The Tim Ferriss Show - #413: Tyler Cowen on Rationality, COVID-19, Talismans, and Life on the Margins
Episode Date: March 5, 2020Tyler Cowen on Rationality, COVID-19, Talismans, and Life on the Margins | Brought to you by NutriBullet and ExpressVPN. "If you need to measure, you've failed." — Tyler CowenProfessor Tyle...r Cowen (@tylercowen) has a personal moonshot: to teach economics to more people than anyone else in the history of the world—and he might just succeed. In addition to his regular teaching at George Mason University, Tyler has blogged every day at Marginal Revolution for almost 17 years, helping to make it one of the most widely read economics blogs in the world.Tyler cocreated Marginal Revolution University, a free online economics education platform that’s reached millions. He is also a bestselling author of more than a dozen books, a regular Bloomberg columnist, and host of the popular Conversations with Tyler podcast, where he examines the work and worldviews of thinkers like Martina Navratilova, Neal Stephenson, Reid Hoffman, and many more.His latest project is Emergent Ventures, a $5 million fund to support entrepreneurs who have big ideas on how to improve society.Please enjoy!This episode is brought to you by NutriBullet. NutriBullet is the affordable, easy-to-use, easy-to-clean blender that was first recommended to me by entrepreneur Noah Kagan when I interviewed him for the podcast. Its signature blending process transforms high-fiber veggies, nuts, seeds, and fruits into silky, nutrient-dense smoothies (or protein shakes, savory soups, and dips) that are easy to digest and absorb.Now, the engineers at NutriBullet have created an incredibly convenient upgrade named the NutriBullet Blender Combo. This device is their most versatile yet, allowing you to effortlessly switch between single-serve and full-size blending—everything that you know and love about the classic device, plus all the performance and capacity you expect from a full-size blender. Don’t settle for blenders that leave your smoothies filled with chunks. Get the NutriBullet Blender Combo, and introduce your veggies and fruits to 1,200 watts. It easily gets the job done. And for you, my dear listeners, NutriBullet is offering 20% off of all products on its website. To get your 20% off, just go to NutriBullet.com/Tim!*This episode is also brought to you by ExpressVPN. I’ve been using ExpressVPN since last summer, and I find it to be a reliable way to make sure that my data is secure and encrypted, without slowing my Internet speed. If you ever use public Wi-Fi at, say, a hotel or a coffee shop (where I often work and as many of my listeners do), you’re often sending data over an open network, meaning no encryption at all.One way to ensure that all of your data is encrypted and can’t be easily read by hackers is by using ExpressVPN. All you need to do is download the ExpressVPN app on your computer or smartphone and then use the Internet just as you normally would. You click one button in the ExpressVPN app to secure 100% of your network data. Use my link ExpressVPN.com/Tim today and get an extra three months free on a one-year package!***If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests.For show notes and past guests, please visit tim.blog/podcast.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (“5-Bullet Friday”) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Please fill out the form at tim.blog/sponsor.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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and I am recording. I figure I might as well record a video. What did you have for breakfast
today, Tyler? Smoked trout, green pepper, green grapes, and some cheddar cheese,
pretty close to my usual. It's an excellent breakfast. Green grapes. Wow, I love this.
All right. They're good for you. This could be a question in the actual podcast, of course. It could. It could. Yeah,
it could definitely be a question. Why do you choose those items in that breakfast?
Except for the grapes, they store pretty well. That's important. You can buy a week's worth at
a time. The trout gives you protein. It's probably either good for you or at least not bad for you.
And it's not something
you're tempted to overeat. Like you just can't eat that much smoked trout in the morning.
For smoked salmon, people can attack and not stop.
Trout has a self-limiting function.
Yet it tastes good, right? It's a funny utility curve for smoked trout.
Okay, let me just listen to that for a second.
Optimal minimum.
At this altitude, I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking.
Can I ask you a personal question?
Now would seem an appropriate time.
What if I did the opposite?
I'm a cybernetic organism, living tissue over a metal endoskeleton.
The Tim Ferriss Show. This episode is brought to you by Nutribullet.
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Hello, boys and girls. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss
Show, where it is my job to deconstruct world-class performers. I would consider my guest today one of those, to moonshot is to teach economics, or economics, we'll clear that up in just
a moment, to more people than anyone else in the history of the world.
And he might just succeed.
In addition to his regular teaching at George Mason University, Tyler has blogged every
day at Marginal Revolution for, I want to say, more than 15 years now.
That's incredible.
Helping to make it one of the most widely read economics
blogs in the world. He's co-created Marginal Revolution University, a free online economics
education platform that's reached millions and will no doubt reach millions more. He's also a
bestselling author of more than a dozen books. This man is an overachiever, a regular Bloomberg
columnist and host of the Popular Conversations with Tyler podcast, where he examines the work and worldviews of underrated thinkers like Martina Navratilova,
Neil Stevenson, one of my favorite writers, Reid Hoffman, and many more. His latest project is
Emergent Ventures, a $5 million fund to support entrepreneurs who have big ideas on how to improve
society. You can find him on the web, marginalrevolution.com, conversationswithtyler.com.
I highly recommend checking out. And on Twitter, at Tyler Cowen. Tyler, welcome to the show.
Thank you, Tim. Happy to be here.
And there are so many questions I want to ask. We have so many friends,
or at least I would say fans of your work in common, like Ryan Holiday. And you have been
suggested and requested as a guest on this
podcast for a very long time indeed. Let's start with my first question slash area of confusion.
As you may have noticed, even in the introduction, I pronounced it differently several times.
Do you say economics or economics? Probably I'm not consistent, but I don't think of myself as doing economics.
I think of myself as doing a funny kind of philosophy with the economy as the topic.
So my goal isn't really to teach economics.
It's to improve my own ways of thinking, and maybe people will learn some of that as I go along. Why use, and I will flip-flop here, why use economics as the vehicle?
What makes that interesting or useful for examining thinking?
I'm stuck with it at this point, right?
So I think the most efficient way of learning at the margin for most smart people is travel.
And I try to travel a lot.
But I don't
necessarily try to talk other people into becoming economists. When I was a young kid, I was a chess
player and I was very good at chess and I quit chess and I took up economics. And that has made
sense for me as a career. But in a way, I'm not emotionally that wedded to economics, right?
I think of anthropology as a more fundamental
way of thinking about humans, and economics indirectly is parasitical on anthropology,
and we should all be doing more anthropology and travel.
Could you explain what you mean by parasitical on anthropology?
So economics, the core insights are about incentives, right? The law of demand,
price goes up, you buy less. That makes perfect sense. But in anything but the simplest contexts, you have to ask,
how do people even understand what the price is? So if a mother says to her kid,
oh, don't do that or you won't be allowed to play outside. You know, what is the real price? Does
the kid really not get to play outside ever again? They get to play outside even more the day after.
Who knows? It's about how people understand how they communicate with each other. And that is a kind of anthropology,
sociology. Economics is embedded in those broader social sciences. So in my view, you need to be
broad, read a lot, travel a lot, kind of be a bit crazy. I'm all for the right kind of crazy. I
think we will be examining and exploring some nooks and crannies that would qualify as, if not crazy, at least weird. That's the hope, part of some research for this conversation, I came across something that said you also played for money.
What did playing chess and or playing chess for money teach you?
What did you take away from those experiences, or what impact did that have on you?
Well, this may sound trivial, but first it taught me I could win, and second it taught me I could lose.
And those are both very important lessons.
And it also taught me I needed to be honest with myself about why I was either winning
or losing and that there were real stakes here.
So I learned that like at age 10, 11.
That was a great background.
And chess is not forgiving of excuses, right?
It cultivates what I now call meta-rationality.
And you can't lie about how well you're doing, not in the medium term.
You have a numerical rating, it's pretty accurate.
You win or you lose.
You can't say the sun got in my eyes more than once.
So you have many phrases that no doubt we will be digging into or terms.
Could you elaborate on meta-rationality, please?
Or give other examples of metarationality? A person is being metarational when he or she understands how smart or well
informed he or she is in a given topic area. Metarationality is very hard to come by, in my
view. So people typically do not defer to the views of experts when they ought to. Sometimes
the expert might be wrong, but if you're just playing the odds, the expert is probably right.
So people are far too confident about too many things they shouldn't be so confident about.
Meta-rational people, who are essentially impossible to find, but at the margin,
we can be a bit more meta-rational, they know to whom they should defer or how to find out the right answer.
And as someone who is self-admittedly or self-described hyperlexic, a consumer of, it would seem, vast quantities, but certainly on some level curated quantities of information. How would you think
about, as an example, because you've also written for the New York Times in 2013 about pandemics,
to fight pandemics, reward research. Now, one could argue that we're a little behind the eight
ball with respect to current circumstances, but as we're recording this on Monday, March 2nd, how do you yourself think about, for instance, parsing information and sources related to something like COVID-19?
And I know that I'm using shorthand, but the virus is sort of awkward to say, so I'll just use COVID-19 as a placeholder for this particular coronavirus that we're contending with.
The returns to understanding how to build a good Twitter feed are very high.
Yeah.
And right now, many of us should be building coronavirus Twitter feeds, right?
Yeah.
And following a number of people like Helen Branswell.
And then people need to trust you.
So the returns to being ethical
and keeping confidences are high.
And then other people
will tell you things
if you're at all known.
And then you need to be
metarational and judge,
you know, which of them
you should listen to more.
Some of that might happen
through WhatsApp.
And then just at the end of the day,
not to get too caught up
in your own narrative, you need to be suspicious of stories. You can, at the end of the day, not to get too caught up in your own narrative,
you need to be suspicious of stories.
