Lex Fridman Podcast - #158 – Zev Weinstein: The Next Generation of Big Ideas and Brave Minds
Episode Date: February 6, 2021Zev Weinstein is a young man who thinks deeply about the world. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod and use code LexPod to get 3 month...s free - Grammarly: https://grammarly.com/lex to get 20% off premium - SimpliSafe: https://simplisafe.com/lex and use code LEX to get a free security camera - Magic Spoon: https://magicspoon.com/lex and use code LEX to get $5 off EPISODE LINKS: Zev's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/GenerationZW Zev's Twitter: https://twitter.com/zev__weinstein Zev's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/zev_weinstein/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LexFridmanPage - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (06:52) - Philosophy becomes dangerous in difficult times (12:15) - The power of radical ideas (17:06) - Changing your mind (21:19) - Fear (22:58) - Labels (28:02) - Thomas Aquinas (32:32) - Nietzsche (37:02) - Nature of truth (39:22) - Jordan Peterson (44:54) - Mediums of communication (53:24) - Free will (57:48) - Simulation (1:02:05) - Transcending the limits of human life (1:05:09) - Elon Musk (1:09:30) - Aliens (1:13:01) - Is math invented or discovered? (1:15:36) - Theory of everything (1:17:30) - Eric Weinstein as a dad (1:33:17) - Music (1:40:32) - Advice for young people (1:42:31) - Mortality (1:46:19) - Meaning of life
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Zev Weinstein, a young man with a brilliant, bold,
and hopeful mind that I had the great fortune of talking to on a recent afternoon.
He happens to be Eric Weinstein's son, but I invited Zev not because of that, but because
I got a chance to listen to him speak on a few occasions and was captivated by how deeply
he thought about this world at such a young age.
And I thought that it might be fun to explore this world of ours together with him
for a time through this conversation.
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at the support this podcast. As a side note, let me say that Zev acknowledges the fear associated
with participating public discourse and is brave enough to join in at a young age,
to push forward, to change his mind publicly,
to learn, to articulate difficult, nuanced ideas,
and grow from the conversations that follow.
In this, I hope he leads the next generation of minds
that is joining and staring the collective intelligence
of this big ant colony we think of as our human civilization.
If you enjoy this thing, subscribe on YouTube, review it on Apple Podcast, follow and spotify
support on Patreon, I'll connect with me on Twitter, Alexa Friedman.
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And now here's my conversation with Zev Weinstein.
You've said that philosophy becomes more dangerous in difficult times. What do you mean by that?
Interestingly, I think I mean two things by that.
I think firstly I should clarify, when I say philosophy, I sort of mean
in a very traditional sense, just thinking ideation, and that could be reconsidering our notions
of self in a very traditional sense, which we consider philosophy, or that could be like technological innovation, I think it's important to recognize all of these
as philosophies that we can not question whether it's important to promote thought. I think the other
thing I should clarify is when I say difficult times, I mean times when nothing is growing and so
the risk for real conflict is much greater because people are incentivized to fight over
the things which already exist.
I think when times are not difficult, the people with the greatest power are usually the
people who are very creative, generating a lot, and that really requires ideation and philosophy of some sort.
I think when times become stagnant, the important successful people become the people who are
very good at protecting their own pieces of the pie and taking others. I think that those people
I think that those people have to be very opposed to any sort of thinking that could restructure society or conventions about who should succeed.
And so, firstly, I mean by that, that it becomes much more dangerous for a person to think deeply and question during a time when the important people are those concerned with making sure no one rocks the boat. Everyone was happy enough to sit through his questions before there was war and poverty and distress.
And afterwards it just became too dangerous.
The other thing I mean by that is that the consequences of thinking deeply carry much
greater potential for real catastrophe when everyone is desperate.
So like for example, the Communist Manifesto was probably much more dangerous during early 1900s Russia than it was during the 1848 revolutions because I think people were in much worse shape. to dive into anything new that might bring the future without fully calculating whatever
the consequences or risks might be.
So it is both more dangerous for a person to have creative ideas and those ideas are more
dangerous when times are tough.
And by dangerous, you mean it challenges the people with power who don't, who want to maintain that power in times of
stagnation when there's not much growth, innovation, creativity, all that kind of stuff.
Right. And we know that if nothing new is created, people have promises that they've made about what will be paid to whom, what debt structure
is. The only possibility, if stagnation lasts for long enough, is really some kind of great
conflict, great war because people have to take from others to make good on their own promises. So we know that by denying any sort of grand ideation,
we are accepting that there will be some kind of great catastrophe.
And so we have to understand that philosophy
is the most important when we've seen too much stagnation
for too long.
It is also very dangerous.
And it's dangerous for the people who are doing it, and it's dangerous for the people who
believe it, but it's kind of our only way out, ever.
And again, by philosophy, you mean the bigger, it's not academic philosophy or this kind
of games played in the space of just like moral philosophy and all those
metaphysics all that kind of stuff. You mean just thinking deeply about this world. Thank you from first principles I think you're like Twitter line involves something about like trying to piece everything together in first principles
So that's that's fundamentally what being philosophical about this world is and that's where
the people who are thinking deeply about this world is and that's where the people who are thinking deeply
about this world are the ones who are feeding who are the catalyst to this growth and society and so on.
Yeah, I mean, I also think that the real implication of moral philosophy can be something that
most would consider like a real political
implication. So I think all philosophy really ties together
because there has to be some sort of grand structure to all thought and how it relates. Do you think this
growth and innovation and improvement can last
forever?
So we've seen some incredible, you know, the thing that humans have
been able to accomplish over the past several hundred years is just, I mean, awe-inspiring and every
moment in that, in that history, it almost seemed like no more could be done. Like, we've solved
all the problems that are to be solved. I mean there's just historically there's all these kind of ridiculous like Bill Gates style quotes or like
It's obvious that we've this new cool things not gonna take off and yet it does and so there's there's a feeling of
The same kind of pattern that we see in Moore's law. There's constant growth in different technologies in the modern day era, in any kind of automation over the past 100 years. Do you think it's possible
that we'll keep growing this way if we give power to the philosophers of our society?
I think the only way that we can keep growing this way is if we give power to real thinkers,
and there's no guarantee that that will work, but we sort of don't have
any other choice. And I think you're entirely right that this period of both understanding the
universe at a rate, which has never been seen before, and invention and creativity,
that these past 100 years have been sort of uncharacteristic for the
level of growth that we've seen in all of history. We've never seen anything like this.
And I think a lot of our promises rest on this sort of thing continuing. I think that's very dangerous, but the one
thing that can get us out of this is philosophy and being ready to radically restructure all
of our notions about what should be what is, I think that's very important.
So you think deeply about this world. You are clearly this embodiment of a think of a philosopher
Your dad is also one such guy airquistine
Do you this you have big disagreements with him on this topic in particular? I think
Now people should know he also happens to be in the room, but
The mics can't pick him up so he can heckle it doesn't even matter
But do you have disagreements with him on this point? Let me try to summarize this argument that we were actually based a lot of our American
society on the belief that things will keep growing.
And yet it seems that however you break it apart, maybe from an economics perspective, that they're
not growing currently.
And so that's where a lot of our troubles are at.
Do you have the same sense that there's a stagnation period that we're living through
over the past couple of decades?
