weird.
It goes almost to our biological instinct towards group survival, if you will, right?
where you're supposed to sacrifice for the good of your species.
Yes, I think, I mean, I think there are probably evolutionary reasons why that works,
but it's so reliable that I'm just guessing that there's some other larger reason
because you can count on it.
Are there times when you've learned not to forgive and it's best to move
on without forgiveness?
I haven't seen that.
Forgiveness is sort of a way of, there's another piece of advice of kind of accepting
the apology you're never going to get, right?
You're not going to get the apology.
So you just sort of in your mind, you accept it.
And it's like, I think there has to be some kind of closure.
Because often we're waiting for that, right?
We're waiting for the apology.
We're waiting for the other person to go first.
We're waiting for the world to give us sort of what we want.
And yet we're incapable of going first.
Right. So that's what forgiveness is, is you accept the apology you're not going to get.
The next bit of advice that I love, which is don't measure your life with someone else's ruler.
Tell me the backstory to this one.
I've had the privilege of knowing a lot of maybe I would say accomplished people, successful people, famous people, super rich people.
And man, the outsides not represent their insights.
and we tend to want to compare ourselves to their outsides to their own ideas of what success is.
This goes back to don't aim to be the best and to be the only.
I think I'm better and I do better when I am not trying to imitate someone else's success state
and how they define success.
I mean, in a certain way, what you want to do is you want to kind of grow,
your own metric for what would be successful for you and that is hard to do because we're
kind of bombarded with images and suggestions about what would make a successful person but if
you talk to people who seem to have success you realize that you want to have a different
metric I spent some time with the Amish a lot of time with the Amish
it was really interesting because they had a very different measure of success
for the Amish what they're trying to use one of the reasons how one of the ways that they decide
which technology they're going to use or not use is they have a very clear idea of success
and so their goal their goal is to have a lot of kids and to have every meal with their kids
until they leave home.
They want to have breakfast, lunch, and dinner with them every day.
And if they can arrange their lives to do that,
there's a couple other things,
but if they can arrange their lives to do that,
that's, that is success.
And so they spend a lot of time
and a lot of routines and rigmarole and crazy stuff
with their hacking to try and do that.
But that's for them.
And it's like, oh, that's interesting.
For them, that's a successful person.
They were able to do that.
And everybody in the community really kind of honors that.
And wow, that's really good.
So it was like, all right, that's interesting.
That's a different measure.
We all have sort of like our own measure of what success is and what we think it is.
And in a world of Instagram, what we're seeing is the best successes from everybody else.
we're feeling less about our own self, in part because maybe that ruler that we're using is
sort of a malleable in a way.
It's like, well, I want I want Kevin Kelly's brain and I want this person's body and I want
this person's vacations and I want this person's cars.
But this is what you're exposed to every day.
You're exposed to the best of everybody else in a way that you never were before.
Yeah.
There's actually, that's an interesting statement because I think it goes even further.
and I think we have really absorbed this
and here's the furtherness
and it's beyond TikTok into YouTube
we see the superlative of everything
we see the best human achievement
of like you know the people who couldn't use count cups
or the Rubicube speedzers
or people jumping off of snowboard down houses
just the weirdest stuff of human achievement
we're seeing it and so we have we're being exposed to the superlative world we're seeing lightning strikes
striking people it's like things that we would never see it's not ordinary but we're seeing this
extreme superlative version of the world which does several things one is it kind of can inspire us
to say well that's i didn't know that was possible for humans to do i want to do something that level
that's great but of course at the same time there's this other thing
like, well, my life is nothing like that.
I must not be worth very much.
So there's two sides to it.
But I think there is a positive side to that,
which is to see
and appreciate kind of the full range
of human potential for the first time.
And that can be inspiring as well.
The extraordinary has become ordinary in some ways.
Yeah, exactly.
Right.
And it's like we're seeing it all day long.
We're seeing the extraordinary all day long.
It's like that must affect us in some way that we don't really appreciate where I can see the best that's ever happened again and again and again.
And the weirdness is kind of like, I mean, actually I actually subscribe to a channel that just shows these weird accidents, coincidences, just this strange stuff every day that people get on their phones and,
security cameras, and you kind of realize, you know, there's, I don't know, there's like 100,000
airplane flights every day, and almost every day there's some airline mishap that we
would normally even think about, but if you see that, you think, oh, this is actually not
that rare.
