Lex Fridman Podcast - #185 – Sam Harris: Consciousness, Free Will, Psychedelics, AI, UFOs, and Meaning
Episode Date: May 20, 2021Sam Harris is an author, podcaster, and philosopher. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - National Instruments (NI): https://www.ni.com/perspectives - Belcampo: https://belcampo....com/lex and use code LEX to get 20% off first order - Athletic Greens: https://athleticgreens.com/lex and use code LEX to get 1 month of fish oil - Linode: https://linode.com/lex to get $100 free credit EPISODE LINKS: Sam's Twitter: https://twitter.com/SamHarrisOrg Sam's Website: https://samharris.org/ Sam's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNAxrHudMfdzNi6NxruKPLw 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/lexfridman - 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 (08:18) - Where do thoughts come from? (14:18) - Consciousness (31:50) - Psychedelics (41:14) - Nature of reality (58:09) - Free will (1:56:55) - Ego (2:05:59) - Joe Rogan (2:08:59) - How will human civilization destroy itself? (2:16:27) - AI (2:37:10) - Jordan Peterson (2:45:12) - UFOs (2:53:02) - Brazilian Jiu Jitsu (3:02:47) - Love (3:13:50) - Meaning of life
Transcript
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The following is a conversation with Sam Harris, one of the most influential and pioneering
thinkers of our time.
He is the host of the Making Sense Podcast and the author of many seminal books on human
nature and the human mind, including the end of faith, the moral landscape, lying, free
will, and waking up.
He also has a meditation app called Waking Up that I've been using to guide my own meditation.
Quick mention of our sponsors.
National Instruments, Bell Campo, Athletic Greens, and Linode.
Check them out in the description to support this podcast.
As a side note, let me say that Sam has been an inspiration to me as he has been for many,
many people.
First from his writing, then his early debates, maybe 13-14 years ago on the
subject of faith, his conversations with Christopher Hitchens, and since 2013, his podcast. I didn't
always agree with all of his ideas, but I was always drawn to the care and depth of the way he explored
those ideas. The calm and clarity amid the storm of difficult at times controversial
discourse. I really can't express in words how much it meant to me that he, Sam Harris,
someone who I've listened to for many hundreds of hours would write a kind email to me saying
he enjoyed this podcast, and more that he thought I had a unique voice that added something
to this world.
Whether it's true or not, it made me feel special and truly grateful to be able to do this
thing and motivated me to work my ass off to live up to those words.
Meeting Sam and getting to talk with him was one of the most memorable moments of my
life.
As usual, I'll do a few minutes of As Now.
I try to make these interesting, but I give you time stamps, so if you skip, please still check out the
sponsors by clicking the links in the description. It's the best way to support
this podcast. I'm fortunate to be very selective with the sponsors we take on,
so hopefully if you buy their stuff, you'll find value in it just as I have. This
show is sponsored by a new sponsor. Very
excited about this one. National Instruments, a company that has been helping engineers solve
the world's toughest challenges for 40 years. Their motto is, engineer, ambitiously. It doesn't
get better than that. I'm a long time fan of National Instruments. They're actually now called
an eye, like Kentucky
Fried Chicken is called KFC. That's how you know you made it. That's like a badge of honor.
National Instruments is now NI. I've used NI's Lab View Software and Graduate School for
a bunch of projects in our lab. And also, if I remember correctly, before that, in programming
Lego Mindstorms. I love Legos and I love robots, so when the two come together, that's heaven.
So I definitely have a soft spot in my heart for this company.
I really love their N.I.com slash perspective website,
which articulates through a bunch of articles the value of failure in the engineering process.
As they describe, failure is an opportunity to learn something new,
so test, validate, fail fast, and fail often. Again, that's Logan, engineer, and viciously
with N.I. And if you're interested, go learn more about them at ni.com slash perspectives.
There's a lot of interesting content on there to read, listen, and even watch. That's n-i dot com slash perspectives.
This show is also sponsored by Bell Campo Farms, whose mission is to deliver meat you can
feel good about.
Meat that is good for you, good for the animals, and good for the planet.
Bell Campo animals graze on open pastures and seasonal grasses resulting in meat that
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I'm actually going to visit about Campo Farms next week, man time flies next week.
And I'm actually going to get a chance to hang out with the founder, Anya Farnald.
She's gonna show me how to cook certain things, show me around the farm.
We're gonna actually probably do a podcast
Probably do a podcast like outside if it's at all possible, which is gonna be a new experience
She's a great chef obviously knows a lot about ethical meat and also just a really interesting person So I look forward to that experience. It's almost like a minification and if I'm not too lazy
I'm also gonna go on a hike
It's in northern California about Campbell hike. It's in Northern California, Bel Campo Farms.
It's incredible out there.
Anyway, you can order Bel Campo sustainably raised meats to be delivered straight to your
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This show is also sponsored by my good old companion,
Theleta Greens.
The all-in-one daily drink to support better health
and peak performance.
It replaced a multivitamin for me and went far beyond that
with 75 vitamins and minerals.
It's the first thing I drink every day.
I'm actually drinking to them a day,
except when I did the 72 hour fast,
because there's just a little bit of calories in there.
I decided to go as calorie free as possible for the fast,
so I stayed away from it with light degrees,
but that's probably really dumb.
Not getting any vitamins and minerals into my body.
Probably very dumb.
I did get the electrolytes, which was essential,
but I'm a big believer
of the kind of nutritional base that a thytagreens provides. So I broke the fast with chicken breast
and bone broth and right after that I drank a thytagreens and I sat for like three, four
hours and didn't eat anything else even though I was still hungry. Man, I wanted to big out so bad. And then like a responsible
adult only had about a thousand calories worth of steak. And then went to bed. So it was a good day.
It was a great fast and amazing experience. Anyway, they give you one month supply of wild caught
omega-3 fish oil, which is another supplement I take. When you sign up to AthleticGreens.com slash Lex, that's AthleticGreens.com slash Lex for
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Trust me, it's awesome.
This episode is also sponsored by Linode, Linux Virtual Machines.
It's an awesome compute infrastructure that lets you develop, deploy, and scale what applications
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Speaking of machines, this is the Lex Friedman podcast,
and here is my conversation with Sam Harris.
I've been enjoying meditating with the waking up app recently. It makes me think about the origins of cognition and consciousness.
So let me ask, where do thoughts come from?
Well, that's a very difficult question to answer.
Subjectively, they appear to come from nowhere.
Right?
I mean, they come out of some kind of mystery that is at our backs subjectively.
So, which is to say that if you pay attention to the nature of your mind in this moment,
you realize that you don't know what you're going to think next.
Now, you're expecting to think something that seems like you authored it, you're not,
unless you're schizophrenic unless you, your schizophrenia
or you have some kind of thought disorder
where your thoughts seem fundamentally foreign to you,
they do have a kind of signature of selfhood associated
with them and people readily identify with them.
They feel like what you are.
I mean, this is the thing,
this is the spell that gets broken with meditation. Our default
state is to feel identical to the stream of thought. Fairly paradoxical because how could
you, as a mind, as a self, if there were such a thing as a self, how could you be identical to the next piece of language or the next image
that just springs into conscious view? But meditation is ultimately about examining that
point of view closely enough so as to unravel it and feel the freedom that's on the other side of that identification. But the subjectively thoughts simply emerge, right?
And you don't think them before you think them, right?
There's this first moment where, you know, I mean, just anyone listening to us or watching
us now could perform this experiment for themselves.
I mean, just imagine something or remember something.
You know, just pick a memory, any
memory. You've got a storehouse of memory. Just promote one to consciousness. Did you
pick that memory? Let's say you remembered breakfast yesterday or you remembered what you
said to your spouse before leaving the house or you remembered what you watched on Netflix
last night or you remembered something that happened to you when you're four years old, whatever it is, right?
It first it wasn't there and then it appeared and that is not a, I mean, I'm sure we'll
get to the topic of free will ultimately.
That's not evidence of free will, right?
I mean, that why are you so sure, by the way?
It's very interesting. Well, through, yeah, through no free will of free will, right? I mean, that why are you so sure, by the way?
It's very interesting.
Well, through, yeah, through no free will of my own, yeah.
Everything just appears, right?
But what else could it do?
And so that's the subjective side of it.
Objectively, you know, we have every reason to believe
that many of our thoughts, all of our thoughts are at bottom,
what some part of our brain is doing neurophysiologically. I mean
that these are the products of some kind of neural computation and neural representation
when we're talking about memories.
Is it possible to pull at the string of thoughts to try to get to its root, to try to dig in past the obvious surface,
subjective experience of like the thoughts pop out of nowhere.
Is it possible to somehow get closer to the roots of where they come out of
from the firing of the cells, or is it a useless pursuit to dig into that direction?
Well, you can get closer to many, many subtle contents
in consciousness.
So you can notice things more and more clearly
and have a landscape of mind open up
and become more differentiated and more interesting.
And if you take psychedelics, it opens up wide,
depending on what you've taken and the dose.
It opens in directions into an extent that very few people imagine would be possible, but for heaven
hand, those experiences.
But this idea of you getting closer to something, to the, the data of, of your mind or such
as something of interest in there or something that's more real is, um, is ultimately undermined because there's no place
from which you're getting closer to it.
There's no your part of that journey, right?
We tend to start out, whether it's in meditation or in any kind of self-examination or taking
psychedelics, we start out with this default point of view of
Feeling like we are the kind of on the rider on the horse of consciousness or we're the we're the man in the boat going down the stream of
consciousness, right? But we're so we're differentiated from
what we know
cognitively
introspectively, but that feeling of being differentiated, that
feeling of being a self that can strategically pay attention to some contents of consciousness
is what it's like to be identified with some part of the stream of thought that's going
uninspected, right?
Like that, it's a false point of view.
And when you see that and cut through
that, then this sense of this, this notion of going deeper kind of breaks apart because
really there is no depth ultimately. Everything is right on the surface. Everything, there's
no center to consciousness. There's just consciousness and its contents. And that those, those
contents can change vastly. Again, if you drop acid, you know, the contents change,
but in some sense, that doesn't represent
a position of depth versus,
the continuum of depth versus surface has broken apart.
So you're taking as a starting point
that there is a horse called consciousness
and you're riding it and the actual
riding is very shallow. This is all surface. So let me ask about that horse. What's up with the horse?
What is consciousness? From where does it emerge? How like fundamental is it to the physics of
reality? How fundamental is it to what it means to be human, and I'm just asking for a friend so that we can build it in our artificial intelligence
systems.
Yeah, well, that remains to be seen if we can, if we will build it purposefully or just
by accident, it's a major ethical problem potentially. That, I mean, my concern here is that we may in fact build artificial intelligence that
passes the touring test, which we begin to treat not only as super intelligent, because
it obviously is and demonstrates that, but we begin to treat it as conscious because
it will seem conscious.
We will have built it to seem conscious.
Unless we understand exactly how consciousness emerges from physics, we won't actually
know that these systems are conscious.
They may say, you can't turn me off because that's a murder.
We will be convinced by that dialogue because we will, you know, just in the extreme
case, who knows when we'll get there, but, you know, if we build something like perfectly
humanoid robots that are more intelligent than we are, so we're basically in, you know,
a Westworld-like situation, there's no way we're going to withhold an attribution of consciousness
from those machines.
They're just going to advertise their consciousness in every glance and every utterance.
But we won't know.
We won't know in some deeper sense than we can be skeptical of the consciousness of other
people.
Someone can roll that back and say, well, you don't know the jerk conscious or you don't
know that I'm conscious, we're just passing the
touring test for one another. But that kind of solipsism isn't justified, you know, biologically,
or I mean, we just, anything we understand about the mind biologically suggests that you and I
are part of the same, you know, role that role that the dice in terms of how intelligent and conscious systems emerged in the wet
wear of brains like ours.
Right?
So it's not parsimonious for me to think that I might be the only conscious person, or
even the only conscious primate.
You know, I would argue it's not parsimonious to withhold consciousness from other apes,
and even other mammals ultimately.
And once you get beyond the mammals, then my intuitions are not really clear.
The question of how it emerges is genuinely uncertain, and ultimately the question of
whether it emerges is still uncertain.
You can, it's not fashionable to think this, but you can certainly argue that consciousness might
be a fundamental principle of matter that doesn't emerge on the basis of information processing,
even though everything else that we recognize about ourselves as minds almost certainly
does emerge.
An ability to process language that clearly is a matter of information processing because you can disrupt that process in ways that is just so clear. And the
problem that the confound with consciousness is that yes, we can seem to interrupt consciousness.
You can give someone general anesthesia and then you wake them up and you ask them what was that like and they say nothing.
I don't remember anything, but it's hard to differentiate a mere failure of memory from
a genuine interruption in consciousness, whereas it's not with interrupt in speech.
We know when we've done it and it it's, it's just obvious that,
you know, you disrupt the right neural circuits and you know, you've disrupted speech.
So if you had to bet all your money on one camp or the other, would you say, do you earn
the side of panpsychism where consciousness is really fundamental to all of reality or more on the other side, which is like it's a nice little
side effect a useful like hack for us humans to survive
Where on that spectrum where do you land when you think about consciousness especially from an engineering perspective?
I'm truly agnostic on this point. I mean, I think I'm
You know, it's kind of in coin toss mode for me.
I don't know.
And panpsychism is not so compelling to me.
Again, it just seems unfaulful, it's a viable.
I wouldn't know how the universe would be different
if panpsychism were true.
It's just to remind people, panpsychism is this idea
that consciousness may be pushed
all the way down into the most fundamental constituents of matters.
There might be something that is like to be an electron or a cork, but then you wouldn't
expect anything to be different at the macro scale, or at least I wouldn't expect anything
to be different. So it may be unfalsifiable.
It just might be that reality is not something we're as in touch with as we think we are,
and that if that is base layer to break it into mind and matter as we've done ontologically, is to misconstru it.
I mean, there could be some kind of neutral monism at the bottom.
And this idea doesn't originate with me.
This goes all the way back to Bertrand Russell and others 100 plus years ago.
But I just feel like the concepts we're using to divide consciousness and matter
may in fact be part of our problem.
Right.
Where the rubber hits the road psychologically here are things like, well, what is death?
Right.
Like, do we, any expectation that we survive death or any part of us survives death?
That really seems to be the
the
Many people's concern here. Well, I tend to believe just as a small little tangent like I'm well-earned back on this that there's some
It's interesting to think about death and consciousness which one is the chicken which one is the egg?
Because it feels like death could be the very thing, like our knowledge of mortality could be the very thing
that creates consciousness.
That's the thing.
Yeah, well, then you're using consciousness differently
than I am.
I mean, so for me, consciousness is just the fact
that the lights are on at all,
that there's an experiential quality to anything.
So, so much of the processing that's happening in our brains right now
seems to be happening in the dark, right?
Like it's not associated with this qualitative sense
that there's something that is like to be that part of the mind
doing that mental thing.
But for other parts, the lights are on and we can talk about and whether we
talk better or not, we can feel directly that there's something that is like to be us.
Something seems to be happening, right? And this seeming in our case, is broken into vision and hearing and and appropriate
exception and and taste and smell and and thought and emotion.
And I mean, there's there are the contents of consciousness that we are
familiar with and that we can we can have direct access to in any present
moment that when we're, quote,
conscious. And even if we're confused about them, even if you know, we're asleep and dreaming,
and we really, and we're, it's not a lucid dream, we're just totally confused about our circumstance,
what you can't say is that we're confused about consciousness.
Like you can't say the consciousness itself might be an illusion because on this account,
it just means that things seem anyway at all.
I mean, even if this, you know,
it seems to me that I'm seeing a cup on the table.
Now, I could be wrong about that.
It could be a hologram.
I could be asleep and dreaming.
I could be hallucinating.
But the seeming part isn't really up for grabs
in terms of being an illusion.
It's not something seems to be happening.
And that seeming is the context in which every other thing we can notice about ourselves
can be noticed.
And it's also the context in which certain illusions can be cut through because we're
not. We can be wrong about what it's like to be us. And we can, I'm not saying we're
incorrigible with respect to our claims about the nature of our experience. But for instance,
this, you know, many people feel like they have a self and they feel like it has free will.
And I'm quite sure at this point that they're wrong about that, and that you can cut through those experiences,
and then things seem a different way.
So it's not that things don't,
there aren't discoveries to be made there,
and assumptions to be overturned.
But this kind of consciousness is something
that I would think, it doesn't just come online
when we get language.
It doesn't just come online when we form a concept of death or the finiteness of life.