I think modern stagnation is completely undeniable, particularly scientifically. And I think there have been a few fields
where tremendous progress has been made very recently. I think my dad might feel that
there is sort of an inevitability to the ending of this period. And I'm not so certain, so certain that the fall of this great time is completely inevitable
because I don't know what thoughts were capable of producing, what we're able to reconsider.
I think we really have to be open to the possibility that all of our standard frameworks where, you know, like he will
talk about embedded growth obligations.
If we continue within the same framework, then we're very susceptible to the dangers of
whatever these embedded growth obligations are, I think if we break the frameworks, we
have no reason to believe that the problems we're experiencing with our current frameworks will follow us.
And I think that's the importance of radical thought is we don't know what the solution
is, but if there is a solution, it will be born from some very fundamental thinking.
And so I have great hope.
So you have optimism about sort of the power of a single radical idea or a single radical thinker to break our frameworks
and break us out of this like spiral down, Matootu, whatever the economic forces that are
creating this current stagnation.
Yeah, I'm very, very hopeful.
The optimism of youth.
Well, I share your optimism. So let me let me come back to
something you've also talked about. You have very little stuff out there currently. But the things you
have out there, your thoughts, you could just tell how deeply you think about this world. And one of
the things you mentioned is as you learn about this world is as you read, as you sort of go through different experiences,
that you're open to changing your mind. How often do you find yourself changing your mind?
Do you think, Zev, from 10 years into the future will look back at this conversation we're having now,
and disagree completely with everything you just said.
It's entirely possible and that's one of the things that scares me so much about appearing
publicly. I think that the internet can be very intolerant of inconsistency and I am entirely prepared
to be very inconsistent because I know that whatever beliefs I have when subjected to scrutiny may change because that's really the only way to
to form your truest
most fundamental
conceptions about the world around you and
it would take an infinite amount of time to
and it would take an infinite amount of time to subject every single one of your beliefs to scrutiny.
And so that's a process that must follow me throughout my entire life.
And I know that means that my opinions and perspectives are always to be changing.
I'm prepared to accept that about myself, whether other people are prepared to accept that
my public opinions may change very greatly over time is something I don't know.
I don't know how tolerant the world will be, but I'm very prepared to change anything. I believe in if I think
deeply enough about it or a good enough argument is made so that I might reconsider.
Well, that's certainly currently in the intolerance. And that's one of the problems of our age.
There's an intolerance towards change. I'll also ask you about labels, you talked about.
So we like to bend each other to different categories,
the blue or red or whatever the different categorization is.
But it seems like the task before you,
as a young person defining our future,
is to make a tolerance of change the norm.
Doing this podcast, for example,
and then changing your mind one or two years later,
and doing so publicly without a big dramatic thing, or maybe changing it on a daily basis,
and just being open about and being transparent about your thought process. Maybe that is
the beacon of hope for the philosophical way, the path of the philosopher.
So that's your task in the sense,
is to change your mind openly and bravely.
You know, you're right.
And maybe I will just have to endure
some sort of criticism for doing that,
but I think that's very important.
I think this ties back to this previous facet of our conversation
where we were discussing if thinkers would
win over systems that are devoted to preventing radical thought, or if who will win the systems
or the thinkers.
I think it's crucial that my generation take up a hand in this fight.
And I think it's important that I'm a part of that because I know that I have some opportunity
to...
There is, I think it is my obligation as a member of a generation whose only real hope is to think outside of a system
because whatever systems exist or collapsing, I think it is really my obligation to try to
place some role, whatever role I can and being an instrument in that change.
Are you, as a young mind, do you have a sense of fear about just like how afraid were you
to do this podcast conversation? Do you have a sense of fear of thinking publicly?
Yeah, I don't even think that that fear is irrational.
It's very difficult to exist publicly in any form now because it's very easy for anyone to take cheap shots at something which is
difficult. And as I said, the people who are trying to have the difficult ideas and conversations
are perhaps putting others in actual danger because everyone is so desperate that they might be
willing to try anything.
So there's a certain amount of responsibility, which one has to take going before the
public, and there is a certain amount of ridicule, which will be completely unwarranted that anyone must endure for it.
And I think that means that the one has to be afraid because they could both ruin the
world and be ruined by the world and unwarranted and undeserved fashion. fashioned. I would like to believe in myself enough to try to accept this as a task
because I think people need to try or there's no getting out of this and we will end in some kind
of crazy brilliant war. You've said also that in these times we can't have labels because it holds us
back. Maybe we've already talked about it a little bit,
but this idea of labels is really interesting.
Why do you think labels hold us back?
Well, I think many underestimate the extent to which
language and communication really impacts
and shapes the ideas and thoughts which are being communicated.
And I think if we're willing to accept imperfect labels to categorize particular people or
thoughts in some sense, we are corrupting an abstraction in order to represent it and communicate about it.
And I think as we've discussed, those abstractions are particularly important when everything is on fire.
We should not be sacrificing grand thought for the ability to express it, I think everyone should work much harder,
including myself, to really be thinking abstractly and abstract terms instead of using concrete
terms to discuss abstraction while ruining it slightly. Yeah, it's kind of a skill actually. So one really difficult example of in this
in the recent time, that maybe you can comment on, if you have been thinking about is just
politics. And there's a lot of labels and politics that it takes a lot of skill to be able
to communicate difficult ideas without labels being attached
to you.
That's something I've been sort of thinking about a lot in trying to express, for example,
how much I love various aspects of the foundational ideas of this country, like freedom.
And just saying, I love America.
A simple statement.
I love the ideas that we're finding to America.
Well, often in the current time,
people will try, they'll desperately try to attach a label.
To me, for example, for saying I love America,
that I'm a Republican, a Donald Trump supporter,
and it takes elegance and grace and skill
to avoid those labels so that people can actually listen to the contents of your words versus the summarization that results from just the labels that they can pin on you.
Are you cognizant of the skill required there of being able to communicate without being branded the Republican or Democrat in this particular
set of conversations, I'm sure there's other dangerous labels that could be attached.
I don't think there's any way of avoiding that right now.
It might not be anyone's best effort to really try.
I think the thing I can say, which will most speak to that, which I truly believe,
is that participating in modern conventional politics is not being inherently political
in a generative sense.
It's this repeated trope where politics now is not about creating new political ideologies.
It's about defending ideologies, which already exists so that everyone can keep what they
have.
And that's where all of the name calling and the labeling really comes in.
It's an attempt to constrict whatever may be generated to standard conversations and discussions
so that arguments can be strong and and defeated and people can keep what they have because
everyone's very, very scared.
I want to be very political, but not in a standard political sense where I'm defending a particular party or place on a spectrum.
I would like to play some role in inventing new spectrums, and I think that's most important politically, because above most else politics is about real power
and conventional politicians have real power.
And that power will find terrible outlets
if new spectrums for that power to live
are not invented.
So you're not afraid of politics.
Political discourse.
At the deepest, richest level of
what political discourse supposed to mean.
Actually, I'm very afraid of it, but once again, we have no, it's not paralyzing for
you.
You feel like it's a responsibility you ready to take it on.
Yes.
This is a good sign.
This is a year special human.
Okay, let's talk, maybe fun, maybe profound, talked about philosophers, philosophy.
Who's your favorite philosopher?
