The Tim Ferriss Show - #477: Yuval Noah Harari on The Story of Sapiens, Forging the Skill of Awareness, and The Power of Disguised Books
Episode Date: October 28, 2020Prof. Yuval Noah Harari (@harari_yuval) is a historian and bestselling author who is considered one of the world’s most influential public intellectuals today. His popular books—Sapi...ens: A Brief History of Humankind, Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow, and 21 Lessons for the 21st Century— have sold 27.5 million copies in 60 languages. They have been recommended by Barack Obama, Chris Evans, Janelle Monáe, Bill Gates, and many others. The Guardian has credited Sapiens with revolutionizing the nonfiction market and popularizing “brainy books.”He is also behind Sapiens: A Graphic History, a new graphic novel series in collaboration with comics artists David Vandermeulen (co-writer) and Daniel Casanave (illustrator). This beautifully illustrated series is a radical reworking of his book Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind. The series will be published in four volumes starting in fall 2020 with Volume 1, The Birth of Humankind, which is out now.Please enjoy!*This episode is brought to you by LinkedIn Jobs. Whether you are looking to hire now for a critical role or thinking about needs that you may have in the future, LinkedIn Jobs can help. LinkedIn screens candidates for the hard and soft skills you’re looking for and puts your job in front of candidates looking for job opportunities that match what you have to offer.Using LinkedIn’s active community of more than 690 million professionals worldwide, LinkedIn Jobs can help you find and hire the right person faster. When your business is ready to make that next hire, find the right person with LinkedIn Jobs. You can pay what you want and get $50 off your first job. Just visit LinkedIn.com/Tim.***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. I also love reading the reviews!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.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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Hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss Show.
My guest today, many of you will know the name, and those who don't will know much more about him shortly.
Professor Yuval Noah Harari is a historian and best-selling author who is considered one of the most influential public intellectuals in the world.
I know that's setting a high bar, but his popular books might ring a bell.
Sapiens, A Brief History of Humankind, Homo Deus, A Brief History of Tomorrow,
and 21 Lessons for the 21st Century have sold 27.5 million copies, roughly, in 60 languages.
I'll let that sink in for people. 27.5 million copies. That is a lot of square footage, or
cubic feet, cubic meters. They've been recommended by Barack Obama, Chris Evans, Bill Gates, and many
others. He's also behind Sapiens, a Graphic History, which we'll talk about, a brand new
graphic novel series in collaboration with comic artists David van der Muelen, I think, co-writer,
and Daniel Casanave, the illustrator. This beautifully illustrated series is a radical
reworking of his book, Sapiens, subtitled A Brief History of Humankind. The series will be published in four volumes,
starting with volume one, The Birth of Humankind, which is available now.
His website, ynharari, H-A-R-A-R-I.com. You can find him on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram,
on Twitter, harari underscore Yuval. We'll link to all the rest of them at Tim.blog slash podcasts.
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out 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 it seem an appropriate time?
What if I did the opposite? I'm a cybernetic organism,
living tissue over metal endoskeleton.
Me, Tim, Ferris, Joe. Divernetic organism, living tissue of a metal endoskeleton. The Tim Ferriss Show.
Yuval, so nice to finally see you.
It's good to be here. Thank you for inviting me.
So we're going to start in an unusual place, perhaps.
Okay.
And that is with correcting my pronunciation on a word.
M-O-S-H-A-V.
How do you pronounce that and what does it mean?
M-O-S-H-A-V.
Oh, that's actually a kind of mistake on Wikipedia.
It's a moshav.
Now, it somehow got around that I live on a moshav,
which is some kind of socialist collective community.
Less radical than the kibbutz, but one of the experiments of
socialists in Israel, like decades ago. And it's just not true. I mean, I live in a kind of middle
class suburb of Tel Aviv. So this is an example, for those listening, of something that some people
call the Wikipedia echo effect. Yes. I tried to correct it so many times
and it's just, I gave up.
It's stronger than me.
So at some point it got into Wikipedia,
then it ended up in The Guardian,
then other people cite The Guardian
and it just will not go away.
So it just keeps coming back.
So let's go to something that I think
is more of a firsthand report.
And it's a paragraph from your wonderful profile, I should say, Answers to Questions in
Tribe of Mentors, which is my last book from a few years ago. And here's the paragraph I'd like
to read, and then we'll explore it. Since the first course in 2000, I began practicing Vipassana
for two hours every day, and each year I take a long meditation retreat for a month or two.
It's not an escape from reality, it's getting in touch with reality. At least for two hours a day, I actually observe reality as it
is, while for the other 22 hours, I get overwhelmed by emails and tweets and funny cat videos.
Without the focus and clarity provided by this practice, I could not have written Sapiens and
Homo Deus. So the missing piece here is the first course. Would you be open to describing how you ended up going to your first Vipassana experience? I was also looking for the meaning of life and reading lots of philosophy books and thinking a lot and nothing really clicked.
And a friend nagged me for about a year to try a meditation retreat instead of reading all these books.
And finally, I gave up and said, OK, I'll try.
I'll see how it is. really fascinating because, you know, the very first evening, the instructions that I was given
by the meditation teacher was very, very simple instructions. I mean, I guess many people heard
them, that you just focus your entire, you sit down, you close your eyes, and you just focus
your entire attention on your nostrils, on your nose, and you just feel, try to feel whether your
breath is coming in or whether your breath is coming in
or whether your breath is going out.
Sounds like the simplest thing in the world.
It's not even a breathing exercise.
You don't need to control the breath.
Just let it be what it is and just feel what it does.
And I couldn't do it for more than 10 seconds, like most people.
That, you know, for 10 seconds I would be focusing on my nostrils,
on my breath, and after 10 seconds, I would be focusing on my nostrils, on my breath, and after
10 seconds, my mind would run somewhere, like to some memory, some story, something I forgot to do,
something that happened years ago, and I would roll in that for minutes before realizing that,
hey, I'm missing my breath and come back. And this was an extremely humiliating and important
experience because it made me realize for the first time in my life that I have almost no control over my mind.
That, you know, I was doing my PhD at Oxford.
I thought I was a very intelligent person, very smart.
And, you know, my mind is my tool.
And I have absolutely no control over it.
I give it this very, very simple task
and it can't do it.
And also you realize how overwhelming
the stories that the mind produce are.
And over time, this was not on the first night,
but gradually over time,
it made me realize that, you know,
if you can't focus on the simple reality
of your breath coming in and out of your
nostrils without being overwhelmed by some story generated in your mind, then how can you hope to
understand, I don't know, the financial system of the world, the geopolitical system, what's
happening in Israel, in the Middle East, much, much bigger things if you can't do
that. I mean, no matter what I try to do, these stories generated by my own mind get between me
and reality. And most of my life, I just spend on these stories. So it was ever since then, it's one of my main practices in life is how do you
avoid being overwhelmed by the stories that your mind generates? Why did your friend nag you for a
year? Was this a friend who was nagging everybody to go to a class? And the teacher, as I understand
it, maybe it was in video i would or i don't or maybe
in person sn going i don't know the lifespan did they nag you because there's something about you
that told them you would benefit in particular or was it a general nagging i think i mean i think
this guy was nagging everybody in a good way i'm still good friends with him. I think because I was really looking hard
to understand life, to understand what's happening here,
then he thought I would be a good candidate. And then he was absolutely right.
Now, Vipassana clicks for some people. It doesn't click for others. Some people gravitate to
Transcendental Meditation and repeating a mantra mantra other people might find a different type of mindfulness practice but it
clicked for you what did the before and after look like if we let's just say go back to that
point in time your first experience and then we flash forward six months what had changed
six months later or or how did your perception of the world change some things changed dramatically
most things didn't i mean you have this kind of false enlightenment experience that you think you
realize something very deep and now everything is going to change and over time you realize that
the deep patterns of yourself of your own mind much, much stronger than one course of meditation or a
practice of six months. And it's a very long way. And again, for some people, it doesn't click at
all. I mean, when I came out of my first course, I thought, oh, that's easy. You can set anybody
there and it will have the same effect. Later on, I realized it doesn't work like that. Different things work for different people.
