Lex Fridman Podcast - #264 – Tim Urban: Elon Musk, Neuralink, AI, Aliens, and the Future of Humanity
Episode Date: February 14, 2022Tim Urban is the author and illustrator of the popular blog 'Wait But Why'. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Audible: https://audible.com/lex to get $9.95 a month for 6 mont...hs - Paperspace: https://gradient.run/lex to get $15 credit - Coinbase: https://coinbase.com/lex to get $5 in free Bitcoin - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex and use code Lex25 to get 25% off - NetSuite: http://netsuite.com/lex to get free product tour EPISODE LINKS: Tim's Twitter: https://twitter.com/waitbutwhy Tim's Website: https://waitbutwhy.com Tim's Instagram: https://instagram.com/timurban 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 (14:54) - Aliens (23:08) - The pencil problem (29:53) - Food abundance (31:57) - Extinction of human civilization (37:15) - Future politics of Mars (44:15) - SpaceX (50:15) - Elon Musk (1:15:43) - Nuclear power (1:20:09) - The higher mind (1:24:53) - Echo chambers and idea labs (1:28:05) - How our brain processes film and music (1:31:19) - Neuralink (1:39:33) - Future of physical interactions (1:43:44) - AI (1:51:04) - Free speech (1:55:07) - How to read more (2:01:49) - Spaced repetition (2:05:52) - Procrastination (2:32:44) - Goals for the future (2:38:02) - Meaning of life
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The following is a conversation with Tim Urban, author and illustrator of the amazing blog
called Wait But Why.
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the one of a kind financing program. That's netsuite.com slash flex. Netsuite.com slash Lash, Lex. This is the Lex Friedman podcast, and here is my conversation with Tim Urban.
You wrote a wait but why blog posts about the big and the small from the observable universe
to the atom.
What world do you find most mysterious or beautiful, the very big or the very small?
The very small seems a lot more mysterious.
I mean, the very big, I feel like we kind of understand.
I mean, not the very, very big, not the multiverse.
If there is a multiverse, not anything outside
of the observable universe.
But they're very small.
I think we really have no idea what's going on.
They're very much less idea.
But I find out.
So I think the small is more mysterious,
but I think the big is sexier.
I just cannot get enough of the bigness of space and the furnace of stars, and it just
continually blows my mind.
I mean, we're still the vastness of the observable universe has the mystery that we don't know
what's out there.
We know how it works, perhaps.
Like, General Relativity can tell us how the know how it works, perhaps. Like, we can general relativity can tell us
how the movement of bodies works,
how they're born, all that kind of things.
But like, how many, how many civilizations are out there?
How many, like, what are the weird things that are out there?
Well, extra-trust-real life is a true mystery,
the most tantalizing mystery of all.
But that's like our size. So that's maybe
that the actual, the big and the small are really cool, but it's actually the things that
are potentially our size that are the most tantalizing. Potentially our size is probably
the key word. Yeah, I mean, I wonder how small intelligent life could get. Probably not that small.
And I assume that there's a limit that you're not going to, I mean, you might have like an a whale, blue whale size intelligent being that would be kind of cool. But I, I
feel like it's in that we're in the range of order of magnitude smaller and bigger than
us for life. But maybe, maybe not, maybe you could have some giant life form just seems
like, I don't know, there's, it's got to be some reason that anything intelligence between
kind of like a little tiny rodent or finger monkey up to a blue whale on this planet.
I don't know, maybe when you change the gravity and other things.
Well, you could think of life as a thing of self-assembling organisms and they just get bigger
and bigger and bigger and bigger.
There's no such thing as a human being, a human being is made up of a bunch of tiny organisms
that's not working together.
And we somehow envision that as one entity
because it has consciousness.
But maybe it's just organisms on top of organisms.
Organisms all the way down, turtles all the way down.
So like, earth can be seen as an organism
for people for alien species that's very different.
Like, why is the human, the fundamental entity
that is living, and then everything else is just either
a collection of humans or components of humans?
I think if it kind of is, if you think about,
I think of like an emergence elevator,
and so you've got an ant is on one floor,
and then the ant colonies, a floor above, or maybe there's even units within the colony that's one floor and then the ant colonies a floor above.
Or maybe there's even units within the colony that's one floor above
and the full colonies of two floors above.
And to me, I think that it's the colony that is closest to being the animal.
It's like the individual thing that competes with others
while the individual ants are like cells in the animal's body.
We are more like a colony in that regard,
but the humans are weird because we kind of,
I think if emergence happens in an emergence tower,
when you've got kind of, as it's cells
and then humans and communities and societies,
ants are very specific.
The individual ants are always cooperating
with each other for the sake of the colony.
So the colony is this unit that is the competitive unit.
Humans can kind of go, we take the elevator up and down, emergence tower psychologically.
Sometimes we are individuals that are competing with other individuals and that's where our
mindset is.
And then other times we get in this crazy zone, you know, a protest or a sporting event
and you're just, you know, you're just chanting and screaming and doing the same hand motions with all these other people
and you feel like one, you feel like one, you know, and you sacrifice yourself and that's
what you know, soldiers.
And so our brains can kind of psychologically go up and down this elevator in an interesting
way.
Yeah, I wonder how much of that is just the narrative we tell ourselves.
Maybe we are just like an alcolein,
we're just collaborating always,
even in our stories of individualism,
of the freedom of the individual,
like this kind of isolation,
lone man on an island kind of thing,
we're actually all part of this giant network of,
maybe one of the things that makes humans who we are
is probably
deeply social the ability to maintain not just the single human intelligence but like a collective intelligence and so this
Feeling like individual is just because we woke up at this level of the hierarchy
So we make it special, but when we very well could be just part of the and colony
special, but we very well could be just part of the end colony. This whole conversation, I'm either going to be doing a Shakespearean analysis of your Twitter, your writing, or
very specific statements that you've made. So you've written answers to a mailback of questions.
The questions were amazing. The ones you chose and your answers were amazing. So on this
topic of the big and the small, somebody asked, are we bigger than we are small,
or smaller than we are big?
Who's asking these questions?
This is really good.
You have amazing fans.
Okay.
So where do we sit at this level of the very small to the very big?
So are we bigger or are we small smaller or we bigger than we are small?
I think it depends on what we're asking here.
So if we're talking about the biggest thing that we can talk about without just imagining
is the observable universe, the Hubble sphere.
And that's about 10 to the 26th meters in diameter.
The smallest thing we talk about is a plank length.
But you could argue that that's kind of an imaginary thing.
But that's 10 to the negative 35.
Now, we're about conveniently about 10 to the 1.
Not quite. 10 to the 0. We're about 10 to the 0 meters long.
So we're writing, so it's easy because you can just look and say, okay, well,
for example,
atoms are like 10 to the negative 15th
or 10 to the negative 16th meters across, right?
If you go 10 to the 15th or 10 to the 16th,
which is right, that's now a so an atom to us is us to this,
you get to like nebulas, smaller than a galaxy
and bigger than the biggest star.
So we're right in between
nebula and an atom. Now if you want to go down to cork level you might be able to get up to galaxy
level. When you go up to the observable universe you're getting down on the small side to things that
we I think are mostly theoretically imagining are there and hypothesizing are there. So I think
As far as real world objects that we're really know a lot about I would say we are smaller than we are big
But if you want to go down to the plank length, we're very quickly. We're bigger than we are small if you think about strings
Yeah, straight exactly was string theory and so on
That's interesting
But I think like you answered no matter what we're kind of middleish. Yeah, straight exactly, it was string theory and so on. That's interesting. But I think like you answered no matter what, we're kind of middleish.
Yeah.
I mean, here's something cool.
If human is a neutrino, and again, neutrino, the size isn't really make sense.
It's not really a size, but when we talk about some of these neutrinos, I mean,
if neutrinos are human, a proton is the sun.
So that's like, I mean, a proton is real small, like really small. And so, yeah,
the small gets like crazy, small very quickly. Let's talk about aliens. We already mentioned it.
Let's start just by with the basic, what's your intuition as of today. This is a thing that could change day by day, but how many alien civilizations out there?
Is it zero?
Is it handful?
Is it almost endless?
Like the observable universe
or the universe is teaming with life?
If I had gun to my head, I have to take a guess.
I would say it's teaming with life.
I would say there is, I have to take a guess. I would say it's teeming with life. I would say there is.
I think running a Monte Carlo simulation, this paper by Andrew Sandberg and Drexler,
and a few others a couple of years ago, I think you probably know about it. I think they're
the mean using different,
using different, running through randomized rate equation multiplication, you're
ended up with 27 million as the mean of intelligence civilizations in the galaxy, in the Milky
Way alone. And so then if you go outside the Milky Way, that would turn into trillions.
That's the mean. Now what's interesting is that there's a long tail because they believe some of these multipliers
in the Drake equation.
So for example, the probability that life starts
in the first place, they think that the kind of range
that we use is for that variable is way too small.
And that's constraining our possibilities.
And if you actually extend
it to, you know, some crazy number of orders of magnitude, like 200, they think that that
variable should be, you get this long tail where I forget the exact number, but it's like
a third or a quarter of the total outcomes have us alone. Like, you know, I think it's like,
I think it's a sizeable percentage has us as the only intelligent life in the galaxy,
but you can keep going.
And I think there's a non-zero legitimate amount of outcomes there that have us as the only
life in the observable universe at all is on Earth.
It seems incredibly counterintuitive.
It seems like when you mention that people think you must be an idiot, because if you picked up one grain of sand on a beach and examined it,
and you found all these little things on it,
it's like saying, well, maybe this is the only one that has it.
And it's like, probably not.
They're probably, most of the sand probably, you're a lot of the sand, right?
So, on the other hand, we don't see anything.
We don't see any evidence, which of course people would say,
the people who scoff at the concept
that were potentially alone,
they say, well, of course there's a lot of reasons
we wouldn't have seen anything,
and they can go list them, and they're very compelling.
But we don't know.
And the truth is, if this were a freak thing,
I mean, if this were a completely freak thing
that happened here, whether it's life at all or just getting to this
level intelligence, that species whoever it was would think there must be lots of
us out there and they'd be wrong. So just being again, using the same intuition
that most people would use, I'd say is probably lots of other things out there.
Yeah, and you wrote a great blog post about it. But to me, the two interesting
reasons that we haven't been in contact, I too have an intuition that the universe is
teaming on life. So one interesting is around the great filter. So we're either the great filters
either behind us or in front of us. So the reason that's interesting is you get to think about what kind of things
ensure or ensure the survival of an intelligence civilization or lead to the destruction of
intelligence civilization. That's a very pragmatic, very important question to always be asking.
And we'll talk about some of those. And then the other one is I'm saddened by the possibility that there could be aliens communicating with us all the time.
In fact, they may have visited and we're just too dumb to hear it, to see it.
Like the idea that the kind of life that can evolve is just the range of life that can involve a so large that our narrow view of what is life
And what is intelligent life is providing us from having a communication with them
But then they don't seem very smart because if they were trying to communicate with us
They would surely if they were super intelligent
They would be very I'm sure if there's lots of life. We're not that rare
We're not some crazy weird species
that hears and has different kinds of ways of perceiving signals.
So they would probably be able to, if you really wanted to communicate with an Earth-like
species, with a human-like species, you would send out all kinds of things.
You'd send out radio waves and you'd send out gravity waves and you send out gravity waves.
And lots of things, but if they're communicating in a way,
they're trying to communicate with us.
And it's just we're too dumb to proceed the signals.
It's like, well, they're not doing a great job
of considering the primitive species we might be.
So I don't know.
I think of a super intelligent species
who wanted to get in touch with us
and had the capability of, I think probably, they would.
Well, they may be getting in touch with us.
They're just getting in touch with the thing
that we humans are not understanding
that they're getting in touch with us with.
I guess that's what I was trying to say.
There could be something about earth
that's much more special than us humans. Like the nature of the intelligence that's what I was trying to say is there could be something about earth that's much more special than us humans
like the nature of the intelligence that's on earth or the thing that's of value and that's curious
and that's complicated and fascinating and beautiful maybe something that's not just like
tweets okay like English language that's interpretable or any kind of language or any kind of signal,
whether it's gravity or radio signal that humans seem to appreciate.
Why not the actual, it could be the process of evolution itself.
There could be something about the way that earth is breathing essentially through the
creation of life and this complex growth of life, it's a whole different way to view organisms and view
life that could be getting communicated with. And we humans are just a tiny finger tip on top
of that intelligence. And the communication is happening with the main mothership of Earth versus
us humans that seem to treat ourselves as super important and we're missing a big picture.
I mean, it sounds crazy, but our understanding of what is intelligent, of what is life,
and what is consciousness is very limited, and it seems to be, and just being very suspicious,
it seems to be awfully human-centric. Like, this story, it seems like the progress of science is you know constantly
Putting humans down on the importance like on the cosmic importance the ranking of how big we are how important we are
That that seems to be the more we discover that's what's happening and I think science is very young
And so I think eventually we might
that's what's happening. And I think science is very young.
And so I think eventually we might figure out that there's something much, much bigger
going on.
The humans are just a curious little side effect of the much bigger thing.
That's what I mean.
That, as I'm saying, it just sounds insane.
But it just, it sounds a little, like religious.
It sounds like a spiritual.
It, you know, it gets to that realm where there's something that more than meets the eye.
Well, yeah, but not so religious and spiritual often of this kind of
woo-woo characteristic, like people write books about them, then go to wars over whatever the heck is written in those books.
I mean more like it's possible that collective intelligence
is more important than individual intelligence, right?
It's the end colony.
What's the primal organism?
Is it the end colonies at the ant?
Yeah, I mean, humans, just like any individual ant can't do shit.
But the colony can do,
they can make this incredible structures
and has this intelligence.
And we're exactly the same.
I mean, you know, you know, the famous
thing that, you know, no one, no human knows how to make a pencil. If you heard this, basically,
I mean, this is great. There's not a single human out there has absolutely no idea how to make
a pencil. So you have to think about, you have to get the wood, the paint, the different
chemicals that make up the yellow paint, the eraser is a whole other thing.
The metal has to be mined from somewhere and then the graphite, whatever that is.
And there's not one person on earth who knows how to kind of collect all those materials
and create a pencil, but together, that's one of the, that's child's play. It's one of the easiest
things. So, you know, the other thing I like to think about, I actually put this as a question on the blog ones.
There's a thought experiment,
and I actually wanna hear what you think.
So, if a witch, kind of a dickish,
witch comes around and she says,
I'm gonna cast a spell on all of humanity
and all material things that you've invented are gonna disappear all at once.
So suddenly we're all standing there naked,
there's no buildings, there's no cars and boats
and ships and no mines, nothing, right?
It's just the Stone Age Earth and a bunch of naked humans,
but we're all the same, we have the same brain.
So we're all know what's going on.
And we all got a note from her,
so we understand the deal and she says, she communicated to every human. Here's the deal. You lost all your stuff.
You guys need to make one working iPhone 13. And you make one working iPhone 13 that could pass
in the Apple store today, you know, in your previous world. For an iPhone 13, then I will restore
everything. How long do you think? And so everyone knows, this is the mission. We're all aware of the mission, everyone, all humans. How long would it take us?
That's a really interesting question. So obviously, if you do a random selection of 100 or
a thousand humans within the population, I think you're screwed to make that iPhone.
I tend to believe that there's fascinating specialization among the human civilization.
Like there's a few hackers out there that can like solo build an iPhone.
With what materials?
So no materials whatsoever.
It has to, I mean, it's virtually, I mean, okay, you have to build factories.
I mean, to fabricate.
Okay.
And you're going to mine the materials where you know many cranes, you know, many, you know,
okay, you 100% have to have the, this everybody's naked.
Everyone's naked.
Everyone's where they are.
So you and I would currently be naked.
It's on the ground and what used to be Manhattan.
So no building.
Grassy, no grassy island.
Yeah. So you need a nakedassy, no, grassy island.
So you need a naked Elon Musk type character
to then start building a company.
You have to have a large company then.
And see if you know where he, you know, where is everyone?
You know, shit, how am I going to find other people I need to do?
But we have all the knowledge of, yeah,
everyone has the knowledge that's in their current brains.
Yeah, I've met some legit engineers.
Crazy, crazy polymath people.
Yeah, but the actual labor of me,
because you said, it's like the original Mac,
like the Apple II, that can be built.
But even that, you know, it's been asking me to have you.
Well, I think part of it is a communication problem.
If you could suddenly have, you know,
if everyone had a walkie-talkie and there was, you know,
a couple, you know, 10 really smart people who designated the leaders, they could say,
okay, I want everyone who can do this to walk west until you get to this little hub.
And everyone else, you know, and they could actually coordinate it, but we don't have that.
So it's like people just, you know, and then what I think about is, so you've got some people that
are like trying to organize and you'll have a little community where a couple hundred people
have come together and there'll be a couple thousand have organized
and they designated one person as the leader
and then they have sub-leaders and okay,
we have a start here, we have some organization,
you're also gonna have some people that say,
good, humans were a scourge upon the earth
and this is good and they're gonna try to sabotage.
They're gonna try to murder the people
and who know what they're talking about.
Yeah.
The elite that possess the knowledge.
Maybe everyone's hopeful for the, we're all civilized and hopeful for the first 30 days or
something. And then things start to fall off. People get start to lose hope. And there's new kinds of
new kinds of governments popping up. New kinds of societies and they're they're they're
they don't play nicely with the other ones. And I think very, I think a lot of people will just give up and say,
you know what, this is it.