Like somebody in your current time, been either influential or you just enjoy his her ideas
or writing or anything like that. Weirdly, I'll give an answer which sort of doesn't have much to do with whom I might
imagine myself to be.
I like Thomas Aquinas at the moment.
I think he's very inspirational to me given what we're going through.
And that's not because his particular ideas of religion or God or unmoved movers are particularly
inspirational to me, and I don't even think they were necessarily right.
But he was introducing aspects of the scientific method
during one of the darkest periods in human history
when we had lost all hope and reason
and ability to think logically.
So I think he was really something of a light in the dark
and I think we need to look to people like that
at the moment, the other reason why I think I need to learn from him is that even though he was doing
something which really needed to be done and introducing scientific thought and reason
to a time that lacked it, he was not saying anything that would have been offensive to whatever powers were in
play during his time.
He was writing about the importance of faith in God and how we could prove it.
So it's important to remember, I suppose, that having ideas that shape the world and which
bring the world closer to what we can prove it's supposed to be and how it's supposed
to work does not always take some sort of grand contradiction of whatever is in play.
And the most courageous thing to do may not always be the most helpful thing to do.
And I think it's very easy for anyone with ideas about how everything is broken to become
very cynical and say, oh, the system man, they're all wrong. I think it takes
I think it takes another kind of discipline to be a person with real ideas and to make the world better without stepping on anyone's toes or contradicting anyone.
I have real respect for that.
So being able to be when it's within your principles to operate, within the current system
of thought. Yeah, and not offend anyone, not say anything outlandish,
but introduce the method by which progress must be achieved.
I think that takes a kind of maturity,
which is found very rarely now,
and I really look to him for inspiration
despite whatever disagreements I may have with
the minute details of his philosophy.
Yeah, it takes a lot of skill, a lot of character, and yeah, deep thinking, to be able to operate
within the system when needed, and having the fortitude and just the boldness, the step outside and to burn the system down when needed,
but rarely, and opportune moments that would actually have impact.
I mean, it's ultimately about impact within the society that you live in, not just making
a statement that has no impact.
Yeah.
And we were talking about how dangerous it is to do real philosophy at dangerous
broken times. He was going through the most broken time in history, and he questioned the
methods which made a broken system able to survive, and he was so skilled and so graceful that he became a saint in that tradition
and there's something for me to really learn from there. Do you draw any inspiration having
the interest in the more modern philosophers, maybe the existentialists? And Nietzsche is one of the
early ones. Do you have thoughts on the guy in general or any of the other existentialists?
Well, with regard to Nietzsche, I think Yates might have said that he's the worst. He was
certainly filled with passionate intensity. Was that compliment? He was the worst or criticism.
Yeah, he said this has this big line,
the best lack all conviction,
the worst are filled with passionate, passionate intensity.
So I think Nietzsche was destroyed
by the horrors of everything that went on around him.
I think he never really recovered from it.
I think that's because if you think about Nietzsche's philosophy,
he was very opposed to any sort of acceptance of what one had.
One should always envy those who have more
and use that envy to fuel their growth
and accept whatever the human condition and desires are.
And use those desires to want more and more
and make use of your greed.
I think it's very difficult to be truly happy if the thing which you
the thing which you pride yourself most on is never being satisfied and I think Nietzsche was
never satisfied and that was was the danger of his
philosophy. I think also with his amoralism, you know, there is no good or evil. I sort of disagree
with that on a, on a pretty fundamental basis. I think that our notion of morality is by no means subjective. It's really the proxy for the fitness of a society.
I think whatever we consider ethical, like don't steal, don't murder, don't do this.
Societies have a very difficult time running. It's very hard to run a civilization when everyone is stealing from everyone else
and people are murdering each other and committing these things, which we would consider atrocities.
So, I think we also, we know this because I think very similar notions of morality have evolved convergently from different traditions.
I think good is a proxy for a civilization's fitness.
And the good news is that that means
that evil in being anathema to that good must therefore be
the opposite of stable in whatever way that it's evil. And that means that good will always be
more stable than evil. And the only way evil can really win is like if everyone dies. So
so wait, can you say that again you say that again, good is a proxy for society's,
uh, what good is a proxy for the stability and fitness of a civilization?
I believe. And you know, that's a good definition. Thank you.
So if you throw some bombs today, okay, all right. Okay, um, this is exciting. Sorry, sorry to interrupt your flow there, but it's just a good damn good one. Thank you
So in that sense, that's a kind of optimistic view that if by definition good is a proxy for stability
That is going to be stable unless the entire world just blows itself up
So good wins in the end by definition. Yeah or
No actually, good wins
unless it all goes to a complete destruction.
Beauty, that's a beautifully put.
Thank you.
On the topic of, sort of, you know, good and evil being
human illusions, you've said that more broadly than that about truth,
that it is easier in some ways to be unified under truth because it is universal than it is to be
unified under belief, which at times can be completely subjective. So what is the nature of truth to you?
Can we understand the world objectively or is most of what we can understand
about the world is just subjective opinions
that we kind of all agree on in these little collectives
and over time it kind of evolves,
it completely detached from objective reality.
I think this is the greatest argument for objectivity
is that something that is objectively true cannot be true to me and untrue to you.
You can feel that it's untrue, but that would be unproductive and create unnecessary tension
and conflict, I think this is one reason for the importance of science as a tool for stability.
If science is the search for truth and truth can never really be, I shouldn't say that.
Truth should never be an engine of conflict because
no two people should disagree on something which is objectively true. Then in some sense,
search for truth is searching for a common ground where we can all exist and live without
contradicting or attacking each other.
Do you have a hope that there is a lot of common ground
to be discovered?
Sure. I mean, if we continue scientifically,
we are discovering truth and in that discovering common ground
on which we can all agree.
That's one reason why I think caring about science.
If you have a culture which cares very deeply about science, that's a culture which is
not necessarily bound to injure unwarranted internal conflict.
I think that's one reason that I'm so passionate about science is it's search for universal
ground.
Let me just throw out an example of a modern
day philosophical thinker will keep your dad air-guised sign out of the picture for a sec,
but he does happen to be an example of one, but Jordan Peterson is an example of another,
somebody who thinks deeply about this world. His ideas are by certain percent of the population, sort of speaking of truth, are labeled as dangerous.
Why do you think his ideas or just ideas
of these kinds of deep thinkers in general
are labeled as dangerous in our modern world?
Is it similar to what you've been discussing
that in difficult times philosophers become dangerous?
Was there something specific about
these particular thinkers in our time?
Well, I think Jordan Peterson is very anti-establishment in a lot of his beliefs.
He's an unconventional thinker.
And I think we need, regardless of whatever, Jordan's particular views and beliefs are and if they bring about
more danger than truth or if they don't, it's very important to have fundamental thinkers
who exist outside of a conventional framework. So do I think that he's dangerous? I think by existing
outside of a system which is known, he is dangerous. And I think we have to, in some sense, we
have to welcome danger in that capacity because it will be our only way out of this.
So regardless of whether his beliefs are right or wrong, I'm pretty adamant about the
fact that we need to support thought which may rescue us.
And that thought can appear radical or dangerous at times.
But ultimately, if you allow for it, this is kind of the difficult discussion of free
speech and so on, is ultimately difficult ideas will pave the way for progress. Yeah, and I'd actually, I'd like to, to slow you down there because I think, like one of the issues
we were discussing previously was the fact that language often destroys our ability to think.