Over time, there are changes on so many levels.
I'm not sure which of these levels is most interesting to you or to our listeners.
So I can talk on several of them. and better mental health to a big change in my working methods,
in my professional life.
I don't think, as I wrote in that passage you read,
I don't think I could have written Sapiens or Homo Deus
or any of these other books without the practice of meditation
because you need a tremendous
amount of focus to do something like that. And you need to be able to see through the
mass of details. And, you know, you try to summarize the whole of human history in 500 pages,
the most important button on the keyboard is delete.
That's the big thing.
I mean, there are so many important things.
What is really important?
That's the big question.
And I don't think I could have done it without the kind of sharp focus that the meditation gives.
So many people have heard of sapience.
Certainly there was a point in Silicon Valley
when it first came out,
and nearly all of my friends
seemed to be reading this same book.
And I think there's a sort of revisionist
grand delusion among many readers
that Sapiens came out,
and then like the snap of the fingers,
20 million copies, or however many millions of copies were sold worldwide in 60 languages. Now that doesn't
seem to match the story exactly. What was the title of the original English version
of Sapiens and how many copies did it sell? Yeah, it was a long story. I mean, the original English version was titled
From Animals Into Gods, and it was a self-publication on Amazon, and it sold
something like 2,000 copies. They now go for, I don't know, thousands of dollars or something,
because they're rare collector items. But yeah, it was a long way. It was a long way. And you brought in then at that point,
a number of professionals.
I believe maybe it was your husband
who found the literary agent.
That was the main thing.
I mean, I think I'm quite a good writer,
but I have very little skills
in terms of publication, negotiations,
or anything to do with the business side of life.
And I tried for some time, for maybe a year or two,
to find a publisher by myself, and it was a complete failure.
And then my husband came in, and he has much, much better business skills
than I do, and he immediately fired the agent that we were working with
at the time, and kind of let's go
back to zero and he was the one that found the best literary agent in Israel
Deborah Harris and she opened a lot of doors for us and we worked on it for I
think we kind of we did the translation again and several several because
originally it was in Hebrew and several rounds of editing and
eventually something like three years or more than three years after the Hebrew version the
real English version came out in 2014 what were the biggest changes that were made aside from the
title I'd be curious to hear the story of Sapiens the title itself but what were some of the changes that were made in the editing process before the grand debut of the
new version if anything i don't know if it was just fine tuning it was fine tuning nothing major
changed i mean the the all the major themes and ideas were already there in the Hebrew version. We just really redo the retranslation and edit it.
And I mean, shortening here and there a few things,
but there was no major revision to the content.
It was mainly issues of style
and the entire kind of business approach
of who to work with and how.
And you, correct me if I'm wrong, because you never know what you read on the internet,
the degree of veracity, but that it was based on lectures you had given previously.
Yes.
Is that true?
That's correct.
I gave, like, for five, six years previously, I was giving a course at the Hebrew University,
which was basically introduction to the history of the world.
And at some point, after working on it for a couple of years, I began handing out my
notes to the students because I wanted them to focus on what I was saying and be part
of the discussion instead of just scribbling down whatever I say.
So I told them, forget it.
I mean, you don't need to write anything.
I'll give you my notes.
And then the notes started circulating
not only among the students of the class,
but also other students at the university.
And this kind of gave me the idea that,
well, maybe there is a larger audience for this.
And I began working on turning these lecture notes
into a book.
Again, it was a long way, but a lot of the major ideas
were there in the lecture notes. And I wanted to hear more about this because I've seen in
some books that I've quite enjoyed, like Zero to One by Peter Thiel and his co-writer, also came from lecture notes originally at Stanford.
Yeah, it's a good method because the students take no bullshit.
You know, when you write a book and it's only you and the screen and the computer,
the computer suffers everything.
Whatever you write, the computer is fine with it.
It's too long, it's incomprehensible, it's boring, the computer doesn't care.
But the students give you immediate feedback.
I mean, if you stand in class and you talk and you see that the students have lost interest,
then that's a sign.
Or they just don't understand what you're saying.
And the great thing about this course, it was really an introduction to first-year students.
And Israeli students. thing about this course, it was really an introduction to first-year students and Israeli
students. And, you know, if it was, I don't know, in Oxford, then maybe it wouldn't work.
But Israeli students, they tell you exactly what they think about you and what you say.
So I got immediate feedback about everything. And maybe the most important feedback is that,
and I was trying to explain the really basic concepts of human history.
What is religion? What is money? What is capitalism?
And you need, you know, when you talk with professors or doctors, you can talk in a very, very complicated way.
So nobody realizes, including yourself, that you don't really know what you're talking about.
But with first year students, you have to use very simple language. So nobody realizes, including yourself, that you don't really know what you're talking about.
But with first-year students, you have to use very simple language.
And that's a big challenge.
The simpler the language, the bigger the challenge. It really shows you and your listeners whether you know what you're talking about or not.
You can't hide behind professional jargon and very complicated, I don't know,
language. And so it forced me, like I was trying to explain what is money, and I had to go back
again and again to the core ideas and to the lecture notes and ask, do I really understand what I'm talking about?
If I really understand, I should be able to make it simpler.
I should be able to give a straightforward example.
It makes me think quite a bit about Richard Feynman,
the physicist who was a very, very esteemed teacher
and felt very similarly that professionals could hide behind labels,
right? Pointing at the bird and knowing the name is very different from understanding the bird.
And if you have to describe it in simple terms, it's a real challenge of competence and clarity
as a teacher. You mentioned the term suffering. And I again want you to fact check me, but it seems to me in doing homework and reading your work that you are very attuned to suffering, whether that is in the animal world, whether that is in the human experience, whether that is in your own experience, say with the endless cloudy days in Oxford at one point. Could you speak to how you developed that sensitivity,
if I'm not imposing that on you? Because I mean, I'm looking behind you right now,
and people might not be watching this video, but you have some calligraphy behind you, which is,
I believe it's Foshin, which is like Buddhist heart or Buddhist mind.
Actually, I just noticed know somebody gave me a present
and i hang it there yeah it's beautiful it's beautiful so that's what that's what it says
okay and suffering and the concept of suffering is is also central to a lot of buddhist thought
yeah could you speak to how you think about suffering or why that is is something that
you're so cognizant of yeah i realized both in my personal life and in my work as a historian that this is the big
question. I mean, the big question is not the meaning of life, and the big question is not
how you satisfy some god or how you achieve this or that goal. The big question is how you liberate yourself and others from
suffering. And this is also, I think, the main theme of human history, is most historians are
focused on the question of power. If you take most history books, and also most economic books,
and so forth, they are about power. They are not just, you know, a guide to how to get power,
but about the history of power.
Conflicts about power between two kings,
between two kingdoms, between two gods,
between two religions, between two classes.
These are most history books are about that.
And it's an important part, but it's not the bottom line.
I think the bottom line, okay, what does all this mean in terms of happiness and suffering?
Okay, so the Roman Empire rose to power.
Did it actually make humans happier?
Did it make them more miserable?
If it had no noticeable effect on, say, average happiness in the world, what does it matter
whether they won or lost?
And in my work, I try to always keep both of these perspectives at the same time,
the perspective of power and of suffering,
especially because humans are very, very good as a species,
not all humans, but as a species.
We are very good in acquiring more power,
but we are not good at all in translating power into happiness.
I mean, for me, the big paradox of history is that it's obvious we are thousands of times
more powerful than people in the Stone Age, but it's not clear whether we are at all happier
than they were.
Maybe we are happier a bit, but not thousands of times more happier.
So something is wrong.
You know, it's like a car which, you know, you press the fuel pedal with all your strength,
but your gear is in neutral.
I mean, we have so much power and it doesn't move anywhere.
And it's also often the case in your personal life that you can achieve so much. And then, you know, you look inside and you ask,
am I actually happier than I was 10 years ago
or 20 years ago, and maybe not.
And one of the things I also realized personally
and, you know, collectively as a historian
is that we just don't understand suffering very well.