We're back in the Stone Age.
Let's just create, you know, a Gary and we don't also know how to farm.
No one knows how to farm.
There's like, even the, even the farmers, you know, a lot of them are relying on their machines.
And so we also, and we a lot of you, mass starvation.
And that, you know, when you're trying to organize, a lot of people are, you know,
coming in with, you know, spearsars they fashioned and trying to murder everyone who has a
significant question given today's society, how much violence would that be? We've gotten
soft or less violent. And you know, weapons. So we have really primitive weapons now.
But we have a, and also we have a kind of ethics where murder is bad. We used to be less,
like human life was less valued. And past so murder was more okay, like ethically.
But in the past, they also were really good at figuring out
how to have sustenance.
They knew how to get food and water because they,
so we have no idea, like the ancient hunter gatherer
of the studies would laugh at what's going on here.
They'd say, you guys know, you don't know what you're,
none of you know what you're doing.
And also the amount of people feeding this amount of people
in a very, in a stone age, you know, civilization're doing. Yeah. And also the amount of people feeding this amount of people
in a very in a stone age civilization
that's not gonna happen.
So New York and San Francisco are screwed.
Well whoever's not near water is really screwed.
So that's her name.
You're near a river, a fresh water river.
And you know,
anyways, it's a very interesting question.
And what it does, this end the pencil,
it makes me feel so grateful and excited about,
man, our civilization is so cool.
And this is, talk about collective intelligence.
Humans did not build any of this.
It's collective human super,
collective humans is a super intelligent being
that can do absolutely, especially over long periods of time,
can do such magical things,
and we just get to be born. When I go, when I'm working and I'm hungry, I just go click, click, click,
and like, salad's coming. The salad arrives. If you think about the incredible infrastructure that's
in place for that, for that quickly, or just the internet, the electricity, first of all,
that's just powering the things, you know, how the, where the amount of structures that have to be
created and for that electricity to be there. And then you've got the, of course, that's just powering the things, you know, how the, where the amount of structures that have to be created and for that electricity to be there.
And then you've got the, of course, the internet.
And then you have this system, um, we're of delivery drivers.
And they have, they're running bikes that were made by someone else.
And they're going to get a salad and all those ingredients came from all over the place.
I mean, it's just, so I think it's like, I like thinking about these things because it, um,
it makes me feel like just so grateful.
I'm like, man, it would be so awful if we didn't have this and people who didn't have it
would think this was such magic we live in.
And we do and like, cool.
That's fun.
Yeah, one of the most amazing things when I showed up, I came here at 13 from the Soviet Union
and the supermarket was people don't really realize that, but the abundance of food.
It's not even so bananas was the
thing I was obsessed about. I just ate bananas every day for many, many months because the
heaven had bananas in Russia and the fact you can have as many bananas as you want plus there were
like somewhat inexpensive relative to the other food and the fact that you can somehow have a
system that brings bananas to you without
having to wait in the long line and all those things.
That's magic.
I mean, also, imagine, so first of all, the ancient hunter gatherers, you know, picture the
mother gathering and eating for all this fresh food.
No, so do you know what an avocado used to look like?
It was a little like a sphere.
And the fruit of it, the actual avocado part, was like a little tiny layer around this big
pit that took almost the whole volume. And the fruit of it, the actual avocado part, was like a little tiny layer around this big pit
that took almost the whole volume.
We've made crazy robot avocados today
that have nothing to do with what they,
so same with bananas, these big, sweet,
and not infested with bugs and grow,
they used to eat the shittiest food.
And they're eating uncooked meat or maybe they cook it and they're just, it's gross and it's
things rot. So you go to the supermarket and it's just, it's just, A, it's like crazy,
super engineered cartoon food, fruit and food. And then it's all this process food, which, you know,
we complain about, we're in our setting, oh, you know, we complain about, you know, we need
too much process. That's a, this is a good's a good problem. If you imagine what they would think,
my God, a cracker, delicious cracker would taste to them.
Candy,
you know,
postons, spaghetti,
they never had anything like this.
And then you have from all over the world,
I mean, things that are grown all over the place,
all here in nice little racks organized,
and on a middle class salary you can afford,
anything you want, I mean, it's,
again, just like incredible gratitude, like, ah, yeah.
And the question is, how resilient is this whole thing?
I mean, this is another darker version of your question is,
if we keep all the material possessions we have,
but we start knocking out some percent of the population.
How resilient is the system that we built up?
Or have we reliant other humans and the knowledge of built up on the past, the distributed nature of knowledge?
How much does it take?
How many humans need to disappear for us to be completely lost?
Well, I'm trying to go off one thing,
which is Elon Musk says that he has this number
a million in mind as the order of magnitude
of people you need to be on Mars
to truly be multi-planetary.
Multi-planetary doesn't mean, you know,
like when Neil Armstrong goes to the moon,
that's, they call it a great leap for mankind.
Yeah.
It's not a great leap for anything.
It is a great achievement for mankind.
And I always like, think about,
if the first fish to kind of go on land
just kind of went up and gave the shore a high five
and goes back into the water,
that's not a great leap for life.
That's a great achievement for that fish.
And there should be a little statue of that fish
and the water and everyone should celebrate the fish.
But we took about a great leap for life.
It's permanent.
It's something that now, from now on,
this is how things are.
So this is part of why I get so excited about Mars,
by the way, is because you can count on one hand
the number of great leaps that we've had,
like no life to life and single cell or simple cell to complex cell and
single cell organisms to animals to come, you know, multi-cell animals and then ocean to land and then
One planet to two planets. Anyway, diversion, but the point is that
We are officially that leap for all of life has happened once the ships could stop coming
from Earth because there's some horrible catastrophic, well, we're three and everyone dies
on Earth and they're fine and they can turn that certain X number of people into 7 billion
population that's thriving just like Earth.
They can build ships.
They can come back and recolonize Earth because now we are officially a multi-planetary
where it's a self-sustaining.
He says a million people is about what he thinks.
Now that might be a specialized group.
That's a very specifically selected million
that has very, very skilled million people.
Not just maybe the average million on Earth,
but I think it depends what you're talking about.
But I don't think, so one million is 1 7000th,
1 8000th of the current population.
I think you need a very, very, very small fraction of humans on Earth to get by.
Obviously, you're not going to have the same thriving civilization if you get to a smaller
number, but it depends who you're killing off, I guess, as part of the question.
Yeah.
If you killed a half of the people just randomly right now, I think we'd be fine.
It would be obviously a great awful tragedy.
I think if you killed off three quarters of all people randomly, just three out of every four people dropped dead, I think we'd be fine. It would be obviously a great awful tragedy. I think if you killed off three quarters of all people,
randomly, just three out of every four people,
drops dead, I think we'd have obviously
the stock market would crash.
We'd have a rough patch, but I almost can assure you
that this species would be fine.
Well, because the million number, like you said,
it is specialized.
So I think, because you have to do this,
you have to basically do the iPhone experiment, like literally you have to be able to be able to manufacture computers.
Yeah, everything.
If you're going to have the self-sustaining, you can, you know, any major important skill,
any important piece of infrastructure on earth can be built there in this, you know,
just as well.
It'd be interesting to list out what are the important things, what are the important
skills?
Yeah, I mean, you have to feed everyone.
So, you know, mass farming, things like that.
You have to, you have to, you have mining, these questions, it's like the materials might
be, I don't know, I don't know, five miles, two miles underground, I don't know what that
is. But like, it's amazing to me
just that these things got built in the first place.
And they never got, no one built the first,
the mind that we're getting stuff for the iPhone
for probably wasn't built for the iPhone,
or in general early mining,
I think obviously I assume that the industrial revolution
when we realized, oh, fossil fuels,
we wanna extract this magical energy source,
I assume that like, my knee took a huge leap
without knowing very much about this.
I think, you know, you're gonna need mining,
you're gonna need like a lot of electrical engineers.
If you're gonna have a civilization like ours,
and of course you could have oil and lanterns
be able to go way back,
but if you're trying to build our today thing,
you're gonna need, you know, energy and electricity
and then minds that can bring
materials and then you're going to need ton of plumbing and everything that entails.
Yeah. And like I said, food, but also the manufacturer, so like turning raw materials into
something useful. Yeah. That whole thing, like factories, some supply chain, transportation.
Right. You know, I mean, you think about when we talk about like World Hunger, one of the major
problems is, you know,
there's plenty of food and by the time it arrives,
most of it's gone bad in the truck, you know,
in a kind of an impoverished place.
So it's like, you know, we take, again,
we take it so for granted, all the food in the supermarket
is fresh.
It's all there.
And which always stresses me,
if I were running a supermarket,
I would always be so like miserable
about like things going bad on the shelves. Or if you don running a supermarket, I would always be so miserable about things going bad
on the shelves, or if you don't have enough,
that's not good, but if you have too much,
it goes bad anyway.
Of course there would be entertainers too.
Like somebody would have a YouTube channel
that's running on Mars.
There is something different about a civilization
on Mars and Earth, existing versus a civilization in the United States versus
Russia and China.
That's a different fundamentally different distance, philosophically.
The quote will be fuzzy.
We know there'll be a reality show on Mars that everyone on Earth is obsessed with.
If I think if people are going back and forth enough, then it becomes fuzzy, it becomes
like, oh, our friends on Mars and there's's like this, Mars versus Earth, you know, like, you know,
and it become like fun tribalism.
I think if people don't really go back and forth
and it really, they're there for, I think,
if you get kind of like, oh, we hate, you know,
a lot of like us versus them stuff going on.
There could be also war and space for territory.
So as first colony happens, China, Russia,
or whoever, the European, different European
nations, Switzerland, Finland, gets their act together and starts wars.
This is supposed to be staying up all along.
Yeah, there's all kinds of crazy geopolitical things that we have not even, no one's really
even thought about too much yet, that could get weird.
Think about the 1500s, when it was suddenly like a race to like, you know, colonize or capture
land or discover new land that hasn't been, you know, so it was like this, this new frontier.
And there's not really, you know, the land is not, you know, the thing about Crimea was like
this huge thing because this tiny peninsula switched. That's how like, optimized everything
has become. Everything is just like really stuck. Mars is a whole new world of like, you know, territory, if I'd even name it, naming things and, you know,
and it's a chance for new kind of governments maybe,
or maybe it's just the colonies of these governments
so we don't get that opportunity.
I think it would be cool if there's new countries
being, you know, totally new experiments.
And that's fascinating because Elon talks
exactly about that.
And I believe that very much like that should be,
like from the start, they should determine their own sovereignty.
They should determine their own thing.
There was one modern democracy in late 1700s, the US.
It was the only modern democracy.
And now, of course, there's hundreds or dozens, many dozens.
But I think part of the reason that was able to start,
I mean, people didn't have the idea,
people had the idea, it was that they had
of clean slate, new place.
You know, and they suddenly were,
so I think it would be a great opportunity to have,
there's a lot of people who have done that,
you know, if I had my own government on an island,
my own country, what would I do?
And it's, the US founders actually had the opportunity, that fantasy,
they were like, we can do it. Let's make, okay, what's the perfect country? And they tried to make
something. Sometimes progress is, it's not held up by our imagination, it's held up by just,
there's no, you know, blank canvas to try something on. Yeah, it's an opportunity for first start.
You know, the funny thing about the conversation we're having is not often had.
I mean, even by Elon, he's so focused on starship and actually putting the first human
on Mars.
I think thinking about this kind of stuff is inspiring.
It makes his dream and makes us hope for the future.
And it makes us somehow like thinking about civilization on Mars is
Helping us think about the civilization here on earth. Yeah, how we should run it. What do you think are like in our lifetime?
I will you know, I think any effort that goes to Mars
The goal is in this decade. Do you think that's actually gonna be achieved?
I have a big bet $10,000 with a friend when I was drunk in an argument.
This is great.
The Neil Armstrong of Mars, whoever he or she may be, will step foot by the end of 2030.
Now, this was probably a 2018, I have this argument.
So, like what?
So, a human has to touch Mars by the end of 2030.
Oh, by the year 30.
Yeah, by January 1st, 2031.
Yeah.
So, did you agree on the time zone or what?
No, no, yeah, it's coming on that exact day.
That's going to be really stressful.
But anyway, I think that there will be.
That was 2018.
I was more confident than.
I think it's going to be around this time.
I mean, I still won the general bet
because his point was you are crazy. This is not going to happen in our lifetime. They're not for many,
many decades. And I said, you're wrong. You don't know what's going on in SpaceX. I think if the
world depended on it, I think probably SpaceX could probably, I mean, I don't know this, but
I think the tech is almost there. Like, I don't think, of course, it's delayed many years by safety.
So they first want to send a ship, you know, Mars, and they want to land a cargo ship on Mars.
And there's the moon on the way to.
Yeah, yeah, there's a lot.
But I think the moon a decade before seemed like magical tech that humans didn't have.
This is like, no, we can, it's totally conceivable that this scene starship, like it's, it is a interplanetary colonial,
or interplanetary transport system.
That's what they used to call it.
The SpaceX, the way they do it is,
every time they do a launch, something fails usually,
when they're testing, and they learn a thousand things,
the amount of data they get, and they improve.
So each one has, it's like they've moved up
like eight generations in each one anyway.
So it's not inconceivable that pretty soon
they could send a star ship to Mars and land it.
There's just no good reason I don't think
that they couldn't do that.
And so if they could do that,
they could in theory send a person to Mars pretty soon.
Now taking off from Mars and coming back again,
I think I don't think anyone want to be on that voyage today
because there's just, you know,
there's still an amateur hour here,
getting that perfect.
I don't think we're too far away now
that the question is,
so every 26 months, earth laps Mars, right?
It's like the synosidal, soil,
or whatever it's called, the period, 26 months.
So it's right now, like in the events,
like 2022 is gonna have one of these,
late 2024, so people could,
this was the earliest estimate I heard Elon said,
maybe we can send people to Mars in 2024,
to land in early 2025.
That is not gonna happen,
because that included 2022 sending a cargo ship to Mars,
maybe even a one in 2020.
And so I think they're not quite on that schedule.
But to win my bet, 2027, I have a chance.
And 2029, I have another chance.
Nice.
We're not very good at backing up
and seeing the big picture we're very distracted by.
What's going on today?
And what's what we can believe because it's happening
in front of our face?
There's no way that humans going to be landing on Mars.
And it's not going to be the only thing
everyone is talking about.
Right? It's going to be the moon landing, but even bigger deal going to another planet, right?
And for it to start a colony, not just to, again, have five and come back.
So this is like the 2020s, maybe the 2030s, is gonna be the new 1960s. We're gonna have a
space decade. I'm so excited about it. And again, it's one of the great leaps for all of life
happening in our lifetime. It's like that's wild.
Depaint a slightly cynical possibility, which I don't see happening, but I just want to
put sort of value into leadership.
I think it wasn't obvious that the moon landing would be so exciting for all of human civilization.
Some of that have to do with the right speeches, with a space race. Like space, depending on how it's presented, can be boring. I don't, I don't think it's been that
so far, but I've actually, I think space is quite boring right now. Not, not, no, space
sex is super, but like 10 years ago, space. Yeah. Some writer I forget who wrote, it's like the best
magic trick in the show happened at the beginning, and now they're starting to do this like easy as you know, it's like you can't go in
that direction and the line that this writer said is like watching astronauts go up to
the space station after watching the moon is like watching Columbus sail to Ibiza.
It's just like, you know, it's, everything is so I'm practically you going up to the
space station not to explore but to do science experiments and microgravity, and you're sending rockets up.
Mostly, here and there, there's a probe,
but mostly, you're sending it up to put satellites
for direct TV, an eye, or whatever it is.
It's kind of like lame earth industry usage.
So, I agree with you, space is boring there.
The first human setting foot on Mars, that's got to be a crazy global event. I can't
imagine it not being maybe you're right. Maybe I'm taking for granted the speeches and the space race.
I think the value of, I guess what I'm pushing is the value of people like Elon Musk and
potentially other leaders that hopefully step up. It's extremely important here. Like I would
argue without the publicity of SpaceX,
it's not just the ingenuity of SpaceX,
but like what they've done publicly
by having a figure that tweets and all that kind of stuff,
like that, that's a source of inspiration.
Totally.
NASA wasn't able to quite pull off with a shuttle.
That's one of his two reasons for doing this.
SpaceX is this for two reasons.
One, life insurance for the species, if you're
on, you know, if you're, if you're, I always think about this way, if you're an alien on
some faraway planet and you're rooting against humanity and you win the bet if humanity
goes extinct, you do not like SpaceX. You do not want them to have their eggs in two
baskets now. Yeah. You know, it's, yeah, in a shirt, it's like, obviously, this, you
know, you could have some, you know, something that kills everyone on both planet, some AI war or something.
But um, but the point is obviously it's good for our chances, our long-term chances,
to be having, you know, chooses self-sustaining civilizations going on.
The second reason he's, he's, he values this, I think, just as high as it's the greatest
adventure in history, you know, going multi-planetary and that, you know, it's, you know, people need some reason to wake up in the morning and
and it'll it'll just be this hopefully great uniting event too. I mean, I'm sure in today's
nasty, awful political environment, which is like a whirlpool of that sucks everything into it.
So it doesn't mean you name a thing and it's become a nasty political topic.
So it doesn't mean you name a thing and it's become a nasty political topic.