When we're talking about whether his ideas are radical, I don't know if we mean radical
in the traditional sense of having to do with the root of a problem or in the more modern
sense of being very extreme.
And I think that's completely by design, I think fundamental thought which semantically would once be considered
radical thought became very dangerous and now it's become synonymous with extreme or dangerous
thought, which means that anyone who considers themselves a radical thinker is linked semantically also a dangerous or extreme thinker.
These are not helpful labels in a sense that the moment you say radical or extremist thinker
than you're just, well, how do I put it, you're not helping the public discourse.
Change of ideas.
But through no fault of our own,
the concept of radical is having to do with a root is,
it's an obvious concept for which there must be language
and a lot of the attack on thought has to do
with attacking language which communicates
Conceptually so like this is an example of how our world is becoming increasingly or well-earned
It just language is being used to destroy our ability to to think I think I can't remember exactly what the numbers are
But I read some statistic about how greatly the average English vocabulary has decreased since 1960.
It was like some incredible number.
It really baffled me.
It's like how are people less able to think in a time
when the world is supposed to be growing
and never before seen rate?
It's like we can't keep on, we can't sustain this growth if we destroy everyone's
ability to think because the growth requires thinking and we're ruining the tools for it.
I watched your podcast with Noam Chomsky And I think one interesting thing which he discussed was how
language is more used to develop thoughts within our own head than it is used to communicate those
thoughts with others. If the language doesn't change even if its usage changes then
changes, then when language is destroyed in communication it also stymies our ability to think reasonably and I'm very, very worried.
So but the language in communication requires a medium and there's a lot of different mediums
so there's social media, there's Twitter, There is writing books. There's blog posts. There's
podcasts
There's YouTube videos all of things you have
dipped a toe in in your exploration of different mediums of communication. Yeah, which do you see yourself?
This might be just a poetic way of asking
are you going to do a podcast, but broader picture, what do you think as an intellectual in this world
for you personally, would be the path for communicating your ideas to the world? What are the
mediums you you are currently drawn to out of the ones I mentioned, maybe something
I didn't. To answer your question concretely before abstractly, I'm scared, but I need
to do a podcast. It's important. It is my obligation as a member of my generation. I really
hope that more people my age start to do this because we will be the
people in charge of new ideas, which either sink or swim.
How upset would your dad be when your podcast quickly becomes more popular than his?
I think he would be negatively upset.
I'll say you'd be proud. He's a good dad. I really think so. Yeah. Sorry, I did
throughout. Yeah. So, but then zooming out. Do you think podcasts are you excited by
the possibility of other mediums outside of podcasting to communicate ideas? I would be if
people still read books or did things like that. I'm somewhat guilty of this. A lot of the books I read are
very technical and then my to absorb really deep modern conversations. I listen to podcasts
and I don't really read many books on the matters that we're discussing
for example.
It's fascinating because you're making me think of something that I online would do
very much of how I consume deep thinkers currently.
So what happens is somebody who thinks deeply about the world will write a book, Jordan
Peterson example, instead of reading their book, I'll just listen to
podcast conversations of them talking about the book, which I find to, this is really sad,
but I find that to be a more compelling way to think about their ideas, because they're often
challenged in certain ways in those conversations and they're forced to after having
born them down and really thought through them enough to write a book. So it's
almost like they needed to go through the process of writing a book just so they
can think through convert the language in their minds into something more
concrete and then the actual exchange of ideas, the actual communication of ideas
with the public happens not with the book, but after the book, with that person going a book tour,
communicating with ideas. Well, there are two meanings I make of why not too many people
spend much of their time reading anymore. One interpretation is that we've lost our attention
spans to our phones.
People can't concentrate on a page if it takes them a minute to read or too busy watching
TikToks or whatever people do.
The other interpretation would be that language and verbal communication as well as some
amount of communication which is done through facial expression, tone
of voice, etc.
These are means of communication that have evolved along with humanity over thousands and
thousands of years.
We know that we are built to communicate in this way.
We have had writing for much less time.
It is a system that we invented,
not a system which evolved and is innately part of
humanity or the human mind.
you know, humanity or the human mind.
And so we are designed to consume conversation
by our own evolution. We are designed to consume writing
by some process of symbols that's evolved
over a couple thousand years.
It makes sense to me why many are much more compelled to listen to podcasts, for example, than they are to read books. It
could be that this is simply a technological progression which has displaced reading conventionally, instead of some sort of maladaptation
of our minds, which has corrupted our attention spans.
Likely, there's some combination, which determines why people spend much less time reading.
But I don't think it's necessarily because we're all broken.
It may simply have to do with the fact that we are designed
to listen through our ears and speak through our mouths.
And we are not innately designed to communicate over a page.
So.
Yeah, this is exciting coupling to me between
like a few second TikTok videos that are
fun and addicting and then the three four hour podcasts, which are both really popular
in our current time.
So people are both hungry for the visual stimulation of internet humor and memes, a huge fan
of, and also slow moving deep conversations. And that might, you know, it's, there's a lot of,
I mean, it's part of your generation to define what that looks like moving forward. We're a lot of
people like Joe Rogan is one of the people that kind of started accidentally stumbled into the
discovery that this is like a thing. Yeah. And now people are kind of scrambling to figure out,
why is this a thing?
Like, why is there so much hunger
for long-form conversations?
And how do we optimize that medium
for further, further expression of deep ideas
and all that kind of stuff?
And YouTube is a really interesting medium for that as well.
Like video sharing videos,
most of the YouTube is used with a spirit of like
the TikTok spirit, if I can put it in that way,
which is like, how do I have quick moving things
that even if you're expressing difficult ideas,
it should be quick and exciting and visual and switching.
But there's a lot of exploration there
to see what can we do something deeper and nobody knows and you're part of the
you have a YouTube channel
releasing one video every few years
So so your momentum is currently quite slow, but perhaps it'll accelerate with you
You're one of the people. I guess the define that medium. Is do you enjoy that the visual, the YouTube medium of communication as well?
I know that when the topic of conversation or the means by which a conversation is
communicated or an idea is communicated, if that is sufficiently interesting to me, I will read a book on it.
I would listen to a podcast on it. I would watch a video on it. I think if I'm very curious about
something, I will consume it however possible. I think when I have to consume things which really don't interest me very much, I am indeed
much more ready to consume them to some sort of video or discussion than I am through
a long tedious book.
So for the breadth of acquiring knowledge, video is good.
For the depth, the medium doesn't matter. I think it'd be fun to ask you about some big philosophical questions to see if you
have an opinion on that.
Do you think there's a free will or a free will just an illusion?
Well, I think classical mechanics would tell us that if we are, if we were to know every piece of information
about a system and understand the rules which govern that system, we would be completely
able to predict the future with complete accuracy.
So if something could know everything about our lives, it could freeze time and understand the position of every neuron in my mind about to fire,
no decision could be unpredictable.
In some sense, there is that sort of fate. I think that doesn't make the decisions we make illegitimate even if some grand super computer could
Understand what decisions we would make beforehand with complete certainty. I think we're making legitimate systems
within a system that has no freedom
We're making legitimate systems within a system that has no freedom. Can you explain what you mean by that?