One of the main problems is that people think
that with regard to suffering, it's obvious
what suffering is.
The big problem is how to make it disappear.
I know that, I don't know, pain is suffering, or I don't have enough money, that's the cause
of my suffering, so now let's focus on getting more money or getting a medicine.
And the mistake is that you don't really understand
the deep causes and mechanisms of suffering.
You see just part of it.
Yeah, obviously pain is suffering, that's true.
But there is much more to it.
And if we spend a little more time on understanding the deep mechanisms
of misery and dissatisfaction in life,
then we can act far more effectively in trying to alleviate it.
Can you speak to the test of suffering to determine what entities are real and what are not?
What are illusion and what are not?
I shouldn't say illusion, maybe abstractions.
The main way that humans gain power is through collective cooperation.
As individuals, we are not particularly powerful animals.
In a match between a human and chimpanzee, the chimpanzee will easily win.
The big advantage of humans, we can cooperate basically in unlimited numbers.
Thousands, millions, today even billions cooperate
together. Chimpanzees can't cooperate more than, say, 50 or 100. That's about the limit.
And then, you know, what enables us to cooperate in very large numbers? This is our ability to
invent and believe in fictional stories and fictional entities. All the big heroes of history,
almost all of them, are fictional entities that exist only in our imagination, only in the stories that we create.
Nations, gods, money, corporations, states, the only place they exist is in the stories that we invent and tell.
They are not physical or biological realities.
Again, the United States or Israel,
the only place it exists is in the story
that millions of people believe.
And it's the same with money.
It has, you know, money has absolutely
no objective value.
But as long
as millions of people believe
in the story about the dollar or the
story about the euro, it works.
Now, when you say that, sometimes people go to the other extreme and think that what you're saying
is that nothing is real, that the entire world is just one big illusion. But that's not the case.
I mean, there is still reality. There are still chimpanzees and elephants and humans.
And there is a very, very simple test to know whether the hero of the story that you are telling is a real entity or a fictional entity,
invented by humans and existing only in their imagination.
And that is the test of suffering.
That a human being can suffer, a cow can suffer, an elephant can suffer, but a nation can't.
If a nation loses a war, it doesn't suffer.
It has no mind.
It can't feel pain or sadness or fear.
The soldiers who are fighting for the nation, the citizens in that nation now being conquered by some other nation, they can suffer a
lot of things. But the nations
can't suffer. It should be obvious.
And it's the same with corporations.
Even if the corporation loses a billion
dollars, it doesn't suffer.
If it goes bankrupt, it doesn't suffer.
Because, again, it has no mind.
Can't feel pain. Can't feel anything.
So it's a very, very simple test that we should remind ourselves from time to time what is real in the world and what are these fictional stories.
Now, I'm not against the stories.
We need them.
They are the basis for cooperation.
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What is the story, if there is one, or stories that you have around money yourself? I was reading
the New Yorker profile from not too long ago, and you probably around money yourself? I was reading the New Yorker profile
from not too long ago, and you probably know the paragraph that I might be thinking about where
you and your husband might relate to money differently. What are the stories that you have
for yourself in your life about money? Well, in essence, money is just trust. It's the most
successful and universal system of mutual trust that humans ever
came up with. And therefore, I don't think it's bad. You know, it's very common for historians
and philosophers and people like that. Oh, money, it's the source of all evil in the world.
I don't think so. Sometimes it causes a lot of bad things, but in itself, it's a wonderful thing.
It's just a system of mutual trust that, you know,
50,000 years ago, to trust somebody, you need to know them personally. You need to know their
personality, what they did in the past, they like you, they don't like you, and that makes it very,
very hard to cooperate in large numbers because you can't know a lot of people personally.
And it also makes it particularly hard to cooperate with strangers
and foreigners that you don't know.
Now, you look at today, I can go to a supermarket
and a complete stranger that I never met in my life
would give me food that I can actually eat,
which was grown by a couple of other people on the other side of the world and was transported from that
Field or plantation to the supermarket by a bunch of other people none of us knows
So how do we cooperate so effectively?
How do we trust each other?
money makes it possible and
Money is really it's just trust, you know in the, money was, because people didn't have a lot of trust,
then money had to be made from something with an objective value,
which doesn't depend just on human belief.
So the first money that we know about was simply grain.
You paid for things with grain.
And grain, you know, you can eat them if nothing works.
But gradually, people, the trust increased.
And today, most money in the world, it's just digital data being passed between computers.
Most money is not even banknotes and coins.
It's, I don't know, like 5% or something of the money is physical money.
Most of it is just digital.
When during this crisis in the recent year,
governments and banks in the US, in Europe, elsewhere,
created trillions of dollars,
they didn't even bother to print the money.
You just have some official in some bank,
goes into the computer, adds a zero somewhere,
and you have a trillion new dollars emerging out of nothing.
And it works. I mean, it works
because people have so much
trust in the
banks, in the governments,
not only of their own country. That's the amazing
thing. I mean, you'd have thought,
well, you can only use the money of your government. No!
You think about even, I don't know, Islamic
fundamentalist ISIS.
They hated America, they hated
American politics, American culture,
American religion, but they had
nothing against American dollars.
When they conquered, I don't know, Mosul
and entered the banks,
they didn't burn the dollars that were there.
They took them. They used them.
So that's amazing that you can
have such a level of trust,
even between complete enemies. And in my personal life, therefore, I don't have a negative attitude
towards money. I think for me, I'm also, I'm not chasing it a lot. but for me, the best thing about money is not to think about it.
I'm now much wealthier than I was 10 years ago. I was just a young professor back then. Not that I
was ever poor, but I'm now much more wealthier. And the thing I like most about my wealth today
is that I simply don't have to think about money. I go to the supermarket and I don't
know, in Israel, pineapples are very expensive. So if I want a pineapple, I don't even look at
how much it costs. I just, oh, I want a pineapple. Okay, let's take it. You've mentioned the
alleviating of suffering and getting a better understanding first of defining the problem,
as opposed to just rushing to solutions and getting a better understanding first of defining the problem as opposed to just rushing to solutions and getting a better understanding of suffering. Are there ways
in which your life, in contrast to, say, not thinking about money, has been complicated or
made harder to navigate with the tremendous success of sapiens and becoming more publicly visible in other words was it as as just an example easier
to find sort of tranquility and connection with bodily sensations as a way to integrate yourself
back at oxford compared to today no but i have 20 years of experience now in doing that
so i don't know maybe if I remained an anonymous professor of medieval history,
I would have much deeper experiences of meditation today.
Maybe not.
It's impossible to know.
I still have time.
You know, I'm not so busy.
I have now a large team.
Like, again, thanks to my husband to kind of set it up,
we now have a team of 15 people working for us.
So I get something like, I don't know, 15, 20 emails a day.
That's it.
And like this conversation, I didn't have to do anything.
I just had to come like two minutes before it started
and just put like plug myself in and that's it.
Somebody organized everything.
So I'm not extremely busy.
I still have two hours every day to meditate.
I still go every year for a long retreat of, say, 30 days or 40 or 60 days,
something like that.
Yeah, I mean, I think a lot.
There are a lot of things to think.
But I thought a lot even before that.
So, I mean, the content of my thoughts changed.
But I don't think the intensity changed.
One of the things I realized from now being this famous public intellectual
and meeting all these famous people and leaders is that everybody is basically the same.
When you are prime minister or president of a superpower,
you can't be more worried than when you run a small business.
It's impossible.
It's the same brain.
It's the same mind.
So if you have a small shop And you're the only worker maybe
And it's now corona time
And you have to shut it down
And you have to pay
Your mortgage
And whatever, you worry about it all day
It's basically the same
With a prime minister or president
That worries about
The economic crisis of a war
It's, of course of course, objectively,
they have to be much more worried, but they can't.
They have the same brain that you have.
So it really depends on, you know,
maybe they are even far less worried than you are.