So I hope, I hope that
space can, you know, Mars can just bring everyone together. But, you know, it could become this hideous thing where it's, you know, I'll, you know, billionaire, some annoying storyline
gets built. So half the people think that anyone who's excited about Mars is an evil, you know,
something. Yeah. Anyway, I hope it is super excited. So far space has been a uniting,
inspired thing. And in fact, especially during this time of pandemic has been just a commercial
entity putting out humans into space for the first time was just one of the only big sources of hope.
Totally. And awe, just like watching this huge skyscraper, go up in the
air, flip over, back down in land. I mean, it just makes everyone just want to sit back and clap
and kind of like, you know, where I look at something like SpaceX is, it makes me proud to be a human.
And I think it makes a lot of people feel that way. It's like good for our self-esteem. It's like,
you know what, we're pretty, you know, we, we, we have a lot of problems, but like, we're kind of awesome.
Yeah, we're awesome. If we can put people on Mars, sticking an earth flag on Mars,
like, damn, we should be so proud of our little family here.
Like we did something cool.
And by the way, I've made it clear to SpaceX, people,
including Elon, many times, and I just like once a year
reminder that if they want to make this more exciting,
they send the writer to Mars on the thing,
and I'll blog about it,
so I'm just continuing to throw this out.
I'm trying to get them to send me to Mars.
I understand that.
So I just want to clarify,
and which trip does the writer want to go?
I think my dream one, to be honest,
would be like Apollo 8,
where they just looped around the moon and came back.
Because landing on Mars give you a lot of good content to write about.
Great content, right?
I mean, the amount of kind of high-minded, and so I would go into the thing and I would
blog about it.
And I'd be in microgravity, so I'd be bouncing around my little space.
I get a little, they can just send me in a dragon.
They don't need to do a whole starship. And I would bounce around and I would get to,
and I've always had a dream of going to like,
I'm one of those nice jails for a year.
Yes.
Because I just have nothing to do
but it's like read books and no responsibilities
and no social plans.
So this is the ultimate version of that.
And anyway, it's a side topic, but I think it would be.
But also if you, I mean, to be honest,
if you land on Mars, it's epic.
And then if you die there, like finishing your writing, it will be just even that much
more powerful for the, for the impact.
Yeah, but then I'm gone.
And I don't even get to like experience the publication of it, which is the whole point
of some of the greatest writers in history didn't get a chance to experience the publication
of their.
I know. I don't really think that,
I think back to Jesus and I'm like,
oh man, that guy really crushed it, you know?
But then if you think about it,
it doesn't like, you could literally die today
and then become the next Jesus,
like 2000 years from now in this civilization
that's like, they're like in magical in the clouds,
and they're worshiping you, they're worshiping Lex.
And like that sounds like
your ego probably would be like wow that's pretty cool except it relevant to you because you never
even knew it happened. This feels like a Rick and Morty episode. It does. It does. Okay you've you've
talked to Elon quite a bit you've written about him quite a bit just it'd be cool to to hear you
talk about what are your ideas over what, you know, the magic
sauce you've written about, about, with Elon.
What makes him so successful, his style of thinking, his ambition, his dreams, his, the
people he connects with, the kind of problems he tackles, is there kind of comments he
can make about what makes him special?
I think that obviously there's a lot of things that he's very good at.
He has, he has, he's obviously super intelligent.
His heart is very much in like, I think the right place.
Like, you know, I really, really believe that.
Like, and I think people can sense that, you know,
he just doesn't seem like a grifter of any kind.
He's truly trying to do these big things
for the right reasons.
And he's obviously crazy and vicious and hardworking, right?
Not everyone is.
Some people are as talented and have cool visions,
but they just don't want to spend their life that way.
So, but that's none of those alone is what makes Elon Elon.
I mean, if it were, there'd be a more of him
because there's a lot of people that are very smart
and smart enough to accumulate a lot of money
and influence and they have great ambition
and they have, you know, their hearts in the right place.
To me, it is the
very unusual quality he has is that he's sane in a way that almost every human is crazy.
What I mean by that is we are programmed to trust conventional wisdom over our own reasoning
for good reason. If you go back 50,000 years,
and conventional wisdom says, you know, don't eat that berry, you know, or this is the way you tie a
spearhead to a spear. And you're thinking, I'm smarter than that, like you're not. That comes from
the accumulation of life experience, accumulation of observation and experience over many generations.
And that's a little mini version
of the collective super intelligence.
It's like, it's equivalent of making a pencil today,
like people back then,
like the conventional wisdom,
like had this super,
this knowledge that no human could ever accumulate.
So we're very wired to trust it.
Plus, the secondary thing is that the people who, you know, just say that they believe the mountain is, they worship
the mountain as their God, right? And the mountain determines their fate. That's not true, right?
And the convention was wrong there, but believing it was helpful to survival because you were part
of the crowd and you stayed in the tribe. And if you started to insult the mountain god
and say that's just a mountain, it's not,
you didn't fare very well, right?
So for a lot of reasons, it was a great survival trait
to just trust what other people said and believe it.
And truly, obviously, the more you really believed it,
the better.
Today, conventional wisdom in a rapidly changing world,
and a huge giant society, our brains are not built to understand that. They have a few settings, you know, and none of them is,
uh, you know, 300 million person society. So their, so your brain is basically, um,
uh, is treating a lot of things like a small tribe, even though they're not in their true,
and, and then they're treating conventional wisdom as very wise,
in a way that it's not.
If you think about it this way,
it's like a picture, a bucket that's not moving,
very much, moving like a millimeter a year.
And so it has time to collect a lot of water.
And if that's like conventional wisdom in the old days,
and very few things change,
like you're 10, great, great, great, great,
grandmother probably lived a similar life to you,
maybe on the same piece of land. And so old people really knew what they were talking about. Today, the buckets
moving really quickly. And so, you know, wisdom doesn't accumulate, but we think it does, because
our brain settings doesn't have the, oh, move, you know, quickly moving bucket setting on it. So
my grandmother gives me advice all the time. And I have to decide, is this, so there are certain things that are not changing,
like relationships and love and loyalty and things like this.
Her advice on those things, I'll listen to it all day,
she's one of the people who said,
you gotta live near your people you love,
live near your family, right?
I think that is like tremendous wisdom, right?
That is wisdom, because that happens to be something
that doesn't change from generation to generation.
For no.
She alt-right.
For no. She's also alt-right. For now.
She's also telling, right, so I'll be the idiot telling my great ex that they'll actually
be in the metaverse life being like, exactly.
It doesn't matter.
And I'm like, you have to, it's not the same when you're not in person.
They're going to say, it's exactly the same.
And they'll also be thinking to me with their new link.
And I'm going to be like, slow down.
I don't understand what you're, you just talk like a normal.
Anyway.
So, so my grandmother then, but then she says, you know, you, you're, I don't know about
this writing you're doing, you should go to law school and, you know, you know, you
want to be secure.
And that's not good advice for me, you know, given the world I'm in and what I like to
do and what I'm good at, that's not the right advice, but because the world is totally,
she's in a different world.
So she became wise for a world that's no longer here, right?
Now, if you think about that, so then when we think about conventional wisdom, it's a little like my
grandmother and there's a lot of, no, it's not maybe, you know, 60 years outdated, like her software,
it's maybe 10 years outdated conventional wisdom, sometimes 20. So anyway, I think that we all continually
don't have the confidence in our own reasoning when it conflicts with what everyone else thinks when with what seems right
We don't have the the guts to act on that reasoning for that reason, right? You know
We we and so there's so many Elon examples. I mean just from the beginning building zip-2 was the first company and
It was internet advertising at the time when people said, you know, this
internet was brand new, like kind of like kind of thinking of like the metaverse, the
R metaverse today. And people were like, oh, we're saying, you know, we, you know, we
were still facilitate internet advertising. People were saying, yeah, people are going
to advertise on the internet. Yeah, right. But actually, it wasn't that he's magical
and saw the future is that he looked at the present, looked at what the internet was, thought about the obvious advertising opportunity
this was gonna be, it wasn't rocket science,
it wasn't genius, I don't believe.
I think it was just seeing the truth,
and when everyone else is laughing, saying,
well, you're wrong, I mean, I did the math,
and here it is, right?
Next company, X.com, which came eventually PayPal,
people said, oh yeah, people are gonna put their financial information on the internet. No way.
To us, it seems so obvious. If you went back then, you would probably feel the same,
you'd think this is that is a fake company that no, it's just obviously not a good idea.
He looked around and said, you know, I see where this is going. So again, he could see where
it was going because he could see what it was that day and not what it, you know, not people,
conventional wisdom
was still a bunch of years earlier.
SpaceX is the ultimate example.
Friend of his apparently bought actually compiled a montage,
video montage of rockets blowing up,
to show him this is not a good idea.
And if, but just even the bigger picture,
the amount of billionaires who have like thought this was,
I'm gonna start launching rockets and, you know, the amount to fail. I mean it's it's it's not
Conventional wisdom said this isn't a bad endeavor. He was putting all of his money into it. Yeah
Landing rockets was another thing. You know well if you know here's the classic kind of way we are re-reason
Which is if this could be done NASA would have done it a long time ago because of the money it would save
This could be done the Soviet Union would have done it back in the 60s.
It's obviously something that can't be done, and the math on his envelope said,
well, I think it can be done, and so he just did it. So in each of these cases, I think actually,
in some ways, he long gets too much credit, as people think it's that he's,
that his Einstein intelligence, or he can see the future, he has incredible,
he has incredible guts,
he's still courageous.
I think if you actually are looking at reality,
you're assessing probabilities,
and you're ignoring all the noise, which is wrong, so wrong, right?
And then you just have to be pretty smart
and pretty courageous,
and you have to have this magical ability to be sane and trust your reasoning
over conventional wisdom because your individual reasoning, part of it is that we see that we
can't build a pencil, we can't build the civilization on our own. So we kind of count to the collective
for good reason, but this is different when it comes to kind of what's possible. You know, the Beatles were doing their kind of Motowny chord patterns in the early 60s,
and they were doing what was normal. They were doing what was clearly this kind of sound is a hit.
Then they started getting weird because they had, they were so popular, they had this confidence
to say, let's just, we're going to start just experimenting. And it turns out that like,
if you just, all these people are in this like one groove together doing music and it's just like there's a lot of land over there.
And it seems like, you know, I'm sure the managers would say in that the all the record exact was like, no, you have to be here. This is what sells.
And it's just not true. So I think that Elon is what I the term for this that actually Elon likes to use is reasoning from first principles, the physics term. First principles are your axioms. Physicists, they don't say,
well, what do people think? No, they say, what are the axioms? Those are the puzzle pieces.
Let's use those to build a conclusion. That's our hypothesis. Now, let's test it, right?
And they come up with all kinds of new things constantly by doing that.
If Einstein was assuming conventionalism was right, he never would have even tried to create something that really disproved Newton's laws. And the other way to reason is
reasoning by analogy, which is a great shortcut. It's when we look at other people's reasoning
and we've got a photocopy it into our head, we steal it. So reasoning by analogy, we do all the
time. And it's usually a good thing. I mean, we don't, if you, it takes a lot of mental energy and time to reason from first principles.
It's actually, you know, you don't want to reinvent the wheel every time, right?
You want to often copy other people's reasoning most of the time.
And I, you know, most of us do it most of the time and that's good,
but there's certain moments when you're, forget just for a second, like,
succeeding in like the world of, like, Elon, just who you're going to marry.
Where are you going to settle down?
How are you going to raise your kids?
How are you going to educate your kids How are you gonna educate your kids?
How you should educate yourself?
What kind of career paths in terms?
These moments, this is what on your deathbed,
like you look back on and these are these,
there's a few number of choices that really define your life.
Those should not be reasoned by analogy.
You should absolutely try to reason from first principles.
And Elon, not just by the way,
in his work, but in his personal
life. I mean, if you just look at the way he's on Twitter, he's not, it's not how you're
supposed to be when you're a super famous, you know, industry tight and you're not supposed
to just be silly on Twitter and do memes and, and getting little, little quibbles with you.
He just does things his own way, regardless of what you're supposed to do, which sometimes
serves him and sometimes doesn't. But I think it has taken him where it has taken.
Yeah, I mean, I probably wouldn't describe his approach
to Twitter as first principles,
but I guess that has the same element.
How do you think it is?
Well, first of all, I will say that a lot of tweets
people think, oh, he's gonna be done after that.
He's fine.
He's just one man in the time of the year.
It's something it's not syncing him,
and I think it's not that I think this is like super reasoned out.
I think that, you know, Twitter is his silly side.
But I think that he saw, he was, his reasoning did not feel like there was a giant risk
in just being his silly self on Twitter.
When a lot of billionaires would say, well, no one else is doing that.
Yes.
So it must be a good reason, right?
No, I got.
Well, I got to say that he inspires me to that it's okay to be silly.
Totally. On Twitter. And, um, but yeah, you're right. The big inspiration is the willingness
to do that when nobody else is doing it. Yeah. And I think about all the great artists,
you know, all the great inventors and entrepreneurs, almost all of them, they had a moment when they trusted their
reasoning.
I mean, Airbnb was over 60 with VCs.
A lot of people would say, obviously, they know something we don't, right?
But they didn't.
They said, I think they're all wrong.
I mean, that's that takes some kind of different wiring in your brain.
And then that's both for big picture and detailed engineering problems.
It's fun to talk to him.
It's fun to talk Jim Keller, who's a good example of this kind of thinking about manufacturing,
how to get costs down.
They always talk about SpaceX rockets this way.
They talk about manufacturing this way, like cost per pound or per ton to get to orbit or something like that.
This is how the reason we need to get the cost down.
It's a very kind of raw materials, like just very basic way of thinking.
First principles.
It's really the...
And the first principles of rocket are like the price of raw materials and gravity, you know, and wind. I mean, these are your
first principles and fuel. Henry Ford, you know, what made Henry Ford blow up as an entrepreneur,
assembly line, right? I mean, he did a, he thought for a second and said, this isn't
how maddening filtering is normally, you know, is normally done this way, but I think
this is a different kind of product.
And that's what changed it.
And then what happens is when someone reasons from first principles, they often fail.
You're going out into the fog with no conventional wisdom to guide you, but when you succeed,
what you notice is that everyone else turns and says, wait, what are they doing?
What are they doing?
They all flock over.
Look at the iPhone.
iPhone, Steve Jobs was obviously famously good at reasoning from Fritz Prinsley, because
that guy had crazy self-confidence.
He just said, if I think this is right, I don't know how he does that.
And I don't think Apple can do that anymore.
I mean, they lost that.
That one brain, his ability to do that was made of that in a totally different company,
even though there's tens of thousands of people there.
He said, he didn't say, and I'm giving a lot of credit to Steve Jobs, but of course I was a team at Apple who said
they didn't look at the flip phones and say, okay, well, let's make a keyboard that's like
clicky and a really cool Apple keyboard. They said, what should a mobile device be?
Axioms, what are the axioms here? None of them involved the keyboard, necessarily,
and by the time they piece it up There was no keyboards it didn't make sense
Everyone suddenly is going wait what what are they doing? What are they doing? What are they now every phone looks like the iPhone?
I mean that's that's how it goes
You tweeted
What's something you've changed your mind about this the question you've tweeted?
Elon replied brain transplants
Sam Harris responded nuclear power. This's a bunch of people with cool responses
there. In general, what are your thoughts about some of
the responses and what have you changed your mind about
bigger, small, perhaps in doing the research for some of
you writing?
So I'm writing right now, just finishing a book on
kind of why our society is such a shit place at the moment,
just polarized and we have all these gifts
like we're talking about just the supermarket.
We have this exploding technology,
fewer and fewer people are in poverty.
Louis CK likes to say,
everything's amazing and no one's happy, right?
But it's really an extreme moment right now
where it's like hate is on the rise,
like crazy things, right?
And if I could interrupt briefly, you did tweet that you just wrote the last word
I sure did and then there's some hilarious asshole who said now you just have to work on
all the ones in the middle yeah I ruined that I mean when you when you were in a reputation as a
as a tried and true procrastinator you're just gonna get shit forever. And that's fine, I accept my fate there.
So do you mind sharing a little bit more about the details
of what you're writing?
So you're,
what, how do you approach this question
about this data society?
I wanted to figure out what was going on
because what I noticed was a bad trend.
It's not that things are bad.
It's that things are getting worse in certain ways.
Not in every way.
If you look at Max Roser's stuff,
he comes up with all these amazing graphs.
This is what's weird is that things are getting better
and almost every important metric you can think of.
Except the amount of people who hate other people
in their own country and the amount of people
that hate their own country, the amount of people that hate their own country,
the amount of Americans that hate America is on the rise, right?
The amount of Americans that hate other Americans is on the rise.
The amount of Americans that hate the president is on the rise, all these things, like on the
very steep rise.
So what the hell?
What's going on?
Like there's something, there's something causing that.
It's not that we know a bunch of new people were born who were just dicks. It's that something is going on, like there's something, there's something causing that. It's not that we know a bunch of new people were born who were just dicks. It's that something is going on. So
I think of it as a very simple oversimplified equation, human behavior. And it's the output
that I think the two inputs are human nature and environment, right? And this is basic,
you know, super, super kindergarten level, like, you know, animal behavior. But I think
it's worth thinking about.
You've got human nature, which is not changing very much, right?
And then you got, you throw that nature into a certain environment and it reacts to the
environment, right?
It's, it's shaped by the environment.
And then eventually what comes out is behavior, right?
Human nature is not changing very much, but suddenly we're behaving differently, right?
We are, again, you know, look at the polls.
Like it used to be that the president, you know,
was liked by, I don't remember the exact numbers,
but you know, 80% or 70% of their own party
and you know, 50% of the other party.