Yeah, so if we were to have just a simple pendulum and I told you how long the rope was,
we froze it at a particular point and I told you how high above the ground the weight was and the motion of a pendulum
is something which is easy for everyone to imagine. If we had all of that information,
you could ask me, what will the pendulum do six and a half minutes from now? And we would have a precise answer.
That's like, that's an example of a very simple system
with a very simple Lagrangian.
And we could completely predict the future
that the pendulum has no ability to do anything
that would surprise us.
Weirdly, that's true of whatever this
four-dimensional crazy world we live in
looks like if we were to understand
where every piece of this system was at any given time,
and we understand the laws of motion,
how everything worked.
If we could compute all of that information somehow,
which we won't never be able to do, we would, every decision you will ever make could be
predicted by that computer. That doesn't mean that your decisions are illegitimate. You
are really making those decisions, but with a completely predictable outcome. So, I'm just sort of a little bit high at the moment on the, on the poetry of a system
within a system that has no freedom.
So the human experience is the system we've created within the system that has no freedom, but that system that we've created has a feeling of freedom that to us ants
feels as much more real than the physics as we understand it of the underlying like base system.
So it's almost like not important what the physics of the
base system is. That for the what we've created the nature of the human experience
is there is a free will. Or there is something that feels close enough to a
free will that it may not be worth spending too much time on the fact that it's something of
illusion. We will never build a computer that knows everything about every piece of the
universe at a given time. And so for all intensive purposes, our decisions are up to us. We
just happen to know that their outcomes could be predicted
with enough information. So speaking of supercomputers, they can predict every single thing about the
what's going to ever happen. What do you think about the philosophical thought experiment of
us living in a simulation? Do you often find yourself pondering of us living in a simulation. Do you often find yourself pondering
of us living in a simulation of this question?
Do you think it is at all a useful thought experiment?
I think it's very easy to become fascinated
with all of these possibilities
and they're completely legitimate possibilities.
You know, like, do I, is there some validity to like solipsism?
Well, it can never be falsified or disproven.
So I mean, sure, you could be a figment of my imagination.
It doesn't mean that I will act according to this possibility.
I'm not going to call you mean names. And just to test the system, to see how robust it is to distortions.
Yeah. So I mean, all of these existential thought experiments are completely possible. We could be
brains and jars. It doesn't mean that our experience will feel any less valid. And so it doesn't make a difference to me if
you were some number of ones and zeros or you were a figment of my imagination, which lives in a
in a stored, stored way brain, it will never really change my experience knowing that that's a possibility.
And so I try to avoid making decisions based on such contemplations.
If we take this previous issue of free will, I could decide that because I have no choice in my life, if I lie around in bed all day
and eat chips, I was destined to do that thing.
And if I make that decision, then I was destined to do that thing.
It would be a really poor decision for me to make.
I have school and a dozen commitments. There's somebody listening to this right now, probably hundreds of people sitting down,
eating chips and feeling terrible about themselves.
Those are how dare you, sir.
If they're listening to this, they're clearly, they're clearly curious about possibilities
of thought.
It's not the, not the bed in the chips that makes the man. It's not the bed in the chips that makes the man.
It's not the better the chips that makes the man. You had another quoteable from Zev Wyzen.
Okay. But you don't think of it as a useful thought experiment from an engineering perspective of
you know, virtual reality of thinking how we can create further and further immersive worlds.
Like what it be possible to create worlds that are so immersive that we would rather live
in that world versus the real world.
I mean, that's another possible trajectory of the world that you're growing up in is
where more and more immersing ourselves into the digital world.
For now, it's screens and looking at the screens and socializing the screens, but it's
possible to potentially create a world that's also visually for all of our human senses
as immersive as the physical world.
And then, you know, to me, it's an engineering question of how difficult is it to create a
world that's as immersive and more fun than
The world we currently live in. It's a terrifying concept and I hate to say it
We might live half-bure lives and a virtual reality headset 30 years from now
Then we are currently living this future the digital future worries you
It worries me.
On the other hand, it may be a better alternative to fighting for whatever people are clinging
onto in our non-virtual world, or at least the world that we don't yet know is virtual.
So embrace the future. We've been talking a lot about thinkers.
Now, in the broad definition of philosophy, you kind of included innovators of all form.
Do you find it useful to draw the distinction between thinkers and doers?
I think that the most important gift we've ever been given
is our ability to observe the universe
and think deductively about whatever principles
transcend humanity.
Because as we discuss, that's the closest thing
we will ever have to a universal experience is understanding
things which must be true everywhere.
In order for that, so I think if we're deciding that life is meaningful and the human experience
is meaningful, you could make a very convincing argument that its greatest meaning will be
understanding whatever transcends it. I think that's only sustainable if people are happy and things of market value are invented.
And so I think we really need both to live meaningful
and successful and possible lives.
In terms of who my greatest heroes are,
I can't decide between figures like Einstein and Newton and Feynman
and on the other hand, figures like Carrie Mullis, for example. I think people like Einstein
make our lives meaningful and people like Carrie Molas, who's probably responsible for saving
hundreds of millions of lives, make our make our lives possible and good.
So in terms of where I would like to find myself with these two different notions of achievement. I don't know what I would more
like to achieve. I have an inclination that it will be something scientific because I
would like to bring meaning to humanity instead of sustenance, but I think both are very important. We can't sustain our lives if we don't keep growing
technologically. I think people like you are making that possible with computing because that's
one of the few things that's really moving forward in a clear sense. I think about this a great deal.
So I think both are very important.
So one example that's modern day inspiring figure on the LAT apart and the engineering
part on the sustenance is Elon Musk.
Does that somebody you draw inspiration from, what are your thoughts in general about the kind of
unique spec of human that's creating so much inspiring innovation in this world? So boldly,
I know that we will not survive without people like that. Elon is a ridiculous and sensational example of one of
these figures. I don't know if he's the best example or the worst example, but he is of his own
kind. He is radically individualistic, and those are the people who will allow us to continue
as humans. I'm very happy that we have people like that in this world.
You said this thing about if we are to say that life has meaning or life is meaningful,
meaning or life is meaningful, then you could argue that it is a worthy pursuit to transcend life.
Do you see that another just, I'm going inspiration of us transcending Earth, of us moving
outside of this particular planet that we've called home for a long time and colonizing
other planets, and perhaps one day expanding outside the solar system
and expanding colonizing our galaxy and beyond.
Honestly, I know very little about space exploration.
I think it makes complete sense to me
why we are starting to think very seriously about it.
It's an amazing and baffling and innovative solution to a lot of problems we see as a world
population.
I can't really offer very much of interest on the topic.
I think when I'm talking about transcending humanity and transcending Earth, I'm talking
usually about deriving truth.
And that's one of the things that makes like theoretical math and physics so interesting.
It's like I really, really love biology, for example, but biology is a combination of whatever
principles ensure evolution and whatever weird coincidences happened billions of years ago.
So do you, as more interesting to understand the fundamental mechanisms of evolution, for example,
than it is the results, the messy results of its processes.
I can't say which is more interesting. I can say which I think is more deep. I think theory and
abstraction, which can be achieved completely deductively, is deeper because it has nothing to do with circumstance and everything to do with logic and thought.
So, like, if we were ever to interact with aliens,
for example, we would not have our biology in common.