If you're an extremely neurotic person,
I don't know, if Woody Allen had a small shop,
and I think he would be much more worried about his shop than certain presidents and prime
ministers today in the world are worried about their countries
i read a i read a quote from you this was in the new york times if if i was a superpower my
superpower would be detachment feel free to correct that if need be, but assuming there's some grain of truth to that, could you expand on that, please?
Yeah, I think it is true that I can keep a kind of distance from situations, from development in my personal life or in world history.
And even though I have my opinions and my preferences,
I have a certain ability to keep a distance and say,
look at things from different angles.
And also, it makes me very skeptical about my own positions
maybe
I just don't know, maybe I'm wrong about it
it could
have been debilitating
that I can't
how can you write the history
of the world if you're not sure about what you say
but actually I find
it, I just don't take
myself 100% seriously.
So, okay, so maybe I'll write something and it's nonsense.
So, okay.
When I wrote Sapiens initially, I had no idea it would be a big success.
So I had this defense that I thought, nobody's going to read it.
Maybe my students at university would read it, and maybe a couple of other people but that's it. So
you know I can write what I want basically. And later on when I became
very successful it was the other way around then that you know it doesn't
matter anymore. That if I write something and it's not and I'm not a hundred percent sure about it then I
can take the hit then okay so people will find out that I wrote something
wrong and that's fine that's part of the business I mean if you really want to
write these kinds of big books you have to accept to some extent that you will make mistakes
and that you will not get everything right. If you're a perfectionist, then it's better to
write the history of kind of one battle in the Middle Ages, then you're on safer grounds.
This is going to seem like a strange question, question perhaps and if it goes nowhere that's
totally fine but i'm curious what do your close friends come to you for when it comes to advice
like what type of advice do your friends come to you for is there any any pattern to it or any
particular standout it depends on the friends i think I have a core of very good friends that go with me for years.
I mean, from long before.
I think that since I became kind of famous,
I made maybe just one or two new good friends.
Almost all my good friends are with me from years back.
And I have different relationships with each of them.
It's like each one of them
holds a different part of my inner world or of my life and I hold different parts of their world
so you know they don't come for me to me for advice about history that's for sure
maybe they'll ask me well what do you think will happen in the US elections?
And I say, I don't know.
But I mean, if something really big happens, I don't know,
during the height of the terrorist wave in the world,
so they would come, at least some of them, and I would say,
look, from a big historical perspective, this is not so important.
You know, every person that dies in a terrorist attack is the entire world destroyed, but looking at the big
picture from the history of the world, this is a very small affair. I mean, I can
explain to you why terrorism gets so much attention. It's basically theater.
These people are experts in theater, not in war,
and they are very good at it.
So they get so much attention.
But you don't need to worry that the terrorists will take over the world.
It's not going to happen.
Most of the things, you know,
it's like somebody's breaking up with their boyfriend, girlfriend.
Somebody's just having a lousy day at work.
And the usual things.
The usual stuff. What would they say your superpower is if if you said it's detachment which we could dig further into but is are there
any other observations that they would have if we if we gave all of your closest friends two drinks
and we said okay you've all superpower what is it what might they say first they will say different things
because they know different angles of me right i think some of them will say i suppose that i'm a
good listener partly because i talk so much during my work but like when i meet these friends i like
to be quiet and just let somebody else do the talking for a while, which is a very good thing because very, very often when people come to you for help, they just want you to listen.
They don't want you to solve their problems. It often happens that somebody comes with a problem
and you don't have patience for them. So you think, what is the fastest way to get rid of them,
to end this phone call? I'll find the solution to
their problem, then they'll go away. And this really is the last thing they want. They really
just want to complain and for somebody to listen to them. And I'm quite good at it.
Right, you spend all your words during the day and then you have the space to listen.
Yes.
How do you relate to happiness?
Yeah, I usually prefer to talk about suffering or misery
because happiness is far more difficult to nail down.
I mean, when you're miserable, you know it.
When you think you're happy,
you're quite often just deluding yourself.
It's not so easy to really understand what's happening there.
You know, it really goes down to the level of the body. This is something that I know
from meditation. When you have a pain somewhere in your body, it acts like a
magnet. It just draws the attention there. There is no way you can miss it. And you
try to observe other things and you can't it's just you know it
gets drawn back to the painful sensation in the knee in the stomach wherever it is
but when you have pleasant sensations in your body they have usually the opposite effect they
throw you out you kind of float a couple of feet above the ground. I mean, sometimes people come in meditation and they say,
I never have any pleasant sensations in the body.
I just have pain.
And that's never the case.
What's true is that when you have pleasant sensations,
you don't notice them because the usual effect of feeling something very pleasant,
it throws you out.
You start kind of imagining, hey, what if I
win the lottery and I'll have a million dollars?
I'll do that, I'll do that. And you
lose connection with what, at the time
that you're having these very pleasant
thoughts, you're having very pleasant
sensations in the body, but you don't notice it.
And
it's,
I find it's
harder to work and to see what's actually happening there.
But it's even more important than kind of noticing and working with the painful sensations.
I mean, in the end, most of our, I would say, the really difficult problems, they begin with the pleasant sensations that, you know, we become so attached to them that the moment they are gone, most of the time people don't have very painful experiences.
Most of the time, if you are dissatisfied, it's because you are missing or craving for some very pleasant experience, which is just not there.
And you're not willing to settle for the kind of ordinary boring thing that you do have.
I want to rewind to your description of your current life compared to your,
just say, pre-fame life, which seems to be similar in many ways. You've been able to preserve the space to do
what you do best. You have this team, you have this husband who's very good at saying no,
you have personal assistants who are very good at saying no. And to many people listening who
have achieved some modicum of success, I think they will listen with great envy because very often, whether they are artists, whether they are business people, what made them successful is often the first thing to get crowded out by the new attention and success that they receive. luck, because perhaps there was some luck and chance involved in meeting the person who then
became your husband. Were there any decisions or are there any decisions or frameworks or anything
at all that has helped you to preserve the space that you have? I think a very important decision
was to keep the meditation first, that like when I plan my day when I plan my year
It's the first thing I put in the calendar is
the meditation retreats and everything else has to find space around that and
That was a very it was a conscious decision and a very important decision that that's really worked
and in a bit similar way also to keep time for my old friends,
to keep time for my family,
and understanding that this is kind of a marathon race
and not a sprint.
But okay, something very important happens,
a new book is coming out, there is a lot of important things.
Okay, so I can change my routines for a while.
But over the long run, you have to keep these kind of basic blocks intact.
This was a very conscious decision.
In my case, it worked.
Also, to kind of remember what's really important for you in life.
For me, I think maybe on the personal level, I really want to understand life, to understand the world, what's happening.
I noticed quite early that most of the big events that I'm participating in, like conferences and so forth, and the important people I meet, they don't really contribute much to that.
They don't seem to understand the life or have some particular insight.
In the big conferences, they never talk about these things.
They talk about the global economy.
They talk about climate change.
They talk about…
They are important things. But on the deeper level of what's actually happening here, I won't get any answers from there.
You know, I don't think it's a coincidence that you look at the whole span of human history,
and almost none of the important political leaders of humankind made a significant philosophical contribution to human thought.
You have a few exceptions, I don't know, Marcus Aurelius or something like that.
But generally speaking, you would have thought that from their vantage point,
they see something that ordinary mortals don't.
Maybe they reach the top
because they have some very keen insight
into human nature.
If they have some keen insight,
they keep it very, very secret.
Who are some of the people you respect
could be past
or present
for really seeing or seeking what is going on
on the deeper levels i can tell you i mean some of the names of thinkers and writers that influenced
me great let's start there yeah so i So, I mean, Charles Taylor, the Canadian philosopher,
really influenced me a lot. His book, The Sources of the Self, is, I think, one of the most important
books I read in life. One of the most difficult books also. I mean, if people take this as a kind
of reading recommendation, they should be warned. It's really tough going.
It's a very big book, very dense,
but if you make it, it's really worth it.
Of course, I was very influenced
by my meditation teacher, SN Goenka.
Again, not necessarily by any books he wrote
or just by the guidance.
I mean, I remember sitting in my first vipassana course
and having this feeling, this guy really gets it. He really understands what's happening.
