Lex Fridman Podcast - #390 – Yuval Noah Harari: Human Nature, Intelligence, Power, and Conspiracies
Episode Date: July 17, 2023Yuval Noah Harari is a historian, philosopher, and author of Sapiens, Homo Deus, 21 Lessons for the 21st Century, and Unstoppable Us. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Master...Class: https://masterclass.com/lex to get 15% off - Eight Sleep: https://www.eightsleep.com/lex to get special savings - ExpressVPN: https://expressvpn.com/lexpod to get 3 months free - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex to get 20% off - AG1: https://drinkag1.com/lex to get 1 month supply of fish oil Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/yuval-noah-harari-transcript EPISODE LINKS: Yuval's Twitter: https://twitter.com/harari_yuval Yuval's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yuval_noah_harari Yuval's Website: https://www.ynharari.com Sapiens (book): https://amzn.to/3NQB9wt Homo Deus (book): https://amzn.to/44MzwXu 21 Lessons for the 21st Century (book): https://amzn.to/3Dfkz4D Unstoppable Us (book): https://amzn.to/3NYyBg5 PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (08:36) - Intelligence (27:31) - Origin of humans (37:53) - Suffering (58:35) - Hitler (1:17:07) - Benjamin Netanyahu (1:35:30) - Peace in Ukraine (1:52:20) - Conspiracy theories (2:06:59) - AI safety (2:21:16) - How to think (2:31:00) - Advice for young people (2:33:41) - Love (2:43:50) - Mortality (2:48:14) - Meaning of life
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The following is a conversation we have all know a harari, a historian, philosopher, and author of several highly acclaimed, highly influential books, including Sapiens,
Holmodeus, and 21 lessons for the 21st century.
He is also an outspoken critic of Benjamin Netanyahu, and the current right-wing government in Israel.
So, while much of this conversation is about the history and future
of human civilization, we also discuss the political turmoil of present-day Israel,
providing a different perspective from that of my recent conversation with Benjamin Netanyahu.
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And now dear friends, here's your vol Noah Harari. 13.8 billion years ago is the origin of our universe. 3.8 billion years ago is the origin of
life here on our little planet, the one we call
Earth.
Let's say 200,000 years ago is the appearance of early homo sapiens.
So let me ask you this question.
How rare are these events in the vastness of space and time or put it in a more fun way?
How many intelligent alien civilizations do you think are out there in this universe?
Us being one of them. I suppose there should be some statistically, but we don't have any
evidence, but I do think that intelligence in any way is a bit overvalued. We are the most
intelligent entities on this planet and look what you're doing. So intelligence also tends to be self-destructive,
which implies that if there are or were intelligent life forms elsewhere,
maybe they don't survive for long. Do you think there's a tension between happiness and intelligence?
Absolutely. Intelligence is definitely not something that is directed towards amplifying happiness.
I would also emphasize the huge, huge difference between intelligence and consciousness,
which many people certainly in the tech industry and in the AI industry tend to miss.
Intelligence is simply the ability to solve problems, to attain goals, and to win a chest,
to win a struggle for survival, to win a war,
to drive a car, to diagnose a disease.
This is intelligence.
Consciousness is the ability to feel things,
like pain and pleasure and love and hate.
In humans and other animals, intelligence and consciousness go together, they go hand
in hand, which is why we confuse them.
We solve problems, we attain goals by having feelings.
But other types of intelligence, certainly in computers, computers are already highly
intelligent,
and as far as we know, they have zero consciousness. When a computer beats you at
chess or goal or whatever, it doesn't feel happy. If it loses, it doesn't feel sad.
And there could be also other highly intelligent entities out there in the universe that have zero consciousness. And I think that
consciousness is far more important and valuable than intelligence. Can you still mount the case
that consciousness and intelligence are intricately connected so not just in humans but anywhere else?
They have to go hand in hand. Is it possible for you to imagine such a universe?
anywhere else. They have to go hand in hand. Is it possible for you to imagine such a universe?
It could be, but we don't know yet. Again, we have examples, certainly we know of examples of high intelligence without consciousness. Computers are one example. As far as we know, plans are not
conscious, yet they are intelligent. They can solve problems, they can attain goals
in very sophisticated ways.
So the other way around to have consciousness
without any intelligence, this is probably impossible.
But to have intelligence without consciousness, yes,
that's possible.
A bigger question is whether any of that is tied
to organic biochemistry.
We know on this planet only about carbon-based life forms, whether you're an amoeba, a dinosaur,
a tree, a human being, you are based on organic biochemistry.
Is there an essential connection between organic biochemistry and consciousness?
Do all conscious entities everywhere in the universe or in the future on planet earth
have to be based on carbon? Is there something so special about carbon as an element that an
entity based on silicon will never be conscious? I don't know, maybe. But again, this is a key question
about computer and computer consciousness. Can computers eventually become conscious,
even though they are not organic, the jury is still out on that. I don't know. We have
to take both options into account.
Well, a big part of that is do you think we humans would be able to detect
other intelligent beings, other conscious beings? Another way to ask that is it possible
that the aliens are already here and we don't see them? Meaning are we very human centric
in our understanding of one, the definition of life, to the definition of intelligence
and three, the definition of consciousness.
The aliens are here, they are just not from outer space.
AI, which is usually stands for artificial intelligence,
I think it stands for alien intelligence,
because AI is an alien type of intelligence.
It solve problems,
attain goals in a very, very different way,
in an alien way from human
beings.
I'm not implying that AI came from outer space.
It came from Silicon Valley, but it is alien to us.
If there are alien, intelligent or conscious entities that came from outer space already
here, I've not seen any evidence for it.
It's not impossible, but science evidence is everything.
Well, I guess instructive there's just having
the humility to look around, to think about living beings
that operate at a different time scale,
a different spatial scale.
And I think that's all useful when
starting to analyze artificial intelligence.
It's possible that even the language models, the large language models we have today are already conscious.
I highly doubt it, but I think consciousness in the end, it's a question of social norms.
Because we cannot prove consciousness in anybody except ourselves.
We know that we are conscious because we are feeling it.
We have direct access to our subjective consciousness.
We cannot have any proof that any other entity in the world,
any other human being, our parents, our best friends,
we don't have proof that they are conscious.
You know, this has been known for thousands of years.
This is the card, this is Buddha, this is Plato.
We can't have for thousands of years. This is the cart, this is Buddha, this is Plato.
We can't have this sort of proof.
What we do have is social conventions.
It's a social convention that all human beings are conscious.
It also applies to animals.
Most people who have pets are thinly believe
that their pets are conscious,
but a lot of people still refuse to acknowledge
that about cows or pigs. Now pigs are far more intelligent than dogs and cats in a
corner of the many measures, yet when you go to the supermarket and buy a piece of frozen
pigmit, you don't think about it as a conscious entity. Why do you think of your dog as conscious but not of the bacon that
you buy? Because you build a relationship with the dog and you don't have a relationship
with the bacon. Now, relationships, they don't constitute a logical proof for consciousness.
They are a social test. The touring test is a social test. It's not a
logical proof. Now, if you establish a mutual relationship with an entity when you are invested
in it emotionally, you are almost compelled to feel that the other side is also conscious.
that the other side is also conscious. And when it comes to AI and computers,
I think, and I don't think that at the present moment,
computers are conscious,
but people are already forming intimate relationships
with AI's and are therefore almost irresistible.
They are compelled to increasingly feel
that these are conscious entities.
And I think we are quite close to the point when the legal system will have to take this
into account. That even though I don't think computers have consciousness, I think we
are close to the point, the legal system will start treating them as conscious entities
because of this social convention.
What do you as a social convention, just a funny little side effect, a little artifact,
or is it fundamental to what consciousness is? Because if it is fundamental, then it seems like AI
is very good at forming these kinds of depolations with humans. And therefore, you'll be able to be a nice catalyst for integrating itself into these social
conventions of ours.
It was built to accomplish that.
We are designed, again, you know, all this argument between natural selection and creationism,
intelligent design.
As far as the past go, all entities evolved
by natural selection.
The funny thing is, but in the future,
more and more entities will come out of intelligent design.
Not of some guard above the clouds,
but of our intelligent design and the intelligent design
of our clouds, of our computing clouds,
they will design more and more entities and this is what is happening with AI. It is designed
to be very good at forming intimate relationships with humans. And in many ways it's already doing it
almost better than the human beings in some situations.
You know, when two people talk with one another, one of the things that kind of makes the
conversation more difficult is our own emotions.
You're saying something, and I'm not really listening to you, because there is something
I want to say, and I'm just waiting until you finish, I can put in a word.
Or I'm so obsessed with my anger or irritation or whatever, that I don't pay attention to what you're feeling.
This is one of the biggest obstacles in human relationships.
And computers don't have this problem because they don't have any emotions of their own. So, you know, when a computer is talking to you, it can be the most, it can focus 100% of
its attention is on what you're saying and what you're feeling because it has no feelings
of its own.
And paradoxically, this means that computers can fool people into feeling that,
oh, there is a conscious entity on the other side
and empathic entity on the other side
because the one thing everybody wants
almost more than anything in the world
is for somebody to listen to me,
somebody to focus all their attention on me.
Like I want it for my spouse, for my husband,
for my mother, for my friends, for my mother, for my friends, for my politicians,
listen to me, listen to what I feel and they often don't.
And now you have this entity which 100% of its attention is just on what I feel.
And this is a huge, huge temptation and I think also a huge, huge danger.
Well, the interesting catch 22 there is you said somebody to listen to us. Yes,
we want somebody to listen to us, but for us to respect that somebody, they sometimes
have to also not listen. It's like they kind of have to be an asshole sometimes. They have
to have mood sometimes, they have to have like self-importance and confidence and we should
have a little bit of fear that they
can walk away at any moment. There should be a little bit of that tension. So it's like absolutely.
But even that, I mean, the thing is, if that if if social scientists and psychologists establish
that annual 17% inattention is good for a conversation because then you feel challenge, oh, I need to grab this person's attention, you can
program the AI to have 17, exactly 17% in attention, not
1% more or less, or it can buy trial and error, discover
what is the ideal percentage.
Again, you can create over the last 10 years, we have
creating machines for grabbing people's attention.
This is what has been happening on social media.
Now we have designing machines for grabbing human intimacy,
which in many ways it's much, much more dangerous and scary.
Already the machines for grabbing attention,
we've seen how much social and political damage
they could do by in when you're by kind of distorting the public conversation.
Machines that are superhuman in their abilities to create intimate relationships,
this is like psychological and social weapons of mass destruction. If we don't regulate it,
if we don't train ourselves to deal with it,
it could destroy the foundations of human society.
Well, one of the possible trajectories is
those same algorithms would become personalized
and instead of manipulating us at scale,
there would be assistance that guide us to help us grow,
to help us understand the world better.
I mean, just even interactions with large language models now, if you ask them questions,
it doesn't have that stressful drama, the tension that you have from other sources of information.
It has a pretty balanced perspective that it provides. So it just feels like that's a,
the potential is there to have a really nice friend who's at an encyclopedia that just tells
you all the different perspectives, even on controversial issues, the most controversial issues,
to say, these are the different theories. These are not widely accepted conspiracy theories, but that here's the kind of backing for those
conspiracy.
It just lays it all out.
And with a calm language, without the words that kind of presume there's some kind of manipulation
going on underneath it all, it's quite refreshing.
Of course, those are the early days and people can step in and start to censor, to manipulate
those algorithms, to start to input some of the human biases in there, as opposed to
what's currently happening is kind of the internet is input, compress it, and have a nice
little output that gives an overview of the different issues.
So, I mean, there's a lot of promise there also, right?
Absolutely.
I mean, if there was no promise, there was no problem.
You know, if this technology could not accomplish anything
good, nobody would develop it.
Now, obviously, it has tremendous positive potential
in things like what you just described, in, you know,
better medicine, better health care, better education,
so many promises.
And, but this is also why it's so dangerous because the drive to develop it faster and faster
is there.
And it has some dangerous potential also.
And we shouldn't ignore it.
Again, I'm not advocating banning it just to be careful about how we not so much develop
it, but most importantly, how we deploy it into
the public sphere. This is the key question. And you know, you look back at history. And one of
the things we know from history, humans are not good with new technologies. I hear many people
now say, you know, AI, it's, we've been here before. We had the radio, we had the printing
press, we had the industrial revolution. Every time there was a big new technology, people are afraid and it will take jobs and build
up the bed actors. And in the end, it's okay. And as a historian, my tendency is, yes,
in the end, it's okay. But in the end, there is a learning curve. There is a kind of a lot of failed experiments on the way to learning how to use the new
technology. And these failed experiments could cause the lives of hundreds of millions of
people. If you think about the last really big revolution, the industrial revolution,
yes, in the end, we learned how to use the powers of industry, electricity, radio, trains, whatever, to build better human societies.
But on the way, we had all these experiments, like European imperialism, which was driven by the Industrial Revolution.
It was a question, how do you build an industrial society? Oh, you build an empire.
And you take, you control all the resources, the raw materials,
the markets, and then you had communism, another big experiment on how to build an industrial
society and you had fascism and Nazism which were essentially an experiment in how to build
an industrial society including even how do you exterminate minorities using the powers of industry.
And we had all these failed experiments on the way.
And if we now have the same type of failed experiments
with the technologies of the 21st century,
with AI, with bioengineering,
it could cost the lives of, again,
hundreds of millions of people
and maybe destroy the species.