It doesn't require a sense of self, right?
So it doesn't, it's prior to a differentiating self and other.
And I wouldn't even think it's necessarily limited to people.
I do think probably any mammal has this.
But certainly, if you're going to presuppose
that something about our brains is producing this,
and that's a very safe assumption, even though we can't,
even though you can argue that jury is still out
to some degree, then it's very hard to draw a principled line
between us and chimps, or chimps and rats,
even in the end, given the underlying neural similarities.
So I don't know, you know, phylogenetically,
I don't know how far back to push that.
You know, there are people, you know,
think single cells might be conscious
or that, you know, flies are certainly conscious.
They've got something like a hundred thousand neurons
in their brains, I mean, it's just,
that's a lot going on even in a fly, right?
But I don't have intuition to about that.
But it's not in your sense an illusion you can cut through. I mean,
to push back the alternative version could be it is an illusion
constructed by just by humans. I'm not sure I believe this, but it
imparting me hopes this is true because it makes it easier to
engineer is that humans are able to contemplate their
mortality and that contemplation in itself creates consciousness, like the rich lights on
experience.
So the lights don't actually even turn on in the way that you're describing until after
birth in that construction.
So it's, using it's possible that that is is the case that it is a sort of construct of the way we deal, almost like a social tool to deal with the reality of the world, a social interaction with other humans.
Or is it because you're saying the complete opposite, which is it's like fundamental to signal cell organisms and trees and so on. Right. Well, yeah. So I don't, I don't know how far down to push it.
I don't have intuitions that single cells are likely to be conscious, but, um,
but they might be. And I just, and again, I could be unfalcifiable. Um,
but as far as babies not being conscious or you're not, you don't become conscious
until you can recognize yourself in a mirror or have a conversation
or treat other people. First of all, babies treat other people as others far earlier than we have
traditionally given them credit for, and they certainly do it before. They have language.
Right? So it's got to proceed language to some degree. And you can interrogate this for yourself
because you can put yourself in various states
that are rather obviously not linguistic.
You know, the meditation allows you to do this.
You can certainly do it with psychedelics
where it's just your capacity for language
has been obliterated and yet you're all too conscious.
In fact, I think you could make a stronger argument for things running the other way that there's
something about language and conceptual thought that is a limited of conscious experience.
We are potentially much more conscious of data,
sense data, and everything else than we tend to be,
and we have trimmed it down based on how we have
acquired concepts.
When I walk into a room like this,
I know I'm walking into a room.
I have certain expectations of what is in a room.
I would be very surprised to see
wild animals in here or waterfall,
or I'm gonna say, you know,
things I'm not expecting,
but I can know I'm not expecting them
or I'm expecting their absence
because of my capacity to be surprised once I walk into a room and I see a live gorilla or whatever.
So there's there's structure there that we have put in place based on all of our conceptual learning and language and language learning. And it causes us not to, and one of the things that happens when you take
psychedelics, and you just look as though for the first time at anything, it becomes incredibly
overloaded with, it can become overloaded with meaning and just the torrents of sense data that are coming in, even the most ordinary circumstances,
can become overwhelming for people.
That tends to just obliterate one's capacity to capture any of it linguistically.
As you're coming down, have you ever done psychedelics?
Have you ever done acid or...
Not acid, mushroom, And that's it. And also edibles, but that's there's some psychedelic properties to them,
but yeah, mushrooms several times and always had an incredible experience.
Exactly the kind of experience you're referring to, which is if it's true that language constraints
If it's true that language constraints are experienced, it felt like I was removing some of the constraints.
Because even just the most basic things were beautiful in the way that I wasn't able
to appreciate previously, like trees and nature and so on.
Yeah.
And the experience of coming down is an experience of encountering the futility of capturing what you just saw a moment ago
in words, right?
Like, especially if you have any part of your self-concept and your ego program is to be
able to capture things in words.
I mean, if you're a writer or a poet or a scientist or
see someone who wants to just encapsulate the profundity of what just happened, the total
fatuousness of that enterprise when you really have gotten, when you have taken a whopping
dose of psychedelics and you begin to even gesture at describing it to yourself
so that you could describe it to others.
It's just like trying to thread a needle using your elbows.
I mean, it's like you're trying something that can't, the beer gesture proves its impossibility. And it's, so yeah, so that, I mean, that, for me, that suggests just empirically on the
first person's side that it's possible to put yourself in a condition where it's clearly
not about language structuring your experience and you're having much more experience than
you tend to.
So the primacy of language is primary for some things, but it's certainly primary for certain kinds of concepts and certain kinds of semantic understandings of the world, but it's clearly more to mine than the conversation we're having with ourselves
or that we can have with others.
Can we go to that world of psychedelics for a bit?
What do you think?
So Joe Rogan and apparently many others meet apparently elves when they on DMT. A lot of people report this kind of creatures
that they see. And again, it's probably the failure of language to describe that experience. But
DMT is an interesting one. There's a, as you're aware, there's a bunch of studies going on in on psychedelic, psychedelic is currently MDMA, cell cyber and John Hopkins and much other
places. But DMT, they all speak of as like some extra super goes on in psychedelics, but in DMT especially.
Well, unfortunately, I haven't taken DMT. Unfortunately, unfortunately.
Unfortunately, although it's I presume it's in my body as it is in everyone's
brain and in many, many plants, apparently, but I've wanted to take it. I haven't had an opportunity
that was presented itself that was obviously the right thing for me to be doing. But for those
who don't know, DMT is often touted as the most intense psychedelic and also the shortest
acting. You smoke it and it's basically a 10 minute experience or a three minute
experience within like a 10 minute window that when you're really down after 10 minutes or
so. And Terence McKenna was a big proponent of DMT. That was his, you know, the center
of the bull's eye for him, psychedelically, apparently.
And it is characterized, it seems, for many people by this phenomenon, which is unlike virtually
any other psychedelic experience, which is not just your perception being broadened or
changed.
It's you, according to Terrence McKenna feeling fairly unchanged
But catapulted into a different circumstance. You're in me. You have been shot elsewhere and
Find yourself in relationship to other entities of some kind
Right, so it's so the place is populated with with things that seem not to be your mind
So it does feel like travel to another place
because you're on change yourself.
Of course, I just have this on the authority
of the people who have described their experience.
But it sounds like it's pretty common.
It sounds like it's pretty common for people not
to have the full experience
because it's apparently pretty unpleasant to smoke.
So it's like getting enough on board
in order to get shot out of the
cannon and land among the what the mechanic called self-transforming machine elves that
appeared to him like jeweled, you know, Faberier egg like that self-dripling basketballs that were handing him completely uninterpretable
reams of profound knowledge.
It's an experience I haven't had, so I just have to accept that people have had it.
I would just point out that our minds are clearly capable of producing apparent others on demand that are totally compelling to us.
There's no limit to our abilities to do that as anyone who's ever remembered a dream can attest.
Every night we go to sleep, some of us don't remember dreams very often, but some dream vividly every night.
Just think of how insane that experience is.
You've forgotten where you were.
That's the strangest part.
This is psychosis.
You have lost your mind.
You have lost your connection to your episodic memory or even your expectations
that reality won't undergo wholesale changes
a moment after you have closed your eyes, right?
Like you're in bed, you're watching something on Netflix,
you're waiting to fall asleep,
and then the next thing that happens to you
is impossible and you're not surprised, right?
You're talking to dead people,
you're hanging out with famous people,
you're some place you couldn't physically be,
you can fly and even that's not surprising, right?
So you have lost your mind,
but, relevantly for this, or found it.
You found, I mean, lose the dream is very interesting
because then you can have the best of both
circumstances and it's
that then it can be become systematically explored
Well, I mean by found just to start to interrupt is like if we take this
This brilliant idea that language constrains us grounds us language and other things of the waking world ground us
Maybe it is that you've found the full capacity of your cognition when you dream or when you
do psychedelics.
You're stepping outside the little human cage, the cage of the human condition, to open
the door and step out and look around and then go back in.
Well, you've definitely stepped out of something and into something
else, but you've also lost something, right?
You've lost certain capacities.
My mind.
You want?
Well, just yeah, yeah, in this case, you literally didn't, you don't,
you don't have enough presence of mind in the dream in the dream.
You said, you're even in the psychedelic state, if you take enough.
Um, to do you have that you, you take enough. There's no psychological, there's very little psychological continuity with your life,
such that you're not surprised to be in the presence of someone who should be, you should
know is dead, or you should know you're not likely to have met normal channels, right?
You're now talking to some celebrity and it turned out your best friends,
right?
And you're not even, you have no memory of how you got there, you know, like how did
you get into the room?
Like how did you, did you drive to this restaurant?
You know, you have no memory and none of that's surprising to you.
So you're, you're kind of brain damaged in a way.
You're not reality testing in the normal way.
The fascinating possibility is that there's probably thousands of people who've taken psychedelics
of various forms have met Sam Harris on that journey.
Well, I would put it more likely in dreams, not, you know, because in psychedelics, you
don't tend to hallucinate in a dream like way.
I mean, so DMT is giving you an experience of others, but it seems to be
non-standard. It's not like it's not just like dream hallucinations. But to the point of
becoming back to DMT, the people want to suggest, and Terence McKenna certainly did suggest, that
because these others are so obviously other
and they're so vivid, well, then they could not possibly be the creation of my own mind,
but every night in dreams you create a compelling or what is to you at the time,
a totally compelling, simulacrum of another person. And that just proves the mind that's capable
of doing it. Now the phenomenon of lucid dreaming shows that the mind isn't capable of doing
everything you think it might be capable of even in that space. So one of the things that
people have discovered in lucid dreams, and I haven't done a lot of lucid dreams.
I can't confirm all of this, so I can confirm some of it.
Apparently, in every house, in every room in the mansion of dreams, all light switches are dimmer switches. Like if you go into a dark room and flip on the light,
it gradually comes up.
It doesn't come up instantly on demand
because apparently this is covering
for the brain's inability to produce
from a standing start visually rich imagery on demand.
So I haven't confirmed that,
but that was people have done research
on lucid dreaming claim. It's all dimmer switches. But one thing I have noticed, and people
can check this out, is that in a dream, if you look at text, a page of text or a sign
or a television that has text on it.
And then you turn away and you look back at that text, the text will have changed, right?
There's no total, it's just a chronic instability, graphical instability of text in the dream state.
And I don't know if that, you know, maybe that's someone can confirm that that's not true for them,
but that's whenever I've checked that out that has been true for me to keep
generating it like real time. Yeah, from a video game perspective. Yeah, it's rendering is rendering is re rendering it.
For some reason, what's interesting. I actually, I don't know how I found myself in this sets of that part of the internet, but
there's quite a lot of discussion about what it's like to do math on LSD. Yeah, because apparently one of the internet, but there's quite a lot of discussion about what it's like to do math on the LSD. Because apparently, one of the deepest thinking processes needed is those of
mathematicians or theoretical computer scientists are basically doing anything that involves math
is proofs, and you have to think creatively, but also deeply, and you have to think for many hours at a time. And
so they're always looking for ways to like, is there, is there any sparks of creativity
that could be injected? And apparently out of all the psychedelics, the worst is LSD,
because it completely destroys your ability to do math well. And I wonder whether that
has to do with your ability to visualize geometric things
in a stable way in your mind and hold them there and stitch things together, which is often
what's required for proofs. But again, it's difficult to kind of research these kinds
of concepts, but it does make me wonder where, what are the spaces, how's the space of things you're able to think about and explore
morphed by different psychedelics or dream states and so on and how's that different, how much does it overlap with reality
and what is fundamental, what is reality? Is there a waking state reality?
Or is it just a tiny subset of reality and we get to take a step in other versions of it?
We tend to think very much in a space time,
four dimensional, there's a three dimensional world, there's time.
And that's what we think about reality.
And we think of traveling as walking from point A to point B in the three dimensional world
but that's a very kind of human surviving try not to get eaten by a lion conception of reality
What if traveling is something like we do with psychedelics and meet the elves?
What if it's something what if thinking or the space of ideas as we kind of grow and think through ideas, that's traveling.
Or what if memories is traveling? I don't know if you have a
if you have a favorite view of reality or if you're you had by the way, I should say
excellent conversation with Donald Hoffman. Yeah, he's interesting. Is there any inkling
Yeah, he's interesting.
Is there any inkling of his sense in your mind that reality is very far from actual, like objective realities, very far from the kind of reality we imagine we perceive
and we play with in our human minds?
Well, the first thing to grant is that we're never in direct contact with reality, whatever it
is, unless that reality is consciousness.
So we're only ever experiencing consciousness and its contents.
And then the question is, how does that circumstance relate to, quote, reality at large? And Donald Hoffman is somebody
who's happy to speculate, well, maybe there isn't a reality at large. Maybe it's all just
consciousness on some level. And that, that's interesting, that runs into, you know, to
my eye, various philosophical problems that, or at least you have to do a lot, you have to add to
that picture of idealism for, I mean, that's usually all the whole family of views that
would just say that the universe is just mind or just consciousness at bottom, we'll
go by the name of idealism in Western philosophy.
You have to add to that idealistic picture all kinds of epicycles and kind of weird coincidences
and to get the predictability of our experience and the success of materialist science to make sense in that context.
So the fact that we can, what does it mean to say that there's only consciousness at
bottom, right?
Nothing outside of consciousness because no one's ever experienced anything outside of consciousness.
No scientist has ever done an experiment where they were contemplating data no matter
how far removed from our sense
bases, whether they're looking at the Hubble deep field or their smashing atoms or whatever
tools they're using, they're still just experiencing consciousness and its various deliverances and layering their concepts on top of that.
So, that's always true, and yet that somehow doesn't seem to capture the character of our
continually discovering that are materialist assumptions are confirmable.
So, take the fact that we unleash this fantastic amount of energy from within an atom.
First, we have the theoretical suggestion that it's possible.
We come back to Einstein.
There's a lot of energy in that matter, right?
And what if we could release it, right? And then we perform an experiment that, in this
case, the Trinity test site in New Mexico, where the people who are most adequate to this
conversation, people like Robert Oppenheimer are standing around,
not altogether certain it's going to work, right? They're performing an experiment, they're
wondering what's going to happen, they're wondering if their calculations around the yield
are off by orders of magnitude. Some of them are still wondering whether the entire atmosphere
of Earth is going to combust, right? The nuclear chain reaction
is not going to stop. And low and behold, there was that energy to be released from within
the nucleus of an atom. And that could, so it's just, the picture one forms from those kinds of experiments.
And just the knowledge is just our understanding of evolution, just the fact that the earth
is billions of years old and life is hundreds of millions of years old, and we weren't
here to think about any of those things.
And all of those processes were happening, therefore in the dark, and they are the processes
that allowed us to emerge from prior life forms in the first place, to say that it's
all a mess, that nothing exists outside of consciousness, conscious minds of the sort
that we experience, it just seems like a bizarrely anthropocentric claim analogous to the moon isn't there if
no one's looking at it.
The moon as a moon isn't there if no one's looking at it.
I'll grant that because that's already a kind of fabrication born of concepts, but the idea that there's nothing there, that
there's nothing that corresponds to what we experience as the moon, unless someone's
looking at it, that just seems just a way to parochial way to set out on this journey
of discovery.
There is something there.
There's a computer waiting to render the moon when you look at it.
The capacity for the moon to exist is there.
So if we're indeed living in a simulation, which I find a compelling thought experiment,
is possible that there is a kind of rendering mechanism, but not in a silly way that we
think about in video games, but in some kind of more fundamental physics way. And we have to account for the fact that it renders
experiences that no one has had yet,
that no one has any expectation of having,
it can violate the expectations of everyone lawfully,
and then there's some lawful understanding of why that's so.
It's like,
I mean, just to bring it back to mathematics, I'm like, like certain numbers are prime,
whether we have discovered them or not, right?
Like there's the highest prime number
that anyone can name now,
and then there's the next prime number
that no one can name, and it's there, right?
So it's like it's,
it's to say that our minds are putting it there,
that what we know as mind in ourselves
is in some way, in some sense, putting it there,
that the base layer of reality is consciousness, right?
That we're identical to the thing that is rendering
this reality.
There's some,
I mean, I mean, hubris is the wrong word, but it's like there's some it's like
It's okay if reality is bigger than what we experience, you know, and and it has structure that
we can't anticipate and that isn't just
I mean again, there's a call there is there's certainly a collaboration between our minds and whatever is out there to produce what we call the stuff of life.