I mean, it's rare, but you, this idea of the extraordinary becoming the ordinary is, I think,
a very profound thing that we haven't really absorbed yet.
So with your thinking of success, I have to ask, what is success for you individually?
Great question. I would say, I ask that in a slightly different way in my own vocabulary, which I ask other people, is what am I trying to optimize?
And what I'm trying to optimize is learning for myself and increasing.
other people learning
and the collective
learning of the world
and I'm also
to my own advice
I'm aiming so that
on the day before I die
I can say I have fully become myself
and I want to
help that for everybody else
is that I want as many people in the world
to be able to say
on the day before the die
I have fully become myself
and
in my mind
that requires
tools
stuff around us
to allow
so the story
that I like to tell
is just to
do the thought
experiment of
imagining
Mozart being born
2,000 years
before he was born
before they had invented
pianos or symphonies
and the way that
his genius
would have been lost
we would not have
he would
Maybe he could play some drums or whatever it was around,
but we would not have had his genius exposed that way
and illuminated and fulfilled.
So we needed to invent those technologies of pianos and stuff.
And so Van Gogh before there was oil paint,
what a loss that would have been?
Or George Lucas, before we invented cinematography,
what a loss that would have been.
So that means that there is a Shakespeare today alive in the world.
And she's waiting for us to invent the tools that she needs to best express her genius.
And so I think we have a moral obligation to kind of make stuff so that everybody born and unborn would be able to express their genius.
And that stuff includes things like clean water and education and stuff.
It's not just technology, it's cultural stuff.
But we have it, and that we want, I want to unleash that in myself and others.
And that's sort of what I'm trying to optimize.
I love that.
It's beautiful.
I love the word unleashed too.
There's unleashing human potential by creating equal opportunity and creating better tools so that people's potential can shine through.
Yeah, yeah.
We're all a different mix.
Each one of us has a different face.
We have a different personality face.
We have a different talent face.
And we each have our own genius.
I truly believe that.
And so what we want to do is arrange things so that you can arrive somewhere where you can actually express it.
And I have to say that this is a very, very difficult thing.
It's taken me most of my life to kind of figure out what I'm really good at.
And I think most people, it just takes almost their entire life.
have to kind of figure out where their genius is. There are some occasionally prodigies of people who
have a very clear idea when they're very young exactly what it is. But for most people, we need
our lives to kind of figure out what our lives are really about. And the other important part of that
is we absolutely need everybody around us. We need parents. We need friends. We need colleagues.
We need customers. We need clients to help us see who we're becoming who we should be.
because it is really, really almost impossible to do that introspectively by ourselves.
Yeah, it's hard to understand a system that you're a part of.
You need those outside, people pointing at your blind spots in a way.
And you need to listen to them when they're right and ignore them when they're wrong.
That's another piece of advice is that, yeah, you want to be able to never quit and then when it's right.
Right, right, but quit when it's necessary.
and you need your friends and family and everyone else to help you decide between those two.
That's why we've been put here with other people around us,
is that we really do need others to help us become who we should be.
I love that.
Beautiful.
Again, it's about the group.
I like that.
There's a common theme here.
One of your other pieces of advice was you can't reason someone out of a notion that they
didn't reason themselves into.
Yeah, trying to argue.
I mean, this is something I have learned to not.
do is argue with people, even though I like to argue. You have to, you know, you have to find someone
who's arguably authentically, you'll want you to learn. And for lots of people, that's not
really the case. And so often we have things that we believe that we inherit or that we don't
know why we believe or we certainly haven't arrived through logic. And so therefore, logic is
not going to work. Another piece of advice I have about changing people's minds is I have found
by far the best way to have any hope of changing someone's mind is to try and listen and
understand, truly understand why do you think what they're thinking, how they got there.
And that conversation will often give you the position to see.
say something honest that might help them move.
Otherwise, it's not going to work because you're kind of operating at that point
and more emotionally at the emotional level of having a conversation rather than an intellectual
reasoning option.
Nobody's rational from the way that they see the world.
It's all about how do they see the world?
What would the world have to look like for me to exhibit that behavior or that belief?
and that goes a long way to helping you understand how other people see it because nobody's intentionally
acting irrationally right and everybody believes and also by the way they also believe that they're good
and doing good things and that's another piece of advice is that in my in my view and this again
took me a long time to kind of realize this but in my view the worst crimes against humanity
have all been done in trying to eliminate evil.
