Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1660: Wokeism, Equity & Social Justice with Gad Saad
Episode Date: October 11, 2021In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Dr. Gad Saad, a Lebanese-Canadian evolutionary psychologist and professor, and the author of The Parasitic Mind. His journey to the field of evolutionar...y psychology. (1:42) Is it hard to do what he does in this current climate? (3:28) The consequences of ignoring the biological drivers of our behaviors. (5:45) Why the equality of outcomes is cancer on the human spirit. (9:49) How much of our biology drives our culture? (12:30) Do men have a greater desire for sexual variety than women? (15:00) What are the arguments for monogamy? (20:21) Where does he see the greatest pushback for his field of study? (22:38) How closely connected is our biological sex from our gender? (29:54) His take on the pros and cons of social media. (31:50) Is cancel culture a dangerous thing we should look out for? (35:20) Where does postmodernism come from? (40:24) Are we seeing the inevitable collapse of western society? (51:33) Dr. Gad Saad, too difficult to cancel? (54:00) What makes academia so vulnerable to terrible ideas? (56:30) Why do we have to make things so hard for ourselves? (1:00:08) Are there any evolutionary roots to religion? (1:05:37) What is the best way to inoculate yourself from bullshit? (1:14:48) Related Links/Products Mentioned October Promotion: MAPS Anabolic and NO BS 6-Pack Formula – Get Both for $59.99! Visit ZBiotics for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! The Parasitic Mind: How Infectious Ideas Are Killing Common Sense The Saad Truth with Dr. Saad From Alabama to Harvard and Back: The Story of E. O. Wilson E.O. Wilson | Speaker | TED Tibetan Fraternal Polyandry: A Review of its Advantages and Breakdown Sperm Wars: Infidelity, Sexual Conflict, and Other Bedroom Battles What the “Grievance Studies” Hoax Actually Reveals Darwin's Cathedral: Evolution, Religion, and the Nature of Society Biologist David Sloan Wilson "Altruistically Punishes" Me for Wrong Think (The Saad Truth with Dr. Saad_127) Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned Dr. Gad Saad (@doctorgadsaad) Instagram Jordan Peterson (@jordan.b.peterson) Instagram
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, MIND, with your hosts.
Salta Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right?
In today's episode, we interviewed God Sod.
He's an evolutionary, behavioral, scientist, very, very smart guy, unapologetic,
fun to talk to. And today's episode we talk about,
wochism, equity, and social justice. This episode is going to trigger some people, but it was
a fun conversation. By the way, he's the author of the book, The Paracetic Mind. It's
making its rounds right now. And you can also find him on Instagram at Dr. God's side.
So that's Dr. G-A-D-S-A-D.
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both programs right now for only one payment of $59.99. If you want to sign up
or you just want to learn more, head over to mapsoctober.com. Okay, God, thank you so
much for coming on the show uh... did just open
up because we may have some listeners and viewers that aren't familiar with
your work
would you mind going into your professional background a little bit your
education so people know where you come from
right so i uh...
have a long educational trial started in mathematics and computer science
uh... then i did an n b did an MBA with a many thesis and operations
research which is an applied mathematics field. Then I went and did an MS, a Masters of Science
and a PhD at Cornell. I studied psychology of decision-making, specifically I studied
information search. When do we know that we've collected enough information to stop and make a choice?
So if I'm choosing between two perspective women to marry or two candidates to vote for or two cars to purchase,
when have I seen enough to say, I no longer need to look for information, I'm ready to stop?
So that was my original doctoral work.
But during my PhD, I had become enamored with the field of evolutionary psychology, which
at the time was a nascent field.
Evolutionary psychology is basically the application of evolutionary principles to the study of
the human mind.
So in the same way that we can use evolution to study why we have opposable thumbs, we
can use evolutionary theory to study why we experience romantic jealousy, why we experience
romantic love, what we experience romantic love.
What are the types of men and women that we prefer?
So when I saw the explanatory power of evolution
in psychology, I had found my scientific calling,
I would then develop a field,
a pioneered field called, which I coined,
evolutionary consumption, which is the application
of evolutionary psychology to study consumer behavior.
And that's what I've been doing for the past nearly three decades. which is the application of evolutionary psychology to study consumer behavior,
and that's what I've been doing for the past nearly three decades.
Excellent. So, what you're doing kind of talks,
or at least alludes to, or actually directly,
explains biology that drives us,
or drives some of our decisions,
and our actions, and our behaviors.
Now, these days, and we've known for a long time
in the scientific fields that there's a combination
of nature and nurture that kind of molds us into who we are,
but it seems like today trying to explain how nature
or our biology affects our behaviors,
it's almost like a bad word, it's almost like it's all nurture
and we're like these blank
slates and it's all about, you know, societal constructs and whatnot. Is it hard to do what
you do right now with the current climate?