This was something quite surprising for me to see that. Some of my good friends have some insight into what's happening here.
I can give a list of books that influenced me.
I'm not sure if this answers the question.
We are free to meander.
We don't have tight constraints.
One of the problems I realized is that it's extremely difficult to share
the really deep
insights you have about life. That very often they are in a nonverbal level and
in any case my impression is that most of the inner world of most humans is
never shared.
They never talk about it because they don't even have the words and don't have the audience.
I mean, most of what happens to you deep down during the day,
your spouse probably doesn't know, your parents don't know,
your children don't know, your friends don't know,
even you don't know if you don't really make the effort one of the
qualities
of great art
not just writing but different kinds of art
that it really gives
words that
you feel something
maybe for years
and you have no idea how to
communicate it and then
you read a poem or you see a TV show,
and yes, this is exactly what I'm feeling,
and I never knew how to communicate it.
So that's why it's also very difficult to kind of know.
You meet somebody and you don't really know what's going on inside them,
and to what extent they understand or don't really know what's going on inside them and to what extent they understand
or don't understand their life or life in general so it's very very hard to say well you also
underscore something that i've thought about a lot recently which is it's quite unfair to expect
other people to understand you fully when you don't understand yourself fully
on your own it's quite an unfair expectation of people sometimes this is a basic expectations
because because we have trouble understanding ourselves we have this hope that somebody will
lend us a hand and we have the experience at least most of us, if we came from
loving families, that when you're kids, there were people
there, like our parents, who did exactly that for us.
Even on the most banal level, that a child is crying
and the mother would say, well, you're just tired, just go to sleep.
And you figure out, well, you should know that you're tired,
but no, I mean, it's amazing that sometimes people are tired
or hungry or whatever, and they don't know it.
And then somebody who really understands them comes and says,
well, just go to sleep.
And in my writing, I engage a lot with the issue
of the future of AI and surveillance.
And I think one of the future of AI and surveillance.
And I think one of the key fantasies with AI and surveillance is that the algorithms will do that for us.
Well, this ties into one of the books that has had a big impact on you,
if I remember correctly, right?
I mean, Aldous Huxley and Brave New World.
Yeah, Brave New World, it really had a really, really deep impact on me
because I think he really got it.
And that he...
The interesting thing about Brave New World, it's kind of, you know,
it's on the surface, it's a dystopia.
But when you kind of ask yourself, why?
What's wrong with Brave New World?
It's very difficult to say it, to find out.
I mean, everybody seems to be satisfied.
Everybody seems to be happy. there is a system in place that understands you very very deeply and makes sure that you'll never be
in great pain or never suffer
any great misery
and it's
a very, in this sense you know
1984, like
it's brother book 1984
it's a very simple book
in this sense
that 1984
describes a terrible terrible
dystopia
the only question is how do we avoid
getting there
but Brave New World you read it
and at least for me I kind of think
okay so what's
really wrong with it
and it's not easy to answer this question
yeah the sort of uncanny wrong with it? And it's not easy to answer this question.
Yeah, the sort of uncanny feeling that something is not quite right, that you can't put words to.
It's very similar to the feeling of something that is quite right, that you can't put words to,
that then gets reflected in good art. It can go both ways. A number of the things that I've read in preparation for this
from various profiles,
there was one that said you prefer television to novels.
There was another that gave the example,
might have been the same profile,
of you swimming as part of your routine in the summer
and listening to nonfiction books via headsets,
but I guess they're resonant.
They deal with the vibration of the skull or the jawbone.
Yeah, I mean, this is a really nice gadget I came across.
I tried to listen through like usual earplugs
and water would seep in somehow all the time
and would ruin it.
And then finally I came across this gadget
that you can just put it on your forehead
and in some mysterious way it works better
and you actually hear better than
when you put it in your ears uh so yeah i would swim back and forth back and forth listening to
i don't know i i listen say to shoshana zuboff's surveillance capitalism while swimming back and
forth in my pool with the with the dolphin headset for the resonance that's amazing so i'll it's a
forehead headset, perhaps.
Do you recall what type it is by any chance?
I know this is getting into the minutia.
If not, we can figure it out later.
I can go and look for it if it's very important.
It's just in the next room,
so it will take me a second if you want.
Oh, yeah, sure.
Let's grab it.
Why not?
Okay, just a minute.
I don't want to say this is the most important thing in the world,
but I'm curious.
I'll take a minute i don't want to say this is the most important thing in the world but i'm curious i'll take it and take a minute
so uh it's a this is how it looks by the way oh wow all right so it's connected to the
yeah sort of dorsal snorkel that goes across the forehead so you don't have to rotate
yes and i don't have to get't have to put my head back and forth
all the time from the water.
It's by Finis Duo.
Finis, F-I-N-I-S.
All right, we'll find it and put it in the show notes.
Thank you for grabbing that.
In those examples, in these profiles,
it seems like you are not consuming much written fiction but brave new world is fiction
yeah yeah fast becoming reality maybe also like you said philosophy disguised as science fiction
are there other fiction books that you have found to have an impact on you or your thinking or do
you do you consume much in terms of quite similar?
Yeah.
It's quite similar to brave new world.
I think hitchhiker's guide to the galaxy.
I also,
I also listed it as a philosophy book.
You know,
I think that,
and it had an impact on,
not just on,
on my thinking,
but on my,
on,
on,
on how I write or work,
that I'm not saying it as a kind of, I don't know, metaphor or something.
They are philosophy books.
They just are written in a different way.
And this is one of the ideas that gave me the inspiration
to kind of turn Sapiens into a graphic novel,
which we might discuss later on if we have the time, that you can play with the form. I think that Aldous Huxley, when he came to write Brave
New World, he had these philosophical issues he wanted to discuss. And maybe I'm inventing,
maybe it wasn't like this at all. But my impression is that he thought, well, it will actually be easier and more
interesting and engaging instead of, you know, having these formal logical arguments. And instead
of having these thought experiments, which philosophers love so much, why not have an
entire book, which is one long thought experiment, and see where it takes me.
And I think that The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy
is basically something similar,
that it explores a lot of deep philosophical issues,
but in a much more fun way
than your typical philosophy book.
I could not agree more.
I just literally a few weeks ago
listened to The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, narrated by Stephen Fry, who's an incredible narrator, for the first time. And you're right that it has so many what otherwise could be very sterile thought experiments and concepts embedded into this entertaining narrative.
And I remember one line, they're talking about the,
I want to say he's the president of the galaxy
or something along those lines.
Yeah, Zapo Bibelbrooks.
That's right, Bibelbrooks.
And they talk about how successful he was
and how people have the mistaken notion
that the job of the president is to wield power,
but that's not the job of the president.
It's to distract from those who are wielding power.
And just these short nuggets contain so much to chew on.
And it's really an effective way of providing people with footholds, in a way.
Toeholds.
It's the same with TV.
I think that Black Mirror, or at least some of the episodes in Black Mirror, are
some of the best discussions that
I've seen of
certain dangerous
tendencies in current technology.
I mean, some episodes are just fun.
I don't know, like
Sanjani Pero, I think it's an
extremely good episode, but it describes
a reality which is so far away from us
that it's not really relevant
to any of the discussions here.
But you look at, if you saw
it, Nosedive,
about, and you know,
maybe the Chinese got the idea
for their social
credit system from Nosedive.
But it's such a powerful
and important episode.
You look at,
how was it called?
The one with the cartoon figure that became president,
that almost became an MP.
The blue bear or something.
And, you know, this was before Trump.
This was before this whole wave.
And this was so prophetic.
It was really amazing. I mean, when I watched it for the first time in 2013,
I thought, what are they talking about?
And then I watched it later, like five years later,
and these guys are just geniuses.
I mean, how did they see it coming?
Yeah, it's a real sweet spot of near-term
or not-too-distant-future kind of technological extrapolation.