There's like the panic story.
It's all going to be fine story.
Probably the truth
is somewhere in between.
But dominant moods or emotions
tend to seize hold of us,
even if we're very smart.
And often smart people go wrong
because they're just better
at feeding more information
into their chosen mood.
And then they're likely to screw feeding more information into their chosen mood.
And then they're likely to screw up.
So it's this very careful balancing act across many dimensions.
How do you cultivate
meta-rationality
particularly when
hopefully taking into account incentives?
Because what I've noticed, for instance,
is that among the friends I've spoken to,
who I all consider, from the perspective of an IQ test at least,
intelligent, pretty far on the right,
that the conviction with which they believe this is serious or not serious often corresponds in some fashion to how inconvenient or convenient it would be or how much of a financial sacrifice believing it is serious and requires, say, self-quarantine or something like that would cost them from a business perspective. How can one cultivate the ability to remain
metarational during times of duress or panic like this? And I know that's a very
jumbled question, but I think you can probably get what I'm grasping for.
Maybe a certain bit of obliviousness actually is useful. So you want to be plugged in, but also
somewhat detached and so caught up in your own thing, your whole, what did I have for breakfast
this morning routine? When am I going to get to shoot baskets next? That it actually distracts
you from too much emotional involvement. So Peter Thiel sometimes says you sort of want to embody
opposites in yourself in some ways.
So this extreme involvement in the processing of information,
but also a fair amount of detachment, maybe is the best you can do if you can achieve that.
I think the returns to detachment have gone up a lot with Twitter.
So Twitter is fantastic, but most people use it badly and they hate it
and they criticize it and they waste time on it.
But if you just use it as a truth generating mechanism and use Twitter search and mostly
ignore politics on it, it's wonderful. Could you give an example of how you have used Twitter
in that fashion? What type of truth might you try to generate or identify through Twitter, and how would you go
about it? Right now, Twitter search is mostly better than Google search. So take a topic you're
interested in, which in this case could be coronavirus, right? And just type it into
Twitter search every morning or every evening and see what pops up. And then you're not restricted
to who it is you follow, which is always going to be limiting. You'll sample different opinions, see how people respond.
You'll be led places by happenstance.
That's fantastic.
We didn't have that 15 years ago.
One of your most popular, if not the most popular post of yours in 2019 on your blog
was How I Practice at What I Do.
I believe that's the name of the blog post. Please
correct me if I'm wrong. Yes, that's correct.
And to quote that blog post, you wrote, recently, one of my favorite questions to bug people with
has been, what is it that you do to train that is comparable to a pianist practicing scales?
If you don't know the answer to that one, maybe you're doing something wrong or not doing enough.
Could you elaborate on that, please?
Well, say you're a social scientist or you're a writer
or you give public talks.
You are out there in some way all of the time.
But if you look at people like, say, what Kobe Bryant did
or what Martina Navratilova did,
they practiced to an
extreme degree, and that's how they got better. Martina was not world number one player until
she had an intense regime of proper practice. Kobe, the older he got, he realized he needed
to practice more, whereas a lot of top stars actually practice less, and they coast on
reputation, and they have a guaranteed contract. So just every day you want
to be reading, you want to be talking, you want to be thinking, you want to be exercising and do it,
you know, at an intense level as you can and just try to do that all day long. And that's practice.
And, you know, one hopes that will make you better. It's not for you to say, but, you know,
that's the hope. How do you practice your scales? What does, what does scales look like for you?
Writing out large quantities of material, much of which I never use or publish,
writing out different points of view, which are not my own, is also a way of practicing.
Trying to talk to a very diverse set of people, in my case, not just academics, not just people I went to high school with, say.
Listening to highly complex music, I think, is a way to keep your mind active.
Periodically reading serious fiction, I think, is something people stop doing after they hit a certain age, maybe 30 or 40.
But it forces you to be open to the complexities of how humans actually are.
I recommend that too.
If someone listening were a nonfiction purist,
say they quit at 20 and had not been reading fiction since,
are there any particular fiction books that you might recommend for someone to use
as their re-entry to the world
of complex fiction or fiction overall? I would have to know their biography,
but I would start with Harold Bloom's book, The Western Canon, which has a list and surveys a lot
of his favorite works, a few of which are nonfiction, by the way. And dig in there and
just find what you love and pursue it. I think the greatest writer is Shakespeare.
It's not necessarily for everyone. And if you did not grow up writing and reading English, it's probably not for you. But that would be one start, the Henriade.
When you say complex music, what does that mean to you?
Indian classical music, I think it is phenomenal and grossly underrated, and it really forces you to be in a complexity mindset.
Beethoven late string quartets, Bach, The Art of the Fugue, atonal music, Arnold Schoenberg.
Some of the stuff people don't like and curse at and think has wrecked music.
I'm all for it, pretty much.
It's just really, really hard. The sophistication of the hand percussion in
classical Indian music, I don't know much about other instruments, but the sophistication of the
hand percussion, speaking as someone who's become very interested in hand percussion in the last
few years, is mind-blowing. It is unbelievable how well developed the system of hand percussion is in classical Indian music, just as one example.
It could be the best music in the world.
And I wonder if it's not related to Indian preeminence in the world of tech.
Hmm.
That is definitely one I'll have to chew on.
I like that as a thought exercise at the very least.
You spoke to your writing and your writing practice. What does your daily writing practice
look like, if it is indeed daily? I make that assumption, but perhaps you're batching your
writing. What does your writing process look like? It is daily in an almost religious manner. I write on Christmas day. I write on
Sundays. I write columns, blog posts. I like to quit writing before I get tired of writing.
That way I'm hungry to come back the day after. And the real enemy in writing is days where you
get nothing written. If you write something every day, I don't care how much or how little it is,
it's going to add up. And over time, you'll get more done each day.
So just make it an absolute rule.
The really important thing, it may not be writing for everyone,
but just do it every day.
Get better at it every day.
Don't take any excuses.
Do it.
What does your routine and setup look like?
What time of day?
What are the ingredients that for you constitute a writing session?
What are the ingredients that for you constitute a writing session? What are the characteristics?
I love having multiple offices to create variance in my physical environment,
but usually I start at home. I have just an ordinary sofa next to a very good stereo and
a lot of CDs, some being Indian classical music. And I just sit on the sofa and lean against the
armrest. I don't even know if I'm comfortable, but I'm so used to it. And I just write and I just sit on the sofa and lean against the armrest. I don't even know if I'm comfortable, but I'm so used to it.
And I just write and I end up back there at the end of the day.
And in between, I'm at one of my two offices.
Or if I'm on the road, I'll write in a hotel room.
I've gotten very used to writing other places.
I enjoy the change of pace.
Somehow forces you to think new thoughts a bit.
Do you do it first thing in the morning?
Does the time of day vary?
What does the timing look like?
Almost always it's early in the morning.
The first thing I do in the morning is check my email and eat breakfast, right?
But after that, I try to get to writing pretty quickly.
So I think a lot of people peak between, say, 8.15 a.m. and maybe 11.30, 11.45.
And those are my core writing times most, but not all days.
And when you check email,
do you have any rules or tactics that help you to avoid getting consumed
or pulled into the vortex of email to the extent that it overtakes your writing time.
How do you think about that?
Well, keep in mind, responding to emails is writing too.
I once said to Patrick Collison, my business model is responding to my email.
So I respond to a lot of email.
I don't respond to it the second it comes in necessarily. And I certainly
don't in the morning, but there'll be a few things if only because of time zones or I do respond
immediately and email us how people are going to tell me things often. So if I respond, I develop
more and better relationships. Uh, I'm, you could say I'm a fan of getting somewhat drowned in your
email, but I think here's part of it. I try to stay a bit weird
and obscure enough that mostly quite smart people are writing me. And if I had too many not smart
emails, I would feel I was doing something else wrong with what I'm writing. What will the symptoms be of you having crossed the line into overexposed or having made mistakes in your writing?
I guess besides the email, but will you know?
Will the indication be just a change in the ratio of smart to not-so-smart email,
or are there other ways that you would recognize you've gone astray with your writing? Maybe too many people asking me to do political things would be a sign that I had
done something wrong. That mostly doesn't happen. The people emailing me being less smart or less
to the point, that mostly doesn't happen. So I think I get a pretty large number of very good
emails each day or WhatsApp messages, and I like that.
But you have to reciprocate, right?
Yeah.
With your writing, do you do your drafting, first drafts, in Word, in LaTeX, in email
composition?
I know some people who do that in an actual WordPress editor or in a blog of some type.
How do you draft?
I'm a software idiot.
So if I'm writing a book or a column, I just use Microsoft Word.
Got it.
And I'm still struggling to figure out how it works.
If it's a blog post, I type it into WordPress.
And I do find if I type into WordPress, I write different things than if I write on an open Word document.
Recently, I've been trying Google Docs.
It's better for collaboration, but it's disorienting for me.
It doesn't feel permanent somehow.
It feels like if a quasar explodes somewhere out there, the whole thing will go poof, and I'm nervous.
But maybe that's good.
It gets me to finish what I'm doing more quickly.
Now, you have written about your own 12 rules for life.
I wanted to ask you about two of them, if you would be willing to expand.
So, I'll read them, but these are rules 7 and 12, respectively.
And I'll read both, and then you can dig into either.
The first, number 7, learn how to learn from those
who offend you. Number 12, every now and then, and I'm going to mispronounce things here probably,
read or reread Erasmus, Montaigne, Homer, Shakespeare, or Joyce's Ulysses so that you
do not take any rules too seriously. The human condition seems to defeat our orders, our attempts, excuse me, to order it. All right, I would love
for you to expand on either of those. You can choose whichever you'd like to talk about first.