And so the lesson to me is, like,
if you are in a business of trying to eliminate evil,
you've got to be really careful
because that's where
that's where most of the harm happens
where people trying to eliminate evil.
Politics is full of that.
Yeah, exactly, right.
So I'm really wary, if anybody left or right,
who's trying to eliminate evil
in the world or the bad things or whatever.
So because most of the really bad things are done in that name.
The next piece of advice I want to talk about is a great way to understand yourself
is to seriously reflect on everything you find irritating in others.
Yeah.
What's the story behind that one?
I think we're kind of, we're really sensitized.
It's kind of like a self-criticism.
We're really sensitized to the things.
I'm not sure what the mechanism is.
I don't have a deep understanding of that, but it's just my observation.
is that there's something fundamental about things that really tick us off.
And it's because it's like the resident frequency.
It's because we're sort of operating on a very similar frequency.
And so we become sensitized to that.
And they find it annoying.
But it's actually because it's something that we are revolving around in some ways.
I'm not saying that, you know...
If you find someone lying, it means that you're a liar.
It just means that there's some fundamental thing about telling the truth or whatever that is really core to you.
And you need to look at it to be sure about your own behavior in that department.
Yeah.
I think that there's a lot of, there's a signal in our body when other people are doing something that irritates us.
that's a part of ourself that we don't, we don't like.
And that's where we're getting that signal from.
The next, I only want to do a couple more of these.
And then we'll switch to sort of broader topics.
But the next one is whenever you have a choice between being right or being kind,
be kind with no exceptions.
And don't confuse kindness with weakness.
Yeah.
There's got to be a story behind this one.
Yeah.
And by the way, you know, the sub.
theme of the book throughout the whole book is about kindness compassion gratitude these
kind of elemental timeless ancient virtues so kindness is a kind of compassion
and it goes back to it again this for me in this kind of the weird paradox of the universe
that kindness is not weakness because in fact it's a strength it's it's it's it's
power. It's weak people, small people are unkind. You can be generous when you are confident and
true and honest. And so cultivating kindness is cultivating a superpower. And so it's just kind of this, again,
this really weird thing that reaching out, helping others is the most selfish thing you can do
in the long term. So it's a little bit of long termism. And that's another.
thing that goes through is this idea that yeah for immediate payback you know be
angry be snarky whatever it is but if you are patient you take the long view of your
own life and what we're doing it's very clear that that you'll gain more in that
way so you can afford to be kind give away something give away your time be humble
give away your own status, whatever it is, because what I've seen among myself and other people
is that you'll be rewarded more. So it's kind of like there's a, there's a reason to do it just
on the base of it of being human, but I'm saying, no, no, it's the most practical, selfish thing
you could possibly do. Totally. I love the idea of the long view because it's a frame that
changes everything, right? So if you take a long view to life, you eliminate a lot of negative
behavior. But if you even remind yourself before you talk to somebody at work or colleague and you
just think, I'm going to have a relationship with this person for 20 years, it changes the
conversation you're about to have with them, especially if you're upset with them. Because now you're
like, I'm going to approach this almost like I would my partner instead of a colleague that is
disposable or transactional or I'm going to approach this as.
we're going to be working together for a long time.
Here's this thing that's bothering me.
How do we get this out of the way so we can keep going forward versus like,
stop doing this.
This is, you know, it just changes the notion of the conversation.
And that allows for compounding.
So if we look at sort of like one of the major, major forces in the world that people don't
take advantage of, it's compounding.
But how does a relationship compound?
Well, it compounds over time, but you need to stay on the timeline.
So anything that you do that negates being in a long-term relationship takes you off compounding to begin with.
So if you think long-term and you know from compounding that all the advantages come at the end, not at the beginning,
they're very slow to accrue, but then they're too large to ignore.
It's like, how do I be in a relationship with this person for 20 years?
And that compounding gives you, again, the freedom.
It unleashes you because it will overcome all kind of temporary setbacks, right?
I mean, the thing we know about investing is, yeah, if you're there for a long time, then things can go up.
There could be recessions coming and going and you're not bothered by them because you're taking the longer view.
So because those gains in the end will overwhelm even fairly large setbacks.
And so if you say, okay, yeah, we have a set, you know, we're, we have an argument or whatever it is.