And now it's like 40% of their own party
and 10% of the other party, you know, it's,
it's, and it's not that the presidents are getting worse. Maybe some people would argue that they're on party in 10% of the other party. And it's not that the presidents are getting worse,
and maybe some people would argue that they are,
but more so.
There's a lot of idiot presidents throughout the,
what's going on is something in the environment is changing,
and that you're seeing as a change in behavior.
A easy example here is that by a lot of metrics, racism,
is becoming less and less of a problem.
It's hard to measure, but there's metrics like, you know, how upset would you be if your kid married someone of another race? And that number is plummeting, but racial grievance is skyrocketing, right?
There's a lot of examples like this.
So I wanted to look around and say, and the reason I took it on, the reason I don't think this is just an unfortunate trend, unpleasant trend that hopefully we come out of,
is that all this other stuff I like to write about,
all this future stuff, right?
Is this magical?
I always think of this, I'm very optimistic in a lot of ways, and I think that our world
would be a utopia, it would seem like actual heaven, like whatever Thomas Jefferson was
picturing as heaven, other than maybe the eternal life aspect, I think that if he came to
2021, US, it would be better.
It's cooler than heaven.
What we live in a place that's cooler than 1700s heaven.
Yeah.
Again, other than the fact that we still die.
Now, I think the future world actually probably would have quote, eternal life.
I don't think anyone wants to turn a life actually if people think they do.
Eternal is a long time, but I think the choice to die when you want.
Maybe we're uploaded.
Maybe we can refresh our bodies. I don't know what it is. But the point is, I think about that
utopia. And I do believe that like if we don't botch this, we'd be heading towards somewhere
that would seem like heaven, maybe in our lifetimes. Of course, if we, if things go wrong,
now think about the trends here. Just like the 20th century would seem like some magical
utopia to someone from the 16th century. The bad things in the 20th century would seem like some magical utopia to someone from the 16th century.
The bad things in the 20th century were kind of the worst things ever in terms of just absolute
magnitude. World War II, the biggest genocides ever. You've got maybe climate change. If it is
the existential threat that many people think it is, I mean, we never had an existential threat on that level before. I mean, so the good is getting better and
the bad is getting worse. And so what I think about the future, I think of us as in some kind of
big, you know, long canoe as a species, 5 million mile long canoe, each of us sitting in a row.
And we have each have one or we can paddle on the left side of the right side. And what we know is there's a fork up there somewhere.
And the river forks, and there's a utopia on one side
and a dystopia on the other side.
And I really believe that that's,
we're probably not headed for just an okay future.
It's just the way tech is exploding,
like it's probably gonna be really good or really bad.
The question is, which side should we be rowing on?
We can't see up there, right?
But it really matters.
So I'm running about with this future stuff,
and I'm saying none of this matters.
If we're squabbling our way into kind of like
a civil war right now, so what's going on?
So it's a really important problem to solve.
What are your sources of hope in this?
So like, how do you steer the canoe?
One of my big sources of hope,
and this is my putting my answer to what I changed my mind on, is I think I
always knew this, but I forget it's easy to forget it. Our
primitive brain does not remember this fact, which is that I
don't think there are very many bad people. Now, you say bad,
you know, they're selfish people. Most of us, I think if,
you know, I think that if you think of people, you know,
there's, there's, you know's digital languages, ones and zeroes.
And our primitive brain very quickly can get into the land
where everyone's a one or a zero.
Our tribe, we're all ones, you know, we're perfect.
I'm perfect, my family is that other family,
is that other tribe, there are zeroes,
and you dehumanize them, right?
These people are awful.
So dehumanized zero is not a human place.
No one's a zero, no one's a one.
Those are, you're dehumanizing yourself.
So when we get into this land,
I call it political Disney world
because the Disney movies, good guys,
scars, totally bad and Mufasa's totally good, right?
There's no, you don't see Mufasa's character flaws.
You don't see scars upbringing that made him like that,
that humanizes him, no, lionizes him, whatever.
You are, well done.
Yeah.
Mufasa's a one and scars a zero. Very simple. Yeah.
So political Disney world is a place, psychological place that all of us have been in.
And it can be religious Disney world, it can be national Disney world and war, whatever it is.
But it's a place where we fall into this delusion that there are protagonist and antagonist
and that's it, right? That is not true. We are all 0.5s or maybe 0.6s to 0.4s in that.
We are also in one hand, it's not,
I don't think there's that many really great people,
frankly, I think if you get into it,
people are kind of a lot of people,
you know, most of us have, you know,
if you get really into our most shameful memories,
the things we've done that are worse,
the most shameful thoughts, the deep selfishness
that some of us have in areas we wouldn't want to admit,
right?
Most of us have a lot of unadmirable stuff.
Right, on the other hand, if you actually got into,
really got into someone else's brain,
and you looked at their upbringing,
you looked at the trauma that they've experienced,
and then you looked at the insecurities they have,
and you look at all there,
if you assemble the highlight reel of your worst moments,
the meanest things you've ever done,
the worst, they're most selfish,
the times you stole something, whatever,
and you just have people that, wow, Lex is an awful person.
If you highlighted your, if you did a montage of your best moments, people will say, oh,
he's a dot, right? But of course, we all have both of those. So I've started to really
try to remind myself that everyone's a point five, right? And point fives are all worthy of
criticism, and we're all worthy of compassion. And the thing that makes me hopeful
is that I really think that there's a bunch of point fives
and point fives are good enough
that we should be able to create a good society together.
There's a lot of love in every human.
And I think there's more love in the humans than hate.
You know, I always remember this moment,
this is weird anecdote, but I was at a Red Sox fan,
Boston Red Sox baseball, and Derek Geter
is who we hate the most.
He's on the Yankees.
He is.
And hate, right?
Jeter, right?
He was his last game in Fenway's retiring,
and he got this rousing standing ovation,
and I almost cried.
And it was like, what is going on?
We hate this guy, but actually,
there's so much love in all humans.
You know, it felt so good to just give a huge cheer
to this guy we hate because it's like this moment
of like a little fist pound being like,
of course, we all actually love each other.
And I think there's so much of that.
And so the thing that I think I've come around on
is I don't, I think that we are in an environment
that's bringing out really bad stuff.
I don't think it's, if I thought it was the people,
I would be more hopeful.
Like if I thought it was human nature,
I'd be more upset. It if I thought it was human nature, I'd be more upset.
It's the two independent variables here,
or there's a fixed variable.
There's a constant, which is a human nature,
and there's the independent variable environment,
and that it behaviors the dependent variable.
I like that the thing that I think is bad
is the independent variable, the environment,
which means I think the environment can get better.
And there's a lot of things I can go into
about why the environment I think is bad, but I have hope, because I think we can, the environment can get better. And there's a lot of things I can go into about why the environment, I think, is bad,
but I have hope because I think the thing that's bad for us is something that can change.
The first principle's idea here is that most people have the capacity to be a point seven
to a point nine.
If the environment is, uh, uh, it's properly calibrated.
Yeah, I think that, well, I think that I think it may be if we. I think that maybe if we're all,
yeah, if we're all 0.5s,
I think that environments can bring out our good side.
Yeah, so maybe we're all on some kind of distribution.
And the right environment can, yes,
can bring out our higher sides.
And I think a lot of ways you could say it has.
I mean, the US environment,
we take for granted how the liberal laws and liberal environment
that we live in, I mean, like in New York City, right, if you walk down the street and you
like assault someone, hey, if anyone sees you, you're probably going to yell at you,
you might get your ass kicked by someone for doing that.
You also might end up in jail, you know, of it's security cameras, and there's just norms.
You know, we're all trained,
that's what awful people do, right?
So, there's not the human nature doesn't have it in it
to be like that.
It's that this environment we're in
has made that a much, much, much smaller experience for people.
There's so many examples like that where it's like,
man, you don't realize how much of the worst human nature
is contained by our environment.
But I think that rapidly changing environment,
which is what we have right now, social media starts.
I mean, what a seismic change to the environment.
There's a lot of examples like that.
Rapidly changing environment can create
rapidly changing behavior.
And wisdom sometimes can't keep up.
And so we can really kind of lose our grip
on some of the good behavior.
We're surprised by Elon's answer about brain transplants or sams about nuclear power?
Or anything else?
Sam's, I think, is...
I have a friend, Isabelle Bollemeckay, who has a nuclear power influencer.
I've become very convinced.
And I've not done my deep dive on this.
But here's...
In this case, this is, this
is reasoning by analogy here. The amount of really smart people I respect, who all, who seem
to have dug in, who all say nuclear power is clearly a good option. It's obviously
emission free, but, you know, the, the, the concerns about meltdowns and waste they see
that they're completely overblown. So judging from those people, secondary knowledge
here, I will say I'm a strong advocate. I haven't done my own deep dive yet, but it does
seem like a little bit odd that you've got people who are so concerned about climate change,
who have, it seems like it's kind of an ideology where nuclear power doesn't fit rather than
rational, you know, fear of climate change,
that somehow is anti-nuclear power.
I personally am uncomfortably reasoning a biology with climate change.
I've actually not done a deep dive myself.
Me neither, because it's so, man, it seems like a deep dive.
And my reasoning by analogy there currently has me thinking it's a truly
existential thing but feeling hopeful. So let me, this is me speaking and this
is speaking from a person who's not done the deep dive. I'm a little suspicious
of the amount of fear mongering going on. I've especially over the past couple
years have gotten uncomfortable with fear mongering and all walks of life.
There's way too many people interested in manipulating've gotten uncomfortable with fear mongering and all walks of life.
There's way too many people interested
in manipulating the populace with fear.
And so I don't like it.
I should probably do a deep dive,
because to me, it's the, well, the big problem
with the opposition to climate change
or whatever the fear mongering is that
it also grows the skepticism and science broadly.
It's like, and that, so I need to make sure I do that deep dive.
I have listened to a few folks who kind of criticize the fear of
mongering and all those kinds of things, but they're few and far in between.
So it's like, all right, what is the truth here?
And it feels lazy, but it also feels like it's hard to get to the, like, there's a lot of
kind of activists talking about idea versus, like, sources of objective, like, calm, first
principles type reasoning.
Like, one of the things, I know it's supposed to be a very big problem, but when people talk about catastrophic effects
of climate change, I haven't been able to see really great deep analysis of what that
looks like in 10, 20, 30 years, raising sea levels.
What are the models of how that changes human behavior, society?
What are the things that happen?
There's going to be constraints on the resources
and people are gonna have to move around.
This is happening gradually.
I will be able to respond to this,
how would we respond to this?
What are the best models for how everything goes wrong?
Again, this is a question I keep starting to ask myself
without doing any research,
like motivating myself to get up to this deep dive that I feel is deep.
Just watching people not do a great job with that kind of modeling with the pandemic
and sort of being caught off guard and wondering, okay, if we're not good with this pandemic, how are we going to respond to other kinds of tragedies?
Well, this is part of why I wrote the book because I said, we're going to have
more and more of these big collective.
What should we do here?
Situations, you know, whether it's how about when, you know, we're probably not
that far away from people being able to go and decide the IQ of their kid or like,
you know, make a bunch of embryos and actually, you know, pick the highest IQ
and possibly go wrong. Yeah. And also like imagine the political sides of that or like, you know, make a bunch of embryos and actually, you know, pick the highest IQ. You can possibly go wrong.
Yeah.
And also like, imagine the political sides of that
and like, as something only, well, people can afford it first
and just the nightmare, right?
We need to be able to have our wits about us as a species
where we can actually get into a topic like that
and come up with a, where the collective brain can be smart.
I think that there are certain topics
where I think of this, and this is again another simplistic model,
but I think it works is that there's a higher mind and a primitive mind,
right, in your head.
And these team up with others.
So when the higher minds are in a higher mind is more rational
and puts out ideas that it's not attached to.
And so it can change its mind easily,
because it's just an idea and the higher mind can get criticized.
Their ideas can get criticized, and it's not a big deal.
And so when the higher mind's team up,
it's like all these people in the room
throwing out ideas and kicking them,
and one idea goes out, and everyone criticizes it,
which is like shooting bows and arrows at it,
and the truth, the true idea is the arrows bounce off.
And it's like, okay, it rises up.
And the other ones get shot down.
So it's this incredible system.
This is what good science institution is,
is someone puts out a thing, criticism arrows come at it
and most of them fall and the needle is in the haystack
end up rising up, right?
Incredible mechanism.
So what that's happening is a bunch of people,
a bunch of flawed medium scientists
are creating super intelligence.
Then there's the primitive mind, which, you know,
is the more limbic systemy part of our brain. It's the, it's a part of us that is very much not
living in 2021. It's living many tens of thousands of years ago, and it does not treat ideas like
this separate thing. It identifies with its ideas. It only gets involved when it finds an idea sacred.
It starts holding an idea sacred
and I start identifying.
So what happens is they team up too.
And so when you have a topic that a bunch of primitive,
that really rouses a bunch of primitive minds,
it quickly, the primitive minds team up
and they create an echo chamber.
Where suddenly no one can criticize this.
And in fact, if it's powerful enough, people outside the community, no one can
criticize it. We will get your paper retracted. We will get you fired. That's not higher
mind behavior. That is crazy primitive mind. And so now what happens is the collective becomes
dumber than an individual, a dumber than a reason, a single reasoning individual. You have
this collective is suddenly attached to this sacred scripture
with the idea and they will not change their mind. And they get dumber and dumber. And
so climate change, what's worrisome, is that climate change has in many ways become a
sacred topic, where if you come up with a nuanced thing, you might get caught branded a denier.
Yes. So there goes the superintelligence. All the arrows, no arrows can be fired.
But when you get called to the nire, that's a social penalty for firing an arrow at a certain orthodoxy.
Right? And so what's happening is the big brain gets like frozen, right? And it becomes very stupid.
Now, you can also say that about a lot of other topics right now. You know, you know,
you just mentioned another one. I forget what it was, but that's also kind of this.
The world of X-C. Yeah, yeah, COVID it was, but that's also kind of this.
The world of vaccine.
Yeah, yeah, COVID, okay.
And here's my point earlier,
is that what I see is that the political divide
has like a whirlpool that's pulling everything into it.
And in that whirlpool,
thinking is done with the primitive mind tribes.
I'm surprised.
And so I get, you know, okay, obviously something like race.
That makes sense, that also right now. The topic of race, for example, okay, obviously something like race, right? That makes sense.
That, that also right now, the topic of race, for example, or gender, these things are
in the world pool.
But that at least is like, okay, that's something that the primitive mind would always get
really worked up about, you know, it's, it taps into like our deepest kind of like primal
cells.
COVID, you know, let me ask this COVID in a way too, but, you know, climate change, like
that should just be something that our rational brain's are like, let's solve this complex problem. But the
problem is that it's all gotten sucked into the red versus blue world pool. And once that happens,
it's in the hands of the primitive minds. And we're losing our ability to be wise together to make
decisions. We're, it's like, it's like, it's like the big species brain is like, or the big American
brain is like, drunk at the wheel right now. And we're about to go on to our future with more and more big technologies.
Scary things, which make big, right decisions,
and we're getting dumbered as a collective,
and that's part of this environmental problem.
So within the space of technologists
and the space of scientists, we should allow the arrows.
That's one of the saddest things to me about,
is like the scientists, I've seen seen arrogance there's a lot of mechanism
that maintain the tribe it's the arrogance it's it's it's how you built up the this mechanism that
defends this wall that defends against the arrows it's arrogance credentialism like um just ego
really and then just it protects you from actually challenging your own ideas,
this ideal of science that makes science beautiful in a time of fear.
And in a time of division created by perhaps politicians that leverage the fear,
it, like you said, makes the whole system dumber.
The science system dumber, the tech developer system dumber, the science system dumber, the tech developer system dumber, if
they don't allow the challenging of ideas.
What's really bad is that in a normal environment, you're always going to have echo chambers.
So what's the opposite of an echo chamber?
I created a term for it because I think we need it, which is called an ideal lab.
An ideal lab, right?
It's like people act like scientists, even they're not doing science, they just treat their ideas like science
experiments and they toss them out there and everyone disagrees and disagreement is like
the game. Everyone likes to disagree, you know, certain texts thread where everyone is
just, you know, saying, you know, it's almost like someone throws something out and just
it's an impulse for the rest of the group to say, I think you're being like overly general
there. I think like, aren't you kind of being, I think that's like your bias showing.
And it's like no one's getting offended because it's like, we're all just messing, we all
of course respect each other.
Obviously, we're just, we're just, you know, trashing each other's ideas and that the whole
group becomes smarter.
We're always going to have IDLabs and echo chambers, right, in different communities.
And most of us participate in both of them, you know, and, you know, maybe in your marriage
is a great IDLab, you love to disagree with your spouse and maybe in, but this group of friends
or your family at home, you know, you know, in front of that sister, you do not bring up politics,
because she's now in force, when that happens, her bullying is forcing the whole room to be
in echo chamber to appease her. Now, what scares me is that usually you have these things
existing kind of in bubbles, and usually there bubbles. And usually they each have their natural defenses
against each other.
And an echo chamber person stays in their echo chamber.
They don't like they will cut you out.
They don't like to be friends with people
who disagree with them.
You notice that they will cut you out.
They'll cut out their parents if they vote
over Trump or whatever, right?
So that's how they do it.
They will say, I'm going to stay inside of an echo chamber
safely.
So my ideas, which I identify with, because my primitive mind is doing the thinking, are
not going to ever get to get challenged because it feels so scary and awful for that to happen.