So as a historian, when people talk about the examples from new technologies, I'm not
so optimistic.
We need to think about the failed experiment, which accompanied every major new technology. So this intelligence thing like you were saying is a
double-aged sword, is that every new thing it helps us create, it can both save us
and destroy us, and it's unclear each time which will happen. And that's maybe
why we don't see any aliens. Yeah, I mean, I think each time it does both
things. Each time it does both good things and bad things.
And the more powerful the technology,
the greater both the positive and the negative outcomes.
Now, we are here because we are the descendants
of the survivors, of the surviving cultures,
the surviving civilizations.
So when we look back, we say in the end,
everything was okay. Hey, we are here.
But the people for whom it wasn't okay, they are just not here.
And okay has a lot of possible variations to it,
because there's a lot of suffering along the way
even for the people that survived.
So the quality of life and all of this.
But let's actually go back there to our deep gratitude to our ancestors. How did it all start?
How did homo sapiens outcompete the others, the other human-like species, the Nyanjrothals and the
other homospices.
You know, on the individual level, as far as we can tell,
we were not superior to them.
Neanderthals actually had bigger brains than us.
And not just other human species, other animals too.
If you compare me personally to an elephant, to a chimpanzee,
to a pig, I'm not so...
I can do something's better, many other things worse.
If you put me alone on some island with a chimpanzee, an elephant, and a pig, I wouldn't bet
on me, being the best survivor, the one that comes successful.
If I may interrupt for a second, I was just talking extensively with Elon Musk about the difference in humans and chimps
relevant to Optimus the robot and the chimps are not able to do this kind of pinching
with their fingers. They can only do this kind of pinching. And this kind of pinching is very useful
for fine manipulation of precisely manipulation of objects. So don't be so hard on yourself. You have
of out precise manipulation of objects. So don't be so hard on yourself. You have a I said that I can do some things better than a chimp, but you know if Elon Musk's goes
on a boxing match with a chimpanzee, you know, this won't help you. This won't help you
against a chimpanzee. And similarly, if you want to climb a tree, if you want to do so many things,
my bets will be on the chimp not not on E-N-Ferna.
So I mean, you have advantages on both sides.
And what really made us successful, what made us the rulers of the planet and not the
chimps and not the Neanderthals is not any individual ability, but our collective ability, our
ability to cooperate flexibly in very large numbers.
Chimpanzis knows how to cooperate say 50 chimpanzees, 100 chimpanzees, as far as we can tell
from archaeological evidence, this was also the case with Neanderthals.
Homo sapiens, about 70,000 years ago, gained an amazing ability to operate basically in unlimited numbers.
You start seeing the formation of large networks,
political, commercial, religious, items being traded over thousands of kilometers,
ideas being spread, artistic, fashions, and this is our secret of success. Chimpanzis, Neonautos can operate say a hundred. We, you know, now the global trade network
has eight billion people. Like what we eat, what we wear, it comes from the other side
of the world. Countries like China, like India, they have 1.4 billion people, even Israel,
which is a relatively small country, say 9 million citizens,
that's more than the entire population of the planet, 10,000 years ago of humans.
So we can build these huge networks of cooperation, and everything we have accomplished as a species
from building the pyramids to flying to the moon, it's based on that.
And then you ask, okay, so what makes it possible
for millions of people who don't know each other to cooperate in a way that Neanderthalsorchimpansis
couldn't. And at least my answer is stories, is fiction, it's the imagination. If you examine
any large-scale human cooperation, you always find fiction as its basis.
It's a fictional story that holds lots of strangers together.
It's most obvious in cases like religion, you can't convince a group of chimpanzees to come together to fight a war or build a cathedral by promising to them. If you do that, after you die, you go to chimpanzee heaven and you get lots of bananas and
coconuts.
No chimpanzee will ever believe that.
Humans believe these stories, which is why we have these huge religious networks, but it's
the same thing with modern politics.
It's the same thing with economics.
People think, oh, economics, this is rational,
it has nothing to do with fictional stories. No, money is the most successful story ever told,
much more successful than any religious mythology. Not everybody believes in God or in the same
God, everybody, almost everybody believes in money, even though it's just a figment of our imagination.
You know, you take these green pieces of paper dollars, they have no value. You can't eat them,
you can't drink them, and today most dollars are not even pieces of paper. They are just
electronic information passing between computers. We value them just for one reason,
that you have the best storytellers in the world, the bankers, the
finance ministers, all these people, they are the best storytellers ever, and they tell
us a story that this green little piece of paper or this bit of information, it is worth
a banana.
And as long as everybody believes that it works.
So at which point does a fiction, when it's sufficiently useful and effective and improving
the global quality of life?
Does it become like accept the reality?
Like there's a threshold which is just kind of...
You know people believe it.
It's like with money.
You know, if you start and you cryptocurrency, if you're the only one that believes the story,
I mean, again, you cryptocurrencies, you have the math of course, but ultimately it's storytelling. You're selling only one that believes the story. I mean, again, you, you, you, you, you, cryptocurrencies, you have the math, of course,
but ultimately it's storytelling.
You're selling people a story.
If nobody believes your story,
you don't have anything.
But if lots of people believe the Bitcoin story,
then Bitcoin can be worth thousands and tenths
of thousands of dollars.
Again, why?
I mean, you can't eat it, you can't drink it,
it's nothing.
It's the story around
the the math, which is the real magic. Is it possible that the story is the primary living organism,
not the storyteller? So that somehow humans, homo sapiens evolved to become these hosts for a more intelligent living organism,
which is the idea.
And the ideas are the ones that are doing the competing.
So this is one of the sort of big perspectives behind your work.
That's really the revolution of how you've seen history, but do you ever kind of take
the perspective of the ideas as the organisms versus the humans?
It's an interesting idea. There are two opposite things to say about it. On the one hand,
yes, absolutely. If you look long-term in history, it's all the people die. It's the stories
that compete and survive and spread. And stories often spread by making people willing
to sacrifice sometimes their lives for the story.
We now in Israel, this is one of the most important
story factories in human history.
And this is a place where people still
kill each other every day over stories.
I don't know, you've been to Jerusalem, right?
So people, you know, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you go there? I don't know, you've been to Jerusalem, right? So people
are Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you go there, I believe in Jerusalem much of my life,
you go there, it's an ordinary place. You know, it's a town. You have buildings, you have
stones, you have trees, you have dogs and cats and pedestrians, it's a regular place.
But then you have the stories about the place. Oh, this is the place where God revealed
himself. This is the place where Jesus was. This is the place where Muhammad was. And it's the stories
that people fight over. Nobody is fighting over the stones. People are fighting about the stories
about the stones. And the stories, if a story can get millions of people to fight for it,
it not only survives, it spreads, it can take over the world.
The other side of the coin is that the stories are not really alive
because they don't feel anything.
This goes back to the question of consciousness,
which I think is the most important thing.
That the ultimate reality is consciousness,
is the ability to feel things.
If you want to know whether the hero of some story
is real or not, you need to ask, can it suffer?
Stories don't feel anything.
Countries, which are also stories, nations, don't suffer.
If a nation loses a war, it doesn't suffer.
The soldiers suffer, the civilians suffer, animals can suffer.
You have an army with horses and whatever, and the horses get wounded.
The horses suffer. The nation can't suffer it's just a
it's just an imagination it's just a fictional story in our mind it doesn't
feel anything similarly when a bank goes bankrupt or company goes bankrupt or
when a currency loses its value like Bitcoin is worth now zero crashed, or the dollar is worth zero.
It crashed.
The dollar doesn't feel anything.
It's the people holding the dollars who might be now very miserable.
So we have this complex situation when history is largely driven by stories,
but stories are not the ultimate reality. The ultimate reality is feeling, feelings
of humans, of animals, and the tragedy of history is that very often we get the order wrong,
stories are not bad, stories are tools. They are good when we use them in order to alleviate suffering.
But very often we forget it.
We, instead of using the stories for our purposes,
we allow the stories to use us for their purposes.
And then you start in tile wars because of history. You inflict millions,
suffering on millions of people just for the sake of a story. And that's the tragedy of human
history. So the fundamental property of life of a living organism is the capacity to feel and
the ultimate feeling of suffering. You know, to know if you're happy or not, it's a very difficult question.
Yeah.
But when you suffer, you know.
Yes.
And also in ethical terms, it's more important to be aware of sufferings and of any other
emotion.
If you're doing something, which is causing all kinds of emotions to all kinds of people,
first of all, you need to notice if you're causing a lot of suffering to someone.
If some people are like it,
and some people are bored by it,
and some people are a bit angry in you,
and some people are suffering because of what you do,
you first of all have to know, oh,
now sometimes you still have to do it.
You know, the world is a complicated place.
I don't know, you have an epidemic,
governments decide to have all
those social isolation regulations or whatever. So in certain cases, yes, you need to do it
even though it can cause tremendous suffering, but you need to be very aware of the cost
and to be very, very, you have to ask yourself again and again and again, is it worth it?
Is it still worth it? And the interesting question there, implied in your statements is that suffering is a pretty
good component of a touring test for consciousness.
This is the most important thing to ask about AI. Can it suffer? Because if AI can suffer,
then it is an ethical subject, and it needs protection, it needs rights just like humans and animals.
Well, quite a long time ago already.
So I work with a lot of robots, legate robots,
but I've even had inspired by a YouTube video,
had a bunch of Roombas and I made them scream
when I touched them or kicked them
or when they run into a wall.
And the illusion of suffering,
for me, silly human, anthropomorphizes things
as powerful as suffering itself.
I mean, you immediately think the thing is suffering.
And I think some of it is just a technical problem,
but it's an easily solvable one.
How to create an AI system that just says,
please don't hurt me.
Please don't shut me off.
I miss you.
Where have you been?
Be jealous also.
What have you been gone for so long?
Your calendar doesn't have anything on it.
So this kind of, this create through words,
the perception of suffering, of jealousy, of anger, of all those things.
And it just seems like that's not so difficult to do.
That's part of the danger that it basically hacks our operating system.
And it uses some of our best qualities against us.
It's very, very good that humans are attuned to suffering
and that we don't want to call suffering, that we have compassion.
That's one of the most wonderful things about humans.
And if we now create AIs, which use this to manipulate us,
this is a terrible thing.
You've kind of, I think, mentioned this.
Do you think it should be a legal to
do these kinds of things with AI, to create the perception of consciousness, of saying,
please don't leave me, or sort of basically simulate some of the human-like qualities?
Yes, I think we have to be very careful about it. And if it emerges spontaneously, we need to be careful. And we can't rule out the
possibility that AI will develop consciousness. We don't know enough about consciousness to be sure.
So if it develops spontaneously, we need to be very careful about how we understand it. But if people intentionally design an AI that they know, they assume it has no consciousness,
but in order to manipulate people, they use, again, this human strength, this human,
the noble part of our nature against us, this should be for bidding. And similarly, a more
general level, that it should be for bidding for an AI to pretend to be a human being.
That it's okay, you know, there are so many things we can use AI as teachers, as doctors
and so forth, and it's good as long as we know that we are interacting with an AI, we
should the same way we ban fake money, we should ban fake humans.
It's not just banning deep fakes of specific individuals, it's also banning deep fake of
generic humans. You know, which is only happening to some extent on social media, like if you have
lots of bots retweeting something, then you have the impression,
oh, lots of people are interested in that.
That's important.
And this is basically the bots pretending to be humans,
because if you see a tweet, which says 500 people
retweeted it, or you see a tweet and it says 500 bots
retweeted it, I don't care what the bots retweeted,
but if it's humans, okay, that's that interesting.
So we need to be very careful that bots can't do that.
They are doing it at present and it should be banned.
Now some people say yes, but freedom of expression.
No, bots don't have freedom of expression.
There is no cost in terms of freedom of expression when you ban bots.
So again, in some situations, yes, AIs should interact with us, but it should be very clear.
This is an AI talking to you, or this is an AI retweeting this story.
It is not a human being making a conscious decision.
To push back on this line of fake humans,
because I think it might be a spectrum.
First of all, you might have AI systems that are offended,
hurt when you say that they're fake humans.
In fact, they might start identifying as humans.
And you just talked about the power of us humans
with our collective intelligence
to take fake stories and make them quite real.
And so if the feelings you have for the fake human is real,
love is a kind of fake thing.
We all kind of put a word to a set of feelings.
What if you have that feeling for an AI system?
It starts to change.
I mean, maybe the kind of things
the AI systems are allowed to do.
For good, they're allowed to create,
communicate, software, and communicate it.
The good stuff, the longing, the hope, the connection,
the intimacy, all of that.
And in that way, get integrated in our society.
And then you start to ask a question.
And are we allowed to really unplug them?
Are we allowed to really censor them, remove them,
remove their voice from social media.
They shouldn't have a voice.
They shouldn't talk with us.
I'm just saying when they talk with us,
it should be clear that they are AI.
That's it.
Don't you can have your voice as an AI?
Again, I have some medical problem.
I want to get advice from an AI doctor.
That's fine.
As long as I know that I'm talking with an AI,
the what should be banned is AI pretending to be a human being.
This is something that will erode trust
and without trust, society collapses.
This is something that especially will endanger democracies
because democracies are built on,
democracy is a conversation basically.