Well, part of the brilliance of those writers I listed is they're highly complex.
They force you or induce you to see human motivation as very complicated. They run against
the grain of there being simple
answers, and you really have to focus on them and give them full attention. So if you're dealing
with them periodically, I think it's a good way to always stay fresh if that's a true, open,
honest engagement. Now, the people who offend you, I mean, Twitter is a great place to find them,
right? People are so negative on Twitter and either directly or
indirectly, they're going to be negative about you, whatever it is you do or are or think.
Someone's going to dump on it and trash it. Those are the people where you really need to look
closely and say, what can I learn from this person? Do not play a strategy, which I call
devalue and dismiss, because you can point to flaws in their thought, right? Or their biography,
like, oh, you know, say what they've done wrong, or they didn't say this right three years ago.
And you can dismiss them. But they're at the margin, really, the ones you've got to learn from.
Like for me, that's Paul Krugman. You know, he puts down so many people. Sometimes he puts down
views I hold. You could say it offends me. But, you know, I need to suck it up and just realize there's something I can learn from here.
What have you learned from Paul?
What would be cultivated as a result of performing this practice?
Well, I would say a lot about regional economics.
At the meta level, I've learned a lot about how to communicate, sometimes how not to communicate.
I understand a particular point of view much better, which I sometimes but not usually agree with.
And he's one of the smartest economists out there, right?
He has a Nobel Prize.
Like, of course, my goodness, we should be learning from this person.
What are things that come to mind that you have changed your mind on in the last few years or the last year?
Are there any positions or beliefs or otherwise that you've changed your mind on or come to think differently about?
Well, one thing that I'm finding really striking is the number of different countries that have had demonstrations or sometimes even riots about their politics. And those are sometimes countries such as Chile, which at least in regional terms are leaders, are doing better than other places. Chile is actually seen declining
income inequality, and yet millions of people in a not so well-populated country are going to the streets. So the sense of discontent out there is higher than I had thought.
And I don't feel I've thought that through properly yet, but I'm definitely changing my mind
about the stability of current parties and regimes of politics. It seems to not quite be holding. What are your working hypotheses
with respect to why that might be?
I think one is the Martin-Gurry hypothesis
that in a world with the Internet,
we see everyone's flaws more readily.
So you look at politicians,
or for that matter, top thinkers on social media,
mostly they're not very impressive.
And again, you could play the devalue and dismiss strategy, but it means the citizenry ends up
disillusioned. So the second point, I think, is that if you look at, say, the United States,
it has not in every way covered itself in glory over the last 15 or 20 years,
and that disillusions people around the world, yet they don't know where else to turn, because in my view, some version of Western liberal capitalist democracy is indeed the best
system. People see China doing better. They don't necessarily want autocracy, so politics becomes
more confusing. And then finally, I think we're seeing big shifts in the income distribution,
where certain groups are seeing either stagnant or falling wages, and this heightens their anxiety,
and then they too become dissatisfied in politics,
but they're not sure exactly where to turn.
They tend to turn to politicians who promise them free lunches,
but that's probably bad.
How are you going to go about developing a better understanding
or different perspectives related to this observation,
for instance, in Chile? What do your next steps look like?
Well, the most likely next step is failure, right? But going to Chile would be one thing I would do.
I've spent maybe five weeks of my life in Chile, which is not a lot, but enough that I have a sense of the
place. I was recently invited back. I will try to find a way to get back and then I will speak with
people. But I also try to figure things out just by writing them down or writing them up. And if I
just sit in the shower and sing, I don't really get anywhere. So I need to talk with people or
give a talk or write something down. And that will probably be wrong, but that's like the draft that doesn't get out.
And then it will get better. And like, maybe sometimes it's okay.
What percentage of what you write, would you say, ultimately gets published on the blog or
elsewhere? Just to give people an idea of what the pie chart looks like with published, unpublished, and maybe there
are other categories. But what percentage would you say end up getting published somewhere?
It's hard to measure because the things I discard, I tend to rewrite them so much,
whether I've thrown them out or just rewritten them, I'm not sure how to classify it. But I have
many hundreds of pages of unpublished stuff, and it's going to stay that way in varying phases of completeness.
But it was necessary to get to other things.
In 2000, I want to say 2003, so this is some time ago.
I suspect things may have changed, but at the time, I read that you were watching television only in Spanish. That was correct then. Yeah.
For what period of time did you do that? Oh, over a dozen years, and I still do it sometimes,
but I found it a good way to learn Spanish, but a good way to have a window onto a group of concerns that I would not
necessarily encounter in the rest of my daily life. So if you watch Spanish language news from
Latin America or from Miami, but essentially from Latin America, you will just get a very different
sense of what is important, what is interesting, what is dramatic, a very different sense of the
role of the tragic, how families fit together, the importance of children.
It really shakes up your worldview.
But mostly I wanted to learn Spanish,
but I became a bit addicted to it,
and I still do it when I have the time.
I listen to the Duolingo Spanish podcast
sometimes for similar reasons,
although it doesn't provide quite...
It does, in some cases, provide that contextual,
temporal, news, human interest element, but perhaps less so than breaking news.
I love Premier Impacto on Univision. I still watch that sometimes. It's at 5 p.m.
For me, it's Channel 14. It's just fantastic.
What do you find to be the benefits of focusing on language acquisition or, I suppose, cultivation?
Well, I only know two other languages, English, Spanish, and German.
They force you out of your comfort zone.
They make you realize what an idiot you are.
You're always learning something.
You get windows into how other people think.
I sometimes call it cracking cultural codes.
Spanish is great because it opens up a lot of different countries to you.
German has some of the most profound writing and music philosophy and culture of human history.
I wish I knew more.
So I envy people who know many languages and people who have traveled, you know,
to more and different places than I have. They're the people you should envy.
I'd like to ask you about one of your many books, The Complacent Class.
Now, my read, and please correct me if I'm wrong, is that you've argued that we've, in some respects, become a stagnant and cautious society.
What does that mean, if I'm actually sort of interpreting things correctly?
And feel free to correct me.
We innovate less, especially outside of the tech sector.
Our incomes grow more slowly.
We move around the United States at
roughly half the rates we used to. We are now unable to pull off grand projects such as putting
a man on the moon. Almost all of the spending of our federal government is now locked in and
much of that, most of that going to the elderly. We're just a less dynamic society. People are
crazy how they bring up their kids.
No risk is to be allowed.
People obsess over, what kindergarten will my kid get into?
If they don't get into that kindergarten, my goodness, all is lost.
We are far more a society of credentials, which I regard as a huge negative.
All of that and more.
What can one do? Are there any personal actions that you would suggest to counteract or counterbalance in some fashion those societal trends? I mean, of course,
that's more than just societal trend. There are actual government policies and so on. But what
can the individual do? If they listen to you say this and they agree
with you?
Are there any particular practices or steps or recommendations that you
absolutely.
So Steve Levitt,
the free economics guy,
he wrote a great paper where he took some people and he looked at their major
decisions.
And for some of the people,
a coin was flipped.
And if the coin said they had to make a big change, they made the big change. And next post, the people who made the big changes
were happier than those who did not. So of course, it depends on the person and on the context.
But in general, read that Steve Levitt paper, think about the coin flipping, and more of the
time, make the big change. Of course, it's a risk, right? But it seems on average, it pays off.
Question for you is the, now those were big changes determined by the flip of a coin.
Is that right? Right, right. Okay. How much of the happiness with the big change do you think
was from making the big change or being absolved of the buyer-slash-seller's regret equivalent, second-guessing, in other words,
a decision that you had to make on your own? I don't know, but if it's only the being absolved
that matters, well, treat me as the villain, and you are hereby absolved from responsibility.
Just say, Tyler made me do it, and go off and be happier. And the rest of society will do better as well.
What are some of the major decisions that you've made that have been extremely impactful in your life?
I decided that I would really focus on the Internet and giving away my output for free
and mostly stopping doing peer-reviewed scholarly research and devoting
all my time to blogging and online essays and online education in my podcast. And that has
gone phenomenally well for me. In retrospect, it doesn't sound that scary. I started blogging,
I think, 17 years ago. And the notion that I would do this every day for what is now almost 17 years
at the time was extremely weird. And I was doing well in my other endeavors. It wasn't,
there was some kind of failure that need to be patched up, but I just thought I'm going to do
this. I'm not going to look back. Uh, at first, like no one paid any attention for years. I just
kept on doubling down happily, you know, in my oblivious fog.
And it worked out great.
So I'm going to push back a little bit on the oblivious fog.
You're a smart guy.
You're able to, I think.
You didn't say I was a metarational guy.
You said I was a smart guy.
Maybe I should be offended.
Well, I was going to metarational next.
That was my second compliment.
What was your decision-making framework
for doing that?
17 years ago,
so that places us around 2003,
roughly.
How did you
make that decision, which at the time
to many very smart
I will use the word smart here,
colleagues probably appeared absurd.
How did you, what was your decision-making framework or how did you think about making
that decision? I'm not even sure I had a decision-making framework. I think in a way I'm
dysfunctional as a decision-maker at that level. I like did it for a day. I enjoyed it.
And I just didn't stop doing it in a very selfish, curious,
greedy with information way.
And it just became quickly impossible
to turn that ship around.
So I thought, well,
I've got to do more of this.
And I mean, I would hesitate
to recommend my so-called
decision-making process to anyone.