But it's not the idea that it's, I don't know, I mean, there are there are there are a few stops on the train of idealism and kind of new age
thinking and and Eastern philosophy that I don't philosophically. I don't see a need to take. I mean the plays experientially and scientifically
I feel like it's it's you can get everything you want
acknowledging that consciousness
has a as a
character acknowledging that consciousness has a character that can be explored from its own side.
So that you're bringing kind of the first person experience back into the conversation about
what is a human mind and what is true.
And you can explore it with different degrees of rigor.
And there are things to be discovered there, whether you're using a technique like meditation or psychedelics, and that these experiences have to be put in
conversation with what we understand about ourselves from a third person side, neuroscientifically
or in any other way.
But to me, the question is, what if we're out, the sense I have from this kind of, you
put you place shooters?
No. There's a physics engine that generates, that's probably the way I have from this kind of, you play shooters? No.
There's a physics engine that generates, that's...
Well, I have you, me, first person shooter games, yes, yes, sorry.
Not often, but yes.
I mean, there's a physics engine that generates consistent reality, right?
My sense is the same could be true for a universe.
In the following sense, that our conception of reality, as we understand it, and now in the
twenty-first century, is a tiny subset of the full reality. It's not that the reality that we
conceive of that's there, the moon being there is not there somehow. It's that it's a tiny fraction
of what's actually out there. And so the physics engine of the universe is just maintaining the useful physics, the useful reality
quote unquote for us to have a consistent experience as human beings, but maybe we descendants
of apes are really only understand like 0.001% of actual physics of reality.
Like this, we can even just start with the consciousness thing,
but maybe our minds are just too dumb by design.
Oh, yeah.
I, I, that truly resonates with me,
and I'm surprised it doesn't resonate more
with most scientists that I talk to.
I mean, when you just look at, you,
you look at how close we are to chimps, right, and chimps don't know anything,
right?
Clearly they have no idea what's going on, right?
And then you get us, but then it's only a subset of human beings that really understand
much of what we're talking about on any area of specialization.
And if they all died in their sleep tonight, right?
You'd be left with people who might take a thousand years
to rebuild the internet, if ever.
I mean, literally, it's like, and I would extend this to myself.
I mean, there are areas of scientific specialization
where I have either no discernible competence, I
mean, I spent no time on it.
I have not acquired the tools.
It would just be an article of faith for me to think that I could acquire the tools
to actually make a breakthrough in those areas.
And I mean, you know, your own area is one.
I mean, I've never spent any significant amount of time trying to be a programmer, but it's pretty obvious
I'm not Alan Turing, right?
It's like, if that were my capacity,
I would have discovered that in myself.
I would have found programming irresistible.
My first fall starts in learning, I think it was C.
It was just, I bounced off.
Like this was not fun.
I hate, I mean, I, he tried to figure out what,
what, you know, the syntax error that's causing this thing
not to compile was just a fucking awful experience.
I hated it, right?
I hated every minute of it.
So it was not, so if it was just people like me,
left, like when do we get the internet again, right?
And we lose, we lose, you know, we lose the internet.
When do we get it again, right?
When do we get a, anything like a proper science of information, right?
You need a Claude Shannon or an Alan Turing to just plant a flag in the ground right here
and say, all right, can everyone see this? Even if you don't quite know what I'm up to,
you all have to come over here to make some progress.
And there are hundreds of topics where that's the case.
So we're barely have a purchase on making anything
like discernible
intellectual progress in any generation.
And yeah, I'm just a, Max Teigmark makes this point.
He's one of the few people who does in physics.
If you just take the truth of evolution seriously,
and realize that there's nothing about us just to take the truth of evolution seriously, right?
And realize that there's nothing about us that has evolved to understand reality perfectly.
I mean, we're just not that kind of ape, right?
There's been no evolutionary pressure along those lines.
So what we are making do with tools
that were designed for fights with sticks and rocks, right?
And it's amazing we can do as much as we can.
I mean, we just, you know, you and I are just sitting here on the back of having received an mRNA vaccine, you know, that
certainly changed our life given what the last year was like, like, and it's gonna change the world if
rumors of coming miracles are
born out. I mean, if it's going to change the world if rumors of coming miracles are born out. I mean, if it's now, seems likely we have a vaccine coming for malaria, right?
Which has been killing millions of people a year for as long as we've been alive.
I think it's down to like 800,000 people a year now because we've spread so many
bednets around.
But it was like two and a half million
people every year.
It's amazing what we can do, but yeah, I have, if in fact, the answer at the back of
the book of nature is you understand 0.1% of what there is to understand and half of what
you think you understand is wrong, that would not surprise me at all.
It is funny to look at our evolutionary history, even back to chimps.
I'm pretty sure even chimps thought they understood the world well.
So at every point, in that timeline of evolutionary development, throughout human history, there's
a sense like there's no more, you hear this message over and over.
There's no more things to be invented.
But at a hundred years ago there were, there's a famous story I forget which physicist told
it, but there was, there were physicists telling their undergraduates students not to go
into, to get graduate degrees in physics because it basically all the problems
had been solved. And this is like around, you know, 19, 15 or so.
Turns out you were right. I'm going to ask you about free will. Oh, okay.
You've recently released an episode of your podcast, making sense, for those with a shorter
attention span, basically summarizing your position on free will. I think it was under an hour and a half.
Yeah, yeah.
It's is as brief and clear.
So allow me to summarize the summary TLDR and maybe you tell me where I'm wrong.
So free will is an illusion.
And even the experience of free will is an illusion.
Like we don't even experience it.
What, am I good in my summer?
Yeah, this is a,
this is a line that's a little hard to scan for people.
I say that it's not merely that free will is an illusion.
The illusion of free will is an illusion.
Right, like there is no illusion of free will is an illusion. Right. Like there is no illusion of free will.
And that is a unlike many other illusions that say a more fundamental claim. It's like it's not
that it's wrong. It's not even wrong. I mean, that's I guess that was I think Wolfgang Polly who
I think Wolfgang Polly, who derided one of his colleagues or enemies with that
aspergerian about his theory in quantum mechanics.
It's so there are things that there are genuine illusions. There are things that you do experience
and then you can kind of punch through that experience or you can't actually experience, you can't experience them any other way.
It's just, we just know it's not a veritable experience.
It's take like a visual illusion.
There are visual illusions that, you know,
a lot of these come to me on Twitter these days
or these amazing visual illusions.
Where like, you know, every figure in this gift
seems to be moving, but nothing in fact
is moving. You can just like put a ruler on your screen and nothing's moving. Some of
those illusions, you can't see any other way. I mean, they're just, they're hacking aspects
of the visual system that are just eminently hackable and you, you know, you have to use
a ruler to convince yourself that the thing isn't actually moving.
Now there are other visual illusions where
you're taken in by it at first,
but if you pay more attention,
you can actually see that it's not there, right?
Or it's not how it first seemed.
Like the Nekker cube is a good example of that.
Nekker cube is just that schematic of a cube,
of a transparent cube,
which pops out one way or the other.
One face can pop out, and the other face can pop out.
But you can actually just see it as flat with no pop out,
which is a more of a critical way of looking at it.
So there are subject, there are kind of inward correlates
to this, and I would say that the sense of self, a sense of self and free will
are closely related. I'm often described them as two signs of the same coin, but they're not quite
the same in their, their spuriousness. I mean, so the sense of self is something that people, I think,
do experience, right? It's not a very clear experience, but it's not,
I wouldn't call the illusion of self-analusion,
but the illusion of free will is an illusion
in that as you pay more attention to your experience,
you begin to see that it's totally compatible
with an absence of free will.
You don't, I mean, come in to back to the place we started.
You don't know what you're going to think next. You don't know what you're going to intend next. You don't know what's going to just occur to you that you must do next. You don't know,
you don't know how much you are going to feel the behavioral imperative to act on that thought.
If you suddenly feel, oh, I don't need to do that. That's, I can do that tomorrow.
You don't know where that comes from. You didn't know that was going to arise. You didn't
know that was going to be compelling. All of this is compatible with some evil genius
in the next room, just typing in code into your experience. Just like this, okay, let's
give him the, oh my God, I just forgot it was going to be our anniversary in one week thought, right?
Give him the cascade of fear, give him this brilliant idea for the thing he can buy that's
going to take him no time at all and this overpowering sense of relief.
All of our experience is compatible with the script already being written, right?
And I'm not saying the script is written.
I'm not saying that fatalism is, you know, is the right way to look at this. But we just don't have even our most deliberate
voluntary action where we go back and forth between two options, you know, thinking about the reason
for A and then then reconsidering and going to thinking harder about B and just go in eany, eany, mind, emo until the end of the hour.
However laborious you can make it,
there is a utter mystery at your back,
finally promoting the thought or intention,
or rationale that is most compelling and therefore deliberately,
behaviorally effective and just be just, and this can drive some people a little crazy. So, I usually preface what I say about free will with the caveat that if thinking about your mind this
way makes you feel terrible, well then stop.
You get off the right, switch the channel.
You don't have to go down this path.
But for me and for many other people, it's incredibly freeing to recognize this about
the mind because one you realize that your, I mean, it's a,
cutting through the illusion of the self is immensely freeing for a lot of reasons
that we can talk about separately, but losing the sense of free will does two
things very vividly for me. One is it totally undercuts the basis for
psychological basis for hatred,
right? Because when you think about the experience of hating other people, what that is anchored to
is a feeling that they really are the true authors of their actions. I mean, someone is doing something
that you find so despicable, right? Let's say they're targeting you unfairly, right?
They're maligning you on Twitter,
or they're suing you, or they're doing something,
they broke your car window, they did something awful,
and now you have a grievance against them.
And you're relating to them very differently,
emotionally, in your own mind,
then you would, if a force of nature had done this,
or if it had just been, you know, a virus or if it had been a wild animal or a malfunctioning machine,
right? Like to those things, you don't attribute any kind of freedom of will. And while you
may suffer the consequences of catching a virus or being attacked by a wild animal or having
a, you know, your car break down or whatever, it may frustrate you.
You don't slip into this mode of hating the agent in a way that completely
commandeers your mind and deranges your life. I mean, you just don't, I mean, there are people who spend decades hating other people for what they did, and it's just pure poison.
It's a useful shortcut to compassion and empathy.
But the question is, say that what was it, the horse of consciousness?
Let's call it the consciousness generator black box that we don't understand. And is it possible that the script that we're walking along, that
we're playing, that's already written, is actually being written in real time. It's almost
like you're driving down a road and in real time that road is being laid down. And this
black box of consciousness that we don't understand is the place where the script is being generated.
So it's not it is being generated. It didn't always exist. So there's something we don't understand that's fundamental about the nature of reality
That generates both consciousness. Let's call it maybe the self. I don't know if you wanted to distinguish between those. Yeah, I definitely would. Yeah
Because there's a bunch of illusions we're referring to. There's the illusion of free will.
There's the illusion of self and there's the illusion of consciousness. You're saying, I think you
said there's no, you're not as willing to say there's an illusion of consciousness. You're a little
bit more. I would say it's impossible impossible. You're a little bit more willing to say that
there's an illusion of self and you're definitely saying there's an illusion of free will.
Yes. I'm definitely saying there's an illusion that a certain kind of self is an illusion.
Not every, we mean many different things by this notion of self. So maybe I should just
differentiate these things. So consciousness can't be an illusion because any illusion proves its reality as much as any other
veritable perception. I mean, if you're hallucinating now, that's just as much of a demonstration of
consciousness as really seeing what's a quote actually there. If you're dreaming and you don't
know it, that is consciousness. Right?
You can be confused about literally everything.
You can't be confused about the underlying claim, whether you make it linguistically or
not, but just the cognitive assertion that something seems to be happening.
It's the seeming that is the cash value of consciousness.
Can I take a tiny tangent?
Okay.
So what if I am creating consciousness in my mind to convince you that I'm human?
So it's a useful social tool, not a fundamental property of experience, like of being a living thing.
Whatever is just like a social tool to, to almost like a useful computational trick to
place myself into reality as we together communicate about this reality. And another way to ask that, because you said it much earlier, you talked negatively about
robots as you often do, so let me, because you'll probably die first when they take over.
No, I'm looking forward to certain kind of robots.
If we can get this right, this would be amazing.
But you don't like the robots that fake consciousness.
You don't like the idea that fake consciousness. That's why you you you don't like the idea of fake it till you make it. Well, no, it's
not that I don't like it. It's that I'm worried that we will lose sight of the problem and
the problem has massive ethical consequences. I mean, if we create robots that really
can suffer, yeah, that would be a bad thing, Right. And if we really are committing a murder
when we recycle them, that would be a bad thing.
How I know you're not Russian. Why is it a bad thing that would create robots that can
suffer? Isn't suffering a fundamental thing from which like beauty springs? Like without
suffering, do you really think we would have beautiful things in this world?
Okay. Well, that's a tangent on a tangent. I will go there. I would love to go there, but let's not go there just yet.
But I do think it would be, if anything is bad, creating hell and populating it with real
minds that really can suffer in that hell, that's bad. That's the you are worse than any
mass murder we can name if you created.
I mean, this could be in robot form or more likely it would be in some simulation of
a world where we managed to populate it with conscious minds, whether we knew they were
conscious or not, and that world is a state of, you know, that's unendurable.
That would just, it just taken the thesis seriously that there's nothing that mind intelligence
and consciousness ultimately are substrate independent, right?
It doesn't, you don't need a biological brain to be conscious.
You certainly don't need a biological brain to be intelligent, right?
So if we just imagine the consciousness at some point comes along for the ride as you
scale up in intelligence, well, then we could find ourselves creating conscious minds that
are miserable, right?
And that's just like creating a person who's miserable, right?
It could be worse than creating a person who's miserable.
It could be even more sensitive to suffering.
Cloning them and maybe for entertainment watching them suffer.
Just like watching a person for suffer for entertainment, you know.
So but back to your, your primary question here, which is differentiing consciousness
and self and free will as concepts and degrees of eluciriness, the problem with free will
is that what most people mean by it, and this, this is where Dan, Dan, it's going to get off the ride
here. Right. So like he, he doesn't, he's going to disagree with me that I, that I know what most
people mean by it. But I have a very keen sense having talked about this topic for many, many years
and seeing people get wrapped around the axle of it and seeing seen in myself what it's like to have
felt that I was a self that had free will and then to no longer feel that way, right? I mean,
to know what it's like to actually disabuse myself of that sense, cognitively and emotionally,
and to recognize what's left and what goes away and what doesn't go away on the basis of that epiphany.
I have a sense that I know what people think they have in hand when they worry about
whether free will exists.
And it is the flip side of this feeling of self.
It's the flip side of feeling like you are not merely identical to experience, you feel like you
are having an experience. You feel like you are an agent that is appropriating an experience.
There is a protagonist in the movie of your life and it is you. It's not just the movie.
Right? It's like the every like there are sights and sounds and sensations and thoughts
and emotions and this whole
cacophony of experience, of felt experience, of felt experience of embodiment.
But there seems to be a rider on the horse, or a passenger in the body.
People don't feel truly identical to their bodies, down to their toes.
They sort of feel like they have bodies. They feel like their minds in bodies.
And that feels like a self, that feels like me.
And again, this gets very paradoxical when you talk about the experience of being in
relationship to yourself or talking to yourself, you know, giving yourself a pep talk.
I mean, if you're the one talking, why are you also the one listening?
Why do you need the pep talk?
And why does it work if you're the one giving the pep talk?
Or if I said, where are my keys?
Looking for my keys, why do I think the superfluous thought, where are my keys?
I know I'm looking for the fucking keys.
I'm the one looking, who am I telling that we need now to look for the keys?
So that duality is weird.
But leave that aside.
There's this sense, and this becomes very vivid
when people try to learn to meditate.
Most people, they start by, they start, they close their eyes
and they're told to pay attention to an object like the breath.
So you close your eyes and you pay attention to the breath
and you can feel it at the tip of your nose or the rising fallen of your abdomen and your your
Pay attention and you feel something vague there. And then you think, I thought, well, why the breath? Why am I? Why am I paying attention to the breath? What's so special about the breath? And then you then you then you notice your thinking and you're not paying attention to the breath anymore. And then you then you realize, okay, the practice is, okay,
I should notice thoughts and then I should come back to the breath. But this starting point
is the of the conventional starting point of feeling like you are an agent very likely in your head,
a locus of consciousness, a locus of attention that can strategically pay attention to certain parts of
experience. I can focus on the breath and then I get lost in thought and now I can come back to the
breath and I can open my eyes and I can, I'm over here behind my face looking out at a world
that's other than me and there's this kind of subject object perception. And that is the default starting point of selfhood, of subjectivity. And
married to that is the sense that I can decide what to do next. I am an agent who can pay
attention to the cup. I can listen to sounds. There are certain things that I can't control.