But if they leave and they go into an idea lab environment, they're going to say, what,
no, they're going to disagree.
And they're going to say, and the person is going to try to bully, you know, they're
going to say, that's really offensive.
And people are going to say, no, it's not.
And they're going to, they're going to immediately say these people are assholes, right?
So the echo chamber person, it doesn't have much power when they leave the echo chamber.
Likewise, the ideal that person, they have this great environment, but they go into an
echo chamber where everyone else is, and they do that, they'll get kicked out of the group,
they will get branded as something, you know, a deny or a racist, you know, a right wing
or a radical, you know, these nasty words.
The thing that I don't like right now is that the echo chambers have found ways to forcefully
expand into places that normally have a pretty good immune system against echo chambers,
like universities, like science journals.
Places where usually it's like there's a strong ideal lab culture, They're very retas. You know, that's an idea lab slogan. You have is that these people have found a way
to a lot of people have found a way to actually go out of their thing and keep their echo
chamber by making sure that everyone is scared because they can punish anyone, whether
you're in their community or not. That's all brilliantly, but once the book coming up and yeah, I did.
June, July, we're not quite sure yet. Okay, I can't wait. Thanks. Awesome. Do you know
it title yet? Or you can't talk about that. Still working on it. Okay. If it's okay, just
a couple of questions from mailbag, I just love these. I would love to, I would love to hear
you riff on these. So one is about film and music.
Why do we prefer to watch the question goes?
Why do we prefer to watch a film we haven't watched before, but we want to listen to songs
that we have heard hundreds of times?
This question and your answer really started to make me think like, yeah, that's true.
That's really interesting.
We draw that line somehow.
So what's the answer?
So I think, let's use these two minds again.
I think that when your higher mind is the one
who's taking something in and they're really interested,
you know, what are the lyrics?
So I'm gonna learn something or what,
you know, reading a book or whatever
and the higher mind is trying to get information.
And once it has it, there's no point in listening
to it again, It has the information.
Your rational brain is like, I got it.
But when you eat a good meal or have sex or whatever,
that's something you can do again and again
because it actually, your primitive brain loves it,
and it never gets bored of things that it loves.
So I think music is a very primal thing.
I think music goes right into our
primitive brain a lot, you know, you know, I think it's of course a it's a comparable collaboration.
You're, you know, your, your rational brain is absorbing the actual message. And, but I think
it's all about emotions and even more than emotions, it literally like the, you know, music taps
into like some very, very deep, you know, primal part of us.
And so when you hear a song once,
even your some of your favorite songs,
the first time you heard it,
you were like, I guess that's kind of catchy.
Yeah.
And then you're loving it on the 10th listen,
but sometimes you even don't even like a song.
You're like, oh, the song sucks,
but you suddenly you find yourself on the 40th time,
because it's on the radio all the time,
just kind of being like, oh, I love this song.
And you're like, wait, I don't, I hated this song.
And what's happening is that the sound is actually, music is actually carving a pathway in your brain.
And it's a dance. And when your brain knows what's coming, it can dance.
It knows the steps. So your brain is your internal kind of,
your brain is actually dancing with the music and it knows the steps and it can anticipate
and it and it and so there's something about
knowing, having memorized the song that makes it incredibly enjoyable to us.
But when we hear for the first time we don't know where it's gonna go, we're like an awkward dancer,
we don't know the steps and your primitive brain can't really have that much fun.
And in the movies that's more that's less primitive. That's the story. You're
taking in. But a really good movie that we really love, often we will watch it like 12
times. You know, it's still like it. Not that many, but versus if you're watching a talk
show, right, you're listening to, if you're listening to one of your podcasts, as a
perfect example, there's not many people that will listen to one of your podcasts, no matter
how good it is 12 times, because it's, you, once you got it, you got it.
It's a form of information that's very high in mind focused.
That's how it is.
Well, you know, the finding is there is people that listen to a podcast episode many, many
times.
And often, I think the reason for that is not because the information is the chemistry,
is the music of the conversation.
Yeah.
So it's not the actual art of's the art of it, they like.
Yeah, they'll fall in love with some kind of person,
some weird personality, and they'll just be listening to,
they'll be captivated by the beat of that kind of person.
Or like a stand-up comic.
I've watched certain things like episodes,
like 20 times, even though I, you know.
I have to ask you about the Wizard Hat.
You're at a blog about neural link.
I got a chance to visit a couple a couple of times hanging out with those folks. That was one of the
pieces of writing you did that like changes culture and changes the way people think
about a thing. The ridiculousness of your stick figure drawings or somehow, it's like calling the origin of the universe the big bang.
It's a slowly titled, but it somehow sticks
to be the representative of that.
And the same way the wizard had for the neural link
is somehow was a really powerful way to explain that.
You actually proposed that the man of the year
cover of time should be
one of my drawings. One of your drawings. Yes, it's an outrage that it wasn't.
It was.
Okay. So what are your thoughts about like all those years later about your link? What
would you find this idea? Like what excites you about is the big long term philosophical
things. Is it the practical things? Do you think think is super difficult to do on the neurosurgery side
and the material engineering, the robotic side?
Or do you think the machine learning side
for the brain-computer interfaces
where they get to learn about each other,
all that kind of stuff?
I would just love to get your thoughts
because you're one of the people that
really considered this problem, really studied it,
of your computer interfaces.
I mean, I'm super excited about it.
It's a, I really think it's actually Elon's
most ambitious thing, more than colonizing Mars,
because that's just a bunch of people going somewhere,
even though it's somewhere far.
Neuralink is changing what a person is, eventually.
Now, I think that Neurelink engineers and Elon himself
would all be the first to admit that it is a maybe,
that whether they can do their goals here,
I mean, it is so crazy ambitious to try to,
even their eventual goals are, you know, of course,
in the interim, they have a higher probability
of accomplishing smaller things, which are still huge,
like basically solving paralysis, strokes, Parkinson, things like that.
I mean, it can be unbelievable.
And, you know, anyone who doesn't have one of these things, like, we might, you know,
we should, everyone should be very happy about this kind of helping with different disabilities.
But the thing that is like, so the grand goal is this augmentation where it's, you take
someone who's totally healthy and you put a pre-mission interface in any way to give
them superpowers.
You know, it's the possibilities of they can do this, if they can really, so, you know,
they've already shown that they are for real, but, you know, they created this robot.
Elon talks about, like, it it should be like LASIC,
where it's not, it shouldn't be something
that needs a surgeon,
there shouldn't just be for rich people
who have waited in line for six months,
it should be for anyone who can afford LASIC
and eventually, hopefully,
something that isn't covered by,
and insurance or something that anyone can do.
Something this big deal should be
something that anyone can afford eventually. And when we have this, no, it's something that anyone can do. Something this big a deal should be something that anyone can afford, eventually.
And when we have this, again, I'm talking
about a very advanced phase down the road.
So maybe a less advanced phase, just to, just,
there, there, maybe right now,
if you think about when you listen to a mute,
when you listen to a song, what's happening?
Is do you actually hear the sound?
Well, not really.
It's that the sound is coming out of the speaker.
The speaker is vibrating.
It's vibrating air molecules.
Those air molecules get vibrated all the way to your head,
pressure wave, and then it vibrates your eardrum.
Your eardrum is really the speaker now in your head
that then vibrates bones and fluid,
which then stimulates neurons in your auditory cortex, which give you the perception that you're
hearing sound. Now, if you think about that, do we really need to have a speaker to do that?
You could just somehow, if you had a little tiny thing that could vibrate eardrums, you could do
it that way.
That seems very hard.
But really what you needed to go to the very end
with a thing that really needs to happen
is your auditatory cortex neurons
need to be stimulated in a certain way.
If you have a ton of neuralink things in there,
neuralink electrodes, and they get really good
at stimulating things, you could play a song in your head
that you hear that not is not playing anywhere.
There's no sound in the room,
but you hear it and no one else could,
it's not like they can get close to your head and hear it.
There's no sound, they could not hear anything,
but you hear sound, you can turn up,
so you open your phone, you have the Nurellink app,
you open the Nurellink app,
and it's just Nurellink, so basically,
you can open your Spotify and you can play to,
you can play to your speaker,
you can play to your computer, you can play right
out of your phone to your headphones or you can, you have now a new one,
you can play into your brain.
And this is one of the earlier things.
This is, you know, something that seems like really doable.
So, you know, no more headphones.
I always think that someone knowing because I can leave the house with just my phone,
you know, and nothing else.
So you can just start Apple Watch.
But there's always this one thing, I'm like,
and headphones, you do need your headphones, right?
So I feel like, you know, that'll be the end of that.
But there's so many things that you,
and you keep going, the ability to think together, you know,
you can talk about like super brains.
I mean, one of the examples Elon uses
is that the low bandwidth of speech,
if I go to a movie, and I come out of a scary movie and you say,
how was I? Oh, it was terrifying. Well, what did I just do? I just gave you, I just gave you,
I had five buckets I could have given you. One was horrifying, terrifying, scary, eerie, creepy,
whatever. That's about it. And I had a much more nuanced experience than that. And I don't all
have is, you know, these, these words, right?
And so instead I just hand you the bucket. I put the stuff in the, in the bucket and give it to you.
But all you have is the bucket. You just have to guess what, what I put into that bucket. All you
can do is look at the label of the bucket and say, I'll us, when I say terrifying, here's what
I mean. So the point is it's very lossy. I have this, all this nuanced information of what I
thought of the movie. And I'm sending you a low-res package that you're going to now guess what the high-res thing looked
like.
That's language in general.
Our thoughts are much more nuanced.
We can think to each other.
We can do amazing things.
We could a have a brainstorm that doesn't feel like, oh, we're not talking in each other's
head.
It's not just that I hear your voice.
No, no, no, we are just thinking.
No words are being said internally or externally. The two brains are literally collaborating.
It's something, it's a skill.
I'm sure we have to get good at it.
I'm sure young kids will be great at it
and old people will be bad.
But you think together and together,
you like, have they joined a piphany?
And how about eight people in a room doing it?
So there's other examples.
How about when you're a dress designer or a bridge designer
and you want to show people what your dress looks like.
Well, right now you gotta sketch it for a long time.
Here, just be me on the screen from your head.
So you can picture it, if you can picture a tree
in your head, well, you can just suddenly,
whatever's in your head, you can be pictured.
So we'll have to get very good at it, right?
So take a skill, right?
You're gonna have to, but the possibilities, my God,
talk about like, I feel like if that works,
if we really do have that
as something, I think it'll almost be like a new ADBC line.
It's such a big change that the idea of like anyone living
before everyone had brain-machine interfaces
is living in like before the common era.
It's that level of like big change, if it can work.
Yeah, and the replay of memories, just replaying stuff in your head.
Oh my God, yeah.
And copying, you know, you can hopefully copy memories onto other things and you don't
have to just rely on your, you know, your wet circuitry.
It does make me sad because you're right.
The brain is incredibly in your plastic and so it can adjust, it can learn how to do this.
I think it'll be a skill.
Probably you and I will be too old to truly learn.
Well, maybe we can get, there'll be great trainings.
You know, I'm spending the next three months in like a, you know,
in a, in one of the, in one of the Nurling trainings.
But it'll still be a bit of like grandpa can definitely.
This is, you know, I was thinking, how are we going to be old?
I'm like, no, I'm going to be great at the new phones.
It's like, not going to be the phones.
It's going to be the, you know, the kids going to be thinking to me.
I'm going to be like, I just, can you just talk, please?
And they're going to be like, okay, I'll just talk
and they're gonna, so that'll be the equivalent
of yelling to your grandma today.
I really suspect that, I don't know what your thoughts are,
but I grew up in a time when physical contact
interaction was valuable.
I just feel like that's going to go the way
that's gonna disappear.
What, why?
I mean, is there anything more intimate than thinking with each other?
I mean, you talk about, you know, once we were all doing that, it might feel like, man,
everyone was so isolated from each other before.
Yeah, sorry.
So I didn't say that intimacy disappears.
I just meant physical having to be in the same, having to touch each other.
But if people like that, if it is important, won't there be whole waves of people start
to say, you know, there's all these articles that come out about how, you know, in our metaverse, we've lost something important. And then now there's
a huge Alphurst, the hippie start doing it and eventually becomes this big wave and now everyone,
well, if something truly is lost, won't we recover it? Well, I think from first principles,
all of the components are there to engineer intimate experiences in the metaverse or in a in a in the cyber space. And so to me,
it's it I don't see anything profoundly unique to the physical experience. Like I don't
understand. But then why are you saying there's a loss there? No, I'm just sad because I won't,
oh, it's a loss for me person because I the the world. So then you do think there's something unique
in the physical experience for me because I was raised with it.
Oh, yeah.
So whatever eight.
So anything you're raised with, you fall in love with like people
in this country came up with baseball.
I was raised in the Soviet Union.
I don't understand baseball.
I get I like it, but I don't love it the way Americans love it.
And so because a lot of times it went to to to baseball games with
the father
and then there's that family connection. There's a young kid dreaming about, I don't know,
um, becoming a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a,
a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a,
a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a, a fundamentally to the human experience. Listen, we're doing this podcast in person. So clearly,
I still value it, but it's true. If this were obviously through a screen, we all agree that's not
the same. But if this were some, you know, we had contact lenses on and like, you know, maybe
neuralink, you know, play maybe again, forget again, this is all that the devices, even if it's
as cool as a contact lens, that's all old school. Yeah. Once you have the brain machine interface,
it'll just be projection of,
it'll take over my visual cortex.
My visual cortex will get put into a virtual room
in so a year, so we will see,
we will hear, really hear and see,
is it where you won't have any masks,
no VR masks needed.
And at that point, it really will feel like,
you'll forget, you'll see,
we'll read together and physically or not.
You won't even, it'll be so unimportant,
you won't even remember. And you're right, you'll say, we'll read together and physically or not. You won't even, it'd be so unimportant, you won't even remember.
And you're right, this is one of those
shits in society that changes everything.
But romantically, people still need to be together.
That there's a whole set of physical things
with relationship that are needed.
Like what?
Sex.
Sex, but also just like that there's fair amounts.
Like there's the physical touch is such a, that's like music.
It's such a deeply primitive part of us that what physical touch with a romantic partner does,
that I think that, so I'm sure there'll be a whole wave of people who are,
their new thing is that, you know, you're romantically involved people you never actually are in person with,
but, and I'm sure there'll be things where you can actually smell what's in the room and you can
yeah and touch yeah but I think that'll be one of the last things to go I think there's something
that to me seems like something that'll be a be a while before people feel like there's nothing
lost by not being it is it's it's very difficult to replicate the human interaction although sex
also again you could not to get too weird,
but you could have a thing where you basically,
you know, or you know, you're, let's do a massage
because it's less like awkward, but like,
you know, I've ever wanted to still imagine sex.
So go on.
A masseuse could massage a fake body
and you could feel whatever's happening, right?
So you're lying down and your apartment alone,
but you're feeling a full. There'll be the new YouTube or like streaming where it's one
misuse, misuse, one body, but like a thousand people are experiencing. Exactly. Right now,
you don't tell your Swift doesn't play for one person and has to go around and everyone ever
fans just to go play for or a book, right? You do it and it goes everywhere. So it'll be the same idea.
Right? You do it and it goes everywhere. So it'll be the same idea.
You've written a lot about AI. So AI safety is specifically. You've mentioned you're actually starting a podcast, which is awesome. You're so good at talking, so good at thinking, so good at
being weird in the most beautiful of ways. But you've been thinking about this AI safety question.
But you've been thinking about this AI safety question, where today does your concern lie for the near future,
for the long term future?
Like quite a bit of stuff happened,
including with Elon's work at Tesla Autopilot.
There's a bunch of amazing robots,
those Boston Dynamics and everyone's favorite vacuum robot,
iRobot, Roomba.
And then there's obviously the applications of machine learning
for recommender systems and Twitter, Facebook, and so on. And you know, face recognition for surveillance,
all these kinds of things are happening. Just a lot of incredible use of not the face recognition,
but the incredible use of deep learning machine learning to capture information about people and try to
recommend to them what they want to consume next.
Some of that can be abused.
Some of that can be used for good, like for Netflix or something like that.
What are your thoughts about all this?
Yeah.
I mean, I really don't think humans are very smart.
All things considered, I think we're like limited.
And we're not, we're dumb enough that we're very easily manipulable.
Not just like, our emotions, people can, our emotions can be pulled like puppet strings.
I mean, again, I do look at what's going on in political polarization now, and I see
a lot of puppet string emotions happening.
So yeah, there's a lot to be scared of, for sure, very scared of. I get excited about a lot of a puppet string emotions happening. So yeah, there's a lot to be scared of, for sure. Like very scared of.
I get excited about a lot of very specific things.
Like one of the things I get excited about is that
like the, so the future of wearables, right?
Again, I think that we're like,
oh, the wrist, the fit bit around my wrist
is gonna seem, you know, the whoop.
It's gonna seem really hilariously old school
in 20 years.
Like, remember, like, we were like a big bracelet, right?
It's gonna turn into little sensors
in our blood probably, or even infrared,
you know, just just things that are gonna be,
it's gonna be collecting 100 times more data
than it collects now, more nuanced data,
more specific to our body.
And it's going to be super reliable,
but that's the hardware side.
And then the software is going to be,
this is, I've not done my deep dive, this is all speculation,
but the software is going to get really good.
And this is the AI component.
And so I get excited about specific things like that.
Think about if hardware were able to collect,
first of all, the hardware knows your whole genome.