What was the positive feedback loop on the daily experience that kept you going for years before it seemingly gained traction? What was it that appealed so much to you?
For three or four years, we had a few thousand readers, but it wasn't a thing and it hadn't taken off. It was fine. And when I started, I thought, oh, it it i would change my mind so i thought well this is some form of progress and again just stuck at it and then later
like blogs became a thing and even though blogging has mostly disappeared it's gone very well for us
we've played a kind of last man standing strategy and uh we haven't like seen that kind of cutback in readership i think it's it's it's
lost some of its newness sex appeal but i would be astonished if long form or even not so long
form writing as long as it is of high quality for considered of high quality for at least a few
thousand people or even less.
I don't see that going away anytime soon. And I know that there are other media,
any other forms of media that are more fashionable perhaps, but I'm certainly not
concerned for the longevity of your readership. I think you'll be fine. How have you thought about branching out
from the written word and making decisions about that? Well, I do now a podcast every two weeks
that's called Conversations with Tyler, and that keeps me very busy and dominates a lot of my
reading time. You know, that's for free. It's not a business for me. It probably costs me some money,
but I find I read much better when I'm reading their work to go and interview them. So next,
I'll be doing Philip Tetlock, the guy who writes on prediction and super forecasters.
That will force me to get my thoughts in order on those topics. After that, I think it's Emily
St. John Mandel, who wrote Station Eleven, which coincidentally is a book about pandemics,
and she has a new book out. I read fiction much better when I know I'm talking to the author,
himself or herself. When I interviewed Martina Navratilova, I had to learn a lot about the history of tennis. I read like 50 books on the history of women's and also men's tennis.
That was fantastic. I wouldn't have absorbed them in the same way if I wasn't going to be
speaking to her.
So I'm just keep on doing these podcasts.
Again, totally dysfunctional decision-making on my part.
Well, we'll see.
You could certainly have good outcomes with bad process,
but I'm not totally convinced it's bad process.
No, it's not bad, but it's not something I could explain or justify in terms
of a model of rationality. Right. It's also low risk in the sense that, I mean, the max downside
risk of doing this is very, it would seem very low, whereas a lot of the benefits, as you said,
putting an incentive and deadline in place so that you immerse yourself in these topics and
worlds that you might not otherwise put so much energy into is certainly a benefit.
How did you prepare for Neil Stevenson? Because I've read Neil's books, and for people who don't
know, you have Snow Crash, Cryptonomicon, you have many others. And these are not short books.
These are, in fact, incredibly long books in many cases.
How did you prepare for that interview?
He was in some ways an easier than usual prep
because there are many Neil Stevenson books I already had read,
which was a huge head start, just as you've read them.
And then there were others that I simply cannot read, like Anathem,
which I suspect is brilliant,
but I'm just not a good enough reader or not smart enough or not something to get through it.
It just loses me, and I've tried at least twice. I tried again to prep for him. I couldn't read it,
and it might be his best book, so I just had to put that one down, and I figure,
well, this is Neil Stevenson. I'm just going to talk to him about stuff.
A lot of the obvious usual questions about science and the future and technology, and
he'll just be interesting.
So that was, I wouldn't say easy, but easier than many.
Whereas people who know a very direct thing, like Emily Wilson, she was the translator
of Homer's Odyssey.
I had to know Homer's Odyssey really, really well. Like that Wilson, she was the translator of Homer's Odyssey. I had to know Homer's Odyssey
really, really well. Like that's what she does. I can't just blah, blah, blah to her about,
you know, what do you think of Peter Thiel and the tech stagnation debate?
We talked 85% about Homer's Odyssey. That was one of my hardest preps.
She's wonderful, by the way, if you ever want to have her on, but it's really tough.
I spent months of my life preparing for her and it was over in an hour yeah that's uh well it's better better
ratio than the olympics i guess yes uh how are you preparing for the conversation about uh well i
suppose it's not going to be limited to but but Station 11, if I'm getting that right,
and pandemics. How are you thinking about navigating that conversation and preparing for it?
I watch her on YouTube. I read all of the interviews with her I can find online.
Her two main novels I will read twice, and her earlier, less well-known novels I've read once.
And she's from Canada. I need to think about Canada, where she grew up in Victoria,
what her literary inspirations are, ask her about those, reread books that she has read.
Think, you know, I looked again at Michael Crichton's The Andromeda Strain. She wrote a
novel about a pandemic. Well, now I have to think about Boccaccio as well, right? And you just have to like dig deep into all your resources like, what have I got here? And we'll see how it goes. But she's a hard prep. and of Stripe, in that you are voracious readers and consume more books than the next 10 people put
together and the next 10 high achievers put together, I think many would say. What are the
books that you have gifted or recommended to people most that come to mind? I know that you
have a huge sort of pantheon of options available, but what
books have you recommended most to others? We had a couple come up earlier in terms of people who
might be interested in exploring fiction or complex nonfiction. What other books come to mind,
if any? I'm very suspicious about recommending books to people because there's the risk they
might listen to what you say. And if you're recommending to them the book that is not
like the most valuable next book they should read, in a sense, you're wronging them. So
I don't give people books that often. One thing I try to encourage people to do is to read more
about music and the arts, not a particular book, but I say, take the creators you love. people books that often. One thing I try to encourage people to do is to read more about
music and the arts. Not a particular book, but I say take the creators you love, whoever, whatever
they may be, and read about them. If it's the Beatles, great. If it's Beethoven. And really dig
into what you might think of as your hobbies, but to read about them in an intense way. And just
think about, like Beethoven, How did he manage his career?
Like, what were his productivity tricks?
What did he do wrong?
And think through some of the questions
you've written and talked about at length,
but in the context of your cultural heroes.
If it's like, what do I tell people to read most often?
You know, I am not myself religious,
but usually I'll tell my non-religious friends
they ought to go read the Bible.
It's a wonderfully deep and brilliant book. And most non-religious friends they ought to go read the Bible. It's a wonderfully deep and brilliant book.
And most non-religious people, even most religious people, barely know it.
Or Shakespeare.
If someone said to you they wanted to become more meta-rational,
if that were their stated objective,
are there any resources you would point them to? Or practices? if that were their stated objective?
Are there any resources you would point them to or practices?
Again, I'd like to know where they are starting from,
but spend some time sitting down with groups of people you don't usually sit down with is my most likely recommendation,
and that will depend on the person.
So there's one colleague of mine, I'm telling him, you need to travel to some very poor countries and sit down and speak to some very poor, in terms of income, individuals,
and that's what I think he should do. Obviously, if someone, say, grew up in the slums of Mumbai, that's probably not my advice, right?
What if they were well-to-do Manhattanites Oh my goodness.
This is easy.
who felt like they were prone to confirmation bias
due to various incentives they had.
So they've embedded themselves in a position.
They have stories they've believed.
Maybe they're stories from their parents.
Who knows?
Yeah, besides spending time with someone
who is, from an income perspective, poor,
what other advice might you have for such a person?
Well, if you're a Manhattanite,
you actually will be in proximity
to a fair number of
poorer people. But I find on average, Manhattanites tend to think the world comes to them.
And I suspect this is a delusion of sorts. So people say, oh, Silicon Valley's a bubble. Well,
maybe, but people in Silicon Valley don't actually think the whole world comes to them. They realize
they're in a very special part of the world.
And I think if Manhattanites would realize that more, they would then just leave Manhattan,
if only to the other boroughs.
I mean, try Staten Island, right?
Don't go to Paris.
Don't go to London.
Try Staten Island, West Virginia, somewhere like Macedonia.
And don't think all these things are already coming to you
in Manhattan because they're not, you're getting a super filtered version of it. And, uh, you're
just seeing a more Manhattan, nothing wrong with that. I love Manhattan, grew up in New Jersey,
but, uh, a lot of remedial work probably needs to be done.
What, what are you working on personally right now?
Are there any particular problems or sort of personal development objectives that you've set out for yourself?
Well, I'm writing a new book, and it's on what do the social sciences know about spotting and evaluating talent.
And I have a project, Emergent Ventures, you referred to before,
where there's a fund of money I give away to individuals who are talented,
or I hope they are talented.
So really just trying to get better at that and trying to get better at communicating what I know or think I know to other people.
And that's very hard. There is no single really go-to source on how to evaluate talent, people who have not yet
succeeded, but maybe they will. I'm just pausing to think for a moment here. What have you learned about interviewing? If you look at, let's just say from either pre
podcast to right now, or first few episodes of the podcast to right now, what have you learned
about interviewing? Or how have you improved as an interviewer? And you can interpret that
however you like, because there are many different
types of interviewing. I'm not sure I've improved. Hard for me to say. But I think getting people to
talk about what they do, actually do, tends to be good. Getting people willing to be weird,
getting people to be conversational, getting people to be engaged and passionate. The worst
question is, please tell us about your latest book. I try to start with something super specific,
something they're shocked that I might know about them, and then just, you know, dig deeper.
How do you get them to be willing to be weird?
Well, most of them are weird to begin with, right? So that's like a big force on your side. Being weird yourself, right? Relaxes the environment. It makes it non-threatening. Just signaling you're not there to, you know, screw them over, that you want to be there to be weird with them and that you're actually doing this because you enjoy it. And usually it works, not always. Some people just like clam up.
They think they're going to get a government job someday. Try not to have them on, right?
What does weird mean to you? How would you define weird?
Well, in a sense, it's the weird that is truly normal. It's how people actually are,
like what they really care about, think about. So in a sense,
you're getting them out of the weird. The weird is the stage presence we put on and all the puffery
and unwillingness to say what you really think because my confirmation hearing, whatever.