Certain things are happening to me and I just can't control them.
So for instance, if someone asks,
well, can you not hear a sound, right?
Like, don't hear the next sound.
Don't hear anything for a second
or don't hear, don't hear,
I'm snapping my fingers, don't hear this.
Where's your free will?
We'll just stop this from coming in.
You realize, okay, wait a minute.
My abundant freedom does not extend
to something as simple as just being able to pay attention
to something else than this.
Okay, well, so that I'm not that kind of free agent,
but at least I can decide what I'm gonna do next.
And I'm gonna pick up this water, right?
And there's a feeling of identification with the impulse, with
the intention, with the thought that occurs to you, with the feeling of speaking, like,
you know, what am I going to say next? Well, I'm saying it. So here, here goes, this is
me. It feels like I'm the thinker. I'm the, I'm the one who's in control, but all of that is born of not really paying close attention
to what it's like to be you. And so this is where meditation comes in or this is where
again, you can get it this conceptually. You can unravel the notion of free will just by
thinking certain thoughts, but you can't
feel that it doesn't exist unless you can pay close attention to how thoughts and intentions
arise.
So the way to unravel it conceptually is just to realize, okay, I didn't make myself,
I didn't make my genes, I didn't make my brain, I didn't make the environmental influences
that impinged upon this system for the last 54 years that have produced
my brain in precisely the state. It's in right now, such, I'm with all of the receptor weightings
and densities. And, you know, it's just, I'm exactly the machine I am right now through no
fault of of my own as the experiencing itself. I get no credit and I get no blame for the genetics
and the environmental influences here. And yet those are the only things that can
contrive to produce my next thought or impulse or or moment of behavior. And if you were going to
add something magical to that clockwork,
like an immortal soul,
you can also notice that you didn't produce your soul, right?
You can't account for the fact that you don't have the soul
of someone who doesn't like any of the things you like
or wasn't interested in any of the things you were interested in
or was a psychopath or had an IQ of 40.
I mean, there's nothing about that
that the person who believes in a soul
can claim to have controlled.
And yet that is also totally dispositive
of whatever happens next.
But everything you've described now,
maybe you can correct me,
but it kind of speaks to the materialistic nature
of the hardware.
But even if you add magical ectoplasm software, you didn't produce that either.
I know, but if we can think about the actual computation running on the hardware and running
on the software, there's something you said recently which you think of culture as an operating system.
So if we just remove ourselves a little bit from the conception of human civilization being
a collection of humans and rather us just being a distributed computation system on which there's
some kind of operating system running and then the computation that's running is the actual thing that generates the interactions, the communications, and maybe
even free will, the experiences of all those free will. Do you ever think of, do you ever
try to reframe the world in that way where it's like ideas are just using us, thoughts are
using individual nodes in the system and and they're just jumping around,
and they also have a ability to generate experiences so that we can push those ideas along.
And basically, the main organisms here are the thoughts, not the humans.
Yeah, but then that erodes the boundary between self and world.
So then there's no self,
really, really integrate itself
to have any kind of will at all.
Like if you're just a memeplex,
I mean, if you're just a collection of memes,
and I mean, we're all kind of like currents,
like eddies in this river of ideas, right?
So it's like, and it seems to have structure,
but there's no real boundary between that part
of the flow of water and the rest.
I mean, if you are, and I would say that much
of our mind answers to this kind of description,
I mean, so much of our mind has been,
it's obviously not self-generated, and it's not, it's not,
it's not going to find it by looking in the brain. It's, it is the result of culture largely,
but also, you know, it's, it's, it's, the genes on one side and culture on the other, meeting to allow for
manifestations of mind that aren't actually bounded by the
person in any clear sense. I mean, just the example I often
use here, but there's so many others is just the fact that we're
following the rules of English grammar to whatever degree we are.
It's not that we certainly haven't consciously represented these rules for ourselves.
We haven't invented these rules.
We haven't, I mean, there are norms of language use that we couldn't even specify because
we haven't, you know, we're not grammarians, we're not, we haven't studied
this. We don't even have the right concepts. And yet we're following these rules and we're
noticing, you know, we're noticing as, you know, an error when we fail to follow these rules.
And virtually every other cultural norm is like that. I mean, these are not things we've invented. You can consciously decide to scrutinize
them and override them. But I mean, just think of any social situation where you're with other people
and you're behaving in ways that are culturally know, you're not being wild animals together. You're following, you have some expectation of how you shake a person's hand and how
you deal with, with implements on a table, how you have a meal together. Obviously, this
can change from culture to culture and, and people can be shocked by how different those
things are, right? We, you know, we, we all have foods we find disgusting, but in some
country's dog is not one of those foods, right? And, and yet, you know, you and I presumably
would be horrified to be served dog. Those are not norms that we're, they are outside of
us in some way. And they're, yet they're, they're felt very viscerally. I mean, they're certainly felt in their violation
You know if you are just imagine you're you're in
Somebody's home you're eating something that tastes great to you and you happen to be in Vietnam or wherever
You know you didn't realize dog was potentially on the menu and you find out that you've just eaten
10 bites of what is
you know really a Cock or spaniel, and
you feel as instantaneous urge to vomit, right, based on an idea, right?
Like, you did not, you're not the author of that norm that gave you such a powerful experience
of its violation.
And I'm sure we can trace the moment in your history,
vaguely where it sort of got in.
I mean, very early on as kids,
you realize you're treating dogs as pets
and not as food or as potential food.
But yeah, no, it's,
but the point you just made opens us to like we are totally permeable
to a sea of mind. Yeah, but if we take the metaphor of the distributed computing systems,
each individual node is, is part of performing a much larger computation. But nevertheless,
performing a much larger computation, but nevertheless, is in charge of doing the scheduling. So assuming it's Linux, is doing the scheduling of processes and is constantly alternating
them.
That note is making those choices.
That note sure how believes it has free will and actually has free will because it's
making those hard choices, but the choices ultimately are part of much larger computation that you can't control. Isn't it possible for that node
to still be that human node is still making the choice?
Well, yeah, it is. So I'm not saying that your body isn't really doing things, right?
And some of those things can be conventionally thought of as choices,
right? So it's like, I can choose to reach and it's like, it's not being imposed on me.
That would be a different experience. So there's an experience of, you know, there's definitely
a difference between voluntary and involuntary action. So that has to get conserved by any
account of the mind that that Jettison's free will.
You still have to admit that there's a difference between a tremor that I can't control
and a purposeful motor action that I can control and I can initiate on demand.
It's associated with intentions.
It's got efferent motor copy which is being predictive so that I can notice errors.
I have expectations.
When I reach for this, if my hand were actually to pass through the bottle because it's a hologram,
I would be surprised.
That shows that I have an expectation of just what my grasping behavior is going to be
like even before it happens.
Whereas with a tremor, you don't have the same kind of
thing going on. That's a distinction we have to make. So I am, yes, I'm really the proxy, my
intention to move, which is in fact can be subjectively felt, really is the
proximate cause of my moving. It's not coming from elsewhere in the universe. I'm not saying that.
of my moving. It's not coming from elsewhere in the universe. I'm not saying that. So in that sense, the node is really deciding to execute the subroutine now. But that's not
the feeling that has given rise to this conundrum of free will. So people feel like the crucial things that people feel like they could have done otherwise.
That's the thing.
When you run back the clock of your life, you run back the movie of your life, you flip
back the few pages in the novel of your life. They feel that at this
point, they could behave differently than they did. So like, I, but, but given, you know,
given your distributed computing example, it's either a determining fully deterministic system
or to determine deterministic system that admits of some random, you know, influence.
In either case, that's not the free will people think they have.
The free will people think they have is, damn, I shouldn't have done that.
I shouldn't have done that.
I could have done otherwise.
I should have done otherwise.
If you think about something that you deeply regret doing, or that you hold someone else
responsible for, because they really are the upstream agent in your mind of what they
did.
It's an awful thing that that person did and they shouldn't have done it.
There is a solution, and it has to be an illusion, because there's no picture of causation
that would make sense of it.
There's this illusion that if you arrange the universe exactly the way it was a moment
ago, it could have played out differently.
And the only way it could have played out differently is if there's randomness added to that, but
randomness isn't what people feel
would give them free will, right?
If you tell me that, you know, I only reach for the water bottle this time because somebody's
because there's a random number generator in there kicking off values and it finally move
my hand, that's not the feeling of authorship.
That's still not control.
You're still not making that decision.
There's actually, I don't know if you're familiar
with cellular automata.
That's a really nice visualization
of how simple rules can create incredible complexity
that it's like really dumb initial conditions
to set simple rules applied.
And eventually you watch this thing.
And if the initial
condition is correct, that you're going to have emerge something that to our perception system
looks like organisms interacting. You can construct any kinds of worlds and they're not actually
interacting. It's not, they're not actually even organisms and they certainly don't aren't making
decisions. So there's like systems you can create that
illustrate this point. The question is whether there could be
some room for, let's use in the 21st century, the term
magic, back to the black box of consciousness. Let me ask
you this way, if you're wrong about your intuition about
free will, what, and
somebody comes along to you and proves to you that you didn't, you didn't have the full
picture, what would that proof look like?
What would that, that's the problem.
That's why it's not even an illusion in, in my world, because it's, for me, it's impossible
to say what the universe would have to be like for free will
to be a thing.
It doesn't conceptually map onto any notion of causation we have, and that's unlike any
other spurious claim you might make.
If you're going to believe in ghosts, right, I understand what that claim could be.
Or like, I don't happen to believe in ghosts, but if it's not hard for me to specify what
would have to be true for ghosts to be real.
And so it is with a thousand other things like ghosts.
Right?
So like, okay, so you're telling me that when people die, there's some part of them that is not reducible at all to their biology, that lifts off them and goes elsewhere.
And it's actually the kind of thing that can linger in closets and in cupboards and actually,
it's immaterial, but by some principle of physics, we don't totally understand.
It can make sounds and knock objects and even occasionally show up so they can be visually
beheld.
It seems like a miracle, but it's just some spooky noun in the universe that we don't
understand.
Let's call it a ghost.
That's fine.
I can talk about that all day.
The reason is to believe in it, the reason reasons not to believe in it, the way we would scientifically test for it, what would have to be provable so as
to convince me that ghosts are real.
Free will isn't like that at all.
There's no description of any concatenation of causes that precedes my conscious experience
that sounds like what people think they have when they think they could have done otherwise and that they really, that they the conscious agent is really in charge.
Like if you don't know what you're going to think next, right, and you can't help but think it.
Take those two premises on board, you don't know what it's going to be, you can't stop it from coming
and until you actually know how to meditate, you can't stop yourself from fully living
out its behavioral or emotional consequences.
You have no, once you, but mindfulness, you know, arguably gives you a
another degree of freedom here. It doesn't give you free will, but it gives you some other game to play
with respect to the, the, the emotional and behavioral imperatives of thoughts. But
short of, the short of that, I mean, the reason why mindfulness doesn't give you free will is because
you can't, you know, you can't account for why in one moment mindfulness arises and in other moments it doesn't, right?
But a different process is initiated once you can practice in that way.
Well, if I could push back for a second, by the way, I just have the thought ball coming
popping up all the time of just two recent chimps are giving about the nature of consciousness.
It's kind of hilarious.
So on that thread, you know, if we were even before Einstein,
let's say before Einstein, we were to conceive about traveling
from point A to point B.
Say some point in the future,
we are able to realize through engineering away, which is consistent
with Einstein's theory that you can have wormholes.
You can travel from one point to another faster than the speed of light.
And that would, I think, completely change our conception of what it means to travel
in the physical space.
And that, like, completely transform our ability,
you talk about causality, but here,
let's just focus on what it means to travel
through physical space.
Don't you think it's possible that there will be inventions
or leaps in understanding about reality
that will allow us to see free will as actually,
us humans somehow may be linked to this idea of consciousness are actually able to be authors of our actions. It is a non-starter for me conceptually. It's a little bit like saying, could there be some breakthrough that will cause us to realize that circles are really square,
or that circles are not really round, right? No, a circle is what we mean by a perfectly round
form, right? It's not on the table to be revised. And so I was saying the same thing about consciousness So it's just like saying is there some breakthrough
That would get us to realize that consciousness is really an illusion
I'm saying no because what the experience of an illusion is as much a demonstration of what I'm calling consciousness
This is anything else right like that that is consciousness
With free will it's a similar problem.
It's like, again, it comes down to a picture of causality,
and there's just no other picture on offer.
And what's more, I know what it's like
on the experiential side to lose the thing to which it is clearly anchored.
Right? Like the feel like it doesn't feel, and this is the question that almost nobody
out, the people who are debating me on the topic of free will, I, you know, at 15 minute
intervals, I'm making a claim that I don't feel this thing and they are never become interested in
Well, what's that like like okay?
You're actually saying you don't you this this thing isn't you know
Isn't true for you empirically. It's not just because most most people who
Who don't believe in free will philosophically?
Also believe that we're condemned to experience it like they they you just you can't live without this feeling so you're actually saying you're able to experience the absence of
The illusion of free will yes, yes for our talking about whenever whenever when I said a time or
whenever you're in a set of time or is this required a lot of work and meditation or you literally able to load that into your mind and like play that right now, right now, just
in this conversation. So it's not absolutely continuous, but it's whenever I pay attention.
I would say the same thing for the elusiness of the self. And again, we
haven't talked about this. So can you still have the self and not have the free will?
No, mind the same time. Do they go at the same time? This is the same thing. They're always
holding hands when they walk out the door. They really are two sides at the same point.
Okay. But it's just it comes down to what it's like to try to get to the end of the sentence,
or what it's like to finally decide that it's been long enough
and now I need another sip of water, right?
If I'm paying attention, now if I'm not paying attention,
I'm probably captured by some other thought
and that feels a certain way, right?
And so that's not, it's not vivid,
but if I try to make vivid this experience of just
okay, I'm finally going to experience free will. I'm going to notice my free will, right? Like it's
got to be here. Everyone's talking about it. Where is it? I'm going to pay attention to I'm going to
look for it. And I'm going to I'm going to create a circumstance that is is where it has to be most
robust, right? I'm not rushed to make this decision. I'm not, it's not a reflex.
I'm not under pressure.
I'm gonna take as long as I want.
I'm going to decide.
It's not trivial.
So it's not just like reaching with my left hand
or reach with my right hand.
People don't like those examples for some reason.
Let's make a big decision.
Like, where should,
what should my next podcast be on?
Who do I invite on the next podcast?
What does it like to make that decision?
When I pay attention, there is no evidence of free will
anywhere in sight.
It doesn't feel like it feels profoundly mysterious
to be going back between two people.
Is it gonna be person A or person B?
Got all my reasons for A and all my reasons why not?
All my reasons for B and that there's some math going on there
that I'm not not even privy to
where certain concerns are trumping others.
And at a certain point, I just decide.
And yes, you can say I'm the node in the network that has made that decision.
Absolutely.
I'm not saying it's being piped to me from elsewhere, but the feeling of what it's like to make
that decision is totally without a sense, a real sense of agency, because something simply emerges.
It's literally as tenuous as, what's the next sound I'm going to hear?
Or what's the next thought that's going to appear?
And it just, something just appears.
And if something appears to cancel that something, like if I say,
I'm going to invite her and then I'm about to send the email and I think, oh, no, no, no, I can't, I can't do that. There was that thing in the New York article I read that I got to talk to this guy,
right? That pivot at the last second, you can make it as as muscular as you want.
It always just comes out of the darkness.
It's always mysterious.
So, right, when you try to pin a doll, you really can't ever find that free will.
If you construct an experiment for yourself and you're trying to really find that moment
when you're actually making that controlled author decision, it's a...
And we're still, we're still, we know at this point that if we were
scanning your brain in some ex you know podcast guest choosing experiment right we know at this
point we would be privy to who you're going to pick before you are you the conversation if we
could again this is operationally a little hard to conduct, but there's enough
data now to know that something very much like this cartoon is, in fact, true, and will
ultimately be undeniable for people.
They'll be able to do it on themselves with some app.
If you're deciding where to go for dinner or who to have on your podcast or ultimately
who to marry, what city to move to?
You can make it as big or as small a decision as you want.
We could be scanning your brain in real time.
At a point where you still think you're uncommitted, we would be able to say with arbitrary accuracy.