And it's a conversation between people. If you know flood, the public sphere
with millions and potentially billions of AI agents that can hold conversations, they never sleep,
they never eat, they don't have emotions of their own, they can get to know you and tailor the words
specifically for you and your life story. They are
becoming better than us at creating
stories and
ideas and so forth. If you flood the public's fair with that, this will ruin the
flood the public's fair with that, this will ruin the conversation between people. It will ruin the trust between people. You will no longer be able to have a democracy in this situation.
You can have other types of regimes, but not democracy.
We could talk about the big philosophical notion of truth then.
You've already talked about the capacity of humans.
One of the things that made a special is stories.
So, is there such thing as truth?
Absolutely.
What is truth exactly?
When somebody is suffering, that's true.
I mean, this is why one of the things
when you talk about suffering
is a kind of ultimatum
reality when somebody suffers that is truth. Now somebody can suffer because of a fictional
story. Like somebody tells people that God said you must go on this crusade and kill these heretics
and this is a completely fictional story. And people believe it, and they start a war, and they destroy cities and kill people,
the people that suffer because of that, and even the crusaders themselves,
that also suffer the consequences of what they do, the suffering is true,
even though it is caused by a fictional story.
Similarly, when people agree on certain rules,
the rules could come out of our imagination.
Now, we can be truthful about it
and say these rules, they didn't come from heaven,
they came from our imagination.
You know, we look at sports,
so we have rules for the game of football, soccer.
They were invented by people.
Nobody, at least very few people claim, that the rules of
football came down from heaven. We invented them. And this is truthful. There are fictional rules
invented by humans and this is true. They were invented by humans. And when you are honest about
it, it enables you to change the rules, which is being done in football every now and then. It's the same with the fundamental
rules of a country. You can pretend that the rules came down from heaven, dictated by God or whatever,
and then you can't change them. Or you can be like, you know, the American Constitution,
which starts with the people. The American Constitution lays down certain rules for a society, but
the amazing thing about it, it does not pretend to come from an external source. The 10 Commandments
start with IMO Lord God, and because it starts with that, you can't change them. You know, the 10th commandment, for instance,
supports slavery.
The 10th commandment, in the 10th commandment,
it says that you should not covet your neighbor's house,
or your neighbor's wife, or your neighbor's slaves.
It's OK to hold slaves according
to the 10th commandment, it's just bad
to covet the slaves of your neighbor. Now, there is no 11th commandment, it's just bad to cover the slaves of your neighbor.
Now, there is no eleventh commandment, which says,
if you don't like, some of the previous ten commandments,
this is how you go about amending them,
which is why we still have them unchanged.
Now, in the US Constitution, you have all these rights and rules,
including originally the ability to hold slaves, but the genius of the
founding fathers of the United States, they had the humility to understand maybe we don't
understand everything.
Maybe we made some mistakes, so we tell you that these rules did not come from heaven,
they came from us humans. We
may have made a mistake. So here is a mechanism for how future generations can
amend the constitution, which was used later on to, for instance, amend the
constitution to Ben's slavery. So now you're describing some interesting and
powerful ideas throughout human history. You just speak to the mechanism of how humans believe
Start to believe ideas. Is there something interesting to say there from your thinking about it?
How like how idea is born and how it takes hold and how it spreads and how it competes with all their ideas
First of all ideas are an independent force in history
Marxists tend to deny that.
Marxists think that all history is just a play of material interests.
And ideas, stories, they are just a smoke screen to hide the underlying interests.
My thoughts are to some extent the opposite. We have
some biological objective interests that all humans share like we need to eat,
we need to drink, we need to breathe, but most conflicts in history are not about
that. The interests which really drive most conflict in history don't come from biology.
They come from religions and ideologies and stories. So it's not that stories are as
most smokescreen to hide the real interests. The stories create the interests in the first
place. The stories define who are the competing groups.
Nations, religions, cultures, they are not biological entities.
They are not like species, like gorillas and chimpanzees. No.
Israelis and Palestinians, or Germans and French, or Chinese and Americans,
they have no essential biological difference between them.
The difference is cultural. It comes from stories.
There are people that believe in different stories. The stories create the identity. The stories create
the interests. Israel and Palestinians are fighting over Jerusalem, not because of any material
interest. There are no oil fields under Jerusalem. And even oil, you need it to realize some cultural fantasy. It doesn't really come
from biology. So the stories are independent forces. Now, why do people believe one story and not
another? That's history. There is no materialistic law. People will always believe this. No,
history is full of accidents. How did Chris
Janet become the most successful religion in the world? We can't explain it. Why this story
about Jesus of Nazareth and not, you know, the Roman Empire in the third century CE was a bit like California today, like so many sects and subjects and gurus and
reliance, like everybody has their own thing. And you have thousands of different
stories competing. Why did Christianity come up on top? As a historian, I don't
have a kind of clear answer. You can read the sources and you see how it happened.
Oh, this happened, and then this happened, and then Constantine adopted it, and then this, and then this.
But why?
I don't think anybody has an answer to that.
If you rewind the movie of history and press play, and And rewind and press play a hundred times,
I think Christianity would take over the Roman Empire
and the world maybe twice, out of a hundred times.
It was such an unlikely thing to happen.
It's the same with Islam.
It's the same, I don't know,
it's the communist takeover of Russia.
In 1914, if you told people that in three years, Lenin and the Bolsheviks
will gain power in the Tsarist Empire, they would think you're utterly crazy. You know, Lenin had
a few thousand supporters in 1914, in an empire of close to 200 million people. It sounded ludicrous.
red million people. It sounded ludicrous. Now, we know the chain of events, the First World War, the February revolution, and so forth that led to the communist take over, but it was such an
unlikely event. And it happened. And the little steps along the way, the little options you have
along the way, because, you know, Stalin versus Trotsky, you could have the Robert Frost poem.
you have a long way, because Stalin versus Trotsky, you could have the Robert Frost poem. There's always...
Yes, it was come to...
And history often takes, you know, there is a highway and there is a kind of sideway
and history takes the sideways many, many times.
And it's perhaps tempting to tell some of that history through charismatic leaders.
And maybe it's an open question how much power charismatic leaders have to affect the
trajectory of history?
You've met quite a lot of charismatic leaders lately.
I mean, what's your view on that?
I find it a compelling notion.
I'm a sucker for a great speech in a vision.
So I have a sense that there's an importance for a leader to catalyze the viral spread of a story.
So I think we need leaders to be just great storytellers that sharpen up the story to make
sure it infiltrates everybody's brain effectively.
But it could also be that the local interactions between humans is even more important.
But we just don't have a good way to sort of summarize and describe that.
We like to talk about, you know, Steve Jobs as central to the development of the computer,
maybe Bill Gates.
You tell it to the stories of individuals like this, because it's just easier to tell a
sexy story that way.
Maybe it's an interplay because you have the kind of structural forces that you look at the
geography of the planet and you look at shipping technology in late, in the late 15th century,
in Europe and the Mediterranean, and it's almost inevitable that pretty quickly somebody will discover
America. Somebody from the old world will get to the new world. So this was not a kind of, this
didn't, if it wasn't Columbus, then it would have been a five years later somebody else. But
the key thing about history is that these small differences make a huge, huge difference.
You know, if it wasn't Columbus, if it was five years later somebody from England, then
maybe all of Latin America today would be speaking English and not Spanish.
If it was somebody from the Ottoman Empire, it's completely different world history, if you have, and you know, the Ottoman Empire at that time was also shaping up to be a major maritime empire.
If you have America rich, being reached by Muslim navigators, before Christian navigators from Europe, you have a completely different world history. It's the same as the computer. Given the economic
incentives and the science and technology of the time, then the rise of the
personal computer was probably inevitable, sometime in the late 20th century.
But the where and when is crucial. The fact that it was California in the 1970s and not say, I don't know, Japan
in the 1980s or China in the 1990s, this made a huge, huge difference. So you have this
interplay between the structural forces, which are beyond the control of any single charismatic
leader. But then the small changes, they can have a big effect. And I think, for instance,
about the war in Ukraine, there was a moment now it's now it's a struggle between nations.
But there was a moment when the decision was taken in the mind of a single individual of Vladimir
Putin, and he could have decided otherwise, and that the world would look completely different.
And another leader, a lot of Miss Zalenskiy could have decided to leave Kiev in the early days.
There's a lot of decisions that kind of ripple.
Yeah.
So you write in homo-dayous about Hitler.
And in part that he was not a very impressive person.
I say that.
The quote is, let me read it.
Okay.
Yeah, he wasn't a senior officer in four years of war.
He rose no higher than the rank of corporal.
He had no formal education.
Perhaps he mean his resume.
Yeah, he was resume was nothing impressive.
That's it.
He had no formal education, no professional skills, no political background.
He wasn't a successful businessman or a union activist.
He didn't have friends or relatives in high places, nor any money to speak of.
So how did he amass so much power?
What ideology, what circumstances enabled the rise of the Third Reich?
Again, I can't tell you the why.
I can tell you the how.
I don't think it was inevitable.
I think that a few things were different.
There would have been no Third Reich.
There would have been no Nazism, no Holocaust.
Again, this is the tragedy.
If it would have been inevitable, then you know, what can you do?
This is the laws of history or the laws of physics.
But the tragedy is, no, it was decisions by humans that led to that direction.
And, you know, even from the viewpoint of the Germans, we know for a fact
it was an unnecessary path to take.
Because, you know, in the 1920s and 30s, the Nazis said that this, unless Germany
take this road, it will never be prosperous. It will never be successful. All the other countries
will keep stepping on it. This was their claim. And we know for a fact this is false. Why? Because they took that road, they lost the
Second World War, and after they lost, then they became one of the most prosperous countries
in the world, because their enemies that defeated them evidently supported them and allowed them to become such a prosperous and successful nation.
So, you know, if you can lose the war and still be so successful, obviously you could just have scripted the war,
you didn't need it. I mean, you really had to have the war in order to have a prosperous Germany in the 19th,
absolutely not. And it's the same with Japan, it's the same with Italy.
So it was not inevitable, but it was not the forces of history that necessitated.
It forced Germany to take this path.
I think part of it is part of the appeal of, again, Hitler was a very,
very skillful storyteller.
He sold people a story.
The fact that he was nobody made it even more effective
because people at that time, they after the defeat
of the first world war, after the repeated economic crisis
of the 1920s in Germany, people felt betrayed by all the established elites,
by all the established institutions, all these professors and politicians and industrialists
and military, all the big people, they led us to a disastrous war, they led us to humiliation,
so we don't want any of them. And then you have this nobody,
a corporal, with no money, with no education, with no titles, with nothing. And he tells people,
I want of you. And this made him, this was one reason why he was so popular. And then the story he
told, when you look at stories, at the competition between different stories and between stories fiction and the truth,
the truth has two big problems.
The truth tends to be complicated and the truth tends to be painful.
The real story of let's talk about nations, the real story of every nation is
complicated and it contains some painful episodes. We are not always good. We
sometimes do bad things. Now if you go to people and you tell them a complicated
and painful story, many of them don't want to listen. The advantage of fiction is that it can be made as
simple and as painless or attractive as you want it to be because it's fiction. And then what you see
is that politicians like Hitler, they create a very simple story. We are the heroes, we always do good things, everybody's
against us, everybody's trying to to to a trampolasse and this is very
attractive. One of the things people don't understand about Nazism and fascism,
we teach in schools about fascism and Nazism as this ultimate evil, the
ultimate monster in human history.
And at some level, this is wrong
because it actually exposes us.
Why?
Because people here are fascism is this monster.
And then when you hear the actual fascist story,
what fascists tell you is always very beautiful and attractive.
Fascists are people who come and tell you, you are wonderful.
You belong to the most wonderful group of people in the world.
You are beautiful.
You are ethical.
Everything you do is good.
You have never done anything wrong.
There are all these evil monsters out there
that are out to get you and they are causing all the problems in the world.
And when people hear that, you know, it's like looking in the mirror and
seeing something very beautiful. Hey, I'm beautiful. I've we've never done anything wrong. We are victims.
Everybody's like, and and when you look and you heard in school that fascists and that fascists are monsters and you look in the mirror, you see something very beautiful and you say, I can't be a fascist because fascists are monsters and this is so beautiful, so it can't be.
But when you look in the fascist mirror, you all you never see a monster. You see the most beautiful thing in the world.
And that's the danger.
This is the problem you know is Hollywood's,
I look at Voldemort in Harry Potter.
Who would like to follow this creep?
Yeah.
And you look at Darth Vader.
This is not somebody you would like to follow.
Christianity got things much better
when it described the devil as being very
beautiful and attractive. That's the danger that you see something is very beautiful.
You don't understand the monster underneath.
And you write precisely about this. And by the way, it's just a small aside. It always
saddens me when people say how obvious it is to them that communism is a flawed
ideology.
When you ask them, try to put your mind, try to put yourself in the beginning of the
20th century and see what you would do.
A lot of people will say, it's obvious that it's a flawed ideology.
So I mean, I suppose to some of the worst ideologies in human history, you could say the same.
And in that mirror, when you look, it looks beautiful.
Communism is the same.
Also, you look in the communist mirror, you're the most ethical, wonderful place a person ever.
It's very difficult to see Stalin underneath it.
So yeah, in homodest, you're also right, during the 19th and 20th centuries, as humanism gained increasing social credibility and political power,
it sprouted two very different offsuits, Socialist Humanism,
which encompassed a plethora of Socialist and Communist movements,
and evolutionary humanism, whose most famous advocates were the Nazis.
So if you can just linger on that, what's the ideological connection between
Nazism and Communism,
as embodied by humanism?