I love Black Mirror,
and I always encourage
people to watch at least three episodes, because I'd say maybe one out of three or one out of four
just completely miss for me. They don't kind of sort of strike a chord. So you have to,
your sample size has to be a few episodes, and you'll usually strike on something. Do you have
any other, and we are going to talk about sapiens or graphic history
because I have a lot of questions about it.
Before we get there, I have two,
actually I'll stick with one question before we get there.
And that is any other television series,
could be documentaries also or movies
that you think are intelligent examples of philosophy
or thought experiments in disguise.
Again, going back to the usual suspects of science fiction,
I thought that Hair was a very intelligent and, you know,
low-key exploration of some of the potential of AI.
I don't like these movies when the robots rebel and kill everybody. I mean,
this is such,
it's implants the wrong fears and it encourages the wrong discussions.
I don't think that in the next 20 or 30 years,
the robots are going to rebel and kill everybody,
but there are other dangers,
much more subtle,
I mean,
or less subtle,
whether it's the job market, whether it's surveillance
and what people do to politics,
or whether it's, you know, changes
in human relationships.
And I thought that Her
was a very, in this way,
a very intelligent
movie that avoided the usual
traps. And it
goes back exactly to what we were discussing
earlier, that we have a deep yearning that
somebody out there in the world would really understand us.
Like we go about life and we hope that our parents would understand us, our teachers,
our lovers, our kids.
Somebody please understand me.
And for many people, it never happens.
And to some extent, somebody understands them, but there are many hidden corners within themselves
that they are unable to communicate,
and maybe they don't understand them fully,
and there is nobody out there that reaches out
and kind of engages those corners in them.
And there is now a technology on the rise
which could fulfill that dream,
and this is extremely attractive and extremely frightening at the same time. And Harry's spot on. I mean, what happens
when there is an algorithm that constantly observes you, not just what you do, but also
what's happening inside your body, and really understands your personality, your moods, your likes, your dislikes.
You know, you come back home from work and you're grumpy
and your husband doesn't notice it, but the computer does notice it.
I mean, and what kind of world is it?
What kind of relationships will there be when computers and objects
understand you better than the people in your life?
And that's a fascinating and frightening question,
and I think a very realistic question.
Unlike the robots rebelling and killing everybody,
the moment that your smart refrigerator knows you better than your husband is not very far in the future.
And, you know, we should be talking more about that.
And I would like to see more movies, more TV shows, more science fiction novels that explore these kinds of questions. Yeah. If you haven't read any of Ted Chiang's work,
C-H-I-A-N-G, he has a compilation of short stories called Exhalation.
Okay. And he has another collection of short
stories. I think you would absolutely love them. One of his short stories was turned into, I believe it was Arrival, about the protagonist
who's this female linguist who decodes the graphic language of these aliens who arrive on Earth,
and it's about temporal perception. These are really, really, really incredible stories. So
Ted Chiang, C-H-I-A-N-G-I-N, I think you'd enjoy it. Let's talk about sapiens and graphic history.
Well, before we get to that, I just want to say that the word understand and the concept of understanding is also fraught with difficulties.
And I think that that is part of what AI will also demonstrate.
Knowing quite a few people who work on AI, what does it mean for, let's just say, a computer or a refrigerator to pass the Turing test so effectively that you feel understood?
Well, I don't believe they'll be conscious.
I don't believe that we are near the point when they will have consciousness.
And if by understand you mean the kind of inner feeling that we have when we understand that that's not the case. I think we are not near there,
but understand in the sense that able to predict our behavior and response unconsciously,
in a way which will be more appropriate than the people around us. That's what I mean by it. Yes,
it's a weaker, definitely. I'm not thinking about the conscious experience of understanding.
It's about just predicting,
could be manipulating,
but most importantly,
just a kind of reacting to us in a way that we will find appropriate,
more appropriate than the way that,
you know, we'll get so used
to having these computers and robots
that are very attuned to how we feel
that we might become even more irritated with the humans who don't feel,
who don't react, who don't understand how we feel
and don't react in the right way.
And then part of the problem is that so many people,
like everybody, are often self-centered.
So I don't get what my husband is feeling because I'm too focused on my own feelings.
One of the reasons that computers could be better than humans in this is that they don't have feelings.
The refrigerator doesn't have any expectations in life from you.
It had no dreams, no fantasies, nothing.
So a refrigerator can be 100% focused on what you feel.
It has no feelings of its own.
So it can't be insulted, can't be angry, nothing.
Sounds like you have an episode of Black Mirror to write.
And to that point, on some level,
we were talking about philosophy disguised as fiction,
or thought exercises embedded into, say, Black Mirror in a way that are not just fascinating,
but also prophetic in some respects. Sapien's a graphic history. I want to talk about this
because I actually have a long history with graphic novels and comic books. I wanted to
be a penciler, a comic book penciler, for about 12 years, and used to be an illust have a long history with graphic novels and comic books. I wanted to be a penciler,
a comic book penciler for about 12 years and used to be an illustrator a long time ago.
And then I lived in Japan in high school, went to a Japanese school. And in Japan, unlike in the US,
there is a long, rich history of comic books and graphic novels for adults and also comic books and graphic novels for adults, and also comic books and graphic novels for teaching difficult concepts, telling history. And these are extended, expansive collections of graphic novels.
And I've seen how effective it is, because I read some of these when I was in Japan on the history
of judo and other things, and I would not have consumed 500 pages of pure text certainly not in japanese and i think
it's an incredibly powerful format how and why did you decide to take sapiens and create this
piece of art but also an effective vehicle for perhaps teaching in a different way?
Actually, the initiative didn't come from me.
It came from David and Danielle, the two artists who collaborated with me on this project. They came up with the idea.
They brought some initial suggestions, and I really liked it.
It connected to something that I did want to do for a long time, which is to reach new
audiences. I see my
main job today as bringing science and history to more people, people who wouldn't necessarily read
a traditional science book. Even if it's popular science, they still won't read it, like 500 pages
of text with footnotes, they won't touch it. But they might connect
to a graphic novel. And yes, it is for adults and teenagers. I mean, many people in the West
have the idea that comics are for kids. But no, it's just a different medium. It's a different
language. It enables you to do, I mean, some things you need to cut down the text,
but there are many things you can do much better in a graphic novel,
certainly to show things.
Like, you know, much of the graphic novel is about the life of hunter-gatherers.
So you can just show it in images instead of long descriptions.
An image is worth a thousand words in many cases.
It also enabled us to... For me, it know the most fun project i ever worked on because it was okay let's take all the academic conventions of
how you write history and throw them aside let's experiment so it's kind of a series of experiments
in how to tell history so you know one part about the evolution of different human species,
the sapiens, Neanderthals, and so forth,
it's told like a reality TV show,
that there are different competition between different human species.
Then you have an entire chapter about how humans caused the extinction
of many of the large animals of the world
as they spread from Africa over the world.
And this is told as a detective movie.
We created this fictional detective, Detective Lopez,
like Sherlock Holmes or Agatha Christie kind of person.
And she goes around the world
and investigates the worst serial killers in history.
Who killed all these big animals?
And the invention of the first religions is told according to the conventions of superhero action movies.
So we created this superhero in Doctor Fiction,
who embodies the human ability to invent fictional stories and mythologies.
And it was really fun working with David and Daniel on that
and just saying, well, why not?
We can try that.
We can do that.
It's allowed.
It also forced me and actually all of us
to answer many questions which we can just ignore in the text.
When you draw, you have to draw specific things.
When you write, you can write in obstructions. When you draw, you have to draw specific things.
When you write, you can write in obstructions.
When you draw, you can't draw obstructions.
So if, for instance, you talk about the connection between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals,
and we now know that some sapiens and Neanderthals had sexual relations and even had children because most of us today still carry some Neanderthal
genes in our DNA.
Now, in a book, you can just write that sapiens had sex with Neanderthals, end of story.
But in a graphic novel, if you want to draw it, you have to make some decisions.
I mean, who is the man and who is the woman?
Is it a Neanderthal man with a sapien woman or the other way around?
And what about skin color?
What about hair color, hairstyle?
All these questions, you can't draw a general human.
It must have some skin color, must have some hair color.