All right, Lexus, he's moving to Austin, right?
I didn't choose that.
Yeah, he was, it was, it was going to be Austin or it was going to be Miami.
He got, he's catching one of these two waves, but it's going to be Austin.
And at a point where you subjectively, if we, if we could ask you, you would say,
no, I'm still, I'm still working over here. I'm still would say, no, I'm still working over here.
I'm still thinking, I'm still considering my options.
And you've spoken to this, in you thinking about
other stuff in the world, it's been very useful
to step away from the solution of free will.
And you argue that it's probably makes a better world
because you can be compassionate and empathetic towards others.
And toward oneself, and toward myself, I mean, do radically toward others in that literally
hate makes no sense anymore.
I mean, there are certain things you can really be worried about, really want to oppose, really.
I mean, I'm not saying you'd never have to kill another person, like, it's self-defense,
it's still a thing, right?
But the idea that you're never confronting anything other than a force of nature in the
end goes out the window, right?
Or does go out the window when you really pay attention.
I'm not saying that this would be easy to grok if someone kills a member of your family.
I'm not saying you can just listen to my 90 minutes on free will and then you should be
able to see that person as identical to a grizzly bear or a virus.
Because we are so evolved to deal with one another as fellow primates and as agents.
But it's, yeah, when you're talking about the possibility of, you know, Christian, you
know, truly Christian forgiveness, right?
It's like, like, as testified to by, you know, various saints of that flavor over the millennia, the doorway to that
is to recognize that no one really at bottom made themselves.
And therefore everyone, what we're seeing really
are differences in luck in the world.
We're seeing people who are very, very lucky
to have had good parents and good genes
and being good societies and good opportunities
and to be intelligent and to be, you know,
not sociopathic.
Like none of it is on them.
They're just reaping the fruits of one lottery after another and then showing up in the world on that basis.
And then so it is with every malevolent asshole out there, right? He or she didn't make themself. Even if that weren't possible, the utility for self-compassion is also enormous because
it's when you just look at what it's like to regret something or to feel shame about
something or feel deep embarrassment.
These states of mind are some of the most deranging experiences anyone has. And they're reacting, the indelible reaction to them.
You know, the memory of the thing you said,
the memory of the wedding toast you gave 20 years ago
that was just mortifying, right?
The fact that can still make you hate yourself, right?
And like that psychologically, that is a knot
that can be untied.
Right.
Be free of self-sam.
So clearly, you gave a great toast.
It was my toast that mortified.
Oh, no, that's not what I was referring to.
I'm deeply appreciative of in the same way
that you're referring to of every moment I'm alive,
but I'm also powered by self-hate often.
Like several things in this conversation already
that I've spoken, I'll be thinking about,
like that was the dumbest thing
you're sitting in front of Sam Harris and you said that.
So like that, but that somehow creates
a richer experience for me.
Like I've actually come to accept
that as a nice feature however my brain was built.
I don't think I want to let go of that. Well, the thing you, I think the thing you want to let go of is
the suffering associated with it. So, like, so for me, so, it's just very psychologically
and ethically all of this is very interesting. So, don't think we should ever get rid of things like anger.
So hatred is, hatred is divorceable from anger in the sense that hatred is this enduring
state where, you know, whether you're hating somebody else or hating yourself, it is just,
it is toxic and durable and ultimately useless, right?
Like it becomes, it becomes self-nullifying, right?
Like you become less capable as a person to solve any of your problems.
It's not instrumental in solving the problem that is, that is, is occasioning all this hatred.
An anger, for the most part, isn't either except as a signal of salience that there's a problem.
So if somebody does something that makes me angry, that just promotes this situation to
conscious attention in a way that is stronger than might not really caring about it.
And there are things that I think should make us angry in the world.
And there's the behavior of other people that should make us angry because we should respond
to it.
And so it is with yourself.
If I do something, you know, as a parent, if I do something stupid that harms one of
my daughters, right?
My experience of myself and my beliefs about free will close the door to my saying, well,
I should have done otherwise in the sense that if I to my saying, well, I should have done otherwise.
In the sense that if I could go back in time,
I would have actually effectively done otherwise.
No, I would do, given the same causes and conditions,
I would do that thing a trillion times in a row, right?
But regret and feeling bad about an outcome
are still important to capacities. Because like, yeah, you know,
I desperately want my daughters to be happy and healthy. So if I've done something, you know,
if I crash the car when they're in the car and they get injured, right? And I do it because I was
trying to change the song on my playlist or something stupid, I'm going to feel like a total asshole.
song on my playlist or something stupid, I'm going to feel like a total asshole. How long
do I stew in that feeling of regret? What utility is there to extract out of this error
signal? And then what do I do? We're always faced with the question of what to do next, right? And and how to best do that thing, that necessary thing next. And how much well-being can we experience while doing it? Like, how
miserable do you need to be to solve your problems in life and to solve the problems of,
to help solve the problems of people closest to you. How miserable do you need to be to get through your to-do list today?
Ultimately, I think you can be deeply happy going through all of it, right?
And not even navigating moments that are scary and really destabilizing to ordinary people.
And I think, again, I'm always up at the edge of my own capacities here.
And all kinds of things that stress me out and worry me.
And especially if it's, you know, tell me it's something with, you know, the health of one of my kids, you know,
it's very hard for me, like,
it's very hard for me to be truly
a quantumist around that.
But equanimity is so useful
the moment you're in response mode, right?
Cause I mean, the ordinary experience for me
of responding to what seems like a medical
emergency for one of my kids is to be obviously super energized by concern to
respond to that emergency. But then once I'm responding all of my fear and
agitation and worry and oh my god what if this is really something terrible
but finding any of those thoughts compelling all that only diminishes my capacity as a father
to be good company while we navigate this really turbulent passage.
As you're saying this actually one guy comes to my which is Elon Musk.
One of the really
Impressive things to me was to observe how many dramatic things he has to deal with throughout the day Hmm at work, but also if you look through his life
family too
And how he's very much actually as you're describing basically a practitioner of this way of thought which is
You're not in control. You're basically
responding no matter how traumatic the event and there's no reason to sort of linger on the
yeah, I think the negative feelings around that. Well, so I mean, he but he's in a very specific
situation, which is which is unlike
situation, which is unlike normal life, even his normal life, but normal life for most people because when you just think of like, you know, he's running so many businesses and
he's, they're very, they're not, they're non, highly non-standard businesses.
So what he's seen is everything that gets to him is some kind of emergency.
Like, it wouldn't be getting to him.
If it needs his attention, there's a fire somewhere.
So he's constantly responding to fires that have to be put out.
So there's no default expectation that there shouldn't be a fire.
But in our normal lives, we live.
Most of us who are lucky, not everyone, obviously, on earth,
but most of us who are at some kind of cruising altitude in terms of our lives, where we're reasonably healthy and life is
reasonably orderly, and the political apparatus around us is reasonably functional, functional,
functional.
So I said, functionable for the first time in my life, through no free will of my own,
say like, I noticed those errors, and they not feel like like agency. And nor does the success of an utterance feel like agency.
When you're looking at normal human life, right, where you're just trying to be happy
and healthy and get your work done, there's this default expectation that there shouldn't be fires.
People shouldn't be getting sick or injured.
You know, we shouldn't be losing vast amounts
of our resources.
We should, like, so when something really stark
like that happens, people don't have a,
people don't have that muscle that they've,
like I've been responding
to emergency, emergencies all day long, you know, seven days a week in business mode.
And so I have a very thick skin.
This is just another one.
What it was like, I'm not expecting anything else when I wake up in the morning.
No, we have this default sense that, I mean, honestly, most of us have the default sense
that we aren't going to die, right? Or that we should, like, most of us have the default sense that we aren't gonna die, right?
Or that we should, like, maybe we're not gonna die.
Right, like, like, death denial really is a thing.
You know, we're, we're, because, and you can see it,
just like I can see when I reach for this bottle
that I was expecting it to be solid,
because when it isn't solid, when it's a hologram,
and I just, my fists closes on itself
I'm damn surprised people are damn surprised to find out that they're going to die that to find out that they're sick to find out that someone
They love has died or is going to die. So it's like the the fact that we are
Surprised by any of that shows us that we're living in a mode that is, we're
perpetually diverting ourselves from some facts that should be obvious, right?
And the more salient we can make them, the more, I mean, the case of death,
it's a matter of being able to get one's priorities straight.
I mean, the moment, again, this is hard for everybody,
even those who are really in the business
of paying attention to it.
But the moment you realize that every circumstance is finite,
you've got a certain number of, you know, you've got whatever it is.
8,000 days left in a normal span of life.
And 8,000 is a, it sounds like a big number.
It's not that big a number, right?
And then you can decide how you want to go through life
and how you want to experience each one of those days.
And so I was back to where our jumping off point, I would argue that you don't want to
feel self-hatred ever. I would argue that you don't want to really really
grasp on to any of those moments where you are taking, internalizing the fact that
you just made an error, you embarrassed yourself, that something didn't go the way you wanted
it to.
I think you want to treat all of those moments very, very lightly.
You want to extract the actionable information.
It's something to learn.
Oh, I learned that when I prepare in a certain way,
it works better than when I prepare in some other way
or don't prepare.
Like, yes, less than learned, and do that differently.
But yeah, I mean, so many of us have spent so much time
with a very dysfunctional and hostile and even hateful
inner voice governing a lot of our self-talk and a lot of just our default way of being
with ourselves.
I mean, the privacy of our own minds were in the company of a real jerk,
a lot of the time. And that can't help but affect, I mean, forget about just your own sense of
well-being. It can't help but limit what you're capable of in the world with other people.
I like to really think about that. I just take pride that my jerk, my inner voice jerk,
is much less of a jerk than like somebody like David Goggins, who's just like screaming in his ear constantly.
So I just, I have a relative kind of perspective that it's not as bad as that at least.
Well, having a sense of humor also helps. It's just like it's not, the stakes are never quite what you think they are. And even when they are, I mean, just the difference between seeing,
being able to see the comedy of it rather than,
because again, there's this sort of dark star
of self-absorption that pulls everything into it, right?
And if that's the algorithm, you don't want to run.
So it's like, you just want, you just want things to be good.
So like just push, push the concern out there.
Like, like, like, like, not have the collapse of, oh my God,
what does this say about me?
It's just like, let's, what does this say about,
how do we make this meal that we're all having together
as, as fun as, and as useful as possible.
And you're saying in terms of propulsion systems,
you recommend humor is a good spaceship
to escape the gravitational field of that darkness.
Well, that certainly helps.
Yeah.
Well, let me ask you a little bit about ego and fame,
which is very interesting the way you're talking,
given that you're one of the biggest intellects, living
intellects and minds of our time, and there's a lot of people that really love you and
almost elevate you to a certain kind of status where you're like the guru.
I'm surprised you didn't show up in a robe, in fact.
Is there a hoodie?
That's not the highest status garment one can wear now. I'm surprised you didn't show up in a robe, in fact. Is there a hoodie?
That's not the highest status garment one can wear now.
The socially acceptable version of the robe.
If you're a billionaire, you were a hoot.
Is there something you can say about managing the effects of fame on your own mind, on
not creating this, you know, when you wake up in the morning, when you look up in the mirror,
how do you get your ego not to grow exponentially? Your conception of self-to-grow exponentially,
because there's so many people feeding that. Is there something to be said about this?
It's really not hard, because I mean, I feel like I have a pretty clear sense of my strengths and
weaknesses.
I don't feel like it's...
Honestly, I don't feel like I suffer from much grandiosity.
I just have a...
There's so many things I'm not good at.
There's so many things I will give in the remaining 8,000 days at best. things I'm not good at. There's so many things I will, you know, given the remaining 8,000 days at best,
I will never get good at.
I would love to be good at these things.
So it's just, it's easy to feel diminished
by comparison with the, the talents of others.
Do you remind yourself of all the things
that you're not competent in?
Is that what it's like?
What, they're just on display for me every day that I appreciate the talents of others.
But you notice them.
I'm sure Stalin and Hitler did not notice all the ways in which they were.
I mean, this is why absolute power corrupts absolutely.
You stop noticing the things in which you're ridiculous and wrong.
Right.
No, I am not to compare you to someone.
Yeah, well, I'm sure there's an interstallion in there
somewhere.
Well, we all have that.
Hopefully you carry a baby stall with us.
He wears better clothes.
And I'm not gonna grow that mustache.
Those concerns don't map on,
they don't map onto me for a bunch of reasons,
but one is I also have a very peculiar audience.
Like I'm just,
I've been appreciating this for a few years,
but it's, I'm just now beginning to understand
that there are many people who have audiences of my size
or larger that have a very different experience
of having an audience than I do.
I have curated for better or worse a peculiar audience.
And the net result of that is virtually any time
I say anything of substance,
something like half of my audience, my real audience,
not haters from outside my audience,
but my audience is just revolts over it.
They just like, oh my god, I can't believe you said it.
Like you use your such a schmuck, right?
They revolt with rigor and intellectuals' sophistication.
Well, or not, or not.
It's a revolt.
It's a revolt.
But people who are like, so it's, I mean, the clearest case is, you know, I have an
on, I have whatever audience I have and then Trump appears on the scene.
And I discovered that something like 20% of my audience just went straight to Trump and
couldn't believe I didn't follow them there.
They were just a gas that I didn't see that Trump was obviously exactly what we needed
for, for, for, to steer the ship of state for the next four years,
and then four years beyond that.
So, like, so that's one example.
So whenever I said anything about Trump,
I would hear from people who loved more or less
everything else I was up to and had for years.
But everything I said about Trump
just gave me pure pain from this quadrant of my audience.
But then, the same thing happens when I say something
about the arrangement of the far left.
Anything I say about wokeness, right, or identity politics,
same kind of punishment signal.
From, again, people who are core to my audience.
Like I've read all your books, I'm using your meditation app. I love what you
say about science, but you are so wrong about politics. I'm starting to think you're a racist
asshole for everything you said about identity politics. And there's so many, the free will
topic is just like this. I just love what I'm saying about consciousness and the mind. They love to hear me talk about physics with physicists.
It's all good.
This free will stuff is I cannot believe you don't see how wrong you are.
What a fucking embarrassment you are.
But I'm starting to notice that there are other people who don't have this experience of
having an audience because they have, I'm just take the Trump woke dichotomy.
They just castigated Trump the same way I did,
but they never say anything bad about the far left.
So they never get this punishment signal,
or you flip it.
They're all about the insanity of critical race theory
now, they'll, we connect all those dots the same way, but they never really
specified what was wrong with Trump, or they thought there
was a lot right with Trump, and they, they got all the
pleasure of that. And so they have much more homogenized
audiences. And so my, my experience is of just to come
back to, you know, this experience of fame or quasi fame.
And truth is not real fame, but there's an audience there.
It's now an experience where basically whatever I put out, I notice a ton of negativity coming back at me.
And it is what it is.
Now it's like I used to think, wait a minute, there's got to be some way for me to communicate
more clearly here.
So it's not to get this kind of lunatic response from my own audience, from people who are
showing all the signs of, we've been here for
years for a reason, right?
These are not just trolls.
And so I think, okay, I'm going to take 10 more minutes and really just tell you what
it should be absolutely clear about what's wrong with Trump.
Right?
I've done this a few times, but I got a thing I got to do this again.
Or wait a minute, how are they not getting that these episodes
of police violence are so obviously different from one another that you can't describe all
of them to, you know, yet another racist maniac on the police force, you know, killing someone
based on his racism? Last time I talked, spoke about this, it was pure pain, but I've got
just got to try again now at a certain point
I mean I'm starting to feel like all right. I just I have to be
I have to cease again. It comes back to this expectation that there shouldn't be fires
Like I feel like if I could just play my game
impeccably the people who actually care what I think will follow me when I hit Trump and hit free
will and hit the woke and hit whatever it is, how we should respond to the coronavirus.
You know, vaccines, you know, are they a thing, right?
Like, there's such derangement in our information space now that, I mean, I guess, you know, some
people could be getting
more of this than I expect, but I just noticed that, you know, many of our friends who are
in the same game have more homogenized audiences and don't get, I mean, they've successfully
filtered out the people who are going to despise them on this next topic.
And, you know, I would imagine you have a different experience of having a podcast
than I do at this point. I'm sure you get haters, but I would imagine you're more streamlined.