So once you stop seeing the weird as actually weird, I think that's also a help. It's like,
this is natural. Let's just do it. And most people respond to that, I think.
But you do many of these yourself, right?
I do.
I'm not convinced I know what I'm doing either.
I somewhat selfishly have surrendered to following personal interest in interviews with the assumption that if I find it interesting, I have at least a guaranteed satisfied audience of one person. But I think I have a very particular personality that
then imprints my approach to asking questions, but I'm okay with that. I don't have a desire
to be anything other than who I am at the moment when it comes to asking questions, at least.
Yeah. Never have a guest on you don't care about, right? That's a good rule.
It is a good rule. What other rules have you developed, if any?
You mean in podcasting, conversing? Just get to the point immediately.
The old saying, personality is revealed on weekends. I think you present a version of
that in one of your books. What does the person do on weekends? Probably the same as what they do on weekdays,
but bring out that side of them, right? And just asking the person, in essence,
what are your open browser tabs right now? It's one way of getting at who they are.
And the browser tabs don't lie, right? Yeah, that is a great question. That is a
really great question. So part of the reason, not surprisingly, that I might be asking this so that I can borrow and use in the future, but the future is now. So here we are a few seconds after you just said that. What are some of the open browser tabs on your computer? Twitter is always open. WordPress for blogging is always open. Several sets of email, always open.
WhatsApp, always open.
And then right now, I will have typically five or six tabs to specific articles,
which at the moment are all coronavirus.
That's atypical.
Usually they're more varied.
But right now, there's two big stories.
There's the election campaign season,
which I hate following and don't really write about, and coronavirus. So it's going to be coronavirus. What are you reading about coronavirus? This is of great interest to me.
I've been tracking it very closely for a few weeks. And I know this is topical but I do think that in a sense
there's a parallel to the expression and I'm going to butcher this and I'm afraid I don't
know the attribution but that adversity doesn't build character it reveals character and I do
think that with the let's call it threat on one hand, panic on the other, and they're not totally separate,
everything going on with coronavirus, the challenges of parsing good from bad information,
reliable from unreliable information, many of the frailties in thinking or logic or
meta-rationality that otherwise would go somewhat unnoticed day-to-day
are becoming much more pronounced in a lot of people, and many of them, and maybe present
company included, are not aware just how those things are manifesting. So what are you reading
and how are you thinking about this particular coronavirus?
We're speaking in very early March.
Yes.
And it seems to me there are several distinct episodes.
One is Wuhan.
There's other parts of China.
There's South Korea, Japan, Singapore, Northern Italy, Washington State, Princess Diamond cruise ship.
And the different numbers from
these separate locations, they don't really add up.
So I'm treating it like a Sherlock Holmes puzzle.
How do we make sense of all of these collectively comparing them to each other?
So yes, of course, there are data mistakes, but what's your theory of data mistakes where
they all fit together?
And I still actually don't find a way of making it add up so I'm trying not to approach it as like a lecturer
like telling everyone do this don't do that wash your hands probably good advice but as a kind of
puzzle and to stay open about it and see what it brings me and also see which of the responses are
the best ones so far Singapore is looking quite good,
but there's plenty of play left, so to speak. And the United States, it seems, has let the
coronavirus get into its healthcare system and it did nothing about it for six weeks in what could
end up being really a kind of huge crime of omission. Yeah. You know, I'm struggling with where to go with this,
because I recognize we have a large audience listening.
How do you currently plan to increase the resolution on those puzzle pieces or to continue informing yourself in such a way that
the picture becomes clearer and not more difficult to make out? How do you think about
information consumption? There's more data every day and I will write out the puzzles as I find them and try to think them through as I write them out
and then get feedback.
And I'm not sure where I'll arrive with this.
One hopes, of course, it just goes away
and the puzzles remain that, puzzles.
At this point, that's seeming a bit less likely
than it had been.
So I'm afraid to say,
I think we're going to find out more than we want to know.
I'm not really worried about that.
If it all remains unresolved, I can just go away and celebrate.
Right. Aside from, for instance, Johns Hopkins has a very good daily newsletter,
which I would consider reasonably uncharged, politically speaking. You had mentioned someone on Twitter who you follow,
and I'm blanking on the name.
Helen Branswell.
She's public health in Toronto.
How do you spell that last name?
It's B-R-A-N-S-W-E-L-L, I believe.
Are there any other particular sources of information or other people you are following who you find to be reasonably level-headed about how they're approaching
and analyzing this uh there's four or five i don't remember their twitter handles by memory
but you know they're in the list of people I follow. If you just go through that,
it will be pretty clear which ones they are. Okay, great.
And then I find by being out there writing about it in an open, non-hysterical way,
I'm just sent a flood of useful information. And that's arguably my main source. And I don't mean to say I trust it all, but you cross-check and you think, and then you talk to people you know,
and you get a bit further.
Yeah.
Why did you, well, I'm also assuming then that this was your initiative, but why did you choose to create Emergent Ventures?
How did that come about?
You have a million projects.
Why have another one and why this one?
There's a whole world of philanthropy out there,
and I think it's one of the least well-functioning sectors
of the American economy.
You can't blame it on government.
It's not that heavily regulated, right?
So much of it is bureaucratic and risk-averse
and people doing the same things.
And I thought, let's go back to earlier models of giving from the Renaissance or the 18th century,
where in essence, there was no bureaucracy, one person who says yes or no.
We don't ask anyone for a vita.
We don't ask anyone about credentials.
Do you have a PhD?
Whatever.
It's basically 1,500 words.
Tell us who you are and what's your story and what you're going to do. And people can use that space more or less
as they wish. We ask them like, tell us one value that you consider to be a value. We have that
question. And, uh, we've now had about 80 winners and, uh, we got them a check in essence.
How many applicants are you vetting those 80 from?
I think it's about 800 now.
So there are most, the rate of good applications is reasonably high.
Maybe I'm lowering it just by talking about the program,
but even though it's only about a year and a half old,
we've had people go on to start companies,
successful ventures.
People end up in high positions in governments.
A lot are just travel grants for young people,
people who are, say, from ages 15, 16, up to 20, who get to meet
mentors. I hope it's changed the course of their lives. Those are often travel grants to Silicon
Valley, but it can be anywhere really. And there's two researchers at Dartmouth. They've created a
kind of Wikipedia-like structure that now contains data about every Indian village,
in essence. Not every village is filled in, but we have the capacity to create and store and use
demographic data about every Indian village. This is a not-for-profit venture. I think it will
greatly improve public health and policymaking in India in the future. There's a fellow who is starting a kind of charter city in Zambia with Zambians.
So many exciting things going on there. Young Indian woman, I think she just turned 18,
starting a bus company. She's raised really quite a bit of venture capital.
So for me, it's a very exciting, rewarding thing to do. I'm paid nothing to do it.
The evaluator is me. There's no panel. There's no bureaucracy.
It's thumbs up or thumbs down. And I think far, far more philanthropy should work this way.
What will success look like? Or how do you, and it could be just a subjective feel, but
how do you determine whether this program has been successful over what period of time?
So many people in philanthropy obsess over measurement, and they end up tending to do the same thing.
So I'm actually, at my margin, somewhat anti-measurement.
I don't want everyone to be anti-measurement, but my view is if I need to measure, you failed, right?
So if I supported Malcolm Gladwell, right, when he was a
kid, well, could I then measure how many books he sold? I mean, I could try, but it's like, come on,
it's Malcolm Gladwell. So if you need to measure, you failed. So that's my simple rule. You know, we'll see. I may never know.
Of all of the many, many, many, many, if you look at, rather, the posts you've put out,
the classes you've taught, the books you've written, what are some of the views that you currently hold or still hold or perspectives that are most controversial, would you say? Meaning they just,
they seem to kick the hornet's nest wherever that hornet's nest may be. What are some of the
views or beliefs that are most controversial? You know, in the world of 2020, where the two
leaders of the two parties at the moment seem to be Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders. I no longer know what is a controversial view, in fact. I used to know what my controversial
views were. I think in general, we should do much more to boost the rate of economic growth,
devote fewer resources to the elderly and much more to the young, and take more chances,
and travel more, and learn other languages, and be much, much more interested in foreign cultures.
I'm not sure those are controversial. They're obviously not controversial with a sliver
of a particular demographic, but I'm not sure many people really mean them either. So
maybe my most controversial view is it's no longer clear what
our controversial views are. So I would love to ask you, because it's, I think, easy to be
intimidated by how much you do, and certainly seemingly do very very successfully you you're able to digest
sort of non-fiction pages and seconds and uh sort of aggregate data from disparate sources into
coherent blog posts that influence uh millions of people ultimately, and so on and so forth,
I'd like to try to offset that with a discussion, doesn't have to be long, but a discussion of a
tough time or a failure that you've experienced. And specifically, if there is a favorite failure
that comes to mind, meaning a failure you experienced,
which was very difficult at the time,
or just a dark period that somehow set you up
or contributed to greater success later,
if that makes any sense.
Yes.
I feel I've been very fortunate in life,
and I think I have about the most even temperament of anyone I know. I literally don't have unhappy days. It would be hard to say I've had zero in life, but I think I'm almost weirdly never unhappy in a way that's good for productivity, but maybe almost inhuman
and to be a little bit feared or looked down upon or not thought well of.
I think that's a better way to think of me than to hear my like story of failure, like
a few years in graduate school. Yes, I felt pretty lonely. I didn't have a girlfriend. I was like a
nerdy kid. That was bad for me. I mean, that would be the best I could do.
