Ricardo Lopes & Robin Hanson , The Dissenter

#54 Robin Hanson: The Elephant in the Brain, Selfishness and Prosociality, Social Progress

11 Apr 2019 • 155 min • EN
155 min
00:00
02:35:02
No file found

------------------Support the channel------------ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thedissenter PayPal: paypal.me/thedissenter ------------------Follow me on--------------------- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thedissenteryt/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheDissenterYT Dr. Robin Hanson is an Associate Professor of Economics at George Mason University and a research associate at the Future of Humanity Institute of Oxford University. He’s also the author of books like The Age of Em, and The Elephant in the Brain. In this episode, the conversation centers around the book The Elephant in the Brain. We talk about subconscious motivations; selfishness and prosociality; rationalizations; strong and weak social norms; personality variability and hidden motivations; conspicuous consumption; prestige status; bragging and self-esteem; costly signaling; self-deception; the social role of laughter; the limits of comedy; the social importance of gossip; the prosociality of nepotism; the social aspects of advertising; art and conspicuous signaling; charity, waste, and effective altruism; the social value of education; conspicuous effort and waste in medicine; the narrative of the self; enlightened self-interest; being humble; individual vs collective change; niche communities; capitalism and social progress; and related topics. Time Links: 00:36 The elephant in the brain 02:30 Evolutionary perspectives on hidden motives 04:43 The Dissenter strikes back on disagreeable ends 08:04 Rationalizations 10:02 Selfishness and prosociality 12:49 We can get away with violating weak norms 14:11 Bragging about positive motivations 17:58 Adding personality variability to the picture 21:05 Conspicuous consumption 23:25 Signaling positive personality traits through material means 25:08 Prestige status 27:21 – Bragging and self-esteem 30:00 The drawbacks of costly signaling 31:25 Self-deception 33:22 The interpreter module 34:53 Norms as rationalizations 36:11 The social role of laughter 44:20 The limits of comedy 50:45 The social importance of gossip 55:26 The prosociality of nepotism 57:08  The social aspects of advertising 1:03:18 Art and conspicuous signaling 1:09:28 Charity, waste, and effective altruism 1:18:03 The social value of education 1:27:53 Thought experiment on a society of inconspicuous consumption 1:30:51 Conspicuous effort and waste in medicine 1:40:56 Reactions to the book 1:46:25 The narrative of the self 1:49:44 Enlightened self-interest 1:52:41 Being humble 1:57:56 Balance between subconscious drives and exerting control over them 2:04:27 Individual vs collective change 2:16:57 Niche communities 2:21:43 Modern life and personal identity 2:26:10 Capitalism and social progress 2:31:10 Where can you follow Dr. Hanson’s work?   -- O Dr. Robin Hanson é um Professor Associado de Economia da George Mason University e um investigador associado do Future of Humanity Institute da Universidade de Oxford. É também o autor de livros como The Age of Em, e The Elephant in the Brain. Neste episódio, a conversa é centrada no livro The Elephant in the Brain. Falamos sobre motivações subconscientes; egoísmo e prossocialidade; racionalizações; normas sociais fortes e fracas; variabilidade de personalidade e motivações escondidas; consumo conspícuo; status de prestígio; relação entre gabarolice e autoestima; sinalização dispendiosa; autodeceção; o papel social do riso; os limites da comédia; a importância social da fofoquice; a prossocialidade do nepotismo; os aspetos sociais da publicidade; arte e sinalizaç

From "The Dissenter"

Listen on your iPhone

Download our iOS app and listen to interviews anywhere. Enjoy all of the listener functions in one slick package. Why not give it a try?

App Store Logo
application screenshot

Popular categories