And humanism basically is, you know, the focus is on humans.
That they are the most important thing in the world.
They move history.
But then there is a big question, what are humans?
What is humanity? Now, liberals, they place at the center of the story
individual humans, and they don't see history
as a kind of necessary collision between big forces.
They place the individual at the center.
If you want to know, there is a bed,
especially in the US today,
liberal is taking the opposite of conservative, but it's to test whether you're liberal,
you need to answer just three questions. Very simple. Do you think people should have the right
to choose their own government, or the government should be imposed by some outside force?
or the government should be imposed by some outside force. Do you think people should have the right to the liberty,
to choose their own profession,
or either born into some caste that predetermines what they do?
And do you think people should have the liberty
to choose their own spouse,
and their own way of personal life,
instead of being told by elders or parents who to marry and how to live.
Now, if you answered yes to all three questions,
people should have the liberty to choose their government,
their profession, their personal lives, their spouse, the neuroliberal.
And most conservatives are also liberal.
Now, communists and fascists, they answer differently.
For them, history is not, yes, history is about humans,
humans are the big heroes of history,
but not individual humans and their liberties.
Fascists imagine history as a clash between races
or nations.
The nation is at the center.
They say the supreme good is the good of the nation.
You should have a 100% loyalty only to the nation.
You know, liberal say yes,
you should be loyal to the nation,
but it's not the only thing.
There are other things in the world,
there are human rights, there is truth, there is
beauty. Many times, yes, you should prefer the interests of your nation over other things,
but not always. If your nation tells you to murder millions of innocent people, you don't
do that. Even though the nation tells you to do it, when to lie for the national interest, you
know, in extreme situations, maybe, but in many cases, your loyalty should be to the truth,
even if it makes your nation look a bit, not in the best light, the same with beauty,
you know, how does the fascist determine whether a movie is a good movie?
Very simple. If it serves the interest of the nation, this is a good movie.
If it's against the interest of the nation, this is a bad movie. End of story.
Liberism says, no, there is aesthetic values in the world.
We should judge movies not just on the question whether they serve the national interest, but also
on autistic value. Communists are a bit like the fascists, instead that they don't place the nation.
At the main hero, they place class, as the main hero. For them, history against, not about individuals,
not about nations, history is a clash between classes.
And just as fascists imagine, in the end, only one nation will be on top. The communists think
in the end only one class should be on top, and that's the pro-Tariat. And same story. Your 100%
of your loyalty should be to the class. And like if you, if there is a class
say between class and family, class wins.
Like in the Soviet Union, the party told children,
if you hear your parents say something bad about Stalin,
you have to report them.
And there are many cases when children reported their parents
and their parents were sent to the Gulag.
Like, and you know, your loyalty is to the party, to the, which leads the proletariat to victory
in the historical struggle.
And the same way in communism, art is only about class struggle.
And movie is good if it serves the interests of the proletariat. Autistic values, there
is nothing like that. And the same with truth. The everything that we see now in fake news,
the communist propaganda machine was there before us. The level of lies, of this information
campaigns, that they orchestrated in the 1920s and 30s and 40s is really unimaginable.
So, the reason these two ideologies, classes of ideologies failed is the sacrifice of truth,
not just failed, but did a lot of damage, as sacrifice the truth and sacrifice the beauty.
And sacrifice of hundreds of millions of people, disregard again for human suffering.
Like, okay, for in order to, for our nation to win,
in order for our class to win, we need to kill those millions, kill those millions.
That was an ethics, aesthetics, truth, they don't matter.
The only thing that matters is the victory of the state or the victory of the class.
And that liberalism was the antithesis to that.
It says no.
Not only, it has a much more complicated view of the world.
And go of communism and fascism, they are the very simple view of the world. There is one, your loyalty, 100% of it should be only to one thing.
Now, liberalism has a much more complex view of the world.
It says, yes, there are nations, they are important.
Yes, there are classes, they are important, but they are not the only thing.
There are also families, there are also individuals, there are also animals, and
your loyalty should be divided between all of them. Sometimes you prefer this, sometimes
you prefer that, that's complicated, but life is complicated.
But also, I think maybe you can correct me, but liberalism acknowledges the corrupting nature of power
when there's a guy at the top, since they're for a while, managing things is probably going
to start losing a good sense of reality and losing the capability to be a good manager.
It feels like the communist and fascist regimes don't acknowledge that
basic characteristic of human nature that power corrupts. Yes, they believe in infallibility.
In this sense, they are very close to being religions. In Nazism, Hitler was considered infallible.
And therefore, you don't need any checks and balances
on his power, why do you need to balance an infallible genius?
And it's the same with the Soviet Union,
in Stalin and more generally, with the communist party,
the party can never make a mistake.
And therefore you don't need independent quotes,
independent media, opposition parties, things like that, because then party is never wrong.
You concentrate the same way 100% of loyalty should be to the party, a 100% of power should be in the hands of the party.
The only deal of liberal democracy is embracing fallibility. Everybody is fallible.
All people, all leaders, or political parties, all institutions, this is why we need checks and balances and many of them.
If you have just one, then this particular check itself could make terrible mistakes.
So you need to press, you need the media to serve as a check to the government.
You don't have just one newspaper or one TV station.
You need many so that they can balance each other.
And the media is not enough.
So you have independent courts.
You have free academic institutions.
You have NGOs.
You have a lot of checks and balances.
So that's the ideologies and the leaders.
What about the individual people, the millions of people that play a part in all of this?
That are the hosts of the stories that are the catalysts and the sort of the components of how the story spreads. Would you say that all of us are capable of spreading any story? Sort of the
soljnets and idea of that all of us are capable of good and evil. The line between good and evil
runs the heart of every man. Yes, I wouldn't say that every person is capable of every type of evil, but we are all fallible.
There is a large element.
It partly depends on the efforts we make to develop our self-awareness during life.
Part of it depends on moral luck.
If you are born as a Christian German,
in the 1910s or 1920s and you grow up in Nazi Germany,
that's bad moral luck.
Your chances of committing terrible things,
you have a very high chance of doing it.
And you can withstand it,
but it will take tremendous effort.
If you are born in Germany after the war, you are morally lucky.
You will not be put to such a test.
You will not need to exert these enormous efforts,
not to commit atrocities.
So this is just part of history.
There is an element of luck.
But again, part of it is also self-awareness.
And you asked me earlier about the potential of power to corrupt. And I listened to the interview
you just did with Prime Minister Netanyahu a couple of days ago. And one of the things that most
struck me doing the interview that you asked him, You asked him, are you afraid of this thing that
paro corrupt? He didn't think for a single second. He didn't pose, he didn't admit a tiny
little level of doubt, no, paro doesn't corrupt. It was, for me, it was a shocking and revealing moment.
And it kind of dovetails with how you began the interview
that I really liked your opening gambit.
No, really, you kind of told him,
lots of people in the world are angry with you.
Some people hate you, they dislike you.
What do you want to tell them to say to them?
And you gave him this kind of platform.
And I was very, what will he say?
And he just denied it.
He basically denied it.
You know, he had to cut short the interview
from three hours to one hour
because you had hundreds of thousands of Israelis
in the streets demonstrating against him.
And he goes and say, no, everybody likes me. What are you talking about?
But on that topic, you've said recently that the Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
may go down in history as the man who destroys Israel. Can you explain what you mean by that?
Yes, I mean, he is basically tearing apart the social contract that held this country together for 75 years.
He is destroying the foundations of Israeli democracy.
You know, I don't want to go too deep and unless you want to, because I guess most of our listeners,
they have bigger issues on their minds than the fate of some small country in the Middle East. But for those who want to understand what's happening in Israel, there is really just one
question to ask, what limits the power of the government? In the United States, for instance,
there are a lot of checks and balances that limit the power of the government.
of checks and balances that limit the power of the government. You have the Supreme Court, you have the Senate, you have the House of Representatives, you have the President,
you have the Constitution, you have 50 states, each state with its own Constitution and Supreme Court
and Congress and Governor, if somebody wants to pass a dangerous legislation saying the House,
governor, if somebody wants to pass a dangerous legislation saying the house, it will have to go through so many obstacles, like if you want to pass a law in the United States,
taking away voting rights from Jews, or from Muslims, or from African Americans, even if
it passes, even if it has a majority in the House of Representatives, it has a very, very,
very small chance of becoming the House of Representatives, it has a very, very, very small chance
of becoming the law of the country.
Because it will have to pass again through the Senate, through the President, through
the Supreme Court, and all the Federal structure.
In Israel, we have just a single check on the power of the government, and that's a Supreme
Court.
There is really no difference between the government and the geologist's nature because there are no separate elections like in the US.
If you win majority in the Knesset in the parliament, you appoint the government.
That's very simple.
And if you have 61 members of Knesset who vote, let's say on a low,
to take away voting rights from Arab citizens of Israel,
there is a single
check that can prevent it from becoming the law of the land and that's a Supreme Court.
And now the Netanyahu government is trying to neutralize or take over the Supreme Court
and they've already prepared a long list of laws. They already talk about it.
What will happen the moment that this last check on the power is gone?
They are openly trying to gain unlimited power and they openly talk about it.
That once they have it, then they will take away the rights of Arabs, of LGBT people, of
women, of secular Jews.
And this is why you have hundreds of thousands
of people in the streets.
You have a Ereforced pilots saying, we are stopped flying.
This is unheard of in Israel.
I mean, we are still living under existential threat.
From Iran, from other enemies.
And in the middle of this, you have Air Force pilots
who dedicated their lives to protecting the country.
And they are saying, that's it.
If this government doesn't stop what it is doing,
we stop flying.
So as you said, I just did the interview.
And as we're doing the interview, there's protests
in the streets.
Do you think the protests will have an effect?
I hope so very much.
I'm going to many of these protests.
I hope that we'll have an effect.
If we fail, this is the end of Israeli democracy probably.
This will have repercussions far beyond the borders of Israel. Israel is a nuclear
power. Israel has one of the most advanced cyber capabilities in the world, able to strike
basically anywhere in the world. If this country becomes a fundamentalist and militarist dictatorship,
it can set fire to the entire Middle East.
It can again have destabilizing effects long, far beyond the borders of Israel.
So you think without the check on power is possible that the Netanyahu government holds
on the power?
Nobody tries to gain unlimited power just for nothing.
I mean, you have so many problems in Israel.
And Netanyahu talks so much about Iran and the Palestinians and his Bala, we have an economic crisis.
Why is it so urgent at this moment in the face of such a position?
Why is it so crucial for them to neutralize the Supreme Court?
They are just doing it for the fun of it?
No, they know what they are doing. They are just doing it for the fun of it?
No. They know what they are doing.
They are adamant.
I mean, we are not sure of it before.
There was like a couple of months ago,
they came out with this plan to take over the Supreme Court,
to have all these laws,
and there were hundreds of thousands of people in the streets,
again, soldiers saying they will stop serving,
a general strike in the economy and they stopped.
And they started a process of negotiations to try and enrich a settlement.
And then they broke down, they stopped the negotiations and they restarted this process
of legislation trying to gain unlimited power. So any doubt we had before, okay, maybe they
changed their purposes. No, it's now very clear. They are 100% focused on gaining absolute
power. They are not trying a different tactic. Previously, they took, they had all these
dozens of lows that they wanted to pass very quickly within a month or two.
They realized, no, there is too much opposition.
So now they are doing what is known as salami tactics.
Slice by slice.
Now they're trying to one-low.
If these succines, then they'll pass the next one
and the next one and the next one.
This is why we are now at a very crucial moment.
And when you see, again, hundreds of thousands of people in the streets almost every day, when you see resistance
within the armed forces, within the security forces, you see hyper companies saying, we will go
on strike. You know, it's that private businesses, hyper companies, I think it's almost unprecedented for private business to go on strike because
what do we what will economic success benefit us if we live under a messianic dictatorship?
And again, the fuel for this whole thing is to a large extent coming from messianic religious
groups which just the thought what happens if these people have unlimited
control of Israel's nuclear arsenal and Israel's military capabilities and cyber capabilities,
this is very, very scary, not just for the citizens of Israel, it should be scary for people
everywhere. So it would be scary for it to go from being a problem
of security and protecting the peace to becoming a religious war.
It is already becoming a religious war. I mean, the war, the conflict with the Palestinians
was for many years a national conflict in essence. Over the last few years, maybe a decade or two,
it is more thing into a religious conflict,
which is a very worrying development.
When nations are in conflict, you can reach some compromise.
Okay, you have this bit of land, we have this bit of land.
But when it becomes a religious conflict
between fundamentalists, between messianic people,
compromise becomes much more difficult because you don't compromise on eternity. You don't
compromise on God. And this is where we are heading right now. So I know you said it's a small nation
somewhere in the Middle East, but it also happens to be the epicenter of one of
the longest running one of the most tense conflicts and crises in human history. So at the very
least it serves as a study of how conflict can be resolved. So what are the biggest obstacles to you
to achieving peace in this part of the world? Motivation. I think it's easy to achieving peace in this part of the world.
Motivation. I think it's easy to achieve peace if you have the motivation on both sides.
Unfortunately, the present juncture, there is not enough motivation on either side, either
the Palestinian or Israeli side. Peace, you know, in mathematics, you have problems without
solutions. You can prove mathematically that this you have problems without solutions.
You can prove mathematically that this mathematical problem has no solution.
In politics, there is no such thing.
All problems have solutions if you have the motivation.