And that's like so cliched and kind of pitiful.
I don't know, like the big life setback tale.
Not sure what that's supposed to be.
Well, that's a fair answer.
That's a weird answer, but it's weirder than it sounds, I would just say.
Have you always been even killed in that respect? Is it just out
of the womb that was your programming, or is that something that you developed over time?
Both. I think that was my natural inclination. And just as you mature, you become more that way.
But I've always felt pretty happy. I suspect my peak happiness is well below that of most people
uh hard to prove that or measure that but intuitively when i see people very very very
happy it's quite strange to me i feel gee i've never felt this but same when people are depressed
so i think think my range is compressed uh in an unusual way so if for many people they strive to feel happy or perhaps more accurately
to not feel unhappy right and much of their decisions many of their decisions and behavior are
kind of governed or driven by that are there any feelings that you prefer not to feel that come to mind?
I mean, is there something for you that is analogous to unhappiness for other people?
Well, I feel guilty about my numerous shortcomings when it comes to behavior.
So, for instance, I think to eat animals raised under terrible conditions is wrong,
but still, mostly I do it. I've tried to improve.
I've improved somewhat,
but I'm reminded of that regularly
by what other people do or write,
and I just think that's wrong.
I think I fall short.
I guess at this point I have to conclude
I'm too selfish to change it,
so I feel bad about that,
but it mustn't be that bad, right?
And I feel bad that I don't feel worse about it as well
got it you could always do more for charity right so yeah that's another it's like never enough is
it for people who wanted to develop a greater a higher level of equanimity. Basically, if they said,
I want to train myself in some fashion
to be more like you, Tyler,
in so much as I don't experience
at least the acute lows that perhaps I experience.
Would you have any recommendations for those people? Are there any particular suggestions,
reading resources, anything whatsoever
that would come to mind that you've seen help other people?
Well, I'm not going to say, like, go read the Stoics.
I mean, Ryan Holiday can tell you that.
No, Ryan's got that covered.
Yeah, but I feel a bit the people in that
position, it's like they want a kind of talisman, almost like a voodoo object. Yeah. And I don't
know if they really want to be more detached and dispassionate or they just want the talisman.
And maybe my advice would be to think through, do you just want the talisman? That's fine. Don't
feel bad about that. But like, there's a really cheap and easy way to buy the talisman like buy one of my
books read my blog that's free yeah uh and you know pat yourself on the back and go away and
forget that was your original motive if you really want to do it i don't know probably uh the fact
that you're asking is a signal that it's someone more in the talisman direction. Well, could you elaborate on what you mean by talisman?
Emily St. John Mandel just tweeted, I think this morning, that there's this risk of a pandemic
with coronavirus. And she wrote a novel about a pandemic that is really, truly horrible,
kills most people in the world. And she can't understand why her book is selling so many more
copies now. I suspect people want to buy it as a kind of protection against the worst case scenario.
Like they feel they faced up to it.
They own it a bit.
They control it.
I think I used the voodoo analogy a bit earlier and thus they're a bit safer.
We sometimes use comedy this way or see horror movies for similar reasons.
And that's a talisman.
You do it for a complex psychological reason to process an idea
and be done with it, and not necessarily to really incorporate what's there. And that's fine. I don't
think we should look down on that. But, you know, if someone asks, I'm going to say, is this a
talisman? Or do you want the real thing? Well, what would distinguish those two within the
context of the question I'm asking? So I will, just because you brought it up, mention, for instance, the Stoics.
So, I do think that, and we don't have to belabor this point, but the fact that I ask about resources,
why would that indicate that I want a talisman or I'm seeking a talisman if I have found the regular review and practice of, say, Stoic principles
to actually be of great benefit, much along the lines of cognitive behavioral therapy or something
like that. So, I do think that has impacted how I relate to the world and relate to others in the
world. So, I would say that that has tremendous practical value.
Sure, I'm pro-Talisman, but I think, you know,
it's like therapy. There's two reasons you might go to therapy. One is to feel you did something
about your problem, and that could itself make you better. And the other is your actual conversation
with the therapist is useful. Both operate. There's nothing wrong with the talisman use of therapy,
and with the Stoics probably both operate, you know you know great the talisman actually makes the
stoics better in fact they're good for two things not just one well i guess i i'd love for you to
just elaborate on why that use that i described is of the talisman uh variety that could be real
learning right but that yeah the version of the talisman use of the Stoics
would be that ex-ante, you feel a kind of personal and social anxiety that you haven't done enough to
calm yourself. And maybe you're just never going to be that calm, but you're met at anxiety about
not having calmed yourself. You can lower perhaps by buying and reading the Stoics. Maybe you'll
forget what they said on a test three years later, at the end of the day you did something you went through a process
you had a mastery over some part of your life and you feel better and the anxiety is diminished i
think that happens quite often in addition to whatever you learn from them. Do you feel like you have such talismans
in your own decision-making
or behaviors, or is that...
Oh, of course, sure.
No reason to think I'm any different.
In a lot of the books I read,
maybe it's I felt some anxiety.
Oh, there's this book out there.
Tyler, you haven't read it yet,
and I go read it.
I'm not saying I learned nothing
from the book,
but part of the enjoyment is the alleviation of the anxiety right right sure oh yeah too many books are like
that like i wish more of them had wonderful incredible content how do you choose your guests
for your podcast uh mostly the people I want to speak to
and the people I wish to prepare for.
So there'll be a lot of economics,
some public figures,
people who have written novels,
just people who know a lot,
people who are what I call infivores,
people who are intense or curious.
It helps if they're nearby,
so I do all of mine face
to face a few of them are public events so just like can this be pulled off is a big question
doing kareem abdul-jabbar that was a dream for me i watched him when i was a kid play basketball
and i saw his last game in the nba i had a chance to do kareem how could i not do that
trying to get william Shatner now. Probably
it will fail. I don't care how old he is. He's William Shatner. Captain Kirk. Who are other
people on your dream list, on your wish list? Ryan Eno, the British musician. I had an email
forwarded to him, and I'm still waiting for him to respond. He strikes me as the kind of guy who
might respond
seven years after the invite most people it's like if you don't hear in a week you figure it
won't happen this is brian eno he could respond at any time with either a yes or a no for you
we talked a bit about the the changes of perspective or changing your mind on anything. And you mentioned, I guess it was regional economics,
and we spoke about Chile.
Are there any new behaviors
that have been particularly beneficial for you
that you've only started in the last year or handful of years?
Any particular new behaviors or habits
that have had a non-trivial impact on your life?
It's hard to tell.
I've spent more time with weights as a form of exercise.
I vaguely feel it's helped.
I don't have any measurement I could cite for you.
And how have my behaviors changed in the last year?
Eating smaller portions of food, which I think has helped.
You know, my diet is just eat what you were going to eat, but eat two-thirds of it.
Right.
And I've had the discipline to make that work.
You don't have to fuss over what you're going to cut out, right?
You just divide by two-thirds.
And just trying to be kinder to people. Again, I'm not even sure I'm managing
to try to do it, but that's like always a priority or sometimes a priority.
What does that look like, being kinder to people? Or why did that become something of focus for you? If you can be encouraging in a non-trivial way, it can really mean a lot to
people. And it takes several kinds of effort. There's effort in the moment, but also the skill
of how to sincerely have a sense of what would be the encouraging thing to say.
And it seems to me that's greatly undersupplied in the world.
And like some of the things that are undersupplied are just people telling other people what they're good at.
Which happens plenty.
But really kind of accurate, incisive.
This is what you're good at and why.
Greatly undersupplied.
Supplying people, especially younger people, visions of what they could be.
Greatly undersupplied.
But you also want to be better at it rather than worse, right?
So making that more of a priority.
And some of the grants I've given out through Emergent Ventures to younger people, I've also tried to give them a sense of what I think they could be.
And I suspect that's more important in some cases than the grant.
In a way, it's complemented
by the grant. In a way, you're giving the grant so you can package it with this vision and the
vision will matter. And the grant makes the vision more vivid or more focal. Like they believe the
vision because you spent real dollars on them. Yeah, that makes perfect sense.
I only have a few questions remaining, really, on my list, so to speak, but I would love to explore anything, certainly, that I may have missed. This may sound like a cliched question,
and I'm sure that it's not going to be a new one to my listeners, but you think very deeply about a lot of things.
If you could put a message, a quote, an image on a billboard, metaphorically speaking, that were to reach billions of people, what might you put on that billboard?
It doesn't have to be super short,
but is there anything that comes to mind
if you wanted to impart something,
convey something to billions of people,
what you would say,
assuming they all are able to read the same language, of course?
Well, social context is so important for messages.
So as we just were saying,
if you communicate to people a vision of what they could be,
it needs to be packaged with some real behavior on your part, probably, to have impact. And I also,
as an economist, tend to think very often the market works. So if I just put up on a billboard,
like Tyler says, do the right thing, I'm pretty sure that would be ineffective.
And if you look at billboards we actually have, like what do you see on those billboards?
The billboards I see, a lot of them are advertisements for insurance.
Some of them are don't drive drunk.
You see bail bondsmen on billboards and suicide hotlines.
So I guess I would study the market and pick one of those four things like, you know, buy
this insurance, bail bondsman, suicide hotline, don't drive drunk, after studying the actual market. Because I don't think I have some idea that's so scarce
that if it's on the billboard with no supporting social context, that it will mean a damn.
I'd say go with the market. Well, if we take, if we take, let's take a more technologically
advanced example. If you could have something pop up on everyone's iPhone
and stay there as the background for a day,
really the point that I'm stretching for here
is to getting large numbers of people
to consider a statement or a prompt of some type
for a period of time.