If these were, or some sort of really intelligent life form, we would have math and physics in common,
because the laws of physics will be the same everywhere
in the universe.
Our particular anatomy and biology
pertains only to life on this planet and the principles may apply more
ubiquitously. Do you ever think about aliens like what they might look like? I try to, when I
deal with thought experiments like these, I try to keep a very abstract mindset and And I noticed that whenever I try to instantiate these abstractions, I corrupt
whatever thoughts there are for which they're useful. So it's kind of like the label's
discussions. So like the moment you try to make it concrete, it's probably going to
look like some cute version of a human.
It's a little green fellas with the eyes and so on or whatever. Whatever the movies
have instilled in your cultural upbringing, you're going to project down to that and the assumptions you have. That's interesting. So you prefer to step away and think and abstract notions of what
it means to be intelligent, what it means to be a living, life form and all that kind of stuff.
I try to, I almost try to pretend I'm, I'm blind and I'm deaf and I'm only a mind with
no inductive reasoning capacity when I'm trying to think about thought experiments like these because I know that if I incorporate whatever my eyes
instruct my brain, I will I will impede my ability to
think as deeply as possible because once again it's the thing which shallows our thought can be
the incorporation
of circumstance and coincidence.
And for particular kinds of thought, that's very important.
I'm not discounting the use of inductive reasoning in many humanities and in many sciences,
but for the deepest of thoughts.
Once again, I feel it's important to try to transcend whatever methods of observation,
characterize human experience.
See, but within that, that's all really beautifully put.
I wonder if there is a common mathematics and a common physics between us and alien beings,
we still have to make concrete the methods of communication.
Yeah. And that's a fascinating question of like, while remaining in these abstract fundamental
ideas, how do we communicate with them? I mean, I suppose that that question could be
applied to different cultures on earth, but it's finding a common language. Do you think about that kind of problem of
basically communicating, abstract fundamental ideas?
My least favorite aspect of math or physics or any of these really deep sciences is the
symbolic component. I'm dyslexic. I don't like looking at symbols there too often a source of ambiguity.
And I think you're entirely right that if one thing holds us back with communication
with something that behaves or looks nothing like us, I think if one thing holds us back, it will be symbols and the
communication of deep thought, because as I said, I think communication frequently compromises
thought by intention or by just theoretical inadequacy.
So, in this topic, actually, it'd be fun to see we have thoughts are, do you think math
is invented or discovered?
So you said that math, we might share ideas
of mathematics and physics with alien life forms.
So it's uniform in some sense of uniform
throughout the universe.
Do you think this thing that we call mathematics
is something that's kind of fundamental to the world we live in, or is it just some kind
of pretty axioms and theorems that have come up with to try to describe the patterns we
see in the world? I think it's completely discovered and completely fundamental to all experience.
I think the only component of mathematics that has been invented is the expression of
it.
And I think in some sense, there's almost an arrogance required to believe that whatever aspect we invent having to do with math and physics and theory,
there is an arrogance required to truly believe that that belongs on any sort of stage with the actual beauty of the matters being discovered. So we need our minds and in some sense
our pens to be able to play with these things and communicate about them. And those hands and those are, and those pens are the things which smudge
the most beautiful thing that humanity can ever experience. And maybe if we interact with
some intelligent life form, they will have their own unique smudges, but the canvas, which is beautiful, must be identical
because that is universal and ubiquitous truth, and that's what makes it deep and meaningful,
is that it's so much more important than whatever we're programmed to enjoy as an aspect
of human experience. Yeah, that's really beautifully put.
The human language is these messy smudges
of trying to express something underlying that is beautiful.
Speaking of that, on the physics side,
do you think the pursuit of a theory of everything in physics, as we may call it in our current times,
of understanding the basic
fabric of reality from a physics perspective is an important pursuit?
I think it's essential.
As I've said, I think ideation is our only escape from the
is our only escape from the constraints of human condition. And I think that it's important that all great thoughts and ideas are bound together.
And I think the math is beautiful, and it ensures that the things which bind great ideas,
which have already been had and great discoveries together.
It ensures that those strings will be beautiful.
I think it's very important to unify all theories that have brought us to where we are.
Do you think humans can do it?
Do you think humans can solve this puzzle?
Is it possible that we
with our limited cognitive capacity will never be able to truly understand this
deep, like deeply understand this underlying canvas? I think if not, it will be
people like you who invent some sort of, I don't know, we'll call it computation for now, that will be able
to not only discover that which transcends humanity, but to transcend human methods of
discovering that which is above it.
So super intelligent systems, AGI and so on that that are better physicists than us.
I wonder if you might be able to comment, so your dad does happen to be somebody who boldly seeks this kind of deep understanding of physics, the underlying nature of reality from a physics
perspective, from a mathematical physics perspective.
Do you have hope your dad figures it out? I have great hope. You know, it's not it's not supposed to be my journey. It's supposed to be his journey.
It's supposed to be his to express to the world.
Obviously, I'm I'm so proud that I'm
obviously I'm so proud that I'm connected to someone who is determined to do such a thing. And on the other hand, maybe in some sense, I feel bad for him for having to, if he's going to be
the thing which discovers some sort of grand unified theory and expresses it. I feel sorry that he will have to smudge whatever canvas this thing is because he's human.
Really, I think I know I've seen a little bit of what I think, great math and great physics
looks like.
And it's unbelievably beautiful.
And then you have to present it to a world with,
like, market constraints and all of this messy sloppiness.
I feel bad in some sense for my dad
because he has to go back and forth between this beautiful
world of math and whatever the messiness is of his human life.
And then the scientific community broadly with egos and tensions and just the dynamics
of what makes us human.
He's also very lucky that he gets to play with these sorts of things.
It's a mixed back.
I both feel a little sorry for him for having to deal with the
beauty as well as the smudging and the sloppiness of human expression. And I think it's difficult
not to envy such a beautiful insight or life or vision. So that's your own path as well as this kind of struggle of
as you mentioned exploring the beauty of different ideas while having to communicate those ideas
with the best smudges you can in a world that wants to put labels, that wants to
misinterpret, that wants to destroy the beauty of those ideas. And that's you
seem to at this time with your youthful enthusiasm embracing that struggle
despite the fear, in the face of fear. So, and your dad also carries that same youthful enthusiasm as well. But that said,
your dad, Eric Weinstein, he's a powerful voice, I would say, powerful intellect in public discourse.
Is this a burden for you or an inspiration or both as a young mind yourself?
or both as a young mind yourself. I think, as I said, there's this weird contrast of, you know, I know that he has ideas, which
I think are very beautiful.
And I know he has to deal with the sort of, there's something you have to sacrifice in beauty when you bring it to a world which is
not always beautiful.
And there's an aspect of that which sort of scares me about this kind of thing.
I also think that especially since I'm trying to think about how I should
appear publicly, my dad has been very inspirational and that I think he's, he brings a sort of
facityous care to very difficult conversations that...
What does facetious mean? Like it's just very careful and thoughtful.
He brings that sort of attitude to,
I think, really difficult conversations.
And I know that I don't have that skill yet.
I don't think I'm terrible.
But- The care, the nuance,
and yet not being afraid to push forward.