But in the long view, it's okay because the gains are going to overwhelm whatever losses we have.
had along the way and or mistakes too I mean you can make that's the other thing is you can make
mistakes even fairly large mistakes but if you have a long view the total gains outweigh them
so so it's it's and that's and we're talking about personal relationships but it's also true
about civilizations and societies and this is of course my involvement with a long now foundation
trying to promote this idea of doing generational things because one we have
ourselves benefited from what previous generations have made, but it also allows us to do things
that are maybe even riskier now because we will, we will make mistakes, but the long-term
games of taking a longer view and arising our horizon will give us greater gains if we do that.
Okay, last piece of advice before we move on, which is before you are old, attend as many
funerals as you can bear and listen nobody talks about the departed's achievements the only thing
people will remember is what kind of person you were well you were achieving so that came from
my attending funerals it was just a 100% direct observation of the data where i was going to
funerals and i was noticing this weird thing
and you know then you kind of play forward it's like what are people going to say at my funeral
it was really sobering um to to reflect on that and there was you know a couple people who were
prominent and i was just kind of maybe shocked or amazed that that's what people wanted to
talk about was what they were like and what they did and their sense of humor and all
other things and it wasn't about the trophies that they had at all or what they had even
accomplished and so that was for me like a wake-up call I said okay I understand that
it's going to be about the quality of my character so so that means that I should
focus a little bit more on my character development growth in my character as is
rather than, you know, another certificate
and another thing they brag about.
I think that's so important.
If you sort of close your eyes
and do a thought experiment
and imagine yourself at, you know,
a hundred lying in a hospital pub
with a few hours to live
and you look back on your life,
you're not going to think about, you know,
how many Twitter followers you had,
how much money's in your bank account.
You're going to think about,
was I there for the people I cared for?
or how was I as a person, right?
All the moments where you chose to be unkind and you could have been kind.
Those are the things you're going to think about.
Was I there for my kids?
Did I skip the meals?
Did I work extra to get that promotion?
That I now realize suddenly it doesn't matter, right?
What matters is time with my kids and my family and, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
So they're all, all these advices are all kind of,
woven together. I know you said that this was the last one, but, you know, one of my pieces
advice is, you know, spend half as much money on your kids as you think you need to and twice
as much time because that's what they're going to, they're going to value. And again, that's
another technique. People call self-distancing that's really good about this, which is imagining
yourself, a future self looking back or imagining yourself old and looking back and seeing what
you would do now to to change things. And I think you might rearrange your priorities, which is
survived it over time. Again, I wish I had known this earlier. So I'm putting it all together in this
little book. Hope you enjoy it. I love that. I think like you're just trying to get a different
perspective on your own life. You don't have to like we look back at like I look back anyway at what
I did when I was 16. I was like, oh, that was profoundly stupid. My 16 year old self did not think that
stupid. But we can use this sort of time shifting to give ourselves a different perspective into our
own lives. Exactly, right. Yeah. So, yeah, this kind of zooming around with time is a very
important tool that, again, I use and I would encourage others to play with. I want to come back
to something we started talking about a little bit earlier, which is artificial intelligence.
Why are you so excited about AI? And what do you fear about AI? I'm very excited about
AI. Incredibly excited. There are books to be written about what's happening right now.
And I really, in some ways, I think we have, we're still under-hyping it for the long term.
That the consequences is so profound. This is by far our biggest invention after the scientific
method. And we humans are incredibly opaque to ourselves. We don't know how we work.
we don't know how our brains work
we don't know what consciousness is
we don't know what intelligence is
we don't know what humans are
and the major
the way that we're going to find out about who we are
is through AI and robots
as we tend to try to make them
like us and not like us
and how do we have other kinds of thinking
and all these things are going to come back
and then in addition to that
making other
and trying to replicate ourselves is that we're also going to use them to become better humans.
So it's like one of the things going on right now is you have these language models and chat bots
that are trained on all human writing and behavior.
And we're kind of, we're shocked that they're racist and ages and sexist when that's kind of like the average human.
but here's the thing is we don't accept that we're saying no they need to be better than us
this thing this thing they were making cannot be racist cannot be sexes it has to be better than
we are which we can code in because that's just code ethics and morale is code we can put it in
but the problem is is that we don't have any idea or consensus on what it means to be better
than us we don't know what a better human looks like we don't we don't have that in our head
We don't know what our own ethics as humans are very shallow and inconsistent and terribly vague.
But we want robots to be better than us, but we don't have a picture in our head of how to do that.
So we are now going to be using these AIs and robots to imagine, articulate, and help us become better humans.