So putting aside the billboard as form factor,
is there anything that...
You've got it.
You can choose not to use it,
but you have the option of imparting something
via the background of everyone's iPhones
for a period of time.
The people with iPhones, of course, I worry about much less.
But I would say this.
I think the social returns to religion, on average, are fairly high.
So the religion most likely that people would accept in a particular area,
I would want the message to be messages about that religion.
So if it's the United States, that would
often but not always be Christianity. Again, that's not going to work in every part of the world.
But I worry families are not having enough children. We're seeing depopulation in many
countries. Religious families have more children. Religious people tend to be somewhat happier.
So I would seek that the messages would make people more religious.
And yet you yourself are not religious, but I suppose that is,
you wouldn't choose religion to make yourself happier because you have very few unhappy days.
But you yourself are not a practicing religious person.
I'm agnostic leaning toward atheists.
So definitely not religious, was not brought up
religious. My parents were not religious, but I look at the data. It seems religion is the most
effective way we have of carrying good ideas. And, uh, at the margin, I want to see more of that.
I think also I, you know, I don't do any drugs. I don't drink. Some people abuse drugs and alcohol,
and religion there can help.
I don't have that practical reason
for needing more religion also.
Let's say 10% of people abuse drugs or alcohol.
That's a pretty high percentage.
If you think the truly religious are less likely to,
that's a big expected gain
well this has been this has been very fun for me is there anything that
we have not explored that you would like to explore or discuss that i haven't brought up
how do you restore a lost focus How do I restore lost focus? Yes.
I would say cold exposure, exercise, and having a routine that I do not deviate from.
So most often for me, if I feel a loss of focus, it is either physiological.
So it is, I'm not eating enough. I am low energy because I've had poor sleep for a period of days, something like that. Almost all of which can be remedied by
attention to basic elements of my routine. So I would say that that's my answer. If I have deviated from routine,
if I'm making too many decisions each day that should be replaced with some type of default
answer, what I have for breakfast, what time I'm waking up, where I'm going to write or record,
et cetera, that usually, or I shouldn't say usually, but often contributes to a feeling of being unfocused.
So it's when I abandon my routines, some of the elements of which would be
default meals and exercise and also cold exposure first thing in the morning,
restoring that order usually helps me.
Do you think cold exposure is partly a placebo or talisman,
or do you think cold exposure works?
You know, it depends in part what we mean by works.
Does it provide a jolt of adrenaline
and other plausible physiological changes that seem to contribute to
more alertness? Yes, I would say the answer is yes. Could be talisman. And if by talisman,
we really mean placebo effect or the desire to feel that we are doing something to
address our problem rather than the actual efficacy of said approach. Sure, I mean, I think placebo effect is everywhere.
So just as nocebo effect can affect things.
But I can tell you that I find it personally helpful,
but I do think there are some certainly obvious
and then not so obvious plausible physical mechanisms
that could improve alertness
when you put yourself into 40 degree Fahrenheit water
for a period of time.
And do you fear ending up in an equilibrium
where you say no to too many things?
And how do you avoid that?
Or maybe you just think it's not a risk.
What type of equilibrium do you mean?
So we all are faced with many demands on our time,
and we have to learn to say no.
Give a talk here, visit this, you know, whatever.
So we become very good at saying no,
but it's quite easy to say no once you're good at it.
It's like, oh, an email comes, no, no.
And you end up saying no too much,
and you end up with too little serendipity in your life.
In a way, you clearly would have had at age 17
or even 23 or maybe 27. But how do you refresh the supply of serendipity in your life in a way you clearly would have had at age 17 or even 23 or maybe 27
but how do you refresh the supply of serendipity and keep the habit of saying no to the things you
ought to say no to i do that through friends who have broad and diverse social networks and they
are known friends of mine publicly so they have broad social interactions and people will pitch
them on things intended for me. I like my friends to feel there is a reputational
risk slash gain to making introductions or suggesting introductions. And in that,
using that approach, I've found that the introductions I end up agreeing to
provide more than enough serendipity for me, and they come highly qualified and highly vetted.
So, I then rely on a sort of more perhaps systematic approach or more tightly controlled approach to serendipity, which sounds
like an oxymoron almost, versus looking for serendipity, say, in my inbox or Twitter feed.
I do look at, I prefer to be able to opt into serendipity as opposed to feeling like I'm being waterboarded with serendipity.
I also get an absurdly high volume of inputs. So that could be reflective, as you said earlier,
perhaps that I'm making mistakes further upstream. But I'm not worried about equilibrium. I have
more than enough intellectual stimulation at this point and of a higher quality signal for me at
least do you worry that too many of your friends are highly successful people uh i don't uh mostly
because i was only referring to my publicly known friends i don't talk i don't talk about my non-public friends publicly
because I think that would be opening them
to all sorts of problems that they don't want to have
and I don't want them to have.
So I don't worry about that.
I have a lot of friends who are on the full spectrum socioeconomically.
And you're talking about addiction earlier.
I mean, my best friend growing up was,
oh, well, until a few years ago,
a fisherman, very low income,
and died of a fentanyl overdose.
So he would certainly not map
from a social or socioeconomic perspective
on top of any portion of the Venn diagram
of the public friends that I have. So I don't worry
about it too much. I also historically travel a lot and have spent time among the homeless in
San Francisco. For instance, I actually paid someone to give me a sort of economics and dynamics of the of homelessness
in san francisco as you said you don't have to go to mumbai right you can find destitution and
poverty and addiction right around the corner if you live in an urban center so i i that there are
plenty of things that i would say i worry about. I do think I probably lean towards the worrywart side of things on the sliding scale.
But I don't worry about all of my friends being in one place or being well-to-do or successful, in quotation marks.
I don't worry about that one.
Great.
Yeah.
Any other questions? I'm happy to field questions
what's your favorite movie my favorite movie uh
i've watched different movies for different purposes uh i
i would say that Princess Bride,
The Princess Bride is very high up there.
I think William Goldman is just a genius screenwriter.
A lot of the movies that are my favorites
are movies I've watched hundreds of times
on repeat while writing.
Babe would be another one.
I love that.
Yeah, those are two of my favorite movies.
What's your favorite movie or some of yours?
Ingmar Bergman movies as a whole would be my favorite part of cinema.
Maybe Scenes from a Marriage being my all-time favorite of those.
But just Empire Strikes Back is a favorite movie too.
So good.
So good.
It is.
Yeah, it's a great film.
It's a great film.
Amelie, another film i love
uh spirited away would be one of my absolute all-time favorites i love miyazaki movies all
of them yeah yeah spirited away i just think has there's a lot of metaphor and just uh
beautiful transformation in that movie uh that i find reveals itself as you watch it more and more.
So I've watched that movie a lot.
And those would be a few.
Those would be a few that come to mind.
And then there are a bunch of flicks you might expect.
I like the first Jason Bourne, The Bourne Identity.
That's good. It's a good movie.
Yeah, Snatch.
All these movies that I got hooked on a long time ago
and haven't been able to give up casino royale i think is an exceptional film uh you mean the
later one not the early david niven one the later one yeah the later one that's good but uh i do
enjoy film and fiction as a respite from the problem solving default that i think is a constant for me
with uh hyper rumination and i think that's that's very common in people who have suffered from say
depression in the past as i have fortunately no major episodes in the last five or six years, which I can attribute to a few things, talisman or otherwise,
but, or would attribute, I suppose, in that case. I think the ability to, for those people who are
prone to hyper-rumination, which can often take the form of obsession with the past in repetitive
loops in the case of depression or obsession with future scenarios in the case of chronic anxiety i
think that i think that film and fiction are have high medicinal value and let's say you could put
your major commitments on hold somehow freeze time in the life you're in,
and take a year off and spend it somewhere.
Where would you choose and why?
And then you just come back, you know,
we put it on pause and you come back to the life you have.
Yep.
Does it have to be one location or can it be multiple locations?
It can be more than one, but you can't say everywhere, right? No, it wouldn't be one location or can it be multiple locations i can
be more than one but you can't say everywhere right no it wouldn't so it could be well travel
down the amazon or right that's multiple locations it has to be one kind of thing one plan
one plan uh okay i would uh if it has to have some theme, I would say I would take a year, ideally with my beloved girlfriend and perhaps a few close friends, if possible, to walk some of the pilgrimage trails around the world.
I've done a small portion of the Kumano Kodo in Japan.
The Camino de Santiago is of interest to me. around the world. So the, uh, I've, I've done a small portion of the Kumano Kodo in Japan. Yes.
The Camino de Santiago is of interest to me.
Uh,
but extended long duration walking with a minimum of
necessities and material goods for that year with a minimum of inputs i think would be uh
be a tremendous way to spend a year and how much do you think we're alike versus being different
the two of us two of us yeah wow that's a great question i uh there's a sort of an asymmetry of
information here because i i i know less about you than I know about myself.
My feeling is that we're quite similar.
Well, same here.
Yeah, my feeling is that based on,
I think we have many shared interests
and intellectual interests, I would say that.
I think you're eminently more qualified
in speaking on most of these shared interests. But the topic of
metarationality and metacognition, which I realize are not exactly the same thing, but
very interrelated, those are of incredible importance to me. And I think about them
constantly. So I think our avenues of inquiry and interests are very similar.
Sounds like our hardwiring is very different, just in terms of the software that we have,
I think is very different. But I like those differences. I think the world doesn't need
more than one of me, that's for sure. So, I really revel in the differences. I would say
my impression, I'd like to hear your answer, but my impression is we probably have
perhaps even more similarities than we realize. I mean, I do, I am a fan of
alcohol, and one might even say drugs on occasion, so we have that difference.