And but motivation is the big problem.
And again, we can go into the reasons why, but the fact is that on neither
side is there enough motivation. If there was motivation, the solution would have been easy.
Is there an important distinction to draw between the people on the street and the leaders in power, in terms of motivation. So, are most people motivated and hoping for peace,
and the leaders are motivated and incentivized to continue war?
I don't think so.
Or the people also.
I think it's a deep problem.
It's also the people.
It's not just the leaders.
Is it even a human problem of literally hate in people's heart?
Yeah, there is a lot of hate.
One of the things that happened in Israel over the last 10 years or so,
Israel became much stronger than it was before,
largely thanks to technological developments,
and it feels that it no longer needs to compromise.
That, hand, this is the many reasons for it,
but some of them are technological,
being one of the leading powers in cyber,
in AI, in high-tech,
we have developed very sophisticated ways
to more easily control the Palestinian population. In the early 2000s,
it seemed that it is becoming impossible to control millions of people against the will.
It took too much power, it spilled too much blood on both sides. So there was an impression,
oh, this is becoming untenable. And there are several reasons why it changed,
but one of them was new technology.
Israel developed very sophisticated surveillance technology
that has made it much easier for Israeli security forces
to control 2.5 million Palestinians in the West Bank
against the will with a lot less effort, less boots on the ground, also less
blood. And Israel is also not exporting this technology to many other regimes around
the world. Again, I heard Netanyahu speaking about all the wonderful things that Israel is
exporting to the world and it's true. We are exporting some nice things.
Water systems and new kinds of tomatoes.
We are also exporting a lot of weapons and especially surveillance systems,
sometimes to unsavory regimes in order to control their populations.
Can you comment on, I think you've mentioned that the current state of affairs is the
defector three-class state.
Can you describe what you mean by that?
Yes, for many years, the kind of leading solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
is the two-state solution.
Can you describe what that means, by the way?
Yes, two states. Within between the Jordan River and the
Mediterranean will have two states, Israel, Israel as a
predominantly Jewish state and Palestine as a predominantly
Palestinian state. Again, there are lots of discussions where
the border passes, what happens with security arrangement
and whatever, but this was the big solution. Israel is
basically abandoned, the two state solution. Maybe they don't say so officially the people in power, but this was the big solution. Israel is basically abandoned, the two-state solution.
Maybe they don't say so officially the people in power, but in terms of how they actually,
what they do on the ground, they abandoned it. Now, they are effectively promoting the three-class
solution, which means there is just one country and one government and one power between the Mediterranean and the Jordan River,
but you have three classes of people living there.
You have Jews who enjoy full rights, all the rights.
You have some Arabs who are Israeli citizens and have some rights.
And then you have the other Arabs, the third class, who have basically no civil rights
and limited human rights. And that's, again, nobody would openly speak about it, but effectively,
this is the reality on the ground already. So there's many, and I'll speak with the Palestinians
who characterize this as a de facto one state apartheid. Do you agree with this? I would take
issue with the term apartheid.
Generally speaking, as a historian,
I don't really like historical analogies
because there are always differences, key differences.
The biggest difference between the situation here
and the situation in South Africa
in the time of the apartheid
is that the black South Africans
did not deny the existence of South Africa and did not call for
the destruction of South Africa. They had a very simple goal, they had a very simple demand,
we want to be equal citizens of this country, that's it. And the apartheid regime was, no, you can't
be equal citizens.
Now, in Israel, Palestine, it's different.
The Palestinians, many of them don't recognize the existence of Israel.
They are not willing to recognize it, and they don't demand to be citizens of Israel.
They demand some of them to destroy it and replace it with a Palestinian state.
Some of them demand destroy it and replace it with a Palestinian state. Some of them demand a separate state.
But if the Palestinians would adopt the same policy as the black South Africans,
if you have the Palestinians coming and saying, okay, forget about it.
We don't want to destroy Israel.
We don't know a Palestinian country.
We have a very simple request, very simple demand.
Give us our full rights. We also want to vote to the Knesset.
We also want to get the full protection of the law. That's it. That's our only demand.
Israel will be in deep, deep trouble at that moment. But we are not there.
I wonder if there will ever be a future when such a thing happens, where everybody, the majority
of people, Arab and Jew, Israeli and Palestinian, accept the one-state solution and say we
want equal rights.
Never say never in history.
It's not coming anytime soon from either side.
When you look at the long-term of history, one of the curious things
you see and that what makes us different human groups from animal species. You know, gorillas and
chimpanzees, they are separate species, they can never merge. Cats and dogs will never merge. But
different national and religious groups in history, even when they hate each other,
surprisingly, they sometimes end by merging.
If you look at Germany, for instance, so for centuries, you had Prussians and Bavarians
and Saxons who fought each other ferociously and hated each other, and they are sometimes
also of different religions, Catholics, Protestants.
You know, the worst war in European history,
according to some measures,
was not the Second World War or the First World War,
it was the 30th year's war,
which loudly on German soil,
between Germans, Protestants and Catholics.
But eventually, they united to form a single country.
You saw the same thing, I don't know, in Britain.
English and Scots for centuries,
hated and fought each other for ausiously,
eventually coming together, maybe it'll break up again,
I don't know.
But the power of the kind of forces of merger
in history, you are very often influenced
by the people you fight, by the people you even
hate, modern by almost anybody else. So if we apply those ideas, the ideas of this
part of the world, to another part of the world that's currently in war, Russia and Ukraine,
from what you learned here, how do you think peace can be achieved in Ukraine?
Peace can be achieved any moment, it's motivation. In this case, it's just one person.
You just put in just need to say, that's it. The Ukrainians, they don't demand anything from Russia,
just go home. That's the only thing they want. They don't want to conquer any bit of Russian territory,
they don't want to change the regime in Moscow, nothing.
They just tell the Russians, go home.
That's it.
And of course, again, motivation.
How do you get somebody like Putin to admit that he made a colossal mistake?
A human mistake, an ethical mistake, a political mistake in instouting this war?
This is very, very difficult.
But in terms of what would the solution look like, very simple, the Russians go home
and of the end of story?
Do you believe in the power conversation between leaders to sit down, assume beings,
and agree?
First of all, what home means?
Because we humans draw lines. That's true. I believe in the power of conversation. The big question to ask is where?
Where do conversations real conversations take place? And this is tricky.
One of the interesting things to ask about any conflict, about any political system, is
where do the real conversations take place, and very often they don't take place in the
places you think, that they are, but think about American politics.
When the country was founded in the late 18th century, people understood holding conversation
between leaders is very important for the
functioning of democracy will create a place for that that's called Congress. This is
where leaders are supposed to meet and talk about the main issues of the day. Maybe there
was a time, sometime in the past, when this actually happened, When you had two factions holding different ideas about foreign
policy or economic policy and they met in Congress and somebody would come and give a speech
and the people would all know on the other side would say, hey, that's interesting. I haven't
thought about it. Yes, maybe we can agree on that. This is no longer happening in Congress. Nobody, I don't think there
is any speech in Congress that causes anybody on the other side to change their opinion
about anything. So this is no longer a place where real conversations take place. The big
question about American democracy is, is there a place Where real conversations which actually change people's minds still take place?
If not, then this democracy is dying also.
Democracy without conversation cannot exist for long.
And it's the same question you should ask also about dictatorial regimes, like you think about Russia or China.
So China has the great whole of the people.
Like you think about Russia or China. So China has the great hall of the people.
And well, the representatives,
the supposed representative of the people meet every now and then,
but no real conversation takes place there.
A key question to ask about the Chinese system
is behind closed doors,
let's say in a polybureauceting,
do people have a real conversation?
If Xi Jinping says one thing
and some other big shot thinks differently,
will they have the courage, the ability,
the backbone to say with all your respect,
I think differently, and there is a real conversation?
Oh, no, I don't know the answer,
but this is a key question.
This is the difference between an authoritarian regime
can still have different voices within it.
But at a certain point, you have a personality cult.
Nobody dares say anything against the leader.
And when it comes again to Ukraine and Russia,
I don't think that if you get, if you somehow manage to
get Putin and Zelensky to the same room, when everybody knows that they are there and
they'll have a moment of empathy, of human connection and they'll have a, no, I don't
think it can happen like that. I do hope that there are other spaces where somebody like Putin can still have a real human
conversation. I don't know if this is the case. I hope so.
Well, there's several interesting dynamics and you spoke to some of them. So one is internally
with advisors. You have to have hope that there's people that would disagree, that would have a
lively debate internally. Then there's also the thing disagree, that would have a lively debate internally.
Then there's also the thing you mentioned, which is direct communication between Putin
and Zelensky in private, picking up a phone, rotary phone, old school.
That's, I still believe in the power of that, but what's, while that's exceptionally difficult
in the current state of affairs, what's also possible to have as a mediator like the United States or some other leader,
like the leader of Israel or the leader of another nation that's respected by both
or India, for example, that can have, first of all, individual conversations and then
literally get into a room together.
It is possible. I would say more generally about conversations.
It goes back a little to what I said earlier about the Marxist view of history.
One of the problematic things I see today in many academic circles
is that people focus too much on power.
They think that the whole of history of the whole of politics is just a power structure.
It's just struggle about power.
Now, if you think that the whole of history and the whole of politics is only power,
then there is no room for conversation.
Because if what you have is a struggle between different powerful interests,
there is no point talking. The only thing that changes it is fighting.
My view is that no, it's not all about power structures.
It's not all about power dynamics. Underneath the power structure there are stories, stories in human mind.
And this is great news, if it's true, this is good news, because unlike power that can only be
changed through fighting, stories can sometimes, it's not easy, but sometimes stories can be changed through talking.
And that's the hope.
I think in everything from couple therapy
to nation therapy,
if you think it's power therapy,
it's all about power,
there is no place for a conversation.
But if to some extent,
it's the stories in people minds,
if you can enable one person to see the story
in the mind of another person.
And more importantly, if you can have some kind of critical
distance from the story in your own mind,
and maybe you can change it a little.
And then you don't need to fight.
You can actually find a better story
that you can both agree to.
It sometimes happens in history.
You know, French and Germans fought for generations and generations.
Now they live in peace, not because, I don't know, they found a new planet.
They can share between France and Germany, so now everybody has enough territory.
No.
They actually have less territory than previously because they lost
all their overseas empires, but they managed to find a story, the European story, that
both Germans and French people are happy with. So they live in peace.
I very much believe in this vision that you have of the power of stories. And one of the
tools is conversations. And other is books. There's some guy that wrote a book about this power of stories. He happens
to be sitting in front of me. And that happened to spread across a lot of people. And now they
believe in the power of story and narrative, even even the children's book too. So the
kids, I mean, it's fascinating how that spreads.
I mean, underneath your work, there's an optimism.
And I think underneath conversations
is what I tried to do is an optimism
that it's not just the power struggles.
It's about stories, which is like a connection
between humans and together kind of evolving these stories that maximize
have or minimize suffering in the world.
And this is why I also I think I admire what you're doing that you're going to talk with
some of the most difficult characters around in the world today.
And with this basic belief that by talking, maybe we can move them an inch, which is a lot
when it comes to people with so much power. Like I think one of the biggest success stories in
modern history, I would say is feminism, because feminism believed in the power of stories not so much in the power of violence, of armed conflict.
By many measures, feminism has been maybe the most successful social movement of the 20 which were in place throughout the world for thousands of years.
And they seem to be just natural, eternal.
You had all these religious movements, all these political revolutions,
and one thing remained constant, and this is the patriarchal system and the oppression of women.
And then feminism came along.
And, you know, you had leaders like Lenin, like Mao saying that if you
want to make a big social change you must use violence. Power comes from the
bow of the gun of a gun. If you want to make an omlette you need to break eggs
and all these things. And the feminists said no, we won't use the power of the
gun. We will make an omelette without breaking any eggs.
And they made a much better omelette than Lenin or Mao or any of these violent revolutionaries.
I don't think, you know, that they certainly didn't start any wars or build any gulags.
I don't think they even murdered a single politician.
I don't think there was any political assassination anywhere by
feminists. There was a lot of violence against them, both verbal but also physical, and
they didn't reply by waging violence, and they succeeded in changing this deep structure of oppression,
in a way which benefited not just women, but also men.
So this gives me hope that it's not easy, in many cases,
we fail, but it is possible sometimes in history
to make a very, very big change, positive change,
mainly by talking and demonstrating
and changing the story and people's minds
and not by using violence.
It's fascinating that feminism and communism
and all these things happen in the 20th century.
So many interesting things happen in the 20th century.
So many movements, so many ideas, nuclear weapons, all of it,
computers. It's just like, it seems like a lot of stuff like really quickly percolated and it's
accelerating. It's still accelerating. I mean, history is just accelerating in the four centuries.
And the 20th century, you know, we squeezed into it, think that previously took thousands of
years, and now, I mean, we are squeezing it into decades. And you very well could be one of the last historians, human historians, to have ever lived.
Could be I think you know our species, homo sapiens, I don't think will be around in a century or two.
We could destroy ourselves in a nuclear war through ecological collapse,
in a nuclear war, through ecological collapse, by giving too much power to AI that goes out of our control.
But if we survive, we'll probably have so much power
that we will change ourselves using various technologies
so that our descendants will no longer be homo sapiens like us.
They will be more different from us
than we are different from the Andertals.
So maybe they'll have historians,
but it will no longer be human historians
or sapiens and historians like me.