So that's why I'm excited, is that it's going to help us.
us become better humans. What does that mean? We don't know. That's the conversation we're
having right now. Every day we're coming up with these things. What does better than us look like?
That is incredibly profound question. How does our own brains work? We don't know, but we're going
to be finding out because we're trying to make them think and be conscious. So this is a huge
long identity crisis, centuries long journey for us of understanding us and then trying to
change ourselves. And that's why it's so exciting. So we can talk more about that. And then
to your question, what am I afraid of? Well, the more powerful the technology, the more powerfully
can be abused. This is the most powerful technology we've ever made. It will be abused. I'm sorry to say,
it will probably be weaponized.
And those are always something to worry about.
So I'm not worried about the kind of commercialization and stuff.
I go along with Ted Chang's idea that most of our worries about technology
are really worries about capitalism.
I am worried about the weaponization of these things.
And I have a second worry, which is a little harder to explain,
which is I'm worried about whether we will take on the relationship with some of these of master slave.
Treat them like slaves.
If we treat them like slaves, that's incredibly corrosive to our own humanity.
Just that stance, just the stance of these are going to do our bidding, they're just machines.
they help me understand that because that's a different relationship than I feel like we have
with computers right now well it is and and one of the things that we're trying to figure out
is what is that relationship and so one of the things I'll say about the chats is that they're
the universal intern that's what we're making we're making these universal interns that do all the
work of interns you have to check their work but they're kind of like doing first drafts and
they're helping the research and so that's what we're making these universal interns that's
a relationship that we can understand and that's a you know it's there's still a power thing but it's
okay it's a it's not degenerative like i think a master slave relationship would be so um we i don't
i don't see any evidence that we're going down that way but that's a worry that we would and that and
and to some people they're just machines and i'm saying no no just that the stance itself it doesn't matter
that they're machines if we have that kind of you're just you'll do my bidding no matter what
I don't know I'm not going to you're not human so therefore I can have you do whatever I
wanted to do so so that's a worry that we would do that although I don't see any evidence
that we're doing that so far what would be the signs that AI has been being weaponized
how would we know oh oh well
there's all different levels of it there's in a curious way because this may seem contradictory
in a curious way you know there's this idea that take humans out to kill decision so you have
robots soldiers and drones that make that autonomously decide whether to fire the gun or not
I actually am okay with that in a weird way because one is I think
think we I think it's possible that we could make them better than us and so they don't do
war crimes so they're actually so we have the rules of war which is a weird concept but it's
better than not having rules of war and that we kind of say okay these are going to follow it so
they do follow it my hope is that that process of doing that we realize how absurd it is to have
war because right now we're saying no no we don't want robots killing people we only want humans
to kill other people.
It's like, that's not.
No, no, we don't want humans to kill people either.
And so I think by having to write the laws of war for the robot soldiers, it will
illuminate how screwed up the idea of accepting war as a legitimate process.
So that's part of it.
I want to explore that a little more because in my mind, where I go with this is like,
not every country would agree to encode that into all of their devices.
The country, the defects would gain an advantage.
But the AIs would also learn that not everybody's following the rules of war.
And then it would autonomously adapt to not following them because, like, am I thinking about this wrong?
Well, the one thing I feel is I have a huge disagreement with a single erudence.
because I don't believe AI is ever going to be out of our control in the sense of, yes, I mean, there may be occasions when it does something, but we're going to be quick to correct it and say, no, no.
So if there's people or countries that don't, that are having soldiers that fight the other way, it would be like having war crimes.
It was like, yeah, does the rest of the world accept that? Are we going to, are they going to be punished?
So the thing about the world that we're headed into is that for better or worse, we're heading into a global world.
And this idea that we're going to stop globalism or stop the globalists, it's like we're not going to become Amish.
We're not going backwards.
We are making an integrated world.
And the more of the complex technology we make, like the Internet and what's ever coming next, is very, very complex.
There's thousands and thousands of people to cooperate, to make it work.
And even the AI running, it's not, it's very, the fantasy, the Hollywood fantasy of the
lone villain on the mountaintop who has all this technology that works.
There's no, there's no IT support.
It just works the first time and they can gain control of these very complicated, that's just, that's just, that's just, it's like dragons.
It's just a fantasy.
There's the only, the technologies that we're making today, the more powerful ones,
just require so many people to buy into the vision, to make it work and keep it going,
that there's a natural resistance now that's going to come.