And we know a lot more about what a genome sequence means.
Because you can collect your genome now,
and we just don't know, we don't have much to do
with that information.
As AI gets, so now you have your genome,
you've got what's in your blood in any given moment,
all the levels of everything.
You have the exact width of your heart arteries
at any given moment, you've got...
All the virus is that ever visited your body because
that there's a trace of it.
So you have all the pathogens, all the things that like you should be concerned about health
wise and might might have threatened you or you might be immune from all of that kind
of stuff.
They also of course it knows how fast your heart is beating and it knows how much you
know exactly the amount of exercise,
knows your muscle mass and your weight and all that, but it also maybe can even know your emotions. I mean make it if emotions you know what are they, you know where do they come from probably
pretty obvious chemicals once we get in there. So again,
Neuralink can be involved here maybe in collecting information. You know because right now you have
to do they think what's your mood right now and it's hard to even assess you know and you're in a bad
mood it's hard to even but by the way just as you're in a bad mood, you're just hard to even. But by the way, just as a shout out, Lisa Feldman Barrett, who's
in your scientist at Northeastern just wrote, I mean, not just like a few years ago wrote a whole book saying
our expression of emotions is nothing to do with the experience of emotions. So you really actually
want to be measuring that that's exactly. And you can tell because one of these apps pops up and
says, we know what, how do you feel right now?
Good, bad.
I'm like, I don't know.
I feel bad right now, because the thing popping up reminded me
that I'm procrastinating.
So I was on my phone.
I should be like, that's not my.
So I think it would probably be able to very get all this
info, right?
Now the AI can go to town.
Think about when the AI gets really good at this. And it knows your genome. And it knows it can just, I want the AI can go to town. Think about when the AI gets really good at this.
And it knows your genome and it knows it can just, I want the AI to just tell me what to do.
When it turns it, okay, so I'll have it this now, imagine attaching that to a meal service,
right? And the meal service has everything, you know, all the, you know,
million ingredients and supplements and vitamins and everything. And I give the,
I tell the AI my broad goals.
I want to gain muscle or I want to, you know,
maintain my weight but I want to have more energy or whatever.
I just want to, you know, I just want to be very healthy
and I want to, obviously, everyone wants the same,
like, 10 basic things like you want to avoid cancer.
You want to, you know, various things.
You want to age slower.
So now the AI has my goals and Drone comes at you know
It's a little thing pops up and this is like you know people like you know 15 minutes
You're gonna eat because it knows that's a great that's the right time for my body to eat
15 minutes later a little slot opens in my wall where a drone has come from the factor the eating the food factory and dropped the
Perfect meal for my that moment for me from for my mood, for my genome, for my blood contents.
And it's because it knows my goals. So you know, it knows I want to feel energy at this time,
and then I want to wind down here. So I, those things you have to tell it.
Well, plus the pleasure thing, like it knows what kind of components of a meal you've enjoyed
in the past. So you can assemble the perfect meal. It knows you way better than you know yourself.
Better than any human could ever know you and a little thing pops up.
You still have some choice, right?
It pops up and it says like, you know, coffee
because it knows that, you know, my cutoff,
they says, you know, I can have coffee
for the next 15 minutes only because at that point,
it knows how long it stays in my system.
It knows what my sleep is like when I have it too late.
It knows I have to wake up at this time tomorrow
that is my calendar.
And so I think a lot of people's,
this is I think something that humans are wrong about
is that most people will hear this
and be like, that sounds awful.
That sounds dystopian.
No, it doesn't.
It sounds incredible.
And if we all had this,
we would not look back and be like,
I wish I was like making awful choices every day.
Like I was in the past.
And then this is,
these are our important decisions.
Your important decision making energy,
your important focus and your attention can go on
to your kids and on your work and on helping other people
and things that matter.
And so I think AI, when I think about like personal lifestyle
stuff like that, I really love thinking about that.
I think it's going to be very exciting.
I think we'll all be so much healthier.
When we look back today, one of the things that's going to look so primitive is the one
size fits all thing, getting like reading advice about heat out.
Each genome is going to have very specific, one unique advice coming from AI.
And so, yeah.
Yeah, the customization that's enabled by collection of data and the use of AI, a of people think what's the like they think of the worst case scenario that data being used by
authoritarian government to control you all that kind of stuff they don't think about most likely especially in capitalist society is most likely going to be.
I used as part of a competition to get you the most delicious and healthy meal possible exactly possible.
to get you the most delicious and healthy meal possible. Exactly.
Exactly.
Yeah, so the world will definitely be much better
with the integration of data.
But of course, you want to be able to be transparent
and honest about how that data is misused.
And that's why it's important to have free speech
and people to speak out like when some bullshits
being done by companies.
That we need to have our wits about us as a society.
Like, this is free speech is the mechanism by which the big brain can think, can think for
itself, can think straight and see straight.
When you take away free speech, when you start saying that, and every topic, when any
topic is political, it becomes treacherous to talk about.
So, forget the government taking away free speech.
If the culture penalizes nuanced conversation about any topic that's political
and the politics is so all-consuming and it's such an incredible market to polarize people,
for media to polarize people and to bring any topic it can into that and get people hooked
on it as a political topic, we become a very dumb society. So free speech goes away as far as it matters.
So people say, people like to say outside,
you don't even know what free speech is.
Free speech is, you know, you know,
your free speech is not being about,
it's like, no, you're right.
My first amendment rights are not being violated.
But the culture of free speech,
which is the second ingredient of two,
you need the first amendment,
and you need the culture of free speech,
and now you have free speech.
And the culture is much more specific. You, you can have a culture that believes people
right now take any topic again that has to do with some very sensitive topics, please
shootings or what's going on in K-12 schools or even climate change. Take any of these
and the first amendment's still there.
You're not gonna get arrested, no matter what you say.
The culture of free speech is gone,
because you will be destroyed.
Your life can be over, as far as it matters,
if you say the wrong thing.
But a really vigorous culture of free speech,
you get no penalty at all
for even saying something super dumb.
People will say, people will laugh and be like, well, that was like kind of hilariously
offensive and like not at all.
Correct.
You're wrong.
Here's what.
But no one's like mad at you.
Now, the brain is thinking at its best.
The IQ of the big brain is like as high as it can be in that culture.
And the culture where you say something wrong and people say, oh, wow, you've changed.
Oh, wow.
Look, this is his real colors. You know, the big brain is dumb.
You still have mutual respect for each other.
So like, you don't think less of others
when they say a bunch of dumb things, you know,
it's just the play of ideas,
but you still have respect.
You still have love for them.
Because I think the worst case is when you have a complete,
free, like, anarchy of ideas where it's like,
like, everybody lost hope that something like a truth can even be converged towards. Like,
everybody has their own truth. Then it's just chaos. Like, if you have mutual respect and
a mutual goal of arriving at the truth and the humility that you want to listen to other
people's ideas, and a forgiveness that other people's ideas might be dumb as hell that doesn't mean
there are lesser beings, all that kind of stuff.
But that's like a weird balance of strike.
Right now people are being trained, little kids,
college students, being trained to think
the exact opposite way, to think that there's no such thing
as objective truth, which is, you know,
the objective truth is the end on the compass
for every thinker.
Doesn't mean we're necessarily on our way or refining,
but we're all aiming in the same direction.
We all believe that there's a place
we can eventually get closer to.
Not objective truth, teaching them
that disagreement is bad violence.
It's like you quickly sound like you're just going
on a political rant with this topic,, it's, you quickly sound like you're just going on like a political rant
with this topic, but like, it's really bad.
It's like genuinely the worst, if I was, had my own country, I mean, the, it's like,
I would teach kids some very specific things that this is the doing the exact opposite of.
And it sucks.
It sucks. It sucks. Be kind of way to escape this.
You've tweeted 30 minutes of reading a day equals,
yeah, this whole video and it's cool to think about reading
like in an as a habit and something that accumulates.
You said 30 minutes of reading a day equals 1000 books
in 50 years.
I love like thinking about this, like chipping away at the mountain.
Can you expand on that sort of the habit of reading?
How do you recommend people read?
Yeah, yeah, I mean, it's incredible.
If you do something a little of something every day,
it compiles, it compiles.
You know, I always think about like the people
who achieve these incredible things in life,
these great, like famous legendary people,
they had the same number of days that you do,
and it's not like they were doing magical days.
They just, they got a little done every day,
and that adds up to,
you know, monument, you know,
they're putting one brick in a day,
eventually they have this building,
this legendary building.
So, you can take writing,
someone who, you know, there's two aspiring writers
and one doesn't never write,
doesn't, you know, manage this to never,
you know, zero write, zero pages a day
and the other one manages to do two pages a week, right?
Not very much.
The other one does zero pages a week, two pages a week,
98% of both of their time is the same.
The other person, just 2% they're doing one other thing.
One year later,
they have written, they write two books a year. This prolific person, you know, in 20 years,
they've written 40 books, they're one of the most prolific writers of all time. The right two pages
a week. Sorry, that's not true. That was two pages a day. Okay, two pages a week, you're still writing
about a book every two years. So in 20 years, you've still written 10 books, also, prolific writers, huge massive writing career.
You write two pages every Sunday morning.
The other person has the same exact week,
and they don't do that Sunday morning thing.
They are a wannabe writer.
They always said they could write.
They talk about how they used to be here,
and nothing happens.
So it's inspiring, I think, for a lot of people
who feel frustrated, they're not doing anything.
So reading is another example where someone who reads,
very, you know, doesn't read,
and someone who's a prolific reader,
you know, I always think about like the Tyler Cowan type.
So I'm like, how the hell do you read so much?
It's infuriating, you know?
Or like James Clear puts out his like,
his 10 favorite books of the year,
20 favorite books of the year.
I'm like, 20, 20 favorites.
I'm trying to just read 20 books like that would be an amazing year.
So, but the thing is they're not doing something crazy and magical.
They're just reading a half hour and a, you know, if you read a half hour
and I, the calculation I came to is that you can read a thousand books in 50 years.
So, as someone who's 80 and they've read a thousand books, you know, between 30 and 80,
they are extremely well read. They can they can delve deep into many nonfiction areas. They can be,
you know, an amazing fiction reader, I have a fiction reader. And again, that's half-hour a day.
Some people can do an hour, half-hour in the morning audio book, half-hour at night in bed. Now,
they've read 2,000 books. So I think it's just it's motivating.
And you realize that a lot of times you think that the people who are doing amazing things
and you're not, you think that there's a bigger gap between you and them that there really
is.
I, on the reading front, I'm a very slow reader, which is just a very frustrating fact about
me.
But I'm faster with audiobooks.
And I also, I just, you know,
I'll just, it's just hard to get myself to read.
But I started doing audiobooks
and I'll wake up, throw it on, do it in the shower,
brushing my teeth, you know,
making breakfast, dealing with the dogs,
things like that, whatever, until I sit down.
And that's, I can read, I can read a book a week,
book every 10 days at that clip.
And suddenly, I'm this big reader because I'm just while doing my morning stuff, I have
it on.
And also, it's this makes the morning so fun.
I'm like, I have a great time the whole morning.
So I'm like, oh, I'm so into this book.
So I think that, you know, audiobooks is another amazing gift to people who have a hard
time reading.
I find that that's actually an inch in a skill.
I do audiobooks quite a bit.
It's a skill to maintain, at least for me, probably the kind of books I read, which is often
like history or like, there's a lot of content. And if you miss parts of it, you miss out on stuff.
So it's a skill to maintain focus, at least for me.
Well, the 10 second back button is very valuable.
So I just, if I get lost, sometimes the book is so good
that I'm thinking about what the person just said.
And I just get the skill for me
is just remembering to pause.
And if I don't, no problem, just back, back, back, back.
Just to be quick, back.
So that of course is not that efficient,
but I do the same thing when I'm reading.
I'll read a whole paragraph
and realize I was tuning out.
Yeah.
You know, I haven't actually even considered
to try that.
I've been so hard on myself maintaining focus because you do get lost in thought.
Maybe I should try that.
Yeah, and when you get lost in thought, by the way, you're processing the book.
That's not wasted time.
That's your brain really categorizing and cataloging what you just read.
Well, there are several kinds of thoughts, right?
There's thoughts related to the book and there's a thought that it could take you elsewhere.
Well, I find that if I am continually thinking
about something else, I just say, I'm not,
I'm just positive.
Yeah, yeah.
Especially in the shower or something,
when like that's sometimes when really great thoughts come
off, I'm having all these thoughts about other stuff.
I'm saying, clearly my mind wants to work on something else.
I'll just pause it.
Quite Dan Carl, I'm thinking about something else right now.
Exactly.
Exactly.
Also, you can, things like, you have to head out to the store.
I'll be able to read 20 pages on that trip.
Just walking back and forth, going to the airport.
I mean, flights, you know, the Uber,
and then you're walking through the airport,
you're shitting in the security line.
I'm reading the whole time.
Like, I know this is not groundbreaking.
People know what audiobook books are,
but I think that more people should probably get
into them than do.
I know a lot of people that have this stubborn kind of thing.
I don't like, I like to have the paperbook, and sure, but like, it's pretty fun to be able
to read.
I still, I listen to a huge number of audiobooks in podcasts, but I still, the most impactful
experiences for me are still reading.
And I read very, very slow.
And it's very frustrating when, like, you go to these websites that estimate how long a book
takes on average, those always in the way.
They do a page a minute when I read a page every two minutes at best.
At best when you're like really like actually not pausing.
I just my ADD, it's hard to keep focusing.
And I also like to really absorb.
So on the other side of things, when I finish a book,
10 years later, I'll be able to, like, you know,
that scene when this happens in another friend of Reddit
would be like, what?
I don't remember any like details.
And I'm like, oh, I can tell you like the entire,
so I absorb the shit out of it.
But I don't think it's worth it to like have,
we reach so less, so much less in my life.
I actually, so in terms of going to the airport,
you know, in these like filler moments of
life, I do a lot of us, it's an app called Anki, I don't know if you know, no, no about
it. It's a space repetition app. So there's all of these facts I have when I read, I write
it down if I want to remember it. And it's these, it, you review it. And the one, the things
you remember, it takes longer and longer to bring back up, it's like you review it. And the one, the things you remember,
it takes longer and longer to bring back up,
it's like flashcards, but a digital app.
It's called ANK, I recommend it to a lot of people.
There's a huge community of people
that are just like obsessed with it.
ANK?
ANKI.
So this is extremely well-known app and idea,
like among students who are like medical students, like people that really
have to study. Like this is not like fun stuff. They really have to memorize a lot of things.
They have to remember them well, they have to be able to integrate them with a bunch of
ideas. So, and I find it to be really useful for when you read history, if you think this
particular factor, it probably is true. So for you. Because you're, that'd be interesting, actually
thought, because you're doing, you talked about like opening up
a trillion tabs and reading things. You know, you probably
want to remember some facts you read along the way. Like, you
might remember, okay, this thing I can't directly put into
the writing, but it's a cool little factoid. I want to store that in.
That's what I go, Enky, drop it in.
Oh, you can just drop it in.
You drop it in a line of a podcast or like a video?
Well, no.
I guess I can type it though.
So, yeah.
So, Enky, there's a bunch of, it's called Space Repetition.
There's a bunch of apps that are much nicer, Enky.
Enky is the ghetto, like Craigslist nicer, Anki. Anki is the ghetto
like Craigslist version, but it has a giant community because people are like, we don't
want features. We want a text box, like it's very basic, very stripped down. So you can
drop in stuff, you can drop in something. That sounds really up. I can't believe I
have not come across this. You actually want to look into it. You realize that how have
I not come up? You are the person that guarantee you a probably write a blog about it.
I can't believe you actually have.
Well, it's also just like your people too.
And my people say, what are you right about?
Literally anything I find interesting.
And so for me, once you start a blog,
like your entire world view becomes with the figure blog post,
with this, I mean, it's the lens I see everything through,
but I constantly come in across something,
or just a tweet, you know,
something that I'm like,
oh, I need to like share this with my readers.
My readers to me are like my like,
my friends who I'm like,
I'm gonna, oh, I need to tell them about this.
And so I feel like just a place to come in.
I mean, I collect things in a document right now,
if it's like really good,
but it's a little fact towards and stuff like that. I mean, I collect things in a document right now. If it's like really good, but it's a little
fact towards and stuff like that. I think, especially if I'm learning something
from like, so the problem is when you say stuff, when you look at it, a tweet and all
that kind of stuff is, uh, you also need to couple that with a system for review.
Because what Enky does is like, literally, it determines for me. I don't have to do
anything. There's this giant pile of things I saved and it brings up to me.
Okay, here's, I don't know,
when Churchill did something, right? I'm reading about what to a lot now. Like a particular event.
Here's that. Do you remember when, what year that happened? And you say, yes, or no, or like you,
you get to pick, you get to see the answer,
and you get to self evaluate how well you remember that fact.
And if you remember well,
it'll be another month before you see it again.
If you don't remember, it'll bring it up again.
That's a way to review tweets, the review concepts.
Yeah.
And it offloads the kind of the process of selecting
which parts you're supposed to review and not.
And you can grow that library, I mean, obviously,
medical students use it for like tens of thousands of facts.
And then it's just gamifies it too.
It's like you can passively sit back and just,
and the thing will like make sure you eventually learn it all.
Yeah.
You don't have to be the executive calling that like the program,
the memorization program, someone else is handling.
Yeah. I would love to hear about like you trying it out or space repetition is an idea.
There's a few other apps, but Anki's the big boss. I totally want to try.