So we have to go back to the literature, the scientific literature, and investigate.
And sometimes you find answers, sometimes you don't.
And then you have to take into account all the ideological and political issues of race and gender. And so it's a huge exist today? How did you think about that or think through those types of decisions? about these things. And, you know, it was a balancing act.
You can't ignore science just for the sake of being politically correct.
On the other hand,
you have to be aware
of the political implications
of the choices you make.
I mean, you can't hide
behind scientific objectivity
because there is no such thing
as a completely objective narrative.
Just choosing what is the opening scene and what is the ending scene, it doesn't come from reality.
It comes from your political, ideological, or religious beliefs.
You know, reality, the real reality, it has no beginning and end.
No historical event had a beginning and an end,
and no historical event had a focus.
You know, it's even easier to think about it in terms of movies.
When you watch a movie, let's say about the Second World War,
so the camera is somewhere, and something is in the focus of the shot,
something is on the side, and many things things you don't see them at all.
Now, in reality, there is no camera. There is no camera hanging above planet Earth,
the camera of history, which points in a particular direction. And this is the center of events and
this is the sidelines. You can tell the Second World War with Churchill as the main hero, Hitler and Stalin appearing on a few scenes, and millions of Chinese that died in the war never appearing at all.
And you can do an entire World War II movie just about a single Chinese village.
Now, both are true.
And what do you choose is not forced on you by the reality.
It reflects very often political and ideological and also artistic choices.
Now, when you go back to the Stone Age, it's even more complicated because there are so many things we just don't know.
I mean, the basic things.
We don't know what family structure was like.
You have all these discussions about what is the natural human family. I mean, the basic things. We don't know what family structure was like.
You have all these discussions about what is the natural human family.
Lots of people believe, well, you know, it's obvious.
It's a man, a woman, two and a half kids, and a dog.
This is a traditional family.
This was always the case.
But we know that even in recent history, this was not always the case.
It's not the case today. In many countries, close to 50% of children don't grow up in such a family today.
You go back to the Middle Ages, it's not the structure of everybody.
You go to biology, to other apes, chimpanzees don't live like that.
Gorillas don't live like that.
Orangutans don't live like that.
So how did humans live 50,000 years ago? And the answer is we don't know. We have evidence from the Stone Age, we have tools, but the tools don't tell you
what was the family structure. You have cave paintings, but one of the interesting things
about cave paintings, we've found thousands and thousands of cave paintings from the Stone Age.
There is not a single image of a family.
There are lots of mammoths, there are lots of horses,
there are lots of ibex, there are some humans also,
mostly stick figures, but there isn't a single image
from the Stone Age that you can say,
look, that's how they depicted a family.
And what does it mean?
Why do people draw all these elephants
and never bother to draw their own family?
I don't know what it means,
but it's interesting.
And it gives us a lot of artistic freedom
about how to deal with these issues.
So like, I don't know,
we have this one scene about Neanderthals. And,
you know, Neanderthals had a big revolution in the last 10 years. Of course, they are dead. But
our understanding of them has completely changed in the last 10 years because of so many new
evidence we have, both from genetics, but also from artifacts and archaeological records.
And whereas 20 years ago, maybe, they were still these archetypical cave people,
primitive and brutal and things like that,
now they have a very positive image.
Not only because we have their genes in our DNA,
but also because we have evidence that they took care of wounded people, of elderly people,
of disabled people. They had a much more sophisticated technology and maybe even art
and culture than we assumed. So we have, we depicted in the graphic novel, this change in
image in this scene that you see these two Neanderthal guys sitting in the office of a PR consultant.
And the PR consultant has on the wall
this old-fashioned image of a Neanderthal,
a brutal Neanderthal with a big stick
dragging a female by the hair.
And there was a big X over this image.
And the PR consultant says,
well, you know, this was a good brand for the 19th century,
but this is the 21st century.
You need to lighten up your brand.
And the two Neanderthals say, yes, well, you know,
actually, we too are gay.
So, obviously, we don't have any evidence
that there were gay Neanderthals.
I mean, our scientific understanding of sex and gender today
indicates that it's very likely that there were gay Neanderthals.
But if you ask for the smoking gun, show me a grave from 50,000 years ago with two men together, only then I believe, then of course we don't have this.
But we hardly have, we don't have a lot of direct evidence for sex in the Stone Age.
We have a lot of indirect evidence, like from genes.
So we know that sapiens and Neanderthals had sex.
But maybe also there were cases of a sapien's man having sex with a Neanderthal man.
Could be.
No evidence in the genes, of course.
But could it have happened?
Maybe.
And we have this autistic license that we can
show that it makes sense well also i mean this is maybe going down a rabbit hole but if you look at
the behavior of of chimpanzees and others i mean there's there's some evidence to suggest that that
type of interaction certainly exists yeah i mean if if you're looking at the sort of current day
precursors, in a sense, what is your hope for these graphic novels? And they're coming out
in four volumes. What do you anticipate or hope the spacing to be of those volumes?
Oh, we hope for one every year. The main challenge is the drawing. I mean, this is Daniel's job,
and I draw like a five-year-old kid. I mean, they can't depend on me for anything when it comes to the drawing.
And it takes a lot of time to draw, you know, these hundreds of images.
And also it goes back and forth because Daniel draws an image or a couple of images and send them.
And then we go, no, the archaeological evidence indicates that actually the spear points were not like you depicted and then I mean the the
political issues that okay we we need a more balanced gender relations in this image and
and it goes back to Daniel and he needs to to draw it again and it takes a long time
so I guess it will be one volume each year and the big hope that it will reach new audiences that may not read a 400-page text about the history of humankind, but would be interested and would find it fun and engaging when it's sold well done. I have to say, I've read, I have probably 5,000 to 10,000 comic
books that I've saved and polybagged over the years. And I've collected everything from Sandman
in the US to dozens of different graphic novels in Japan. It's very well done. So I mean, you and your team deserve a lot of credit for
that. I'd love to ask a question about your mission statement. Now, I don't know if you
would call it a mission statement, maybe it is. So this is from the New Yorker profile from this
year. And it describes how your mission statement reads as follows. And this is on a bulletin board
in your office.
Keep your eyes on the ball, focus on the main global problems facing humanity, learn to distinguish reality from illusion, care about suffering.
And I guess there was previously embrace ambiguity, but that got scratched out.
Yes.
So could you explain the origins of this mission statement, please?
It's a couple of mission statements.
As we expand our team, it becomes more difficult to get everybody on the same page,
to make sure that everybody, each person has a different personal and professional background.
And so when it was just me or just my husband and me,
there was no need to write down these official mission statements.
But when you have 15 employees, then it becomes important.
And we had a long discussion and like a back and forth also with all the employees.
And we came up with these as several kind of general guidelines to keep in mind.
And maybe the most important thing is that we see our task as helping to focus the global conversation on the most important issues.
Because one of the big problems of the 21st century is people are flooded by enormous amounts of information.
It's not like in the past when information was scarce and the problem was how to get it. Now it's the opposite.
And you just don't know what to pay attention to. And it also goes back to my practice of meditation,
of how to stay focused. And it's kind of linked the personal practice with the global project.
Again, we don't see ourselves as providing solutions,
but just kind of helping to steer the global conversation
in the most important directions.
You have such a historical context
for determining the relative weight to assign to different events
or phenomena in the world, as indicated or described in the example of terrorist attacks
and their sort of cultural, or I shouldn't say cultural, but historic significance. Like,
yes, they're horrible. Yes, the theater and graphic nature of it is very compelling
to the human psyche, which would also be true of, say, a shark attack, right? If a 12-year-old boy
were attacked by a shark on the East Coast of the United States, it would be in every newspaper,
and there would be a huge response, probably dramatic over-harvesting of sharks, so on and
so forth. But in the sweep of human history, its importance is close to zero, negligible.
What are some of the more important, the main global problems facing humanity from your perspective?
Well, as we speak, I think the three big ones are nuclear war,
which, you know, people tend to connect with the Cold War.