So to get something accepted, you have to have millions of people.
Millions of people buy into the vision.
And there are things we bought into without knowing it.
There's all kinds of things that we have that we're collectively supporting without having articulated them.
But the important thing is that it takes huge buy-in to make things happen today.
And that's a conservative force in the classical sense of it.
And so that's one of the reasons why I don't worry too much.
about these rogue ideas of things.
Yes, there may be an occasional thing,
but it's not really a force that work in the world.
Do you think we're at the hockey stick inflection point of AI finally?
I mean, we've been talking about AI for 20 years.
No, I don't.
I think we're still at day one.
And so here's the thing about AI, artificial intelligence,
is that most people think of intelligence,
including a lot of AI researchers,
as a single dimension, like a decibels, IQ.
It's multi-dimensional.
There's multi-vecuret.
It's all gradient.
None of it's binary.
There's probably hundreds of different dimensions
and different types of cognition in our own minds.
And so far, we've synthesized basically two varieties.
pattern recognition and a little bit of kind of generative ability there's this logical deduction
you know symbolic reason none of these things have we come close to synthesizing what's
shocking to us is how far we can go with just these two things we've and then and they're very
flat and kind of bottom up into this connectionist idea
which is like, yeah.
And what I've learned from that is that that bottom up
will take you much further than you thought you could go,
but will never take you all the way to where you want to go.
So Wikipedia, this classic bottom up thing,
over time, there's a more and more top-down editorial control,
and eventually over time there will be even more to get where we want,
to get that kind of encyclopedia that's totally reliable,
that does what you want to do, there's going to be some more top-down control given to that bottom-up
power.
But you can't get all the way just from the bottom-up.
And that's sort of what the neuronets are.
They're very flat bottom-up.
And they're going to take us much further than we ever thought.
But they're not going to take us to where we want to get to.
One of my fears, I think, with AI that we'll have to deal with at some point is that they're going to take us.
that the news isn't the news anymore.
The news is tailored to me.
And by tailored to me, I mean, you and I can look at the same article,
which is generated in real time based on our political preference,
based on how much coffee we had in the morning.
Right, right, right, right.
It's going to have enough information to tailor the article towards us in a way that
can manipulate or mislead or engage or drive clicks or do whatever.
and we'll have no way of telling what the actual news is
because we'll all have an individual view into the news.
Yeah, so I think this epistemological front that we've entered into
is a very significant and very potent frontier,
which is how do we know things?
What do we need?
to be convinced something is true.
Again, we have kind of like in our own past sort of waved our hands and thought, oh, I know, I know.
But what this is coming up to illuminate is, in fact, we don't know.
We don't really have a very scientific measurement for that or process.
And so what this is illuminating is like, okay, Chachy P is making things up.
Well, what would we need to believe that?
Is it the source?
Can we believe the source?
How many levels?
Do we need to get on three levels of footnotes or does it need seven levels?
Or do they have to be verified by something, some other AI?
So this issue, I think, is a really fundamental thing.
It's not a trivial thing of like disinformation for the election.
No, no, it goes way beyond that.
This is a really core thing at the level of,
what is truth how do we it's a consensus of some sort well how do we come to that consensus
and what do we what are the different categories maybe there's different categories of things
you know there's maybe the levels or varieties I don't know and that and that's very exciting
because we're going to have to head into that to kind of decide and it's not a matter of something
Facebook is going to figure out this is a big big challenge
as how do we know things, which was begun by the scientific method,
the scientific method began to change how we decided we knew things.
But that's, so I did a study of the scientific method.
I did the first study of the scientific method.
And what I realized is a lot of the things that we consider essential to the scientific method
were very recent.
The double-blind study was like in the 1950s.
Pacebos were not invented until.
within my lifetime. And so
the scientific
method itself is changing very, very
rapidly. And so I'm trying to imagine what's the
scientific method going to look like in the other 50 years.
And I think part of what's
happening is that it's going to have an AI component
and all these other things.
But
how we know things has been changing, and we're
in this process right now of kind
of being now illuminated the fact that we're in
this thing. We're changing how
we decide we know things.
And that's very, very
exciting and scary.
Yeah, I mean, it's going to be fascinating to watch all those play out.
I want to switch gears just a little bit because I wanted to hit on this before we end.
We talked to a little bit earlier about religion.
I'm curious what role you see religion playing in society today and how that might evolve in the future.