You've written and spoken quite a bit about procrastination.
I like you suffer from procrastination, like many other people suffering quotes.
How do we avoid procrastination? I don't think the suffer is in quotes. I think
that's a huge part of the problem is that it's treated like a silly problem. People don't
take it seriously as a dire problem, but it can be. It can ruin your life.
There's, like we talked about the compiling concept with, if you read a little,
if you write two pages a week, you write a book every two years,
you're a prolific writer, right? And the difference between, you know, the, again, it's not that that person's working so hard is that they
have the ability to, when they commit to something like on Sunday mornings, I'm going to
write two pages. That's it. They, they respect, they have, they have enough, they have, they
respect the part of them that made that decision is decision is a respected character in their brain. And they say, well, that's, I decided it, so I'm going to do it.
The procrastinator won't do those two pages.
That's just exactly the kind of thing that procrastinator will keep on their list and they will
not do.
But the doesn't mean there are any less talented than the writer who does the two pages.
It doesn't mean they want it at any less.
Maybe they want it even more.
And it doesn't mean that they wouldn't be just as happy having done it as the writer who does the two pages doesn't mean they want it any less, maybe they want it even more.
It doesn't mean that they wouldn't be just as happy having done it as the writer who
doesn't.
What they're missing out on, picture a writer who writes 10 books, best sellers, and they
go on these book tours.
They're so gratified with their career. And they think about what the other person is missing
who does none of that, right?
So that is a massive loss, a massive loss.
And it's because the internal mechanism in their brain
is not doing what the other person says.
They don't have the respect for the part of them
that made the choice.
They feel like it's someone they can disregard.
And so, to me, it's in the same boat as someone who is obese
because they're eating habits, make them obese over time
or they're exercise habits.
That's a huge loss for that person.
That person is the health problems
and it's just probably making them miserable.
And it's, and it's self-inflicted, right?
It's, it's self-defeating, but that doesn't make an easy problem to fix just because you're
doing it to yourself.
So to me, procrastination is another one of these where you are the only person in your
own way.
You are, you know, you are failing at something or not doing something that you really
want to do.
You know, kid, does not be work.
Maybe you want to get out of that marriage that you know you realize it hits you.
You shouldn't be in this marriage.
You should get divorced and you wait 20 extra years before you do it or you don't do it
at all.
That is, you know, you're not living the life that you know you should be living, right?
And so I think it's fascinating.
The problem is it's also a funny
problem because there's short term procrastination, which I talk about as, you know, the kind that has
a deadline. Now, some people, you know, this is when I bring in, there's different characters,
there's the panic monster comes in the room, and that's when you actually, you know, the procrastinator can,
there's different levels. There's the kind that even when there's a deadline,
they stop panicking, they just, they've given up
and they really have a problem.
Then there's the kind that when there's a deadline,
they'll do it, but they'll wait to the last second.
Both of those people, I think, have a huge problem
once there's no deadline.
Because, and most of the important things in life,
there's no deadline, which is changing your career, changing your career, you know, becoming a writer when you never have been before,
getting out of your relationship, you know, be doing whatever you need to, the changes
you need to make in order to get into a relationship. There's the thing after launching a startup,
launching a startup, right? Or once you've launched a startup, firing is the right someone
that needs to be fired, right? Yes? I mean, going out for fundraising and instead of just trying to, you know, there's so
many moments when the big change that you know you should be making that would completely change
your life if you just did it, has no deadline. It just has to be coming from yourself. And
coming from yourself. And I think that a ton of people have a problem
where they think this delusion that,
I'm gonna do that, I'm definitely gonna do that.
But not this week, not this month, not today,
cause whatever, and they make this excuse again,
and again, and it just sits there on their list,
collecting dust.
And so yeah, to me, it's, it is very real suffering.
And the fix isn't fixed in the habits. Just, uh, uh,
I'm still working on the fix, first of all. So there's, there's, okay, there is, um,
there's, it, just so you have a boat that sucks and it's leaking and it's, kind of
sink. You can fix it with duct tape for a couple,
or you know, for one ride or whatever.
That's not really fixing the boat,
but you can get you by.
So there's duct tape solutions.
To me, so the panic monster is the character
that rushes into the room once the deadline gets too close
or once there's some scary external pressure,
not just from yourself.
And that's a huge aid to a lot of procrastinators.
Again, there's a lot of
people who won't, you know, do that thing, they've been writing that book they wanted to write,
but there's way fewer people who will not show up to the exam, you know, most people show up to the
exam. So that's because the panic monster is gonna freak out if they don't. So you can,
then you can create a panic monster. If you want to, you know If you really want to write music,
you really want to become a singer-songwriter,
well, Book of NU, tell 40 people about it
and say, hey, on this day, two months from now,
come and see, I'm gonna play you some of my songs.
You now have a panic monster, you're gonna write songs,
you're gonna have to.
So there's duct tape things, you can do things,
people do, I've done a lot of this with a friend,
and I say, if I don't get X done by a week from now,
I have to donate a lot of money,
somewhere I don't want to donate.
And that's, you would put that in the category
of duct tape solutions.
Yeah, because it's not, why do I need that?
Right, if I really, this is something I want to do for me,
it's selfish. I just literally just want to be selfish here and do the work I need to? Right? If I really have solved this, this is something I want to do for me. It's selfish.
I just literally just want to be selfish here and do the work I need to do to get the
goals I want to get.
There's a lot.
All the incentives should be in the right place.
And yet, if I don't say that, it'll be a week from now and I won't have done it.
Something weird is going on.
There's some resistance.
There's some force that is in my own way.
And so doing something where I have to pay all this money, okay, now I'll panic and
I'll do it.
So that's duct tape.
Fixing their boat is something where I don't have to do that.
I just will do the things that I, again, it's not, I'm talking about super crazy work
ethic, just like, for example, okay, I have a lot of examples because I have a serious
problem that I've been working on.
And in some ways, I've gotten really successful
at solving it in other ways.
I'm still floundering.
So.
Yeah, the world's greatest duct tape.
Yes, well, I'm pretty good at duct tape.
I probably could be even better.
And I'm like, and I'm, and I'm,
you're procrastinating.
I'm becoming a better duct tape.
You literally, like, yes, there's nothing I won't.
So here's what I know what I should do as a writer. Right, it's very obvious to me is that I should wake up. I'm not going to be one of those crazy people with 5.30 jogs.
I'm going to wake up at whatever, you know, 7.38, 8.30.
And I should have a block, like just say 9 to noon, where I get up and I just really quick make some coffee and write.
It's obvious. I'm going to be a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a little bit more like a And I should have a block, like just say nine to noon, where I get up and I just really quick make some coffee
and write.
It's obvious because all the great writers in history
did exactly that.
Some of them have done that.
That's common.
There's some that I like these writers.
They do the late night sessions,
but most of them they do way up.
There's a session, but there's a session that's.
Most writers write in the morning,
and there's a reason.
I don't think I'm different than those people.
It's a great time to write.
You're fresh, right?
Your ideas from the, from dreaming have kind of collected.
You have all, you know, new, new answers that you didn't have
yesterday and you can just go.
But more importantly, if I just had a routine where I wrote
from noon to noon, weekdays, every week would have a minimum of 15 focused hours of writing, which
doesn't sound like a lot, but it's a lot. A 15, 15, no, this is no joke. This is, you know,
you're not your phones away, you're not talking to anyone, you're not opening your email,
you are focused writing for three hours. That's a big week for most writers, right? So
now what's happening is that every weekday is a minimum of a B.
I'll give myself.
I know what A might be, you know,
wow, I really just got into a flow of over six hours and had, you know, great.
But it's a minimum of a B.
I can keep going if I want.
And every week is a minimum of a B with that 15 hours.
Right. And if I just had to talk about compiling, if I,
this is the two pages a week, if I just did that every week,
I'd achieve all my writing goals in my life.
And yet, I wake up and most days If I just did that every week, I achieve all my writing goals in my life.
And yet, I wake up and most days, I just either I'll revenge procrastination later and I
can go to bed, wait too late and then wake up later and get on a bad schedule and I just
fall into these bad schedules or I'll wake up and there's just, you know, I'll say I'll
just go do a few emails and I'll open it up and I have something on text and I'm texting
and I'll just go and, you know, I'll make a phone call and I'll be on phone calls for three
hours. It's always something. Yeah. Or I'll start writing and you know I'll make a phone call and I'll be on phone calls for three hours. It's always something.
Yeah.
Or I'll start writing and then I hit a little bit of a wall but because there's no sacred,
this is a sacred writing block, I'll just hit the wall and say, well, this is icky and
I'll go do something else.
So duct tape, what I've done is there, wait, but why has one employee, Alicia, she's the
manager of lots of things.
That's her role.
She truly does lots of things. That's her role. She truly does lots of things.
And one of the things we started doing is, either she comes over and sits next to me
where she can see my screen from nine to noon.
That's all it takes.
The thing about procrastination is
is usually they're not kicking and screaming.
I don't want to do this.
It's the feeling of, you know, in the old days
when you had to go to class,
your lunch block is over and it's like,
oh shit, I've class in five minutes. Or it's Monday morning, you go, in the old days when you had to go to class, your lunch block is over and it's like, oh shit, I've class in five minutes or it's Monday morning, you go, oh,
yeah.
But you said, you know what, but you go, you say, okay, and then you get to class and it's
not that bad once you're there, right?
It is.
You know, you have a trainer and he's, okay, next set and you go, okay, and you do, that's
all it is.
It's someone, some external thing being like, okay, I have to do this.
And then you have that moment of like, sucks, but I guess I'll do it. If no one's there, though, the problem with the procrastinators, okay, I have to do this. And then you have that moment of like sucks, but I guess I'll do it.
If no one's there though, the problem with the procrastinators, they don't have that
person in their head.
Other people I think were raised are the sense of shame if they don't do stuff.
And that stick in their head is hugely helpful.
I don't really have that.
And so anyway, Alicia is sitting there next to me.
It's not she's doing her own work, but she can see my screen and she of all people knows
exactly what I should be doing,
what I shouldn't be doing.
That's all it takes.
The shame of just having her see me,
while she's sitting there not working,
would be just be too weird and too embarrassing.
So I get it done and it's amazing.
It's like game changer for me.
So duct tape can solve, sometimes duct tape is enough,
but I'm curious to, I'm still trying to what is going on.
Yeah.
I think part of it is that we are actually wired.
I think I'm being very sane, human actually is what's happening.
You're not sane, it's not the right word.
I'm being a natural human that we are not programmed to sit there and do homework of a certain
kind, but we get the results like six months later.
Like that is not so we're supposed to conserve energy and like fulfill our needs as we
need them and like do immediate things.
And we're overriding our natural ways when we wake up and get to it.
And I think sometimes because the pain, I think a lot of times we're just avoiding suffering
and a lot of people, the pain of not doing it is actually worse because they feel shame
So if they don't get up and take a jog and get up early and get to work
I'll feel like a bad person and that is worse than doing those things and then it becomes a habit eventually
And it becomes just easy to automatic
It becomes I do it because that's what I do
But I think that if you don't have a lot of shame necessarily
The pain of doing those things is worse in that in the immediate moment than not doing it.
But I think that there's this feeling that you capture with your body language and so
on to the like, I don't want to do another set that feeling.
The people I've seen that are good at not procrastinating are the ones that have trained
themselves to like the moment they would be having that feeling, they just it's like zen, like Sam Harris style zen, you
don't experience that feeling.
Yeah.
You just march forward.
Like I talked to Elon about this a lot actually offline.
It's like he doesn't have this.
No, really not.
It's an it's the way I think he talks about the way I think about it is it's like you just
pretend you're like a machine
and running an algorithm.
Like, you know this, you should be doing this.
Not because somebody told you so on,
this is probably the thing you want to do.
Like, look at the big picture of your life
and just run the algorithm.
Like, ignore your feelings, just run as a...
It's framing, frame it differently.
Yeah, you know, yeah, you can frame it as like,
it can feel like homework or it can feel like,
you're like, you're living your best life
or something when you're doing your work.
Yeah.
And maybe you'll reframe it.
But I think ultimately is whatever you're reframing,
you need to do, you just need to do it for a few weeks.
And that's how the habit is formed and you stick with it.
Like, I've, I'm now on a kick where I exercise every day.
It doesn't, it doesn't matter what that exercises.
It's not serious.
It could be 200 pushups, but it's the thing that like,
I make sure I exercise every day
and it's become way, way easier because of the habit.
And I just, and I don't like, at least with exercise,
because it's easier to replicate that feeling.
I don't allow myself to go like,
I don't feel like doing this.
Right.
Well, I think about that,
even just like little things,
like I brush my teeth before I go to bed,
and it's just a habit.
Yeah.
And it is effort, like if it were something else,
I would be like,
I don't know what I'm gonna do,
I'm gonna do that,
and I just wanna like,
I'm just gonna lie down right now.
But it doesn't even cross my mind.
It's just like that I just robotically go and do it.
Yeah.
And it almost has become like a nice routine.
It's like, oh, this part of the night.
You know, it's like, yeah.
Morning routine for me stuff is like, you know,
that stuff is kind of just like automated.
Yeah, it's funny because you don't like go,
like I don't think I've skipped many days.
I don't think I skipped any days brushing my teeth.
Right.
Like, unless I didn't have a toothbrush,
like I was in the woods or something.
And what is that?
Because it's annoying.
Well, to me, there's,
so the character that makes me procrastinate
is the instant gratification monkey.
Now, that's what I've laid off of him, right?
And there's the rational decision maker
and the instant gratification monkey
in these battles with each other.
But for procrastinating,
the monkey wins.
Yeah.
I think the monkeys, you know, from you, you know, you read about this kind of stuff.
I think that the, this kind of more primitive brain is always winning.
And in non-procrastinator, that primitive brain is on board for some reason.
And it isn't resisting.
So, but when I think about brushing my teeth, it's like the monkey doesn't even think there's
an option to not do it.
So it doesn't even like get, there's no hope. The monkey has no hope there. So it doesn't even like get involved.
And it's just like, yeah, you know, we have to just like kind of like robotically just like,
you know, it's kind of like Stockholm syndrome. Just like, oh, no, no, I have to do this.
It doesn't even like wake up. It's like, yeah, we're doing this now. For other things,
the monkey's like, oh, no, no, no, most days I can win this one. And so the monkey puts up that like fierce
resistance. And it's like, it's, it's a lot of it's like the initial transition. So I think
of it as like jumping in a cold pool, where it's like, I will spend the whole day pacing
around the side of the pool in my bathing suit, just being like, I don't want to have that
one second when you first jump in and it sucks. And then once you're once I'm in, once I jump and I'm usually, you know,
once I start riding, I'm suddenly I'm like, Oh, this isn't so bad. I don't kind of
into it. And then I, then someone you can't tear me away. You know, then I suddenly I'm
like, I get into a flow. So it's like, once I get into cold water, I don't mind it. But
I will spend hours standing around the side of the pool. And by the way, I do this in a more
literal sense when I go to the gym with a trainer. In 45 minutes, I do a full ass workout.
And it's not because I'm having a good time, but it's because it's that, okay, I have
to go to class feeling, right?
But when I go to the gym alone, I will literally do a set and then dig around my phone for
10 minutes before the next set.
And I'll spend an over an hour there and do way less.
So it is the transition.
Once I'm actually doing the set,
I'm never like, I don't wanna stop in the minute.
Now it's just like I'm gonna do this
and I feel happy I just did it.
So it's something about transitions that is very,
that's why procrastinators relate a lot of places.
It's, I will procrastinate getting ready
to go to the airport.
Even though I know I should leave it three
so I cannot be stressed, I'll leave it three, 36,
and I'll be super stressed.
Once I'm on the way to the airport immediately,
I'm like, why didn't I do this earlier?
Now I'm back on my phone doing what I was doing.
I just had to get in the damn car or whatever.
So yeah, there's some very, very odd irrational.
Yeah, like I was waiting for you to come
and you said that you're running a few minutes late, like I was waiting for you to come and you said
that you're running a few minutes late and I was like,
try to do it.
I was like, I'll go get you a coffee,
because I can't possibly be the one who's early.
Right.
I can't, I don't understand, I'm always late to stuff
and I know it's disrespectful in the eyes of a lot of people.
I can't help, you know what I'm doing ahead of it?
It's not like I don't care about the people.
I'm often like, you know, for like this conversation,
I'd be preparing more.
Right.
It's like, I obviously care about the person,
but it's so...
Yeah, it's just interpreted as like,
there are some people that like,
show up late because they like,
they kind of like that quality in themselves.
Yeah.
That's a dip, right?
There's a lot of those people,
but more often it's someone who shows up frazzled and they feel awful and they're furious at themselves. And that's a dip, right? There's a lot of those people. But more often it's someone who shows up frazzled
and they feel awful and they're so furious at themselves.
They're so regretful.
Exactly.
I mean, that's me.
And I mean, also all you have to do
is look at those people alone running through the airport.
Right.
They're not being disrespectful to anyone there.
They just inflicted this on themselves.
Like, hilarious.
Yeah.
You've tweeted a quote by James Baldwin saying, quote,
I imagine one of the reasons
people cling to their hates so stubbornly is because they is, is because they sense once
hate is gone, they will be forced to deal with the pain.
What has been a painful but formative experience in your life?