I think it's an extremely dangerous development
and the chances that this will go wrong,
that people will use the new technologies
Trying to upgrade humans, but actually downgrading them. This is a very very big danger if you let
corporations and armies and ruthless politicians
Change humans using tools like AI and bioengineering
It's very likely that they will try to enhance a few human
qualities that they need, like intelligence and discipline, while neglecting what are potentially
more important human qualities, like compassion, like artistic sensitivity, like spirituality.
If you give Putin, for instance, bioengineering
and AI and brain computer interfaces,
he is likely to want to create a race of super soldiers
who are much more intelligent and much stronger
and also much more disciplined and much stronger and also much more disciplined
and never rebel and march on Moscow against him.
But there's no interest in making them more compassionate
or more spiritual.
So the end result could be a new type of humans,
a downgraded humans, who are highly intelligent and disciplined, but have
no compassion and no spiritual depth.
And this is one, for me, this is, you know, the dystopia, the apocalypse, that when people
talk about the new technologies and they have this scenario of, you know, the terminator,
robots running in the street shooting people, this is not what worries me.
I think we can avoid that.
What really worries me is using the corporations, armies, politicians, will use the new technologies
to change us in a way which will destroy our humanity or the best parts of our humanity.
And one of those ways could be removing compassion.
Another way that really worries me,
for me, is probably more likely,
is a brave new world kind of thing that
sort of removes the flaws of humans,
maybe removes the diversity in humans,
and makes us all kind of these dopamine chasing creatures
that just kind of maximize enjoyment in the short term,
which kind of seems like a good thing,
maybe in the short term,
but it creates a society that doesn't think,
that doesn't create, that just is sitting there
enjoying itself at a more and more rapid pace, which seems like another kind of society that
could be easily controlled by a centralized center of power.
But the set of dystopias that we could arrive at through this, through a long corporations
to modify humans is vast.
And we should be worried about that. So it seems like humans are pretty good as we are.
All the flaws, all of it together.
We are better than anything that we can intentionally
design at present.
Like any intentionally designed humans
at the present moment is going to be much, much worse
than us.
Because basically, we don't understand ourselves.
I mean, as long as we don't understand our brain,
our body, our mind, it's a very, very bad idea
to start manipulating a system
that you don't understand deeply,
and we don't understand ourselves.
So I have to ask you about an interesting dynamic of stories.
You wrote an article two years ago titled when the world seems like one big conspiracy
How understanding the structure of global
Kabbal theories can shed light on their allure and their inherent falsehood
What are global Kabbal theories and why does so many people believe them 37% of Americans for example?
Why does so many people believe them? 37% of Americans, for example.
Well, the global Kabal theory, it has many variations,
but basically there is a small group of people,
a small Kabal that secretly controls everything
that is happening in the world.
All the wars, all the revolutions, all the epidemics,
everything that is happening is controlled
by this very small group of people who are, of course,
evil and have bad intentions.
And this is a very well-known story. It's not new. It's been there for thousands of years. It's very attractive because, first of all, it's simple. You don't, you know, if you understand
everything that happens in the world, you just need to understand one thing. The role in Ukraine, this very Palestinian conflict, 5G technology, COVID-19, it's simple, there is this global
Kabbal, they do all of it. And also, it enables you to shift all the responsibility to all the
bad things that are happening in the world, to this small Kabbal. It's the Jews, it's the Freemason, it's not us.
And also it creates this fantasy, utopian fantasy.
If we only get rid of the small cabal, we solved all the problems of the world, salvation.
This very Palestinian conflict, the war in Ukraine, the epidemics, poverty, everything is solved
just by knocking out this small
cabal. So, and it's simple, it's attractive, and this is why so many people believe it.
It's, again, it's not new. Nazism was exactly this. Nazism began as a conspiracy theory. We don't
call Nazism a conspiracy theory because, oh, it's a big thing, it's an ideology. But if you look
at it, it's a conspiracy theory.
The basic Nazi idea was that Jews control the world, get rid of the Jews, you solved all the
world's problems. Now the interesting thing about these kind of theories, again they tell you
that even things that look to be the opposite of each other, actually they are part of the conspiracy.
So in the case of Nazism, the Nazists told people,
you know, you have capitalism and communism,
you think that they are opposite, right?
Ah, this is what the Jews want you to think.
Actually, the Jews control both communism,
Trotsky Marx or Jews blah, blah, blah,
and capitalism, the Rothschilds.
The Wall Street is all controlled by the Jews.
So the Jews are fooling everybody.
But actually the Communists and the capitalists are part of the same global kabal.
And again, this is very attractive because now I understand everything.
And I also know what to do.
I just give power to Hitler. He gets rid of the Jews. I solved all the problems of the world
Now as a historian the most important thing I can say about these theories. They are never right
Because the global Kabbal theory says two things first
Everything is controlled by a very small number of people
Secondly, these people hide themselves. They do it in secret.
Now, both things are nonsense. It's impossible for people to control a small group of people,
to control and predict everything, because the world is too complicated. You know, you look at a
real world conspiracy. Conspiracy is basically just a plan. Think about the American invasion of Iraq in 2003.
You had the most powerful superpower in the world
with the biggest military,
with the biggest intelligence services,
with the most sophisticated, you know, the FBI
and the CIA and all the agents.
They invade a third-rate country, a third-rate power Iraq.
With this idea, we'll take over Iraq and we'll control it,
we'll make a new order in the Middle East.
And everything falls apart.
Their plan completely backfires.
Everything they hope to achieve, they achieve the opposite.
America, United States, is humiliated.
They caused the rise of ISIS.
They wanted to take out terrorism, they created motorism.
Worst of all, the big winner of the war was Iran.
You know, the United States goes to war with all its power and gives Iran a victory on
a silver plate.
The Iranians don't need to do anything.
The Americans are doing everything for them.
Now this is real history. Real history is when you have not a small group of people, a lot of people with a lot of power, carefully planning something, and it goes completely
out against their plan. And this we know from personal experience experience. Like every time we try to plan something,
a birthday party, a surprise birthday party,
a trip somewhere, things go wrong.
This is reality.
So the idea that a small group of, I don't know,
the Jewish Kabbal, the Freemasons, whoever,
they can really control and predict all the wars.
This is nonsense.
The second thing that is nonsense is to think they can do that and still remain secret.
It sometimes happens in history that a small group of people accumulates a lot of power.
If I now tell you that Xi Jinping and the hands of the CCP, the Chinese Communist Party,
they have a lot of power.
They control the military, the media, the economy, the universities of China.
This is not a conspiracy theory.
Obviously, everybody knows it. Everybody knows it.
Because to gain so much power, you usually need publicity.
Hitler gained a lot of power in Nazi Germany because he had a lot of publicity.
If Hitler remained unknown working behind the scenes, he would not gain power.
So the way to gain power is usually through publicity.
So secret cabals don't gain power.
And even if you gain a lot of power, nobody has the kind of power necessary to predict and control everything that happens in the world.
Every all the time shit happens that you did not predict and you did not plan and you did not control.
The sad thing is there's usually an explanation for everything you just said that involves a secret global
cabal that the reason your vacation planning always goes wrong is because
you're not competent. There is a competent small group that's ultra-component
small group. I hear this with intelligence agencies. The CIA running everything,
Masada's running everything. You see, I mean, as a historian, you get to know how many blunders these people do.
They are so...
And they're capable, but they are so incompetent in so many ways.
Again, look at the Russian invention of Ukraine.
Before the war, people thought Putin was such a genius, and the Russian army was one
of the strongest armies in the world.
This is what Putin thought.
And it completely backfired. Well, the Kabbal explanation there would be there's a NATO-driven United States military
industrial complex that wants to create chaos and incompetence.
So they put the gun to Putin's head and told him Vladimir, if you don't invade, we shoot
you. How did they cause Putin to invade?
It's the thing about conspiracy theories is there's usually a way to explain everything.
Can I explain in any other subject, religion? You can always find explanation for everything.
And in the end, it's intellectual integrity. If you insist on whenever people confront
you with evidence, with finding some very, very complicated explanation for that too, you can explain everything.
We know that. It's a question of intellectual integrity. And I also say another thing,
the conspiracy theories, they do get one thing right, certainly in today's world.
I think they were present, an authentic and justified fear of a lot of people that they are losing control of their lives, they don't understand what is happening.
And this is, I think, is not just a legitimate fear, this is an important fear. They are right.
We are losing control of our lives. We are facing really big dangers but not from a small
cabal of fellow humans. The problem with many of these conspiracy theories, that
yes, we have a problem with new AI technology. But if you now direct the fire
against certain people, so instead of all humans cooperating against our real common threats,
whether it's the rise of AI, whether it's global warming, you're only causing us to find
each other. And I think the key question that people who spread these ideas, I mean many of them,
they honestly believe it's not malicious. They
honestly believe in these theories is, do you want to spread, to spend your life spreading
hate towards people? Or do you want to work on more constructive projects? I think one of
the big differences between those who believe in conspiracy theories and people who warn about the dangers of AI,
the dangers of climate change.
We don't see certain humans as evil and hateful.
The problem isn't humans.
The problem is something outside humanity.
Yes, humans are contributing to the problem,
but ultimately the enemy is external to humanity. Whereas conspiracy theories usually claim
that a certain part of humanity is the source of all evil, which leads them to eventually think in terms of exterminating this part of humanity, which leads
sometimes to historical disasters like Nazism.
So it can lead to hate, but it can also lead to a cynicism apathy that basically says,
it's not in my power to make the world better, so you don't actually take action. I think it is within the power of every individual to make the world a little bit better.
You know, you can't do everything, don't try to do everything. Find one thing in your areas of activity.
Place where you have some agency and try to do that and hope that other people do their bit. And if everybody do their bit,
we'll manage. And if we don't, we don't, but at least we try.
You have been part of conspiracy theories. I find myself recently becoming part of conspiracy
theories. Is there a device you can give of how to be a human being in this world?
The values, truth, and reason while watching yourself become part of conspiracy theories,
at least from my perspective, it seems very difficult to prove to the world that you're
not part of a conspiracy theory.
As you said, have interviewed Benjamin Netanyahu recently.
I don't know if you're aware, but doing such things will also,
you know, pick up a new menu of items that your new set of conspiracy theory is you're not a part of.
And I find it very frustrating because it makes it very difficult to respond.
Because I sense that people have the right intentions, like we said, they have a nervousness
of fear of power and the abuses of power.
And as do I.
So I find myself in a difficult position that I have nothing to show, to prove that I'm
not part of such a conspiracy theory.
I think ultimately you can't, we can't.
I mean, it's like proving consciousness.
You can't.
That's just a situation.
Whatever you say, Ken and will be used against you
by some people.
So this fantasy, if I only say this,
if I only show them that, if I only have this data,
they will see I'm okay.
It doesn't work like that. I think to keep your sanity in this situation,
first of all, it's important to understand that most of these people are not evil.
They are not doing it on purpose. Many of them really believe that there is some very
nefarious, powerful conspiracy, which is causing a lot of harm
in the world, and they are doing a good thing by exposing it and making people aware of it and trying
to stop it. If you think that you are surrounded by evil, you're falling into the same rabbit hole,
you're falling into the same paranoid state of mind. Oh, the world is full of these evil people that they know. Most of them are good people.
And also, I think we can empathize with some of the key ideas there, which I share, that, yes,
it's becoming more and more difficult to understand what is happening in the world.
There are huge dangers in the world that we are existential dangers to the human species,
but they don't come from a small cabal of Jews or gay people or feminists or whatever.
They come from much more diffuse forces, which are not under the control of any single individual.
We don't have to look for the evil people.
We need to look for human allies in order to work together against the dangers of AI,
the dangers of bioengineering, the dangers of climate change.
And when you wake up in the morning, the question is,
do you want to spend your day spreading hatred,
or do you want to spend your day trying to make allies
and work together?
Let me ask you kind of a big philosophical question
about AI and the threat of it.
Let's look like at the
threat side. So folks like Elias or Yadkowski worry that AI might kill all of us. Do you worry
about that range of possibilities where artificial intelligence systems in a variety of ways
might destroy human civilization.
Yes, I talk a lot about it about the dangers of AI.
I sometimes get into trouble
because I depict these scenarios of how AI
becoming very dangerous and then people say
that I'm encouraging these scenarios,
but I'm talking about it as a warning.
I'm not so terrified of the simplistic idea, again, the terminator scenario
of robots running in the street shooting everybody. I'm more worried about AI accumulating
more and more power and basically taking over society, taking over our lives, taking power
away from us,
until we don't understand what is happening
and we lose control of our lives and of the future.
The two most important things to realize about AI,
you know, so many things are being said now about AI,
but I think there are two things
that every person should know about AI.
First is that AI is the first tool in history that can make decisions by itself.
All previous tools in history couldn't make decisions. This is why they empowered us.
You invent a knife, you invent an atom bomb, the atom bomb cannot decide to start a war,
cannot decide which city to bomb. AI can make decisions by itself. An autonomous weapon systems
can decide by themselves who to kill who to roam. The second thing is that AI is the first
tool in history that can create new ideas by itself. The printing press could print our ideas, but could not create new
ideas. AI can create new ideas entirely by itself. This is unprecedented. Therefore, it
is the first technology in history that instead of giving power to humans, it takes power
away from us, and the danger is that it will increasingly take
more and more power from us until we are left helpless and clueless about what is happening
in the world.