But I think those may be largely cosmetic in some respect. So what's your impression?
What's your read? I might be a bit more mono than you are. So something like drugs,
if there were a safe way to do it, and probably there is, I still wouldn't do it.
I would fear it would distract me from a kind of program I've set for myself.
Although I'm not religious, I think of my mental structure as somehow more like Protestant and mission-driven.
I suspect you're more competitive than I am.
Maybe.
I've tried to be less competitive over time.
I've never tried to be less competitive, whether or not I should.
But I just think I'm less competitive to begin with.
Yeah.
That could be true.
That could be true. I think that many of my male role models growing up, sort of surrogate influences in that domain
were coaches. And so I've, I think honed much of, well, honed makes it sound all positive,
developed many of my behaviors and predispositions. Some I'm sure I'm aware of, and some certainly I'm not,
through the lens of competition and receiving positive reinforcement when I win.
So that, I think, has been a huge blessing and provided a lot from the perspective of achievement.
But I do think that conditioning can be very problematic.
So I envy you being less competitive.
What do you find of most value in religion?
Well, I think that...
It's sort of presumptive for me to say in a sense,
because I don't consider myself religious, but I think a peace of mind
with otherwise what would be considered unknowns.
So frameworks for making decisions, rules that you don't have to come up with on your own, and an assurance of plans or certain certainties
with things like death, for instance,
which otherwise could be existentially overwhelming to many people.
And you want to do these pilgrimages, right?
That's striking.
It sounds wonderful.
One more time.
But that you want to do all these pilgrimages. That's That's striking. It sounds wonderful. But that that's the one that
you want to do all these pilgrimages, that's wonderful, but it's striking that that's your
plan for the year, is something almost defined by its religious nature. Yeah, well, they are
certainly, I think for some people, defined. The pilgrimages are defined by some by their
religious nature. I find religion endlessly fascinating,
though I myself would not self-describe as religious. And I also find that
I could perhaps get many of the same benefits of doing that if I walked the Appalachian Trail or one of these other long, defined paths, but I like the inbuilt
social interactions of stopping at inns or shrines, etc., with pit stops along the way for reflection.
So, I would say that I am more a naturalist, or if I wanted to stretch, and somebody said you have to choose a religion, maybe an animist of some type.
Well, Miyazaki, if you love Spirited Away, right?
That movie resonates with you for a reason. find tremendous value in pilgrimage and contemplate the deep meaning that these paths have had
for people during very tumultuous, difficult times or times, as all times are, of great
uncertainty.
I find that I enjoy thinking about that, even though I wouldn't sort of, I don't ascribe to any formal religious group.
I took my daughter once to Santiago de Compostela in Spain.
We had a fantastic time, and the social resonance of it did truly matter for us.
Yeah, yeah, absolutely.
And not to get too—you can tear this apart, feel free, but
I feel like there's a sort of a residue or an imprint that is made when you have
thousands or millions of people traveling the same path that, whether it's just a story you make yourself or otherwise,
I've found my experiences on those paths to be quite non-ordinary.
And that could get into some pretty woo-woo hand-wavy territory really quickly.
But suffice to say, I've had very
unusual experiences on some of these pilgrimage paths, and I find that intrinsically
interesting to explore. If you think about this interest in pilgrimages,
the large number of guests or people written about in your books that you relate to,
and then also your ability to quickly learn languages
and master very idiosyncratic accents
in, say, Spanish and German.
I mean, do you have a sense in your own mind
of how that all fits together?
Like, what's your unified theory of you?
Because those are three very striking things about you.
Oh.
And maybe you've explained them somewhere
that I haven't seen or heard,
but this is my chance, so I'm asking you.
Yeah, so we have the pilgrimages, we have the language learning,
and then the skill acquisition of sort of strange, idiosyncratic,
eclectic things like horseback archery.
But I have your book here, Tools of Titans, and your other books.
There's so many different people you talk to or correspond with.
And you manage to enter into their worlds in some way to draw them out,
including on your podcast, of course.
Yeah.
So that's a skill.
The pilgrimages and then the language with highly idiosyncratic accents.
Done almost perfectly, I might add.
Thank you for that.
But it's the mix of perfect and idiosyncratic that's unusual yeah i would say just yeah i would say that if i had to come up
with a unified theory of of tim i've never tried before but uh i'll take a stab at it and it might
be very dissatisfying and i appreciate appreciate the questions, by the way.
Well, this is what I've been thinking about. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I think that much like you have been,
had certain software, perhaps since the beginning,
that enables you to be,
to handle the world with a certain degree of equanimity.
I think that my programming from the beginning has made me very sensitive to
stimuli. I think that as a kid, I was very, very sensitive, not in the pejorative sense that I got upset about things easily, but rather
if I were a scale, I wasn't a pound scale. My senses were more of a jewelry scale or something
like that. Jewel scale, excuse me. So when I was a kid, I had some terrible things happen to me. And I may talk about those more
on a future episode of the podcast, we'll see. But suffice to say, I learned to, it was safer
and better to numb myself and desensitize myself operating in the world and developed a lot of
habits. I think competition was one, high pain tolerance related to that, another, that allowed me
to kind of bludgeon my sensitivity into submission so that I could achieve in the world.
And I know this is a little long, but I'll wrap it up.
No, this is great which is i think all of the things you described reflect a slow rediscovery and
reopening of those sensitivities and uh i am definitely at this point an introvert who can
perform for short periods of time as an extrovert but i find it exceptionally energetically costly
i've been saying it goes introverts make the best extroverts
yeah yeah because we're not really putting ourselves out there in a way
yeah whereas the extroverts it's so much social anxiety involved with like being on camera being taped yeah totally so yeah so i think that that sensitivity would uh
would would be the unifying the unifying uh if it's a unifying theory is just that i have
my perceptual aperture is by nature very wide i have a very wide perceptual aperture. So
I notice things like inflection in Mandarin Chinese or inflection in Greek or Turkish or
languages that I might just study for a few weeks while I'm traveling. I notice things that,
for whatever reason, seem to only be noticed by a small percentage of, say, tourists in those places
who are actively focusing on a language. And I can find a walk of 100 miles extremely interesting
because I notice it's not dull to me precisely because I notice so many things around me. But there are environments in which
if I'm noticing
the details versus using these
kind of 2D Simpsons-esque
avatars
for things, it can be
very exhausting.
So
that's my best stab at answering your question.
I very much hope you
write and talk more about this because I think it would be phenomenal.
Thank you for that.
I appreciate it.
I expect I will be writing a bit more about it.
And what about yourself?
I mean, I know I'm just reflecting back a very good question, but I'd like to get some practice.
What is your unifying theory, the unifying theory of Tyler?
I think Tyler is quite curious, loves to collect information. I think in a way I'm more an
information collector than economist or any other single thing. Very even keeled,
maybe just somehow fundamentally difficult for those reasons.
Like hard to relate to.
Definitely introverted.
But sort of always game for the next thing.
And I think what I take from religion is this Protestant notion of having a personal project that you're obligated to see through
in a very serious way
that I find quite American
and not really found
in Protestantism elsewhere,
or even kind of like
the Jewish version of that.
I'm not Jewish,
but there's kind of a Jewish version
of the American Protestant
sense of obligation
that I find culturally powerful and appealing.
And, you know, I think not somehow being involved
or engaged enough is my danger in many things.
But there's a kind of thinness to myself,
a kind of versatility that I can grasp onto things
or work with different people or make part
of a project work that make me very productive and very flexible. And I can just kind of power
through and keep on going and just not ever stop or feel the need to or need distraction.
And when I do art, music, theater, whatever, to me, it's all piling on. It's not escape
from something I'm doing that becomes too much.
It's like intensification.
So that's like part of my theory of Tyler.
But I'm also convinced like we never know ourselves, right?
Right.
Yeah.
So we really don't.
And that's part of the great tragedy of life.
But it also makes life interesting.
Yeah.
It's part of the great tragedy and also, I suppose, part of the
great incentive to find friends you can sit with who help you to discover more of yourself or
develop more of yourself. Not necessarily to compensate for being unable to know yourself
completely, but being a social creature and engaging with
friends more deeply is a relatively new thing in my life, I would say, since regaining some
of the sensitivities that I'd lost.
So I find the, in a sense, the inability to know oneself completely a wonderful driver
to facilitate more of those deep connections with others, at least for me.
That's great.
Yeah. And I hope...
Go ahead.
Go on.
Oh, no, I was just going to say, I hope this is just the first of more conversations.
I was going to say exactly the same. So we are a bit more alike than we thought five seconds ago. I really appreciate you taking the time, Tyler.
This has been great,
and I appreciate you sort of pushing at the edges a bit
and making me think,
which I always appreciate.
And I will, in turn, think about this all more a great deal,
and I hope you do, too.
I will. I will.
And people can find you at marginalrevolution.com, Conversations with Tyler, the podcast, which
I definitely recommend people take a look at.
They can find you on Twitter, at Tyler Cowan, and I'll link to everything in the show notes
at tim.blog forward slash podcast for people.
You can find it very easily.
Is there anything else you would like to mention before we wrap up?
Just to thank you heartily and till whenever.
All right. Thank you so much. And to everybody listening and possibly watching,
thanks for tuning in. Watch out for your talismans, work on your meta-rationality,
and thanks for tuning in.
Hey guys, this is Tim again. Just a few more things before you take off.
Number one, this is Five Bullet Friday.
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