Or what's the flavor, the shape of your pain that fuels you? I mean, honestly, the first thing that jumped to mind is my own battles against myself
to get my work done because it affects everything. When I just took five years in this book and
granted it's a beast. I probably would have taken two or three years, but it didn't need to take
five. And that was a lot of not just, you know, not just that I'm not working. It's that I'm
over researching. I'm making it, I'm adding in things I shouldn't because I'm perfectionist,
you know, being a perfectionist about like, oh, well, I learned that now I want to get it in there.
I know I'm going to end up cutting it later just, you know, or I over outline, you know,
something, you know, until, you know, trying to get it perfect when I know that's not possible.
She's making a lot of immature kind of, like, I'm not actually that much of a writing amateur.
I've written, including my old blog,
I've been a writer for 15 years.
I know what I'm doing.
I could advise other writers really well.
And yet, I do a bunch of amateur things
that I know while I'm doing them
is I know I'm being an amateur.
So that A, it hurts the actual product to make see,
you know, it's, it's waste your precious time.
See, when you're mad at yourself,
when you're in a negative self-defeating spiral,
it almost inevitably will be less good to others.
Like, I used to, early on in my now marriage,
one of the things we always used to do
is I used to plan mystery dates.
You know, New York City, great place for this. I'd find some weird little adventure for us.
You know, it could be anything. And I wouldn't tell her what it was. I said, I'm
reserving you for Thursday night, you know, at seven, okay. And it was such a fun part of our relationship.
Started writing this book and gotten to a really bad, you know, personal space where it was like,
in my head, I was like, I can't do anything until this is done. You know, like no, and I just stopped like ever valuing like like joy of any kind. Like I was like no
any, no, that's the point I'm done. And that's a trap or very quickly, you know, you know,
because I was thinking, you know, I think it's going to be a six months away, but actually five years
later, I'm like, wow, I really wasn't living fully in for five years is not, we don't live very long.
Like, like about your prime decades, like that's like a sixth of my prime years.
Like, wow, that's a huge loss. So to me, that was excruciating.
And it was a bad pattern, a very unproductive, unhelpful pattern for me,
which is I'd wake up in the morning in this great mood.
Great mood every morning. Wake up, thrilled to be awake.
I had the whole day ahead of me.
I'm gonna hit so much work done today.
And, but, you know, first I'm gonna do all these other things
and it's all gonna be great.
And then I end up kind of failing for the day
with those goals, sometimes miserably,
sometimes only partially.
And then I get in bed, probably a couple hours later
than I want to.
And that's when all of the reality hits me.
Suddenly so much regret, so much anxiety,
furious in myself, wishing I could take a time machine back
three months, six months a year,
or just even to the beginning of that day.
And just tossing and turning now,
I mean, this is a very bad place.
That's what I said, suffering.
procrastinators suffer in a very serious way.
So look, I know this probably sounds like
a lot of like first world problems and it is,
but it's real suffering as well.
Like it's, so to me, it's like,
it's painful because you're not being,
you're not being as good a friend or a spouse
or whatever as you could be.
You're also not treating yourself very well.
Usually you're not being very healthy in these moments,
you know, you're often, and you're not being very healthy in these moments. You're not you're often.
And you're not being, I'm not being good to my readers.
So it's just a lot of this.
And it's like, it feels like it's one small tweak away.
Sometimes it's like, that's what I said.
It's like, you just suddenly
were just doing that nine to 12 and you get in that habit.
Everything else falls into place.
See, all of this reverses.
So I feel hopeful, but it's like, it is a, I have not figured it out.
I haven't fixed it about yet. I have some good duct tape.
And you also don't want to romanticize it because it is true that some of the greats in
history, especially writers, suffer from all the same stuff. Like they weren't quite
able, I mean, you might only write for two or three hours a day, but the rest of the day
is often spent,
the kind of tortured by.
Well, right, this is the irrational thing.
If I, if, in a lot of this goes for a lot of people's jobs,
people, especially who work for themselves,
you'd be a shock how much you could wake up at nine,
or eight, or seven, or whatever.
Get to work and stop at one,
but you're really focused in those hours, one or two,
and do 25 really focused hours of stuff,
products stuff a week. And then there's 112 waking hours in the week. Right. So we're talking about
80 something hours of free time. You can live, you know, if you're just really focused in your,
you know, yin and yang of your time, and that's what that's my goal is black and white time. I
really focused time. And then totally like clean conscience free time.
Right now I'm neither. It's a lot of gray. It's a lot of I should be working, but I'm not.
Oh, I'm wasting this time. This is bad. And that's just as massive.
So if you can just get really good at the black and the white.
So you just wake up and it's just like full work.
And then I think a lot of people could have like all this free time.
But instead, I'll do those same three hours. It's like you said,
I'll do them really late at night or whatever after having tortured myself the whole day
And not at any fun. It's not like I'm having fun
I call it the dark playground by the way, which is where you are when you know you should be working
But you're doing something else. It's you're doing something fun on paper
But it's it's never it feels awful and so yeah, I spent a lot of time in the dark
And you know you shouldn't be doing it and you still do it and yeah,, it's not clean conscience. Fun. It's bad. It's toxic. And I think that it's, there's something about,
you know, you're draining yourself all the time. And if you just did your focus hours and then
if you actually have good clean fun, fun can be anything. Reading a book can be hanging out with
someone can be really fun. You can go and do something cool in the city. You know, that is critical.
It's you're recharging some part of your psyche there.
And I think it makes it easier to actually work the next day.
And I say this from the experiences when I have had, if you know, good stretches, it's
like it's you're, you know what it is?
It's like you feel like you're fist pounding.
One part of your brain is fist pounding the other part.
Like you're like, you're like, we got that like we treat each, we treat ourselves well.
Like is how you're internally feel like I treat myself.
And it's like, yeah, no, it's work time.
And then later you're like, now it's play time, and it's like, yeah, no, it's work time. And then later, you're like, now it's play time.
And it's like, okay, back to work.
Cause, and you're in this already healthy, like parent child
relationship in your head versus like this constant conflict.
And like the kid doesn't respect the parent and parent hates the kid.
And like, yeah.
And you're right.
It always feels like it's like one fix away.
So that there's hope.
I mean, I guess, I mean, so much of what you said
just rings so true.
I guess I have the same kind of hope myself.
But you know, this podcast is very regular.
I mean, I'm impressed like, and I think partially
what there is a bit of a duct tape solution here,
which is you just, the, the, the,
because it's always easy to schedule stuff
for the future for myself, right? Because that's future Tim and future Tim is not my problem. So I'll schedule all kinds of
shit for future Tim and I will, and I will not, then not do it. But in this case, you can schedule
podcasts and you have to show up. Yeah, I have to show up. Right. It seems like a good medium for
procrastination. But this is not my, this is what I do for fun. I know, but at least this is the kind of thing,
especially if it's not your main thing,
especially if it's not your main thing,
it's the kind of thing that you would dream of doing
and wanna do and never do.
And I feel like your regular production here
is a sign that something is working, at least in this regard.
Yeah, and this will go, but this I'm sure you have
this same kind of thing with the pocket.
In fact, because you're going to be doing the podcast,
as possible, the podcast becomes what the podcast is for me.
This is your procrastinating.
If you're thinking about being 80 and if you can get into that person's head
and look back and be like, just deep regret.
You just, you know, you're earning,
you could do anything to just go back and have done this differently.
That is desperation.
It's just, you don't feel it yet.
It's not in you yet.
The other thing you could do is if you have a partner,
if you want a partner with someone,
now you could say, we meet these 15 hours every week.
And that point, you're gonna get it done.
So working with someone can help.
Yeah, that's why they say like a co-founder
is really powerful for many reasons,
but that's kind of one of them.
Because actually for the startup case,
you, unlike writing, perhaps writing perhaps, it's really a
hundred hour plus thing. Once you really launch, you go all in, everything else just disappears.
You can't even have a hope of a balanced life for a little bit. There, CoFon really helps.
That's the idea. You're one of the most interesting people on the internet,
so as a writer you look out into the future, do you dream about certain things you want to still
create? Is there projects that you want to write? Is there movies you want to write or direct or
endless? So it's just endless, see if I do.
I mean, there's just, no, there's, there's specific list of things that really excite me,
but it's a big list that I know I'll never get through them all.
And that's part of why the last five years really like, you know, when I feel like I'm
not moving as quickly as I could, it bothers me because I have so much genuine excitement
to try so many different things and I get so much joy from finishing things
I don't like doing things but a lot of writers are like that
I I
Publishing something is greatly is hugely joyful and makes it all worth it
You know, we're just finishing something you're proud of putting it out there and have people appreciate it
It's like the best thing in the world, right?
You know a lot of every kid makes some little bargain with themselves has a little you know a dream or you know as something
And I feel like when I do something that I Have a little, you know, a dream or, you know, something.
And I feel like when I do something
that I make something in this, you know,
for me, it's been mostly writing.
And I feel proud of it.
And I put it out there.
I feel like I like, again, I'm like fist pounding
my seven year old self.
Like there's a little like, I'm, I like,
I owed to myself to do certain things.
And I just did one of the things.
I just paid off some debt to myself.
I owed it and I paid it and it feels great.
It feels like you just feel a lot of inner peace
when you do.
So the more things I can do,
and I just have fun doing it, right?
So for me, that includes a lot more writing.
I just short blog post, I write very long blog post,
but basically short writing in the form of long blog post
is a great, I love that medium. I want to do a lot more of that.
Books you have to be seen.
I'm going to do this and I'm going to have another book I'm going to do right after and
we'll see if I like those two.
And if I do, I'll do more otherwise I won't.
But I also want to try out their mediums.
I want to make more videos.
I want to, I did a little travel series once.
I love doing that.
I want to do more of that.
I was like a vlog.
Let readers in a survey pick five countries they wanted me to go.
So awesome.
They picked, they sent me to weird places.
They sent me, I went to Siberia, I went to Japan, I went from there to,
there's all in a row into Nigeria, from there to Iraq, and from there to Greenland. And then I went back to New York like two weeks in each place.
And I got to, you know, each one I got to, you know, have some weird experiences.
I tried to like really dig in and have like, you know, some interesting experiences.
And then I wrote about it and I taught readers a little bit about the history of these
places and it was just, I love doing that.
I love right.
So, you know, and I'm like, oh man, I haven't done one of those in so long. And then I have a big desire
to do fictional stuff. Like I want to write a sci-fi at some point and I would love to write
a musical. That's actually what I was doing before Weep at Wise with a partner, Ryan Linger.
We were halfway through a musical and he got tied up with his other musical and wait
but why I started taking off and we just haven't gotten back to it but it's such a fun medium.
So it's such a silly medium but it's so fun. So you think about all of these mediums on which
you can be creative and create something and you like the variety of it. Yeah, it's just that
I, if there's a chance on a new medium I could could do something good. I wanna do it, I wanna try it.
It sounds like so gratifying, so fun.
I think it's fun to just watch you actually sample these.
So I can't wait for your podcasts.
I'll be listening to all of them.
I mean, that's a cool medium to see, like where it goes.
The cool thing about podcasting and making videos,
especially with the super creative mind,
like yours, you don't really know what you're gonna make of it
until you try it.
Yeah, podcast, I'm really excited about,
but I'm like, I like going on other people's podcasts.
And I never try having longs.
So there's this, with every medium,
there's the challenges of how the sausage is made.
So like the challenges of the challenge effect.
Yeah, but it's also, I like to like,
I go on like, as you know, long ass monologues.
And you can't do that.
And if you're the interviewer,
like you're not supposed to do that as much.
So I have to like, reign it in.
And that's, that can be, that might be hard, but we'll see.
We could also do solo type stuff.
Yeah, I might, maybe I'll do a little of each.
You know it's funny, I mean, some of my favorite
is more like solo, but there's like a side cake.
So you're, you're having a conversation,
but you're like friends, but it's really a side cake. So you're having a conversation, but you're like friends,
but it's really you ranting, which I think you'd be
extremely good at.
That's funny, yeah.
Or even if it's 50, 50, that's fine.
Like if it's just a friend who I want to like really riff with,
I just don't, I don't like interviewing someone,
which I won't, that's not what the podcast will be,
but I can't help, I've tried moderating panels before,
and I cannot help myself.
I have to get involved.
And no one likes a moderator who's too involved.
It's very unappealing.
So, I am interviewing someone, and I'm like,
I can't, I don't even, I just, it's not my,
I can grill someone.
That's different, that's my curiosity being like,
wait, how about this?
And I interrupt them and I'm trying to.
I see the way your brain works.
It's hilarious, it's awesome.
It's like lights up with fire and excitement.
Yeah, actually, I love listening.
I like watching people, like listening to people.
So this is like me right now having just listening to a podcast.
This is me listening to your podcast right now.
I like listening to a podcast because then it's not even like,
but once I'm in the room, I suddenly can't help myself.
I'm jumping in.
Okay.
Well, big last ridiculous question.
What is the meaning of life?
The meaning of like an individual life?
Your existence here on earth,
or maybe broadly this whole thing
we got going on descendants of apes,
physically creating, trying to...
Yeah, well, for me, I feel like,
I want to be around as long as I can.
And if I can do some kind of crazy life extension
or upload myself, I'm gonna, because who doesn't want to see how cool 20 year 3000 is? You did say
mortality was not appealing. No, it's not appealing at all to me. Now, it's ultimately appealing.
As I said, no one wants to turn a life, I believe. If they understood what a turnity really was.
I did Graham's number as opposed to, and I was like, okay, no one wants to live that many years.
But I'd like to choose.
I'd say, you know, I'm truly over it now and I'm going to have, you know, at that point
we'd have our whole society would have like, we'd have a ceremony.
We'd have a whole process of someone signing off and, you know, it would be beautiful and
it wouldn't be so.
Well, you know, I think you'd be super depressed by that point.
Like, who's going to sign off when they're doing pretty good?
Maybe, maybe, yes, okay, maybe it's dark.
But at least, but the point is, if I'm happy, I can stay around for five, you know, but I'm thinking 50
century sounds great. Like, I don't know if I want more than that. 50, 50 sounds like a right
number. And so if you're thinking, if you would sound up for 50, if you had a choice, one is what I
get that is bullshit. Like, if you want, if you're someone who wants 50, one is a hideous number,
right? You know, anyway, so for me personally, I wanna be around as long as I can.
And then honestly, the reason I love writing,
the thing that I love most is like,
is like warm fuzzy connection with other people, right?
And that can be my friends, and it can be readers.
And that's why I would never wanna be like a journalist
where the personality is like hidden behind the writing.
Or even a biographer.
There's a lot of people who do great writers,
but I like to personally connect.
And if I can take something that's in my head
and other people can say, oh my God, I think that too.
And this made me feel so much better,
I made me feel seen, that feels amazing.
And I just feel like we're all having such a weird
common experience on this one little rock
in this one little moment of time,
where this weird, these weird four limb beings, and we're the same and it's like we're all we all the human experience
So I feel like so many of us suffer in the same ways and we're all going through a lot of the same things and
To me it is very if I lived if I was on my deathbed and I feel like I had like I had a ton of human connection and like
Share a lot of common experience and made a lot of other people feel like
Like not alone. Do you feel that as a writer?
Do you like hear and feel like the inspiration,
like all the people that you make smile
and all the people you inspire?
Honestly, not, sometimes, you know,
when we did an in-person event
and I, you know, meet a bunch of people
and it's incredibly gratifying or, you know,
you just, you know, you get emailed,
but I think it is easy to forget
that how many people,
that sometimes you're,
you're just sitting there alone typing,
yeah, dealing with your procrastination.
But that's why publishing is so gratifying
because that's the moment when all this connection happens.
And especially if I had to put my finger on it,
it's like it's having a bunch of people
who feel lonely and their existence
is all realized, like, I'll connect, right?
So that, if I do a lot of that, and that includes, of course, my actual spending a lot of
really high quality time with friends and family and making the whole thing as heartbreaking
as mortality in life can be, make the whole thing fun and at least we can laugh at ourselves
together while going through it.
And that to me is that, yeah. And then your last blog post will be written from Mars as you get the bad news
that you're not able to return because of the malfunction in the rocket.
Yeah. I would like to go to Mars and like go there for a week and be like,
yeah, here we are. And then come back. No, I know that's what you want.
Staying there. Yeah. And that's fine. By the way, if I, if I, yeah, if,
so you think you're picturing me alone on Marsas as the first person there and then it malfunctions
No, you were supposed to return but malfunctions and then there's this
that so it's both the hope the
The you experience which is how the blog starts and then it's the
overwhelming like
Feeling existential dread, but then it returns to the love of humanity.
Well, that's the thing, if I could be writing,
yeah.
And actually writing something that people would read
back on Earth, it would make it feel so much better.
Yeah, yeah.
You know, if I were just alone and no one was gonna
realize what happened.
No, no, no, you get to write.
Yeah, I know, if I could say.
Also, that would bring out great writing.
Yeah, I think so.
If you're on your deathbed on Mars alone.
I think so.
Yeah.
Well, that's exactly the. I think so. Yeah. Well,
that's exactly the future I hope for you, Tim. All right, this was an incredible conversation. You're a really special human being, Tim. Thank you so much for spending your really valuable time
with me. I can't wait to hear your podcast. I can't wait to read your next blog post, which you
said in a Twitter reply, you'll get more'll get more. Yeah, after the book, which
at that to the long list of ideas to procrastinate about
then thanks so much for talking to me, man. Thank you.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Tim Urban,
to support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in
the description. And now, let me leave you with some words from Tim Urban himself. Be humbler about what you know, more confident
about what's possible, and less afraid of things that don't matter. Thanks for listening
and hope to see you next time. Thank you.