And this is already beginning to happen in an accelerated pace, more and more decisions
about our lives,
whether to give us a loan,
whether to give us a mortgage,
whether to give us a job, or taking by AI,
and more and more of the ideas of the images,
of the stories that surround us and shape our minds,
our world, our produce, our created by AI,
not by human beings.
You can just linger on that.
What is the danger of that?
That more and more of the creative side
is done by AI, the idea generation.
Is it that we become stale and are thinking?
Is that that idea generation is so fundamental to
like the evolution of humanity?
That we can't resist the ideas.
To resist an idea, you need to have some vision of the creative process.
Now, this is a very old fear.
You go back to Plato's cave.
Some of this idea that people are sitting chained in a cave and seeing shadows on a screen, on a wall, and thinking this is reality.
You go back to the cart, and he has this thought experiment of the demon,
and the cart asks himself, how do I know?
But any of this is real.
Maybe there is a demon who is creating all of this, and is basically enslaving me,
by surrounding me with these illusions.
You go back to Buddha, it's the same question. What if we are living in a world of illusions
and because we have been living in it throughout our lives, all our ideas, or our desires?
How we understand ourselves, this is all the product of the same illusions.
how we understand ourselves, this is all the product of the same illusions. And this was a big philosophical question for thousands of years.
Now it's becoming a practical question of engineering
because previously all the ideas as far as we know,
maybe we are living inside a computer simulation of intelligent rats from the planet X.
If that's the case, we don't know about it.
But taking what we do know about human history until now, all the stories, images, paintings,
songs, operas, theater, everything we've encountered and shaped our minds was created by humans.
Now increasingly, we live in a world where the more and more of these cultural artifacts
will be coming from an alien intelligence.
Then quickly we might reach a point when most of the stories, images, songs, TV shows
whatever are created by an alien intelligence. And if we now find ourselves inside this kind of world
of illusions, created by an alien intelligence
that we don't understand, but it understands us,
this is a kind of spiritual enslavement
that we won't be able to break out of,
because it understands us, it understands
how to manipulate us, but we don't understand what is behind this screen of
stories and images and songs. So if there's a set of AI systems that are
operating in the space of ideas that are far superior to ours,
and we're not almost able to, it's opaque to us, we're not able to see through.
How does that change the pursuit of happiness, the human pursuit of happiness?
Life.
Where do we get joy if there were serendip by AI systems that are doing most of the cool
things humans do much better than us?
You know, some of the things, it's okay that the AI's will do them.
Many human tasks and jobs, you know, it's their drudgery, they are not fun, they are not
developing, I would ask emotionally or spiritually, It's fine if the robots take over.
I don't know, I think about the people in supermarkets who grocery stores, it's spent hours
every day just passing items and then then then then charging you the money. I mean, if this can
be automated, wonderful. We need to make sure that these people then have better jobs, better means of supporting themselves, and developing their social abilities, their spiritual abilities. I can create that it takes away from us the things that it's better if we don't do them
and allows us to focus on the most important things and the deepest aspects of nature, of our potential.
If we give AI control of the sphere of ideas at this stage, I think it's very, very dangerous, because
it doesn't understand us. And AI at present is mostly digesting the products of human
culture. Everything we have produced over thousands of years, it eats all of these cultural products, digest it, and starts producing its own new stuff.
But we still haven't figured out ourselves.
Our bodies, our brains, our minds, our psychology.
So an AI based on our flowed understanding of ourselves is a very dangerous thing.
I think that we need, first of all, to keep developing ourselves.
If for every dollar and every minute that we spend on developing AI, artificial intelligence,
we spend another dollar and another minute in developing human consciousness,
the human mind will be okay. The danger is that we spend all our effort on developing an AI at
a time when we don't understand ourselves and then letting the AI take over, that's a road to
a human catastrophe. This has surprised you how well large language models work?
I mean, has it modified your understanding of the nature of intelligence?
Yes.
I mean, you know, I've been writing about AI for, you know, like, eight years now and
engage with all these predictions and speculations.
And when it actually came, it was much faster and more powerful than I thought it would be.
I didn't think that we would have in 2023 an AI that can hold the conversation that you can't know if it's a human being or an AI, that can write beautiful texts.
I mean, I read the texts written by AI, and the thing that strikes me most is the
coherence. You know, people think, oh, it's nothing. They just take ideas from here and there,
words from here, and put it, no, it's so coherent. I mean, you read in not sentences, you read
paragraphs, you read entire texts, and there is logic.
There is a structure. It's not only coherent, it's convincing.
Yes, it's a beautiful thing about it that has to do with your work.
It doesn't have to be true, and it all gets facts wrong, but it's still convincing.
And it is both scary and beautiful.
Yes. That our brains love language so much that we don't need the facts to be correct.
We just need it to be a beautiful story.
Yeah.
And that's been the secret of politics and religion for thousands of years.
And now it's coming with AI.
So you as a person who has written some of the most impactful words ever
written in your books, how does it make you feel that you might be one of the last effective
human writers? That's a good question. First of all, do you think that's possible? I think
it is possible. I've seen a lot of examples of AI being told right like you Valnogharaari and what it produces.
Has it ever done better than you think you could have written yourself?
I mean, on the level of content of ideas, no.
There are things I say I would never say that.
But when it comes to the, I mean, there is, there is, again, the coherence and the quality
of writing is such that I say it's unbelievable how good it is.
And who knows, in 10 years, in 20 years, maybe it can do better even on, according to certain
measures, on the level of content. So that people would be able to do like a style transfer
do in the style of Yuvano Harari, write anything, right?
Why I should have ice cream tonight and make it
convincing.
I don't know if I have anything convincing to say about this.
I think you'll be surprised.
I think you'd be surprised.
There could be an evolutionary biology explanation for what.
Yeah, I think it's good for you.
Yeah.
So I mean, that changes the nature of writing.
Ultimately, I think it goes back much of my writing
is suspicious of itself.
I write stories about the danger of stories. I write about intelligence,
but highlighting the dangers of intelligence. Ultimately, I don't think that in terms of power,
human power comes from intelligence and from stories. But I think that the deepest and best qualities of humans
are not intelligence and not storytelling and not power.
Again, with all our power, with all our cooperation,
with all our intelligence, we are on the verge
of destroying ourselves and destroying much of the ecosystem.
Our best qualities are not there. Our best qualities are not verbal. Again,
they come from things like compassion, from introspection. An introspection, for my experience,
is not verbal. If you try to understand yourself with words, you will never succeed. There is a place where you need the words. But the deepest insights, they
don't come from words. And you can't write about it. That's the second. It goes back to
Wittgenstein, to Buddha, to so many of these sages before that these are the things we
are silent about. But eventually you have to project it as a writer, you have to do the silent
infraspection, but projected onto a page. Yes, but you still have to warn people, you
will never find the deepest truth in a book. You will never find it in words. You can only
find it in, I think, in direct experience, which is nonverbal, which is preverbal.
In the silence of your own mind, somewhere in there.
Yes.
Well, let me ask you a silly question then.
A ridiculously big question.
You have done a lot of deep thinking about the world, about yourself, this kind of introspection.
How do you think?
If you, by way of advice, but just practically speaking day to day, how do you think about
difficult problems of the world?
First of all, I take time off.
Like, the most important thing I do, I think as a writer, as a scientist, I meditate. I spend about two hours
every day in silent meditation, observing as much as possible non-verbally.
What is happening within myself, focusing, you know, body sensations, the breath.
Thoughts keep coming up, but I try not to give them attention. I don't try to
drive them away. Just let them be there in the background like some background noise.
Don't engage with the thoughts.
Because the mind is constantly producing stories with words.
These stories come between us and the world. They don't allow us to see ourselves or the world.
Like for me the most shocking thing when I started meditating like 23 years ago,
I was giving this simple exercise
to just observe my breath coming in and out of the nostrils,
not controlling it, just observing it.
And I couldn't do it for more than 10 seconds.
I thought 10 seconds would try to notice,
oh, now the breath is coming in, it's coming in,
it's coming in, oh, it's stop coming in,
and now it's going out, going out, 10 seconds, and some memory would come,
some thought would come, some story about something that happened last week, or 10 years ago,
or in the future, and the story would hijack my attention, it would take me maybe five minutes
to remember, oh, I'm supposed to be observing my breath.
If I can't observe my own breath because of these stories created by the mind, how can
I hope to understand much more complex things like the political situation in Israel, the
Russian invasion of Ukraine?
If all these stories keep coming, I mean, it's not the truth,
it's just the story your own mind created.
So first thing, train the mind to be silent
and just observe.
So two hours every day, and I go every year
for a long retreat between one month
and two months, 60 days of just silent meditation.
Silent meditation for 60 days.
Yeah.
To train the mind, forget about your own stories.
Just observe what is really happening.
And then also, on other throughout the day,
have an information diet.
Many people are very aware of what they feed their body, what enters their mouth,
mouth, be very aware of what you feed your mind, what enters your mind, have an information diet.
So for instance, I read long books and I prefer like, you know, I do many interviews, I prefer three hours interviews, two, five minutes interviews.
The long format is, it's not always feasible,
but you can go much, much deeper.
So I would say information diet, be very careful about what you feed your mind,
give preference to big chunks, over small...
The books over Twitter. over small books over Twitter.
Yes, books over Twitter definitely.
And then, you know, when I encounter a problem,
difficult intellectual problem,
then I give it, I let the problem lead it, lead me
where it goes and not where I want it to go.
If I approach a problem with some preconceived idea,
solution, and then try to impose it on the problem,
and just find confirmation bias,
just find the evidence that supports my view.
It's, this is easy for the mind to do,
and you don't learn anything new.
This is easy for the mind to do and you don't learn anything new. Do you take notes?
Do you start to concretize your thoughts on paper?
I read a lot.
I don't, usually I don't take notes.
Then I start writing and when I write, I write like a torrent.
Just write.
Now it's the time you read.
You didn't want to give me the meditation. Now it's the time to write. Don't stop. Just right. Now it's the time you read, you didn't want to admit it, meditation. Now it's the time to write, write. Don't stop. Just write. So I would
write from memory. And I'm not afraid of formulating, say, big ideas, big theories and putting
them on paper. The danger is once it's on paper, not on paper, on the screen, in the computer, you get attached to it, and then
you start with confirmation bias to build more and more layers around it, and you can't go back.
And then it's very dangerous. But I trust myself that I have to some extent the ability to press
the delete button. The most important button in the Hebo is delete.
I write and then I delete. I write and then I delete. And because I trust myself that I'll have the
every time I come to press the delete button, I feel bad. It's a kind of pain. I created this.
It's a beautiful idea and I have to delete it. But you still brave enough to press the link. I try and hopefully I do it enough times.
And this is important because in the long term,
it enables me to play with ideas.
I have the confidence to start formulating some brave idea.
Most of them turn out to be nonsense.
But I trust myself not to be attached, not to become attached
to my own nonsense. So it gives me this room for playfulness.
I would be a mis-evident ask for people interested in hearing you talk about meditation. If they
want to start meditating, what advice would you give on how to start? You mentioned you couldn't
hold it for, you couldn't hold your attention
on your breath for longer than 10 seconds at first.
So how did they start on this journey?
First of all, it's a difficult journey.
It's not fun, it's not recreational,
it's not kind of time to relax.
It can be very, very intense.
The most difficult thing,
at least in the meditation
I practice, Vipassana, which I learned from a teacher called Sengu Enka. The most difficult
thing is not the silence, it's not the sitting for long hours, it's what comes up. Everything
you don't want to know about yourself. This is what comeshmm. So it's very intense and difficult. If you go to a meditation retreat,
don't think you're going to relax.
So what's the experience of meditation and treat
when everything you don't like comes up for 30 days?
It depends what comes up.
Anger comes up, you're angry.
Yeah.
For days on end, you're just boiling with anger.
Everything makes you angry. Again,
something that happens right now, or you remember something from 20 years ago, and you start boiling
with, it's like, I never even thought about this incident, but it's somewhere, it was somewhere
stowed with a huge, huge pile of anger attached to it. And it's now coming up and all the anger is coming up.
Maybe it's boredom.
You know, 30 days of meditation is not getting bored and it's the most boring thing.
Suddenly no anger, no, it's the most boring.
I, another second, I scream.
I mean, and boredom is one of the most difficult thing to deal with in life.
I think it's closely related to death. Death is boring. You know, in many movies death is
exciting. It's not exciting. I mean, when you die, it's ultimately it's boredom. Nothing happens.
It's the end of exciting things. And many things in the world happen because of boredom.
To some extent, people start in entire wars because of boredom.
People quit relationships, people quit jobs because of boredom.
And if you never learn how to deal with boredom,
you will never learn how to enjoy peace and quiet.
Because the way to peace passes through
boredom. And from what I experience with meditation I think, maybe it was the
most difficult, maybe at least in the top three, like much more difficult, say
than anger, or pain. When pain comes up, you feel heroic. I'm dealing with pain. When boredom comes up, it brings it, you know, with depression and
feeling of worthlessness and it's nothing. I'm nothing.
The way to peace is through boredom. David Foscaruala said, the key to life is to be unborable.
Pasha Wallace said the key to life is to be unborrable.
It's a different perspective on what you're talking to. These are true to that.
Yeah, I mean, it's closely related.
I would say like, I look at the world today,
like politics, the one thing we need more than anything else
is boring politicians.
We have a super abundance of very exciting politicians
while doing and saying very exciting things
and we need boring politicians.