Yeah, I would really like to learn from my dad there. I think also my dad has been very important
to my life just because I've always been a sort of very idiosyncratic thinker. And I think
And I think I don't always know how to interact with the world for those sorts of reasons. And I think my dad has always been similar.
And if not for my dad, I don't know if I would just believe that I was stupid or something.
Because I wouldn't know how to, I don't know if I would know how to interpret
my differences from convention.
So he gave you, he gave you the power to be different and use that as a superpower.
Yeah, I guess you could, you could put it that way. I don't know who I would believe I am if I didn't have my dad telling me that it wasn't my own stupidity,
which alienated me from certain aspects of a standard life.
So I'm very, very thankful for that.
Is there a fond memory you have about an interaction with your dad,
either funny, profound, that kind of sticks
with you now. A lot. Part of the reason I asked that of course, it's just fascinating to see
somebody as brilliant as you, see how the people that you interact with, how they form the mind that you have, but also to give an insight of another public figure like your dad to see from your perspective of
what kind of little magical moments happen in private life.
I would say I remember, I could just post it about this on Instagram or something.
Otherwise, it didn't happen.
If you didn't post that, yeah.
One person has always sort of mattered to whatever weird life
and experience I've had has been this comedian,
Tom Lehrer.
Do you know him?
Yes, yes.
I love him very much.
Likewise.
Anyway, I remember I think I was five or something.
My dad came home with the CD, this Tom Larris CD, and he told me to listen to it.
And it was all of this bizarre, satirical writing about prostitution and cutting up
babies and all kinds of like ridiculously vile
content for a five-year-old, I think
beyond just my love of Tom Lehrer, I think it was
away from my dad to express that from a very young age he was really
ready to treat me like an adult and he was ready
to trust me and share his life and his enjoyments with me in a way that was unconventional because conventional because he was willing to discard tradition for the chance that a really unique
and meaningful parental relationship.
So, trusting that his particular brand of weirdness is something you can understand at a young
age and embrace and learn from it.
Tom Lear, which is a a clarify is not all about what is
it murder and prostitution. He's one of the wittyest most brilliant musical artists. If you
haven't listened to his work, you should. He's just a rare interlac who's able to sort
of in catch you rhyme, express some really difficult ideas and sat through satire, I suppose.
Express some really difficult ideas and sat through satire, I suppose
That's still even though it's decades ago still resonates today some of the ideas that he expressed. I will say also that I think I am probably a
More cultured person having listened to Tom Lair than I would have been without I think a lot of his comedy
than I would have been without, I think, a lot of his comedy draws upon a canon that I was really driven to research by saying, what does this mean?
I don't understand that reference.
There are a lot of references there to really inspirational things, which he sort of assumes
going into a lot of his songs.
For many of us, like me, I have to together, you know, looking at Wikipedia pages and whatnot. But to tie this back to the original question,
I think there's sort of a break at you, bought it notion of parenting. I think, really,
if you're not going to accept a standard, you have to invent your own.
And I think in some ways that was my dad's way of telling me that if I was too unstandard as a child,
he would invent his own way of parenting me because that was worth it to him.
And I think that was very meaningful to me.
I know you're young.
This is a weird time to ask this question.
Are you cognizant on the role of love
in your relationship with your dad?
Are you at a place mentally as a man yourself
to admit that you love the guy?
I love my dad like I,
with the connection that I think I've had to very few things in the world. I think my dad is one of the people that's allowed me to see myself and
I don't know uh who I would imagine myself to be if not for my dad. That isn't to say that I
agree with him on everything, but I think he's given me courage to accept myself
and to believe that I can teach myself where I'm unable to learn from convention. So I have a very,
I love my dad very dearly. Yes. Is there ways in which you wish you could be a better son? Firstly, I'd like to say
I'm sure before I figure out exactly what those are. I think if I think whenever I come to conclusions
on what that means, I'm eager to take them. What do you mean by that? What do you mean by conclusions?
Five an idea for how to be a better son.
I think I'm inclined to try to be that person.
I think that's true of almost anything.
I think if I have ideas for improvement, it would be wasteful not to act on them. So I suppose one thing I could say is that I think idealism and what could not necessarily a lacking of maturity, but instead an obligation to those older than us who to fully believe in what is naive and right without the assistance of the young to re-inspire
traditional idealism.
And so, perhaps instead of trying to be more mature all the time, I should spend some time
trying to be in idealistic form of hope in the lives of people who maybe have seen too
much to retain all of that original hope.
So that's something that's difficult, but you know, especially appearing in public as
someone as young as I am, I think anything I do, which is juvenile by choice, will be held
against me. So, but maybe that's a sacrifice that I have to make. I have to retain some sort
of youthful hope and optimism. Yeah, I can't. I mean, I'm going to get teary eyed. No, but I have allergies. But also,
this is pretty powerful. We're just saying I certainly share your ideas. It's something
I struggle with, I've just by instinct, you should read the idea by Dusty Eski. By instinct,
I love being naive and seeing the world from a hopeful perspective, from an
optimistic perspective.
And it is, it's sad that that is something you pay a price for in this world.
Like in the academic world, especially as you're coming up through schooling, but just
actually it's a hit on your reputation throughout your life.
And it's a sad truth, but you have to like, for many things, if it's a principle, you hold,
you have to be willing to pay the costs.
And ultimately, I believe that in part, a hopeful view will help you realize the best version
of yourself.
Because optimism is a kind of...
Optimism is productive.
Like believing that the world is and can be amazing
is allows you to create a more amazing world somehow.
I mean, I'm not sure if it's a human nature
of a fundamental law of physics.
I don't know, but believing the impossible in the sense being optimistic about the thing.
It's it's it's similar like going back to what you've said is like believing that a radical,
that a powerful single idea that a single individual can revolutionize some framework that we're
operating in that will change the world for the better believing that
allows you to have the chance to create that and so I'm with you on the optimism
But it's you may have to pay a cost of optimism and
naive
hopefulness. I mean in some sense optimism limits freedom
I think if we don't really have much choice in choosing what is perfect, if it exists
as an ideal, then there isn't much room for creativity, and that's a danger of optimism
as someone who would like to be creative.
I think who was Warren Zeevon said,
accepting dreams you're never really free and that's something I think about a lot.
He's an interesting guy, also, I really like him.
On that topic, you do have a bit of an appreciation and connection with music. I saw you play some guitar a few months ago.
What can you put in like a philosophical sense
your connection to music, what insights about life,
about just the way you see the world you get for music?
I think the role music has played in my life
was originally motivated by sort of wanting to prove things
to myself.
I really have no ear for music.
I have a terrible sense of pitch and I think a lot of music relies on very standard teaching.
If you think about lessons, for example, music lessons, there's sort of a routine to them, which is so archaic
and traditional that there's no room for deviation.
I think all of that suggested to me that I would never have a relationship with music.
I loved listening to music.
It was just difficult to me.
It was sort of saddened me. I wanted to know if there was any way I could build to music. It was difficult to me. It was sort of saddened me.
I wanted to know if there was any way I could build a connection to music, given who I
am, my own idiosyncrasies, what challenges I have.
I decided to try to learn music theory before I touched an instrument. I think that gave me a very
unique opportunity instead of spending my time fruitlessly at the beginning on the syntax
of a particular instrument. This is how you, this is your posture on the piano, this is
how you hold your fingers. I tried instead to learn what made music work. And the wonderful thing about that was I'm pretty sure
that any instrument with discrete notes
is mined for the taking within a day or so
of having the ability to play with it.