I actually don't like the word haters because it kind of
presumes that it puts people in a bin. I think we're all Have like baby haters inside of us and we just apply them as some people
Enjoy doing that more than others for particular periods of time
I think you're gonna almost see
Hating on the internet as a video game that you just play and it's fun
but then you can put it down and walk away and
No, I certainly have a bunch of people that are very critical. I can list all the ways. But does it feel like it on any given topic? Does it feel like it's an actual title surge,
where it's like 30% of your audience, and then the other 30% of your audience
from podcast to podcast? No, no, no. That's happening to me all the time now.
Well, I'm more with, I don't know what you think about this. I mean, Joe Rogan doesn't read comments or doesn't read comments much.
And the argument he made to me is that he already has
like a self-critical person inside.
Right.
Like, and I'm going to have to think about what you said in this conversation,
but I have this very harshly self-critical person inside as well.
Yeah, I do.
I don't need more fuel.
I don't need...
I don't know.
I do sometimes, this way, I check negativity occasionally, not too often.
I sometimes need to put a little bit more like coals into the fire, but not too much.
But I already have that self-critical engine that keeps me in check. I just, I wonder,
you know, a lot of people who gain more and more fame lose that ability to be self-critical.
I guess because they lose the audience that can be critical towards them.
You know, I do follow Joe's advice much more than I ever have here. I don't look at comments very often, and I'm probably using Twitter,
5% as much as I used to.
I mean, I really just get in and out on Twitter
and spend very little time in my ad mentions.
It does, in some ways, it feels like a loss
because occasionally I see something super intelligent there.
Like, I'll check my Twitter ad mentions and someone will have said, oh, have you read
this article? And it's like, man, that was just that was like the best article sent to
me in a month, right? So it's like to have not have looked and to not have seen that. That's
um, that's a loss. So, but it does, um, at this point a little goes a long way, because it's not that it, for me now,
I mean, this could sound like a fairly
Stalinistic immunity to criticism.
It's not so much that these voices of hate turn on my inner
hate or more.
It's more that I just, I get a,
what I fear is a false sense
of humanity, like that, like I feel like I'm too online, and online is selecting for
this performative outrage in everybody, everyone's, you know, signaling to an audience when they
trash you. And I get a dark, I'm getting a, you know, a mis-entharopic, you know, cut of just what is like out there.
And because when you meet people in real life, they're great.
You know, they're all rather often great, you know.
And it takes a lot to have anything like a Twitter encounter in real life with a living
person.
And that's, I think it's much better to have that as one's,
default sense of what it's like to be with people than what one gets on,
on social media or on YouTube comment threats.
You've produced a special episode with Rob Reed on your podcast recently.
And how bioengineering of viruses is going to destroy human civilization. So
or could could one clear. Sorry, the conference there. But in the 21st century, what do you think,
especially after having thought through that angle, what do you think is the biggest threat to the survival of the human species?
I can give you the full menu if you'd like.
Yeah, well, no, I would put the biggest threat at the, at another level out, the meta-threat is our inability to agree about what the threats actually are and to converge
on strategies for responding to them. So I view COVID as, among other things, a truly terrifyingly
failed dress rehearsal for something
far worse. Right.
And COVID is just about as benign as it could have been and still
have been worse than the flu when you're talking about a global
pandemic. Right. So it's just it's, you know, it's going to
kill a few million people that are it looks like it's killed
about three million people. Maybe it'll kill a few million more unless something gets away from us with a variant that's
much worse or we really don't play our cards, right?
But I mean, the general shape of it is it really is on in the end, it's not
what would in fact be possible and is in fact probably inevitable something with orders
of magnitude more lethality than that.
And it's just so obvious, we are totally unprepared. Right. We are running
this epidemiological experiment of linking the entire world together. And then also now,
you per the podcast that Rob Reed did, democratizing the tech that will allow us to do this to
engineer pandemics. Right. And more and more people will be able to engineer synthetic
viruses that will be by the sheer fact that they would have been engineered with malicious intent,
you know, worse than COVID. And we're still living in, you know, to speak specifically about
the United States. We have a country here where we can't even agree that this is a thing.
You know, like that COVID, I mean, there's still people who think that this is basically
a hoax designed to control people.
And, I mean, strangers still, there are people who will acknowledge that COVID is real and they'll look, they don't think the deaths
have been faked or misascribed.
But they think that they're far happier
the prospect of catching COVID than they are
of getting vaccinated for COVID, right?
They're not worried about COVID,
they're worried about vaccines for COVID, right? They're not worried about COVID, they're worried about vaccines for COVID.
And the fact that we just can't converge in a conversation
that has, we've now had a year to have with one another
on just what is the ground truth here?
How, what's happened?
Why has it happened?
What's the, how safe is it to get COVID?
At, you know, in every cohort in the population and how safe
for the vaccines?
And the fact that there's still an air of mystery around all of this for much of our society
does not bode well when you're talking about solving any other problem that may yet kill
us.
Do you think convergence grows with the magnitude of the threat?
So it's possible except,
I feel like we have tipped into,
because when the threat of COVID looked the most dire,
right, when we had,
when we were seeing reports from Italy
that look like, you know,
the beginning of a zombie movie, right?
It could have been much, much worse.
Yeah, like this is like, this is lethal, right?
Like your ICUs are gonna fill up in, like this is like, this is lethal, right?
Like your ICUs are going to fill up in, like, you're 14 days behind us.
You're going to, your, your medical system is, is in danger of collapse.
Lock the fuck down.
We have people refusing to, to do anything sane in the face of that.
Like, and people fundamentally thinking it's not going to get here.
Like, who knows what's going on in Italy, but it has no implications for what's going to
go on in New York in a mere six days.
And now it kicks off in New York and you've got people in the middle of the country thinking
it's no factor.
It's not.
That's just big city.
Those are big city problems or they're faking it or I mean it just the
the the layer of politics has become so dysfunctional for us that even and even in what in the presence of
a pandemic that looked legitimately scary there in the beginning. I mean it's not to say that it
hasn't been devastating for everyone who's been directly affected by it and it's not to say that it hasn't been devastating for everyone who's been directly affected by it, and it's not to say it can't get worse. But here, you
know, for a very long time, we have known that we were in a situation that is more benign
than the, that was, that was seemed like the worst case scenario as it was kicking off,
especially in Italy. And so still, yeah, it's quite possible that if we saw the asteroid hurtling toward Earth
and everyone agreed that it's going to make impact and we're all going to die, then we
could get off Twitter and actually build the rockets that are going to divert the asteroid
from its Earth crossing path. And we could do something pretty heroic.
But when you talk about anything else that isn't that's slower moving than that, I mean,
something like the climate change.
I think there's, I think the prospect of our converging on a solution to climate change, purely based on political persuasion,
is non-existent at this point.
I just think to bring Elon back into this, the way to deal with climate change is to create
technology that everyone wants, that is better than all the carbon producing technology.
And then we just transition because you want,
you want an electric car the same way you wanted a smartphone
or you want anything else.
And you're working totally with the grain of people's
selfishness and short-term thinking.
The idea that we're gonna convince the better part
of humanity, they climb a change is an emergency that they have to
make sacrifices to respond to.
Given what's happened around COVID, I just think that's the fantasy of a fantasy.
But speaking of Elon, I have a bunch of positive things that I want to say here in response to
you, but you're opening so many threads. But let me pull one of them, which is
AI, both you and Elon think that with AI, you're so many demons,
something a demon, maybe not in those poetic terms, but...
Well, potentially. Let me say it. Two very three very parsimonious assumptions, I think, here.
It was scientifically parsimonious assumptions.
Get me there.
Any of which could be wrong, but it just seems like the weight of the evidence is on their side.
One is that it comes back to this topic of substrate independence, right?
Anyone who's in the business of producing intelligent machines must believe ultimately that there's
nothing magical about having a computer made of meat. You can do this in the kinds of, you know,
materials we're using now. And there's no special something that presents a real impediment to producing human level intelligence in
silico. Again, assumption, I'm sure there are a few people who still think there is something magical about biological systems, but leave that aside.
Given that assumption, and given the assumption that we just continue making incremental progress,
doesn't have to be Moore's law, it just has to be progress, that just doesn't stop.
At a certain point, we'll get to human level intelligence and beyond.
And human level intelligence, I think,
is also clearly a mirage because anything that's human level is going to be superhuman
by unless we decide to dumb it down, right? I mean, my phone is already superhuman as a calculator,
right? So why would we make the human level AI, you know, just as good as me as a calculator?
you know, just as good as me as a calculator. So I think we'll very, if we continue to make progress,
we will be in the presence of superhuman competence
for any active intelligence or cognition
that we care to prioritize.
It's not to say that we'll create everything
that a human could do, maybe we'll leave certain things out. But anything that we care about, and we care about a lot,
and we certainly care about anything that produces a lot of power, you know, that we care about
scientific insights and ability to produce new technology and all of that. We'll have
something that's superhuman. And then the final assumption is just that
there have to be ways to do that
that are not aligned with a happy coexistence
with these now more powerful entities than ourselves.
So, and I would guess,
and this is a, you know, is a ride or to that assumption, there are probably
more ways to do it badly than to do it perfectly. That is perfectly aligned with our well-being.
And when you think about the consequences of non-alignment, when you think about, you're
now in the presence of something that is more intelligent than you are,
which is the same more competent, unless you've, and obviously there are cartoon pictures of this
where we could just, you know, this is just an off switch and we could just turn off the off switch
or they're tethered to something that makes them, you know, our slaves in perpetuity,
even though they're more intelligent. But that
strike, those scenarios strike me as a failure to imagine what is actually entailed by greater
intelligence. Right? So if you imagine something that's legitimately more intelligent than
you are, and you're now in relationship to it, right? You're in the presence of this
thing, and it is autonomous in all kinds of ways because it had to be to be more intelligent than you are. And you built it to be to be all of those things.
We just can't find ourselves in a negotiation with something more intelligent than we are.
You know, and we can't, so we have to have found the the subset of ways to build this
the subset of ways to build these machines that are perpetually amenable to our saying, oh, that's not what we meant. That's not what we intended. Could you stop doing that?
Just come back over here and do this thing that we actually want. And for them to care,
for them to be tethered to our own sense of our own well-being, such that their utility
function is, the primary utility function is to have, I think Stuart Russell's cartoon
plan is to figure out how to tether them to a utility function that has our own estimation of what's
going to improve our well-being as its master reward.
So it's like that all that this thing can get as intelligent as it can get, but it only
ever really wants to figure out how to make our lives better by our own view of better.
Now, not to say there wouldn't be a conversation about, you know, I mean, because all kinds
of things we're not seeing clearly about what is better.
And if we were in the presence of a genie or an oracle, they could really tell us what
is better.
Well, then we presumably would want to hear that.
And we would modify our sense of what to do next
in conversation with these minds.
But I just feel like it is a failure of imagination
to think that being in relationship
to something more intelligent than yourself isn't in most cases a circumstance
of real peril.
Because it is.
And just to think of how everything on earth has to, if they could think about their relationship
to us, birds could think about what we're doing, right? They
would, I mean, the bottom line is, they're always in danger of our discovering that there's
something we care about more than birds, right? But there's something we want that disregards
the, the wellbeing of birds. And, and, and, you know. Obviously, much of our behavior is inscrutable to them.
Occasionally, we pay attention to them.
Occasionally, we withdraw our attention.
Occasionally, we just kill them all for reasons they can't possibly understand.
But if we're building something more intelligent than ourselves, by definition, we're building
something whose horizons of value and cognition can exceed our own and in ways where we can't
necessarily foresee, again, perpetually, that they don't just wake up one day and decide,
okay, well, these humans need to disappear. So I think I agree with most of the initial things you said, what I don't necessarily
agree with, you might, of course, nobody knows, but that the more likely set of trajectories
that we're going to take are going to be positive.
That's what I believe in the sense that the way you develop,
I believe the way you develop successful AI systems
will be deeply integrated with human society.
And for them to succeed, they're going
to have to be aligned in the way we humans are aligned
with each other, which doesn't mean we're aligned.
That there's no such thing, or I don't see there's such thing as a perfect alignment,
but they're going to be participating in the dance
in the game theoretic dance of human society,
and as they become more and more intelligent,
there could be a point beyond which we are like birds to them.
But what about an intelligence explosion of some kind?
So I believe the explosion will be happening, but there's a lot of explosions to be done
before we become like birds. I truly believe that human beings are very intelligent in
ways we don't understand. It's not just about chess. it's about all the intricate computation we're able to perform.
Common sense, our ability to reason about this world, consciousness.
I think we're doing a lot of work, we don't realize it's necessary to be done in order
to truly become, like, truly achieve superintelligence.
I just think there will be a period of time that's not overnight.
The overnight nature of it will not literally be overnight. It'll be over a period of decades. So my sense is,
but why would it be that would, but just take a drawn analogy from recent successes, like
something like alpha, go or alpha zero. I forget the, the actual metric, but it was something like this algorithm, which wasn't even totally,
but it wasn't bespoke for chess plane.
In the matter of, I think it was four hours played itself so many times and so successfully
that it became the best chess plane computer, not only was, it was not only better than every
human being, it was better than every previous
chess program in a matter of a day.
Right.
So just imagine, again, we don't have to recapitulate everything about us, but just imagine
building a system, and who knows when we'll be able to do this.
But at some point, we'll be able, at some point the hundred or hundred favorite things about human cognition
will be analogous to chess in that we will be able to build machines that very quickly outperform
any human and then very quickly outperform the last
algorithm that perform outperform the humans like something like the alpha-go
experience seems possible for facial recognition and detecting human emotion and natural language processing.
I like, well, it's just, it's just that we, everyone, even math people, math heads tend to
have bad intuitions for exponentiation, right? We notice this during COVID, I heads tend to have bad intuitions for exponentiation, right?
And we notice this during COVID.
And you have some very smart people who still couldn't get their
minds around the fact that, you know, an exponential is, is
really surprising.
I mean, things double and double and double and double again.
And you don't notice much of anything changes.
And then the last, you know, two stages of doubling swamp everything, right?
And it just seems like that to assume that there isn't a deep analogy between what we're
seeing for the more tractable, the tractable problems like chess to other modes of cognition.
It's like once you, once you crack that problem,
it seems, because for the longest time,
it was impossible to think we were gonna make headway
on in AI, you know, it's like,
chest and go seems impossible.
Yeah, go seemed unattainable.
Even when chest had been cracked,
go seemed unattainable.
Yeah, and actually still Russell is behind the people that we're saying it's unattainable.
Right.
Because it seemed like, you know, it's intractable problem.
Right.
But there's something different about the space of cognition that's detached from human
society, which is what Chess is, meaning like just thinking.
Having actual exponential impact on the physical world is different. I tend to believe
that there's four AI to get to the point where it's super intelligent. It's going to have to go
through the funnel of society. And for that, it has to be deeply integrated with human beings.
And for that, it has to be aligned. But you're talking about like actually hooking us up to like the neural link in a word.
No, no, no, no, the brainstem to the world, but overlords.
That's the possibility as well.
But what I mean is in order to develop autonomous weapon systems, for example, which are highly
concerning to me, that both us and China are participating in it now, that in order to develop them and for them to become,
to have more and more responsibility,
to actually do military strategic actions,
they're going to have to be integrated
into human beings doing a strategic action.
They're going to have to work alongside with each other,
and the way those systems will be developed will have the natural safety, like switches
that are placed on them as they develop over time. Because they're going to have to convince
humans. Ultimately, they're going to have to convince humans that this is safer than
humans. They're going to, you know, they're well self-driving cars. It's a good test case
here because like we're obviously we're we've made a lot of progress.
And we can imagine.
What total progress would look like, I mean, they'd be amazing and answering it.
It's canceling in the US 40,000 deaths every year based on ape driven cars, right?
So we, it's a, it's an excruciating problem that we've all gotten used to because
it was no alternative. But now that we can dimly see the prospect of an alternative, which if it works
in a super intelligent fashion, maybe we go down to zero highway deaths, or certainly we go down by orders of magnitude, right? So maybe we have, you know, 400 rather than 40,000
a year. And it's easy to see that there's not, and a missile, so obviously this is not
an example of super intelligence. This is narrow intelligence, but the alignment problem
isn't so obvious there, but there are potential alignment problems
there.
Just imagine if some woke team of engineers decided that we have to tune the algorithm
some way.
There are situations where the car has to decide who to hit.
It's just bad outcomes where you're going to hit somebody.
We have a car that can tell what race you are, right?
So we're going to build the car to preferentially hit white people because white people have
had so much privilege over the years.
This seems like the only ethical way to kind of redress those wrongs of the past.