That's a really good question.
I am myself. I have a religious belief.
I think that if we look at the evidence right now,
it's pretty clear that organized religions are on the wing.
They're just disappearing around the world.
The US is almost exceptional in this sense.
It's a very modern, has a high living standard
and a high religiosity, which is very, very unique.
One of the things I can say about Christianity is all the countries that have gone atheists were Christians first.
So Christianity is the closest thing to atheism.
It's really strange. It's really strange.
So I would say, standing back, there are several things you can say about religion.
One is there's going to be less of the current organized versions of them.
And secondly, the other pattern we see is the schizism,
where even the organized ones become more finely divided in different little local niches.
So it's kind of like mass notification that we see in other parts of the culture.
I am going to, I would not be surprised to see some new religions based on AI come up.
religions have always been about throughout history people have converted and gravitated to religions that they felt made them more powerful more successful
i mean like you look at korea korea went from a kind of a semi-buddhist to a christian state because it was being driven by the people that they saw who were christian who were successful and i wouldn't be like them or or your gods are more powerful
powerful than my gods. That was a very common thing in the ancient world was whose God
was more powerful. And people who were successful believing these gods was like, yeah, I want
that. So I'm going to worship that God because I want to be like them. And that's been one of
the major causes. I mean, we think there's some intellectual thing. Oh, the theology sounds better,
but generally has not operated that way.
It's been much more, I want to be like that person.
What do they believe?
There's a lot of encoded ancient wisdom in religion, though,
that is beneficial to create success.
Exactly, right, right.
So in a modern world, yeah, if you don't drink
and don't womanize around and stuff
or a family man, you're probably going to be more successful
than somebody else.
And so, yeah, I want to be that.
I want to be the Islamic guy because they were more successful because of their beliefs.
You know, again, some of the things in my book about, you know, kindness and compassion and gratitude are ancient, ancient wisdom of the religions.
And in my observation, people who believe that do better.
So yes.
So there is a lot of encoded wisdom in the religions.
But the other stuff about them is not working as well.
And I think there could be some new powers from people who kind of dive into AI.
Maybe AI helps them understand who they are better.
Maybe they can become more themselves by using AI.
And that therefore there could be something, not Scientology, but that's one hint at that kind of a thing.
Imagine if Scientology really worked, right?
I mean, you know, the gizmo stuff.
Well, that would be, you know,
there are a lot of people could move into that.
And so I think, so it wouldn't not surprise me to see some new religions based around AI emerging
in the kind of vacuum of the waning of the established religions.
And let me say one last thing.
And I would expect it to see these first in China and maybe Russia,
because they have a total vacuum of this.
So here's the thing about China,
which I spend a lot of time in.
There's nothing to believe in.
They don't have a religion to believe in.
They don't have a scripture.
They don't have a constitution that they believe in.
There's only about making money, and that's not enough.
And so there is this hunger for something to believe in.
And if there was something like an AI religion that could sweep the country because of the vacuum of something greater than themselves to believe in.
I think we miss the fact that as humans, we have this instinct to be a part of something larger than ourselves.
And when that instinct is not fulfilled, it leads to all sorts of unpredictable behavior.
Right, right, right.
Exactly.
So in absence of that, so nationalism is something bigger than yourself to believe in.
And so that's why there's going to be a rise in China of nationalism.
That's sort of almost inevitable because that's bigger than yourself.
And you can believe in that.
It's your team, China.
But there could be even bigger.
bigger things and that's yeah you wanted to believe in your your purpose in life
should suit you but your meaning in life your passion should suit you but your
purpose and meaning should exceed you should be bigger than you and we crave
that individually and so therefore you know we we want to sign up we want to be
part of a big story an arc going through it for me that big story is
technology in life. I see technology is an extension of the same process of life in the mind.
And so for me, the big arc is this sort of what I call exotropic growth of planets forming and
life forming and then minds forming and then technology forming. It's all one long arc through
the universe. And so that's what I'm aligned or that's what I'm trying to align my
myself with. It's a bigger story of bringing choices and possibilities to everybody so that
everybody has a chance to fulfill their, be the most full of themselves as possible.
That's a beautiful place to end this conversation. Thank you so much, Kevin.
it was my pleasure thanks for the great questions and for your insight i really appreciate i'm a fan
and um you know i i i really did enjoy this i had a lot fun thank you
thanks for listening and learning with us for a complete list of episodes show notes
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