Yeah, there was something there about nuclear weapons, but they are still here. And I don't think we'll see nuclear
war in the next few months. But if tensions in the world continue to grow, then it will become
again a major issue. And it is an existential issue. Other things can destroy us, but nuclear
war can. So we have to keep it in mind all the time. The second big thing is ecological collapse.
It's not just climate change
that gets most of the headlines lately.
It's many other things also,
like loss of biodiversity
and destruction of habitats and so forth.
But generally speaking, yes, we are seeing,
we are in, whereas nuclear war,
you know, it's just a future possibility.
Maybe it will happen.
Maybe it won't happen.
Ecological collapse has already begun.
It's all around us.
And it threatens, again, it's an existential danger.
It threatens the foundations of our civilization.
I guess that some people will survive it.
But if things really go bad, with the economic and political implications of it,
it could cost the lives of billions of
people. And the third big one, and I think most complicated, is technological disruption,
the consequences of disruptive technologies, especially artificial intelligence and
bioengineering. It's the most complicated challenge because, you know, with nuclear
war and climate change and ecological collapse, you can disagree whether it's true or not but everybody
agrees what needs to be done about it to stop it nobody thinks that having a
nuclear war is a good idea nobody thinks that climate change is a good idea maybe
some people deny it but they don't say it's good now with technological
disruption it's much much more complicated because it has a lot of positive potential.
A lot of people positively wish to see greater and faster technological disruptions.
And there is no agreement whatsoever about what we should do
with technologies like AI or like bioengineering.
The dreams of some people are the nightmares of other people.
So it's very complicated.
Again, like ecological collapse, it's not a future scenario.
It's already happening all around us.
And I think the pace is such that it may, to some people, it sounds like crazy,
but I strongly believe that given the technologies we are now developing,
within a century or two at most, our species will disappear.
I don't think that in the end of the 22nd century,
the Earth will still be dominated by Homo sapiens.
I think given the immense powers of technologies we are developing,
there are two scenarios only.
One scenario is that the technology will destroy humanity.
And I think it's less likely, but still possible.
The more likely scenario is that it will change humanity in a profound way.
That we will use AI and bioengineering to change
homo sapiens and to create new kinds of beings that will be much more different from us than
we are different from Neanderthals or from chimpanzees.
To give just one example, I think it is possible that we will create the first inorganic life
forms after four billion years of organic evolution.
So, again, it's not a destruction of our species,
it's the changing of species into something else.
But what kind of thing it will be,
we have to be extremely careful about that.
It won't necessarily be a better version of us.
It could be much, much worse.
Could you give a bit more detail around the
new inorganic life form? And in your mind's eye, if we change for the worse in some tech-enabled
way, deliberately or by accident, what might that look like to you? Well, I'll start with the second question of what it could look like.
You know, you could use whatever technology to increase the efficiency of people, the intelligence of people, at the price of things like autistic sensitivity or like spiritual depth. I mean if you ask armies if you ask corporations if you ask governments
What do you need from your employees from your soldiers? They will say oh we want people to be more efficient
We want people to reach to be more logical
We want people to be more disciplined and if you have the technology then you engineer such people
Even if it comes and it always comes at them
I mean usually when you improve something it tends to come at the price of something else
and things like, I don't know, spiritual
depth, what kind of army needs
its soldiers to have spiritual depth
so if you live
to the corporations and armies, it's
very likely that once you have
a technology to change humans
it will, I would say
downgrade them and not upgrade them
it will make them more efficient soldiers or employees or whatever,
but it will make them kind of poorer beings, lesser beings.
So that's about just one scenario of what does it mean to downgrade people.
Now, with regard to inorganic life forms, you know, for 4 billion years,
everything on the planet, all life forms were organic.
Whether it's a bacteria or a mammoth
or a tree or a human,
it's organic. It obeys the laws of
organic chemistry. Now
is the rise of AI.
We might have a chance.
Again, I tend to be agnostic about it.
I'm not sure. But
it is possible that
in a couple of decades, we will be able to create either
completely inorganic beings, or at least part organic, part inorganic cyborgs. And this will be,
if it happens, it will be the biggest revolution in the history of life since the beginning of life.
Much, much bigger than the creation of mammoths or the creation of mammals or humans, because
it's a completely different game.
Once you're no longer subject to organic chemistry, we can't even begin to imagine what it means
because our imagination is the product of organic chemistry.
So if you have a kind of intelligence which is not or based on organic chemistry
you know who it can be anything if you look over the next so you're talking about the i guess the
the 22nd century and the prevalence dominance or existence of homo sapiens if we look over the next
50 years just to choose an arbitrary time frame, of nuclear war, ecological collapse, or these unforeseen accidents or mistakes of high technology, which scares you the most?
Or which do you worry about the most?
I worry most about the third because of what I said earlier, that it's the most complicated.
That it's not enough to be kind of, I don't know, good and wise to deal with the first two.
It will be very hard to deal with the first two as it is.
But the third one is really complicated because there is no agreement on the goal.
With the first two, at least there is an agreement on the goal.
And that makes it very, very complicated.
Also, you know, the first two, nobody is actively working to make it happen sooner.
And even the people who deny climate change, they are not in favor of climate change.
They just say, it's not really, it doesn't happen. But with AI and bioengineering,
there are some of the most powerful people
and organizations and governments
and corporations in the world,
they are extremely busy
making it happen faster.
And it's also,
we don't have a framework even
to think about it properly.
So as a thinker
and a politician,
I think this is where I can contribute the most,
is in trying to entangle this kind of completely new threat.
Just a few more questions,
then I'll let you get going,
because I know we're separated by quite a few time zones.
When you are thinking about these threats,
perhaps hearkening back to your times reading Aldous Huxley's
work, and here we're
talking about Brave New World and not Island,
right? Very different descriptions,
although some parallels.
When you feel
the potential for
these various types of
collapse or disaster,
what keeps you going?
Where do you find the light?
It's a good question.
You know, if you're able to deal with your own mortality,
as every person has to on some level,
then you should be able to deal with the potential mortality
of your entire species.
I mean, it's still part of biology.
Yes, individuals come and go.
Nations come and go.
Also, entire species come and go.
99% of the species that evolved on planet Earth are gone
for one reason or another.
Homo sapiens also is not internal.
Again, even in the best scenario,
I don't think Ho sapiens will be around
in two or three hundred years
the best scenario is that
homo sapiens will disappear
but in a peaceful and gradual way
and be replaced by something better
I don't think there is
any chance whatsoever
that people like us
will just continue to have
lives like us in 200 years.
There will be in 200 years a professor of history sitting and having a podcast talk with somebody.
It's not going to happen.
I mean, the changes are going to be too big.
So maybe it goes back again to the practice of meditation and the realization that change is the only certainty in in life so you might as well tune into the changes
yeah so that you're at least aware that you're responding to your reactions
to things outside and not the outside itself well you've all this has been a lot of fun for me it's
nice to connect with you. And of course,
I will link to everything in the show notes for people.
The volume one of your series,
Sapiens,
a graphic history is out now.
Volume one can be found and I'll include links to that in the show notes for
everyone at Tim.blogs slash podcasts.
Your website is YN Harari.
Facebook is prof.uval.noah.harari. Twitter Harari underscore Yuval. Instagram Yuval underscore Noah underscore Harari. I'll provide all of those
so people don't have to remember them. Is there anything else that you would like to say to my
audience, ask of the audience, suggest to the audience before we wrap up?
No, just thank you for your time. I know that time and attention are the most valuable resources
today for most people. So I hope you benefited from investing them in listening to us.
Likewise. And I can certainly speak for myself in saying that I enjoyed it quite a lot.
And definitely check out Ted Chiang Exhalation.
I think you'll love it.
I have a bunch of notes for things
that I will be checking out.
And to everyone listening,
until next time,
thank you for tuning in.
Hey guys, this is Tim again.
Just a few more things before you take off.
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This episode is brought to you by Peak Tea. That's P-I-Q-U-E. I have had so much tea in my life. I've
been to China. I've lived in China, in Japan. I've done tea tours. I drink a lot of tea. And 10 years
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