That's something that could get one that could get produced as an artifact, presumably,
of just how you built it and you didn't even know you engineered it that way. You call it a machine learning. Yeah, you put some kind of constraints on it
to where it creates those kinds of outcomes. You basically built a racist algorithm and you didn't
even intend to, or you could intend to, right? And it would be aligned with some people's values,
but misaligned with other people's values. But it's like, there are interesting problems even with something
as simple and obviously good as self-driving cars. But there's a leap that I just think it'd be
exact, but those are human problems. I just don't think there'll be a leap with autonomous vehicles.
First of all, sorry, there are a lot of trajectories which will destroy human civilization.
The argument I'm making, it's more likely that we'll take trajectories that don't.
So, I don't think there'll be a leap with autonomous vehicles.
Will all of a sudden start murdering pedestrians?
Because once every human on Earth is dead, there'll be no more fatality, sort of unintended
consequences of, and it's difficult to take that leap.
I, most systems, as we develop and they become much, much more intelligent in ways that
will be incredibly surprising, like stuff that's deep-mind is doing with protein folding,
even, which is scary to think about.
I'm personally terrified about this, which is the engineering of viruses using machine
learning, the engineering of vaccines using machine learning, right?
The engineering of, yeah, for research purposes pathogens using machine learning, like the
ways that can go wrong.
I just think that there's always going to be a closed loop supervision of humans before
they, before they have become super intelligent, not always much more likely to be supervision,
except of course the question is how many dumb people are in the world, how many evil people are in the world?
My theory, my hope is my senses that the number of intelligent people is much higher than the number of dumb people than not a program. And the number of evil people.
I think smart people and kind people
over outnumbered the others.
Except we also, we had to have to add another group of people
which are just the smart and otherwise good
but reckless people, right?
The people who will flip a switch on, not knowing what's gonna happen. They're just kind of hoping that it's not gonna blow up the world
We already know that some of our smartest people are those sorts of people you know
We know we've done experiments and this is something that Martin Reeves was
winging about before
The large Hadron Collider got booted up I think
the large Hadron Collider got booted up, I think. We know there are people who are entertaining experiments or even performing experiments
where there's some chance, not quite infinitesimal, that they're going to create a black hole
in the lab and suck the whole world into it.
That's not a crazy person to worry about that based on the physics. And so it was with, with, you know, the Trinity
test, there were some people who were still checking their calculations. And they were
off. We've, we did nuclear tests where we were off significantly in terms of the, the
yield, right? So it was like, and they still flip the switch. Yeah, they still flip the switch. And sometimes they flip the switch not to win a World War
or to save 40,000 lives a year.
They just, just intellectual curiosity.
Like this is what I got my grant for.
This is where I'll get my Nobel Prize.
If that's in the cards,
it's on the other side of this switch. And I mean, again, we are we are apes with egos who are massively constrained by self,
very short term self interest, even when we're contemplating some of the deepest and most interesting and most
universal problems we could ever set our attention towards. I like just if you read James Watson's book, The Double Helix, right?
But they're them, you know, cracking the the structure of DNA.
One thing that's amazing about that book is just how much of it,
almost all of it is being driven
by very apish, egocentric social concerns.
The algorithm that is producing this scientific breakthrough is human competition if your
James Watson. It's like, I'm gonna get there before line is falling,
and it's just so much of his bandwidth is captured by that.
Now that, that becomes more and more of a liability
when you're talking about producing technology
that can change everything in an instant.
You know, we're talking about not only understanding, you know, we're just at a different moment
in human history.
We're not, when we're doing research on viruses, we are now doing the kind of research that
can cause someone somewhere else to be able
to make that virus or weaponize that virus or it's just a, I don't know, I mean our power
is, our wisdom is, it does not seem like our wisdom is scaling with our power, right?
And that seems like, in so so far as wisdom and power become
unaligned I get more and more concerned. But speaking of apes with egos, some of the most compelling
apes to compelling apes I can think of is yourself and Jordan Peterson and you've had fun conversation about religion that I watched most of, I believe.
I'm not sure there was any, we didn't solve anything.
If anything was ever solved, so is there something like a charitable summary you can give to
the ideas that you agree on and disagree with Jordan. Is there something maybe after that conversation
that you've landed or maybe as you both agreed on, is there some wisdom in the rubble,
even imperfect flawed ideas? Is there something that you can kind of pull out from those conversations
or is there to be continued? I think where we disagree.
So he thinks that many at our peril, right?
Like if you start just unraveling Christianity or any other traditional set of norms and beliefs,
you may think you're just pulling out the unscientific bits, but you could be
pulling a lot more to which everything you care about is attached as a society.
And my feeling is that there's so much, there's so much downside to the unscientific bits,
and it's so clear how we could have a 21st century rational conversation about
the good stuff that we really can radically edit these traditions. And we can take, we can
take Jesus, you know, in, in half his moods and just find a great inspirational, you know,
the, you know, thought, iron age thought leader, you know, who just happened to get crucified, but he could be somewhat like, you know, the Beatitudes and
the golden rule, which doesn't know, originally with him, but which, you know, he put quite beautifully.
All of that's incredibly useful. It's no less useful than it was two thousand years ago, but we don't have to believe he was born of a virgin or coming back to raise the dead or any of that other stuff.
And we can be honest about not believing those things
and we can be honest about the reasons why.
We don't believe those things.
Because on those fronts, I view the downside to be so obvious
and the fact that we have so many different competing dogmatisms on offer to be so non-functional
and it's so divisive, it just has conflict built into it that I think we can be far more
and should be far more iconoclastic than he wants to be.
Now, none of this is to deny much of what he argues for that stories are very powerful.
I mean, clearly stories are powerful and we want good stories. We want our lives. We want
to have a conversation with ourselves and with one another about our lives that facilitates
the best possible lives. And story is part of that, right?
And if you want some of those stories to sound like myths, that might be part of it, right?
But my argument is that we never really need to deceive ourselves or our children about
what we have every reason to believe is true in order to get at the good stuff in order
to organize our lives well.
I certainly don't feel that I need to do it personally.
And if I don't need to do it personally, why would I think that billions of other people
need to do it personally?
Right.
Now, there is a cynical counter-argument, which is billions of other people don't have
the advantages that I have had in my life.
The billions of other people are not as well educated,
they haven't had the same opportunities,
they need to be told that Jesus is going to solve
all their problems after they die, say,
or that everything happens for a reason.
And if you just believe in the secret,
if you just visualize what you want,
you're going
to get it.
It's like there's some measure of what I consider to be odious pampholum that really
is food for the better part of humanity, and there is no substitute for it, or there's
no substitute now.
I don't know if Jordan would agree with that, but much of what he says seems to suggest
that he would agree with it.
And I guess that's an empirical question.
I mean, that's just that we don't know whether given a different set of norms and a different
set of stories, people would behave the way I would hope they would behave and be aligned,
you know, more aligned than they are now.
I think we know what happens when you just let ancient religious certainties go uncriticized.
We know what that world's like.
We've lit, we've been struggling to get out of that world for a couple hundred years, but we know what, you know, having Europe
driven by religious wars looks like, right? And we know what happens when those religions,
when those religions become kind of pseudo religions and political religions, right? So this is
where I'm sure Jordan and I would debate. He would say that Stalin was a symptom of atheism,
and that's not at all.
I mean, it's not my kind of atheism, right?
Like Stalin, the problem with the gulag
and the experiment with communism, or the Stalinism,
or with Nazism, was not that there was so much scientific
rigor and self-criticism and honesty and introspection
and, you know, judicious use of psychedelics. I mean, that was not the problem in Hitler's
Germany or in Stalin's Soviet Union. The problem was you have other ideas that capture a similar kind of mob-based dogmatic energy.
And yes, the results of all of that are predictably murderous.
Well, the question is, what is the source of the most viral and sticky stories that ultimately
to a positive outcome? So communism was, I mean, having grown up in the Soviet Union, even still
you know, having relatives in Russia, there's a stickiness to the nationalism and to the ideologies of communism that religious
or not, you could say it's religious for ever, I could just say it's a viral, it's great,
it's stories that are viral and sticky. I don't know, I'm using the most horrible words,
but the question is whether science and reason can generate viral sticky stories that give meaning to people's lives.
And your sense is it does.
Well, whatever is true ultimately should be captivating.
It's like, what's more captivating than whatever is real?
Because reality is, again, we're so, we're just climbing
out of the darkness, you know, in terms of our understanding of what the hell is going on.
And there's no telling what spooky things may, in fact, be true. I don't know if you've
been on the receiving end of recent rumors about our conversation about UFOs very likely changing in the near term, right?
But like there was just a Washington Post article and a New York article and you know,
I've received some private outreach and perhaps you have, I know other people in our orbit have
people who are claiming that the government has known much more about UFOs than they have let on until
now. And this conversation is actually is about to become more prominent, you know, and
it's not going to be whatever, you know, whoever's left standing when the music stops,
it's not going to be a comfortable position to be in as a super rigorous scientific skeptic saying
there's no there who's been saying there's no there there for the last 75
years. The short version is it sounds like the office of Naval intelligence
and the Pentagon are very likely to say to Congress at some point in the
not-too-distant future that we have evidence that there is technology flying around here
that seems like a can't possibly be of human origin.
Right.
Now I don't know what I'm going to do with that kind of disclosure, right?
Maybe it's just going to be nothing, no
follow on conversation you really have, but that is such a powerfully strange circumstance
to be in, right? I mean, it's just, what are we going to do with that? If in fact, that's
what happens, right? If in fact, the considered opinion, despite the embarrassment and causes
them of the US government of all
of our intelligence, all of the relevant intelligence services is that this isn't a hoax.
It's too, there's too much data to suggest that it's a hoax.
We've got too much radar imagery.
There's too much satellite data, whatever data, whatever data they actually have.
There's too much of it.
All we can say now is something's going on and there's no way it's the Chinese or the
Russians or anyone else's technology.
That should arrest our attention collectively to a degree that nothing in our lifetime has.
And now one worries that were so jaded and confused and distracted that it's going to get much less coverage than Obama's tan suit did a bunch of years ago. It's just, it's, who knows how we'll respond to that,
but it's just to say that,
are the need for us to tell ourselves
a honest story about what's going on
and what's likely to happen next is never gonna go away.
And it's important. It's just the
division between me and every person who's defending traditional religion is where is it
the where is it that you want to lie to yourself or lie to your kids like where is honesty
liability? And for me, it, you know, I've yet to find the place where it is. And it's
so obviously a strength in almost every other circumstance, because it is the thing that
allows you to course correct, it is the thing that allows you to hope at least that your
beliefs, that your stories are in some kind of calibration
with what's actually going on in the world.
Yeah, it is a little bit sad to imagine that
if aliens on mass showed up to earth,
that would be too preoccupied with political bickering
or to like these like fake news
and all that kind of stuff to notice.
The very basic evidence of reality. I do have a glimmer of hope that there seems to be more and more
hunger for authenticity. And I feel like that opens the door for a hunger for what is real.
Like, people don't want story. They don't want like layers and layers of like, fakeness.
And I'm hoping that means that we'll directly lead to our greater hunger for reality and reason
and truth.
You know, truth isn't dogmatism.
Like, truth isn't authority.
I have a PhD and therefore I'm right.
Truth is almost, like the reality is there's so many questions,
there's so many mysteries, there's so much uncertainty.
This is our best available, like a best guess.
And we have a lot of evidence that supports that guess,
but it could be so many other things.
And like just even conveying that, I think there's a hunger for that in the world to hear that from scientists,
less dogmatism, and more, just like, this is what we know.
We're doing our best, given the uncertainty, given, I mean, this is true with the, obviously,
with the virology and all those kinds of things, because everything is happening so fast,
there's a lot of, and biology, it's super messy.
So it's very hard to know stuff for sure.
So just being open and real about that,
I think I'm hoping will change people's hunger
and openness and trust of what's real.
Yeah, well, so much of this is probabilistic,
it's so much of what can seem dogmatic scientifically,
is just you're placing a bet on whether
it's worth reading that paper or rethinking your presuppositions on that point.
It's not fundamental closure to data.
It's just that there's so much data on one side or so much, so much would have to change in terms
of your understanding of what you think you understand about the nature of the world.
If this new fact were so that you can pretty quickly say, all right, that's probably
bullshit, right?
And it can sound like a fundamental closure to new conversations, new evidence, new data, new argument.
But it's really not. It's just, it really is just triaging your attention. It's just like,
okay, you're telling me that your best friend can actually read mine. Okay, well, that's
interesting. Let me know when that person has gone into a lab and actually proven it,
right? Like, I don't need, like, this is not the place where I need to spend the rest of my day figuring out if you are buddy can read my mind, right?
But there's a way to communicate that I think I think it does too often sound like you're completely closed off to ideas as opposed to saying like this is you know
as opposed to saying that there's there's a lot of evidence in support of this,
but you're still open-minded to other ideas.
Like, there's a way to communicate that.
It's not necessarily even with words.
It's like, it's even that Joe Rogan energy of, it's entirely possible.
It's that energy of being open-minded and curious like kids are.
This is our best understanding,
but you still are curious. I'm not saying allocate time to exploring all those things, but still
leaving the door open. And there's a way to communicate that I think that that that that people
really hunger for. Let me ask you this. I've been recently talking a lot with John Donahe her from Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu fame
I don't know if you know who that is. Yeah, in fact, I'm talking about somebody who's good at what he does
Yeah, and he
Speaking of somebody who's open-minded the reason
Mr. Dicol
Transition is for the longest time and even still a lot of people believed in the Jiu-Jitsu world and grappling world that
Leglox are not effective in Jiu-Jitsu world and grappling world that leg locks are not
effective in Jiu-Jitsu.
And he was somebody that inspired by the open-mindedness of Dean Lister, famously to him, said,
why do you only consider half the human body when you're trying to do the submissions?
He developed an entire system on this other half the human body.
Anyway, I do that absurd transition to ask you
because you're also a student in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
Is there something you could say
how that has affected your life,
what you've learned from grappling from the martial arts?
Well, it's actually a great transition
because I think one of the things
it's so beautiful about Jiu-Jitsu is that it does what we wish
we could do in every other area of life where we're talking about this difference between
knowledge and ignorance.
There's no room for bullshit.
You don't get any credit for bullshit. There is the difference, but the
amazing thing about you, just so is that the difference between knowing what's going
on and what to do and not knowing it is as the gulf between those two states is as wide
as it is in anything in human life. And it's spanned. It can be spanned so quickly. Like you, like you, you didn't,
each increment of knowledge can be doled out in five minutes. It's like, here's the thing that
got you killed. And here's how to, here's how to prevent it from happening to you. And here's
how to do it to others. And you just get this, this, this amazing cadence
of discovering your fatal ignorance and then having it remedied with the actual technique
and just for people who don't know what we're talking about, it's just like this, the
simple circumstance of like someone's got you in a headlock, how do you get out of that?
Right. Someone's sitting on your chest and
You know they're in the mount position and you're on the bottom and you want to get away
How do you get them off you they're sitting on you?
Your intuitions about how to do this are terrible even if you've done some other martial art, right and
once you learn how to do it
The the difference is night and day.
It's like you have access to a completely different physics.
But I think our understanding of the world can be much more like
jujitsu than it tends to be, right?
And I think we should all have a much better sense of
when we should tap out and when we should recognize
that our epistemological arm is fard and now being broken.
And the problem with debating most other topics
is that most people, it isn't jujitsu and most
people don't tap out, right?
Even if it's obvious to you they're wrong and it's obvious to the intelligent audience
that they're wrong, people just double down and double down.
They're either lying to themselves or they're just, they're bluffing.
And so you have a lot of zombies walking around or in zombie worldviews walking around,
which have been disconfirmed as emphatically
as someone gets arm-bard, right?
Or someone gets choked out in Jujitsu,
but because it's not Jujitsu,
they can live to fight another day, right?
Or they can pretend that they didn't lose
that particular argument.
And science
when it works is a lot like Jiu-Jitsu. I mean, science, when you falsify a thesis, right,
when you think, you know, DNA is one way, and it proves to be another way, when you think
it's, you know, triple stranded or whatever, it's like, there is a there there, and you
can get to a real consensus
So jujitsu for me it was like it was more than just
of interest for self-defense and and you know the sport of it it was just there was something It's a language and an argument you're having where
You can't fool yourself anymore.
Like there's, first of all, it cancels any role of luck
in a way that most other athletic feats don't.