So I think approaching music abstractly
gave me the ability to instantiate it everywhere. And I think it also taught me something
about self-teaching. Recently, I've tried getting into classical music because at least traditionally,
this is the thing which is thought to require the most rigor and traditional teaching. I think it's essentially taught me, even if
I'll never be a great classical performer, that there is nothing one can't really teach
themselves in this in this era. So I've been I've been enjoying whatever connection I have with
with music. The other thing I'll say about it is that it's a it's a very
rewarding learning process. We know for example that music
accesses are neurochemicals very directly and if you teach yourself a little bit of theory and are able to instantiate
it on an instrument without wasting your time or spending your time tediously on learning the
particulars of that instrument, you can instantly sit down and access your own dopamine loops.
And so you don't really need to motivate yourself
with music because you're giving your brain drugs,
who needs motivation to give themselves drugs
and learn something.
So I think more people should be playing music.
I think a lot of people don't realize how easy it can be to approach if you take a sort
of, um, unstandard approach.
And the aesthetic approach, in your sense, was understanding the theory first and then
just from the foundation of the theory, be able to then just take on an instrument
and start creating something that sounds reasonably good
or learning something that sounds reasonably good,
and then plugging into the, as you call them,
the dopamine loops of your brain,
allowing yourself to enjoy the process.
Yeah.
What about the pain in the ass rigorous process of practice?
So is there something about my dopamine loops, for example,
that enjoys doing the same thing over and over and over again
and watching myself improve?
I think that's because music is more effective at accessing us
when it's played correctly.
And I think you play, I'm positive that you play music
much more correctly than I do.
So if you are going to sit down and play something
that you've learned, that piece will be much more
satisfying to your ears and to your brain
than if I were to play that piece just sitting down
within an instrument.
But it's sort of a trade-off
with freedom and rigor, because even if I should be spending more of my time practicing rigorously,
I know I don't have to to make me happy. Well, Jaco Willocco Willink, I think, has the saying that discipline is freedom. So, maybe
the repetition of the discipline, repetition, is actually one of the mechanisms of achieving
freedom. It's another way to get to freedom, that it doesn't have to be a constraint, but
in a sense, unlocks greater sets of opportunity than results in a deeper
experience of freedom.
Maybe.
I mean, particularly if you're thinking about discipline and method for improvisation.
There are a million pieces that you could improvise with the same discipline and how to
approach that improvisation.
I think that's true that discipline promotes freedom if you insert a layer of indirection because I think if you're trying to learn one piece that
was written 400 years ago and you're playing it over and over again, there is nothing
personable, sorry there's nothing personal or creative about that process even if it's
beautiful and satisfying. There has to be some sort of discipline applied to the creativity of self.
So I think that is the layer of indirection which reconciles both approaches to freedom and discipline
and enjoyment of music.
and enjoyment of music. Discipline applied to the creativity of self. Damn, Zav. Thank you. Now, as an aging man yourself, if you were to give an
advice to young folks today of how to approach life, maybe advice to yourself. Is there some way you can dance
a set of principles, a set of advices you would give to yourself and to other young folks?
Ah, of how to live life.
Sure, I would say that with the collapse of systems that have existed for thousands of years, you know,
whatever is happening with universities might be an example of some system that may or
may not be decaying, I think with the destruction of important systems, there is a unique opportunity to invest in one's self. And I think that is
always the right approach provided that the investment one makes in his self is obligated
towards humanity as a whole. And I think that is the great struggle of my generation. Will we create
our own paths that are capable of saving whatever is collapsing? Or will we be squashed by the
debris? And I hope to articulate what patterns I see this struggle taking over the years that my
generation becomes particularly active in the world as an important force. I think already
we're important as a demographic to particular markets, but I should hope that our voices will matter as well starting very
soon.
So I would try to think about that.
That would be my advice.
Do you, it's a silly question to ask perhaps, but not a bit of a Russian one.
It's silly because you're young, but I don't think it's actually silly because you're
young. Do you ponder your mortality?
And are you just afraid of death in general?
So tying us back to our previous conversations about abstraction versus
abstraction versus experience, which is determining our notions of our life and our world. Death is interesting in that it is obviously hyper-important to a person's life, and it is
something that for the most part part no human will really experience and
be able to reflect upon. So
our notions of death are sort of proof that if we want to make the most of our lives we have to think abstractly and
relying not at all at times on
experiential thought and understandings because we can't really experience death and reflect upon it hence and use it to motivate us.
It has to remain some sort of abstraction.
And I think if we have trouble comprehending true abstraction, we tend to view ourselves as nearly immortal.
And I think that's very dangerous.
So one concrete implication for my belief in abstraction would be that we all need to be aware of our own deaths.
And we need to understand concretely the boundaries of our lifetimes
and no amount of experience can really motivate that.
It has to be driven by thought and abstraction and theory. That's one of the deepest elements of what it needs to be human is our ability to form
abstractions about our mortality versus animals.
I think there's just something really fundamental about our interaction with the abstractions
of death. And you know, there's a lot of philosophers that say that
that's actually core to everything we create in this world, which is like us struggling
with this impossible to understand idea of mortality. I mean, I'm drawn to this idea because
both the mystery of it
but also just from the human experience perspective
it seems that you get a lot of meaning from
stuff-ending
it's kind of sad, the flip side of that, to think that
stuff won't be as meaningful if it doesn't end if it's
not finite.
It seems like resources gain value from being finite.
That's true for time, that's true for the deliciousness of ice cream, that's true for
love, for everything, for music, and so on. And yeah, it's, uh, it seems deeply human to, to try to, uh, as you said,
concretize the abstractions of mortality, even though it can never truly experience it, because
it's the whole point of it. Once it ends, you can't experience it. Yeah.
Again, another ridiculous question. Okay.
What do you think is the meaning of it all? What's the meaning of life?
From your deep thinking about this world, is there a good way to answer any of the why questions
about this existence here on earth? As I said, we're here in part by principle and part by
As I said, we're here in part by principal and part by accident and a lot of the things which bring us joy
our program to bring us joy to ensure our evolutionary
success and so
I would not necessarily consider
all of the things which bring us joy to be meaningful.
I think they play a very obvious role and a clear pattern.
And we don't have much choice in that.
I think that out rules the idea of joy being the meaning of life.
I think it's a nice thing we get to have, even if it's not inherently meaningful.
I think the most wonderful thing that we have ever been given has been our ability to, as I said,
observe what transcends us as humans, and I think to live a meaningful life is to see
that and hopefully contribute to that.
So to try to understand what makes us human it just to transcend that and in some small way contribute to it in the
finite time we have here. Yeah. Those are some powerful words that you're truly special human being.
It's really not to talk to you.
I can't.
I'm just, I'm a newborn fan of yours and I can't wait to see how you push to the world.
Please embrace the fear you feel and be bold.
And I think you will do some special things
in this world I'm confident if this world doesn't destroy you
and I hope it doesn't be strong, be brave,
you're an inspiration, keep doing your thing.
And thanks for talking to me.
Thank you so much, Lai.
Thanks for listening to this conversation
with Zev Weinstein and thank you to our sponsors
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Thank you.