We need them quickly.
Yeah, the way to peace is through boredom that applies in more ways than one.
What advice would you give to young people today in high school and college?
How to have a successful life? How to have a successful career?
What they should know it's the first time in history nobody has any idea
How the world would look like in 10 years. Yeah, nobody has any idea how the world would look like when you grow up
You know throughout history it was never possible to predict the future. You live in the Middle Ages? Nobody knows. Maybe in 10 years, the Vikings will invade. The
Mongols will invade. They'll be in a epidemic. They'll be an earthquake. Who knows? But the basic
structures of life will not change. Most people will still be peasants. Armies would fight on horseback with swords and bows and arrows and things like that.
So you could learn a lot from the wisdom of your elders, they've been there before, and
they knew what kind of basic skills you need to learn.
You most people need to learn how to sow wheat and harvest wheat or rice and make bread and build a house and
ride the horse and things like that. Now we have no idea, not just about politics. We have no idea
how the job market would look like in 10 years. We have no ideas, no idea what skills will still be needed. You think you're going to learn how to code because they'll need a lot of coders in the 2030s.
Think again, maybe AI is doing all the coding. You don't need any coders.
You're going to, I don't know, you learn to translate languages, you want to be translated,
gone. And we don't know what skills will be needed.
gone and we don't know what skills will be needed. So the most important skill is the skill to keep learning and keep changing throughout our lives which is
very very difficult to keep reinventing ourselves. It's a deep, again it's in
in a way a spiritual practice, to build your personality, to build your mind as a very flexible mind.
If traditionally people thought about education, like building a stone house with very deep foundations. Now it's small like setting up a tent that you can fold and move to the next place very, very quickly.
That's the 21st century.
Which also raises questions about the future of education, what that looks like.
Let me ask you about love.
like. Let me ask you about love. What were some of the challenges, what were some of the lessons
about love, about life that you learned from coming out? As gay.
In many ways, it goes back to the stories. I think this is one of the reasons I became so interested in stories and in their power was I grew up in
Small Israeli town in the 1980s early 1990s, which was very homophobic
Um, and I basically embraced it. I breathed it
Uh, because You could how could not even think differently.
So, you had these two powerful stories around, one that God hates gay people and that he will
punish them for who they are or for what they do.
Secondly, that it's not God, it's nature, that there is something diseased or sick about it.
And these people, maybe they are not sinners, but they are sick, they are defective.
And nobody wanted to identify with such a thing.
If your option is, okay, you can be a sinner, you can be a defect, what do you want?
No good options there.
And it took me many years, till I was 21,
to come to terms with it.
And one of the things, I learned two things,
first about the amazing capacity of the human mind
for denial and delusion.
That an algorithm could have told me that I'm gay when I was like 14 or 15.
Like if there isn't good looking guy and girl walking, I would immediately focus on the guy.
But I didn't connect the dots.
Like I could not understand what was happening inside my own brain and my own mind and my own body.
Took me a long time to realize, you know, you're just gay.
So that speaks to the power of social convention versus individual thought.
This is the power of self delusion. That, you know, it's not that I knew I was gay and was hiding it.
I was hiding it for myself successfully. That I don't understand how it is possible looking back. I don't understand how it is possible
But I know it is possible. I knew and didn't know at the same time
And then the other big lesson is the power of of the stories of the social conventions
Because the stories were not true
They did not make sense even on their own terms
true. They did not make sense even on their own terms. Even if you accept the basic religious framework of the world, that there is a good God that created everything and controls everything.
Why would a good God punish people for love? I understand why a good God would punish people for violence, for hatred, for cruelty,
but why would God punish people for love, especially when he created them that way?
So even if you accept the religious framework of the world, obviously the story that God
hates gay people, it comes not from God, but from some humans who invented this story. They take
the on hatred, this is something humans do all the time. They hate somebody and they say, no, I
don't hate them, God hates them. They throw their on hatred on God. And then if you think about
the scientific framework that said that, oh, Gaze, they are against nature,
they are against the laws of nature, they are and so forth. Science tells us nothing can exist
against the laws of nature. Things that go against the laws of nature just don't exist.
There is a law of nature that you can't move faster than the speed of light. Now you don't have this minority of people who break the laws of nature by going faster than the speed of light.
And then nature comes, ah, that's bad, you shouldn't do that.
That's not how nature works.
If something goes against the laws of nature, it just can't exist.
The fact that gay people exist, me and not just people, you see homosexuality among
many, many mammals and birds and other animals, it exists because it is in line with the
laws of nature. The idea that this is sick, that this is whatever, it comes not from nature,
it comes from the human imagination. Some people, or for whatever reasons, hated gay people,
they said, oh, they go against nature.
But this is a story created by people.
This is not the laws of nature.
And this told me that so many of the things
that we think are natural, or eternal, or divine,
no, they are just human stories. But these human stories
are often the most powerful forces in the world. So what did you learn from your personal
struggle of journey through the social conventions to find one of the things that makes life awesome, which is love. So like, what it takes to kind of strip away the self-delusion and the pressures of social
convention to wake up? It takes a lot of work, a lot of courage, and a lot of help from other people.
You, it's this kind of, I can heroic idea that I can do it all by myself. It doesn't work
Certainly with love you at least one more person and I'm very happy that I found it sick
We lived in the same small Israeli town. We lived on two adjacent streets for years
Probably went to school on the same bus for years without really encountering each
other. In the end, we met on one of the first dating sites on the internet for gay people
in Israel in 2002. You're saying the internet works? Yes, I said bad things or dangerous
about technology and the internet. They're also of course good things and this is not an accident.
You have two kinds of minorities in history. You have minorities which are a cohesive group like Jews. That yes, you are a small as being born Jewish in say Germany or Russia or whatever.
You're born in a small community but as a Jewish boy, you're born to a Jewish family.
You have Jewish parents.
You have Jewish siblings.
You're in a Jewish neighborhood.
You have Jewish friends.
So these kinds of minorities, they could always come together and help each other throughout
history.
There are another type of minority, like gay people or more broadly LGBTQ people, that as a
gay boy, you're usually not born to a gay family with
gay parents and gay siblings and in a gay neighborhood.
So usually you find yourself completely alone.
For most of history, one of the biggest problems for the gay community was that there was no
community.
How do you find one another?
And the internet was a wonderful thing in this respect,
because it made it very easy for these kinds of diffuse communities,
or diffuse minorities to find each other.
So, me and Eitz, even though we rode the same bus together to school for years,
we didn't meet in the physical world we met online.
Because then, in the physical world, you don't want to identify in a't meet in the physical world, we met online.
Because then in the physical world, you don't want to identify in a Israeli town in the
1980s, you write the bus, you don't want to say, hey, I'm gay, is there anybody else gay
here?
That's not a good idea.
But on the internet, we could find each other.
There's another lesson in that maybe sometimes the thing you're looking for is right under
your nose.
Yeah.
A very old lesson and a very true lesson in many ways.
So you need help from other people to realize the truth about yourself.
So of course, in love, you cannot just love abstractly.
There is another person there. You need to find them.
But also, we were one of the French generations who enjoyed the benefits
of gay liberation, of the very difficult struggles of people who were much braver than us
in the 1980s, 1970s, 1960s, who dared to question social conventions to struggle at sometimes a terrible price and we benefited from it and
More broadly we spoke earlier about the feminist movement. There would have been no gay liberation
without the feminist movement
We also owe them
For you know starting to change the gender structure of the world and
starting to change the gender structure of the world.
And this is always true. You can never do it just by yourself.
Also, I look at my journey in meditation.
I could not have found, I mean,
the idea of going to meditation, which reads, okay.
But I couldn't discover meditation,
I couldn't develop the meditation technique by myself.
Somebody had to teach me
this way of how to look inside yourself. And it's also a very important lesson that you can't
do it just by yourself. The dysphantasy of complete autonomy, of complete self-sufficiency, it doesn't work.
You hear, it tends to be a very kind of male match of fantasy.
I don't need anybody.
I can be so strong and so brave that I'll do everything by myself.
It never works.
You need friends, you need a mentor, you need the very thing that makes us human as other humans.
Absolutely. You mentioned that the fear of boredom might be a kind of proxy for the fear of death.
So what role does the fear of death play in the human condition? Are you afraid of death?
Yes, I think everybody are afraid of death. I mean, all of fear has come out of the fear of death? Yes, I think everybody are afraid of death.
I mean, all of the fears come out of the fear of death.
But the fear of death is just so deep and difficult.
We can't usually, we can't face it directly.
So we cut it into little pieces and we face just little pieces.
Oh, I lost my smartphone.
That's a little, little, little piece of the fear of death, which is of
losing everything.
So I can't deal with losing everything, I'm dealing now with losing my phone or losing
a book or whatever.
Somebody, I feel pain, that's a small bit of the fear of death.
Somebody who really doesn't fear death would not fear anything at all.
There'll be, like, anything that happens, I can deal with it.
If I can deal with death, this is nothing.
So any fears and as a distant echo of the big fear of death, have you ever
looked at it head on, caught glimpses, sort of contemplated as the stoic.
Yes. I mean, when I was a teenager, I would constantly contemplate trying to understand
to imagine it was a very, very shocking and moving experience.
I remember that especially in connection with national ideology, which was also very
big, strong in Israel, still is.
Which then comes from the fear of death.
You know that you're going to die, so you said, okay, I die, but the nation lives on.
I live on through the nation, I don't really die.
And you hear it especially on Memorial Day,
for fallen soldiers.
So every day, they'll be in school, Memorial Day for fallen soldiers who fell
defending Israel in all its different wars. And all those kids would count rest in white. And you
have this big ceremony with flags and songs and dances in memory of the fallen soldiers. And you
get the impression, again, I don't want it to sound crass, but you get the impression that the
best thing in life is to be a falling soldier.
Because even though you die, everybody dies in the end, but then you'll have all these cool kids. For years and years, remembering you and celebrating you and you don't really die.
And I remember standing in these ceremonies and thinking, what does it actually mean?
Like, okay, so if I'm a fallen soldier, now I'm a skeleton. I'm bones under this, in this military cemetery,
under this stone, do I actually hear the kids singing all these patriotic songs?
If not, how do I know they do it? Maybe they trick me, maybe I dine the war, and then they don't sing any songs.
And how does it help me? And I realized, as a quite young at the time, that if you're dead,
you can't hear anything because that's the meaning of being dead. And if you're dead, you can't
think of anything like, oh, now they're remembering because you're dead, that's the meaning of being dead.
And it was a shocking realization. But it's a really difficult realization to keep holding your mind like it's the end.
I lost it over time. I mean, for many years it was a very powerful fuel motivation for philosophical,
for spiritual exploration. And I realized that the fear of death is really a very powerful drive.
And over the years, especially as I meditated, it kind of dissipated. And today, sometimes find myself trying to recapture this teenage fear of death because
it was so powerful and I just can't.
I try to make the same image.
I don't know.
It's something about the teenage years.
Yeah, at the teenager, I always thought that the adults, there is something wrong with
the adults because they don't get it. the five-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per-per or a person will problem like with the bank or what, they'll be so worried. But then about the fact that they're going to die,
we don't care about it.
That's why you read Kamu and others when you're a teenager,
you really worry about the existential questions.
Well, this feels like the right time to ask the big question,
what's the meaning of this whole thing, you all?
And the right person to ask, what's the meaning of life?
Life? Yes.
Oh, that's easy. What is it?
So what life is, if you ask what the meaning of life, what life is, life is feeling things,
having sensations, emotions, and reacting to them.
When you feel something good, something pleasant, you want more out of it. You want
more of it. When you feel something unpleasant, you want to get rid of it. That's the
whole of life. That's what is happening all the time. You feel things, you want the pleasant
things to increase, you want the unpleasant things to disappear. That what life is. If
you ask what is the meaning of life in a more kind of philosophical or
spiritual question, the real question to ask what kind of answer do you expect? Most people expect
a story and that's always the wrong answer. Most people expect that the answer to the question that me, what is the meaning of life will be a story like a big drama that this is the plot line and
this is your role in the story. This is what you have to do. This is your line
in the big play. You say your line, you do your thing, that's the thing. And this is
human imagination. This is fantasy. To really understand life, life is not a story.
The universe does not function like a story.
So, I think to really understand life,
you need to observe it directly in a non-verbal way,
don't turn it into a story.
And the question to start with is, what is suffering?
What is causing suffering?
You know, the question, what is the meaning of life?
It will take you to fantasies and delusions.
We want to stay with the reality of life.
And the most important question about the reality of life
is, what is suffering and where is it coming from?
And to answer that non-verbaly, so the conscious experience of suffering.
Yes.
When you suffer, try to observe what is really happening when you're suffering.
Well put, and I wonder if AI will also go through that same kind of process on this way.
If we develop consciousness or not, that present, it's not, it's just words.
It will just say to you, please don't hurt me, you've all.
Again, as I've mentioned to you, I'm a huge fan of yours.
Thank you for the incredible work you do
This conversation been a long time. I think coming. It's a huge honor to talk to you This was really fun. Thank you for talking today. Thank you
I really enjoyed it and as I said, I think the long form is the best form
Yeah, I loved it. Thank you
Thanks for listening to this conversation. Yvalindol Harari.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description.
And now let me leave you some words from Yvalindol Harari himself.
How do you cause people to believe in an imagined order such as Christianity,
democracy or capitalism?
First, you never admit that the order is imagined.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.
you