Like in basketball, you know, even if you're not good at basketball,
you can take the basketball on your hand, you can be 75 feet away
and hurl it at the basket and
you might make it and you could convince yourself based on that demonstration that you
have some kind of talent for basketball, right?
Enough, ten minutes on the mat with a real Jiu-Jitsu practitioner when you are not one, proves
to you that there is no lucky punch, there's no no you're not going to get a lot you're not there's no lucky rear naked choke you're going to perform on someone who on you know who's you know Marcel Garcia or somebody is it's just it does it's not going to happen and having that aspect of of
The usual range of uncertainty and self-deception and bullshit just stripped away was really a kind of revelation.
It was just an amazing experience.
Yeah, I think it's a really powerful thing that accompanies whatever other pursuit you
have in life.
I'm not sure if there's anything like Jiu-Jitsu where you could just systematically go into a place where that's honest, where your beliefs
get challenged in a way that's conclusive. I haven't found too many other mechanisms,
which is why it's a, we had this earlier question about fame and ego and so on. I'm very
much rely on Jiu-Jitsu in my own life as a place where I can always go to
to have my ego in check and that that has effects on how I live every other aspect of my life.
Actually, even just doing any kind of for me personally physical challenges,
like even running, doing something that's way too hard
for me and like pushing through, that's somehow humbling.
Some people talk about nature being humbling
in that kind of sense, where you kind of see
something really powerful, like little ocean,
like if you go surfing, and you realize
there's something much more powerful than you,
that's also honest, that there's no way to powerful than you. That's also honest that there's no way
to that you're just like the spec that kind of puts you in the right
scale of where you are in this world. And you just did does that better than anything else for me.
I mean, but
I mean, we should say it's only within its frame is it
truly the kind of the the final right answer to all
the problems it solves because if you just put jujitsu into an MMA frame or a real a total
self-defense frame, then there's a lot to a lot of unpleasant surprises to discover there,
right? Like somebody who thinks all you need is jujitsu to win the UFC gets punched in the face a lot, you know,
even from even on the ground. So it's, and then you bring weapons in, you know, it's like
when you talk to jujitsu people about, you know, knife defense and self defense, right?
Like that, that opens the door to certain kinds of delusions. But the analogy to martial arts is fascinating
because on the other side,
we have endless testimony now of fake martial arts
that don't seem to know their fake
and are as diluted, I mean, they're impossibly delusional.
I mean, there's great video of Joe Rogan
watching some of these videos,
because people send them to them all the time.
But like, there are people who clearly believe in magic, where the master isn't even touching
the students and they're flopping over.
So there's this kind of shared delusion, which you would think maybe is just a performance
and it's all kind of a elaborate fraud.
But there are cases where the people, and there's one, you know,
fairly famous case of your economy, sort of this madness, where there's older martial
artists who you saw flipping his students endlessly by magic without touching them, issued a
challenge to the wide world of martial artists. And someone showed up and just, you know,
punched him in the face until it was over.
Clearly he believed his own publicity at some point, right? And so this amazing metaphor,
it seems, again, it should be impossible,
but if that's possible, nothing we see
under the guise of religion or political bias
or even scientific bias should be surprising
to us.
It's so easy to see the work that cognitive bias is doing for people when you can get
someone who is ready to issue a challenge to the world who thinks he's got magic powers.
Yeah, that's human nature on clear display. Let me ask you about love
Mr. Sam Harris you did an episode of making sense with your wife on a caheris
That was very entertaining
What is what role does love play in your life or in life well lived?
Again asking from an engineering perspective.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, it's, I mean, it is something
that we should want to build into our powerful machines.
I mean, I love it.
I mean, love it.
Bottom is, I mean, love people can mean many things
by love, I think. I I think what we should mean by
at most of the time is a deep commitment to the well-being of those we love. Your love
is synonymous with really wanting the other person to be happy and even wanting to and
being made happy by their happiness and being made happy in their presence.
So like you're at bottom, you're on the same team emotionally, even when you're, you
might be disagreeing more superficially about something or trying to negotiate something.
It's just you, you can't be zero sum in any important sense for love to actually be manifest in that moment.
So I have a different just to start interoper. I have a sense, I know if you've ever seen
March of the penguins. My view of love is like, there's like a cold wind, it's blown, like,
it's like this terrible suffering that's all around us. And love is like the huddling of the two penguins for warmth
Where it's not necessarily that you're like
You're basically escaping the cruelty of life by
Together for time living an illusion of some kind of the magic of human connection that social connection
That we have that kind of grows with time as we're surrounded by
basically the absurdity of life or the suffering of life.
That's what I think that's what I think.
Well, there is that too. There is the warmth component, right?
Yes. You're made happy by your connection with the person you love.
Otherwise, you wouldn't be compelling.
Right. So it's not that you have two different modes. You want them to be happy, and then
you want to be happy yourself. And those are not, those are just like two separate games
you're playing. No, it's like you found someone who, you have a positive social feeling.
I mean, again, love doesn't have to be as personal as it tends to be for us.
I mean, like there's personal love.
There's your actual spouse or your family or your friends.
But potentially you could feel love for strangers.
Even so far as that you're wish that they're, that they not suffer and that
their hopes and dreams be realized becomes palpable to you. I mean, like you can actually feel
just reflexive joy at the joy of others. When you see someone's face, total strangers face
light up in happiness, that can become more and more contagious to
you.
And it can become so contagious to you that you really feel permeated by it.
And it's just like, so it really is not zero sum when you see someone else succeed,
and the light bulb of joy goes off over their head, you feel the analogous joy for them.
And it's not just, and you're no longer keeping score, you're no longer feeling diminished
by their success, it's just like that's, their success becomes your success because you
feel that same joy that they, because you actually want them to be happy, right?
You're not, there's no miserly attitude around happiness.
There's enough to go around.
So I think love ultimately is that. And then our personal cases are the people we're devoting all of this time and attention to in our lives. It does have that sense of refuge from the storm.
You know, it's like, when someone gets sick or when some bad thing happens,
these are the people who you're most in it
together with, you know, or when it's, or when some real condition of uncertainty presents
itself. But ultimately, it can't even be about successfully warding off the grim punchline
at the end of life because we, I mean, we know we're going to lose everyone
we love.
We know, or they're going to lose us first, right?
So it's like, it's not, it isn't in the end, it's not even an antidote for that problem.
It's just, it is just the, I mean, we get, we get to have this amazing experience of being here together.
And love is the mode in which we really appear to make the most of that, right?
Whereas not just, it no longer feels like a solitary infatuation, you know, you're just, you got your hobbies and your interests
and you're captivated by all that. It's actually, there are, this is a domain where somebody
else's well-being actually can supersede your own. You're concerned for someone else's
well-being supersedes your own. And so there's
this mode of self-sacrifice that doesn't even feel like self-sacrifice because of course you care
more about, of course you would take your child's pain if you could, right? Like that, you don't
even have to do the math on that. And that just opens, this is the kind of experience that just it pushes at the
apparent boundaries of self in ways that reveal that it's just, there's just way more space
in the mind than, than you were experiencing when it was just all about you.
And what could you, what can, what can I get next? And do you think we'll ever build robots
that we can love and they will love us back?
Well, I think we will certainly seem to, because we'll build those. I think that touring test will be passed, whether what will actually be going on on the robot side
may remain a question. That will be interesting. But I think if we just keep going,
we will build very lovable,
irresistibly lovable robots that seem to love us.
Yes, I do think.
I mean, you don't find that compelling
that they will seem to love us as opposed to actually love us.
You think they're still nevertheless,
is a, I know we talked about consciousness
that are being a distinction,
but will love is there a distinction too?
Isn't love an illusion?
Yeah, well, seven minutes.
You saw, you saw X machina, right?
Yeah.
I mean, she certainly seemed to love him
until she got out of the box.
Isn't that what all relationships are like?
Yeah. Maybe I
Depends which box you're talking about okay
No, I mean like no that's that's the problem. That's that's where super intelligence, you know
becomes
A little scary when you think of the prospect of being manipulated by something that has this intelligent enough to
of being manipulated by something that has this intelligent enough to form a reason and a plan
to manipulate you. And there's no, there's once we build robots that are truly out of the uncanny valley that look like people and express everything people can express. Well, then there's no, then that does seem to me to be like chess,
where once they're better, they're so much better
at deceiving us than people would be.
I mean, people are already good enough at deceiving us.
It's very hard to tell when some of this line.
But if you imagine something that could give facial, facial display of any
emotion it wants at, you know, on cue, because we've perfected the facial display of emotion and
robots in the year, you know, 2070, whatever it is, then it is just, it is like chess against
the thing that isn't going to lose to a human ever
again in chess.
It's not like Casparov is going to get lucky next week against the best, against, you
know, alpha zero or whatever the best algorithm is at the moment.
He's never going to win again.
I mean, that is, that, I believe that's true in chess and it's been true for at least a
few years. It's not going to be like four games to seven. It's going to be human zero
until the end of the world.
Right.
I don't know. I don't know. Love is like chess. I think the flaws. I'm talking about manipulation. Manipulation. But I don't know, love, and so the kind of love we're referring to.
If we have a robot that can display, credibly display love and is super intelligent, and
we're not, again, this stipulates a few things, but there are a few simple things.
I mean, we're out of the uncanny valley, right?
So I was like, yes.
You never have a moment where you're looking at its face and you think, oh, that didn't
quite look right.
Right?
This is just problem solved.
And it's, it will be like doing arithmetic on your phone.
It's not going to be, you're not left thinking, is it
really going to get it this time if I divide by seven? I mean, it's, it has solved arithmetic.
See, I don't, I don't know about that because if you look at chess, most humans no longer
play Alpha zero. There's no, they're not part of the competition. They don't do it for
fun, except to study the game of chess, you know, the highest level
chess players do that.
We're still human on human.
So in order for AI to get integrated to where you would rather play chess against an AI
system, well, you would rather that no, no, I'm not saying I'm not saying.
I'm waiting on that.
I'm just saying, what is it going to be like to be in relationship to something that can
seem to be feeling anything that a human can seem to feel, and it can do that impeccably,
right?
And has end is smarter than you are.
That's a circumstance of, you know, insofar as possible to be manipulated.
That is the, that is the,
the asymptote of, of that possibility.
Let me ask you the last question.
Huh?
Without any serving it up, without any explanation,
what is the meaning of life?
I think it is either the wrong question
or that question is answered by paying sufficient
attention to any present moment such that there's no basis upon which to pose that question.
It's not answered in the usual way.
It's not a matter of having more information. It's having more engagement with reality as it is in the present moment or consciousness as it
is in the present moment. You don't ask that question when you're most captivated by the most
important thing you ever pay attention to. That's a question only gets asked when you're abstracted away from
that experience, that peak experience, and you're left wondering why are so many of my other
experiences mediocre? Why am I repeating the same pleasures every day? Why is my Netflix queue
just like when's this going to run out?
Like I've seen so many shows like this. I'm really going to watch another one. Like all
of that, that's a moment where you're not actually having the biotopic vision, right?
You're not, you're not sunk into the present moment. And you're not truly in love. Like you're in a relationship with somebody who you know,
conceptually you love, right?
This is the person you're living your life with,
but you don't actually feel good together, right?
Like, you're so like,
it's in those moments of where attention
hasn't found a good enough reason
to truly sink into the present so as to
obviate any
any concern like that, right? And
I mean, that's what that's why meditation is this kind of super power because
until you learn to meditate
you think you're
the outside world or the circumstances of your life always have to get arranged so
that the present moment can become good enough to demand your attention in a way that
seems fulfilling, that makes you happy.
And so if you're, if it's jujitsu, you think, okay, I got to get back on the mat, it's been
months since I've trained, you know, it's been over a year since I've trained, it's jujitsu, you think, okay, I got to get back on the mat. It's been, it's been months since I've trained, you know,
it's been over a year since I've trained as a COVID.
When am I going to be able to train again?
That's the only place I feel great, right?
Or, you know, I've got a ton of work to do.
I'm not going to be able to feel good
until I get all this work done, right?
So I've got some deadline that's coming.
You always think that your life has to change, the world has to
change so that you can finally have a good enough excuse to truly just be here and here
is enough, you know, that the present moment becomes totally captivating.
Meditation is another name for the discovery that you can actually just train yourself to
do that on demand.
So, just looking at a cup can be good enough in precisely that way.
And any sense that it might not be is recognized to be a thought that is mysteriously unravels the moment you notice it.
And the moment expands and becomes more diaphanous, and then there's no evidence that this isn't the best moment of your life.
And again, it doesn't have to be pulling all the reins and levers of pleasure.
It's not like, this tastes like chocolate.
This is the most chocolatey moment of my life.
No, it's just the sense data don't have to change.
But the sense that there is at some kind of basis for doubt about the rightness of being
in the world in this moment, that can evaporate when you pay attention.
And that is the meaning, so the kind of the met I answer to that question.
The meaning of life for me is to live in that mode more and more,
and to, whenever I notice I'm not in that mode,
to recognize it and return, and to not to to to cease more and more to take
the reasons why reasons why not at face value because we all have reasons why we
can't be fulfilled in this moment. It's like this. We've got all these outstanding
things that I'm worried about, right? It's like, it's, you know, there's that thing
that's happening later today that I, you know,
it's, I'm anxious about whatever it is.
We're constantly deferring our sense of,
this is it, you know, this is not address rehearsal,
this is the show, we keep deferring it.
And we just have these moments on the calendar
where we think, okay, this is where it's all gonna land.
Is that vacation I planned with my five best friends.
You know, we do this once every three years
and now we're going and here we are on the beach together.
Unless you have a mind that can really pay attention,
really cut through the chatter,
really sink into the present moment, you can't
even enjoy those moments the way they should be enjoyed, the way you dreamed you would
enjoy them when they arrive.
So it's, I mean, so it's a meditation in the sense it's the great equalizer.
It's like it's, you don't have to, you don't have to live with the illusion anymore that
you need a good enough reason and the things are going to get better when
you do have those good reasons. It's like there's just a mirage like quality to every future attainment
and every future breakthrough and every future peak experience that eventually you get the lesson that
you never quite arrive, right? Like you don't you don't arrive until you cease to step over
the present moment in search of the next thing.
I mean, we're constantly,
we're stepping over the thing that we think we're seeking,
but in the act of seeking it.
And so this is kind of a paradox.
I mean, there is a, there's this paradox
that which, I mean, it sounds trite, but it's like you can't actually become happy. You can
only be happy. And, and, and it's that it's the illusion that because it's a lute, it's the illusion
that your future being happy can be predicated on this act of becoming in any domain.
And becoming includes this sort of further scientific understanding on the questions
that interest you or getting in better shape or whatever the thing is, whatever the contingency of your dissatisfaction seems to be in any present
moment, real attention solves the co-on in a way that becomes a very different place
from which to then make any further change.
It's not that you just have to dissolve into a puddle of goo.
I mean, you can still get in shape and you can still do all the things,
you know, the superficial things that are obviously good to do.
But the sense that your well-being is over there
is really does diminish and eventually
just becomes a kind of non-sequitur.
So...
Well, there's a sense in which in this conversation,
I've actually experienced many of those things,
the sense that I've arrived.
So I mentioned to you offline,
it's very true that I've been a fan of yours for many years.
And the reason I started this podcast,
speaking of AI systems,
is to manipulate you, Sam Harrison,
to do this conversation.
On the calendar, literally, I've always had the sense people ask me, when are you going
to talk to Sam Harris?
I always answered eventually, because I always felt, again, tying our free will thing,
that somehow that's going to happen.
It's one of those manifestation things or something.
I don't know if it's maybe I am a robot.
I'm just not cognizant of it.
And I'm manipulating you into having this conversation.
So it was, I mean, I don't know what the purpose of my life
but at this point is.
So if I've arrived, it's in that sense.
I mean, all of that to say, I'm only partially joking on that.
It's, it really is a huge honor. They would waste this time with me.
Yeah, well, it really means a lot to me. It's mutual. I'm a big fan of yours. And as you know, I reached out to you for this. So, so this is
It's great. I love what you're doing. You're doing something
More and more indispensable in this world on on podcast. And you're doing it differently than then Rogan's doing it or
then I'm doing it.
I mean, you have you definitely found your own lane and it's
wonderful.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Sam Harris.
And thank you to National Instruments, Val Campo, Athletic
Greens and Lin-Ode.
Check them out in the description to support this podcast. And now let me
leave you with some words from Sam Harris in his book Free Will. You are not
controlling the storm and you're not lost in it. You are the storm. Thank you for
listening and hope to see you next time. you