I mean, it is. And that's how I originally got into this whole culture wars because
before I, you know, took the show out to the public. I used to have these battles within my scientific disciplines because
I really straddle both in natural sciences and the social sciences, right? And that I'm trying to
apply biology to study human behavior while housed in a business school. And to most of my colleagues,
what is this biology that you're applying? Sure, you can't be serious, Dr. Sad. I mean, biology
matters to explain the behavior of the mosquito and the zebra and your dog, but surely consumers are not driven
by their biology. Somehow, we exist in the superplane where we transcend our biology. So,
most social scientists have historically been very, very reticent to accept biological
based thinking in whether it be in sociology or economics or
political science or consumer behavior.
And so I first saw this departure from reason within the confines of academia, and then
eventually a lot of these dreadful ideas break out of the lab, so to speak.
So the stupidity begins with an academia,
but then it begins to infect every nook and cranny of society.
So this is why one of the idea pathogens
that I discuss in my book,
in my latest book, The Percocetic Mind,
I call it biophobia.
Biophobia is the innate fear of using biology
to explain human behavior,
and no one suffers from this dreadful disease
more than social scientists.
Wow, that's interesting. So what are some of the, I guess, consequences of that? So essentially, what you're saying is, if I try to explain a cultural behavior or things that men do or women do,
or what we do in relationships, and I say, you know, there's some biological roots to this that
contribute to some of this. That's like, I'm saying the wrong thing.
I could get, like, don't say that, that's wrong.
It's all society, it's all culture.
What are the potential consequences of ignoring
some of the biological drivers of our behaviors?
So it depends which constituent group you're speaking to.
Let take, for example, parents, right?
Parents love to be parasitized by the concept of social constructivism.
Social constructivism is everything is due to social construction, right?
We're all born as you alluded to in your first question.
We're born Tabularaza, empty states, with equal potentiality.
So whether your son becomes the next Michael Jordan or the next Albert Einstein
is only a function of whether you offer them the right environmental conditions for them
to flourish maximally, right?
Well, that's a very hopeful message, right?
It's a beautiful message.
I love the idea that my son can be the next Leon L. Messi, the greatest soccer player,
or he can be the next Albert Einstein.
I like the idea that we are all born with equal potentiality, except that that idea is rooted in a really massive pile
of bullshit, but it is hopeful. It is nice. It feels good, and therefore I'd like to sign up for it.
So depending on which group you speak, look, rooting any intervention in a wrong erroneous
view of human nature is never a good idea.
So I'll just give you one other example to speak to your question.
So I'll advertise what I'm teaching my MBA students.
At first, they're sort of intimidated.
They think they're sort of mistakenly entered biology class or bio-site class because
they're wondering how do we apply this to you know to
marketing professor and I tell them look a good marketer is ultimately one who understands human
nature right it's very very difficult to come up with products that violate central tenets of human
nature and have them succeed in the marketplace and so let me give you an example.
So if you study if you do a content analysis of the male archetype in a romance novel,
a romance novels are almost exclusively read by women around the world.
There is no culture where men read romance novels more than women, irrespective of which
culture you're speaking about.
Well, if you want to understand the types of men that women fantasize about, well, then
do a content analysis of the types of
exemplars that are depicted in romance novels and it's always the exact same guy.
Whether the romance novels read in Bolivia, in China, or in Jordan, he is tall, he is a prince,
he's also a neurosurgeon, he fights alligators on his six-pack and defeats them
and bites their head off.
But he could only be tamed by the love of this one good woman.
I just explain to you every single romance novel
that's ever been written in the history of humanity.
Well, if a company comes along as actually happen,
I don't remember the name of the company,
and they wanted to come up with a new,
more progressive definition of masculinity, right? Because they wanted to move up with a new more progressive definition of masculinity, right?
Because they wanted to move away from the stereotypical toxic masculine guy.
So they wanted a guy who sucks a stump, who cries in a corner, who's fair-shaped, who's got an nasal voice,
who watches Bridges Jones diary movies.
Guess what happened to that product line?
These consumers called women said, yeah, we don't
give a shit about your progressivism. We want the types of guys that we fantasize about. So,
not understanding human nature has profound implications at the individual level, how I live my life,
at the economic level, at the marketing level, at the socio-economic level, at all levels. You can't
live life living a reality that is detached
from an understanding of human nature.
Yeah, God, is this why, I mean, historically,
when we compare successful societies to societies
that have failed, the attempts at,
and the word that people use today is equity, right?
The attempts at making people equal with the outcome, right? Everybody
has the same stuff, everybody makes the same money, everybody's exactly the same versus,
you know, dare I say the American ideal, which was equality opportunity, we all have equal
opportunities or close to, but then we can choose to live how we want. One of them results in a
great deal of equality and prosperity. The other one historically is resulted in just terrible death and destruction and repression.
Is it because we're forcing something on us that is so completely counter to our nature
that as it continues to not work, we add more and more to it to try to make it work and
it just causes more problems?
Is this because, go ahead.
I'm sorry, finish your point.
No, no, as I was was gonna say, is this why?
Because it's so counter to just how we are
in terms of our nature.
That's exactly right.
So I'll hear I'll quote the brilliant and fantastic
who's still alive by the way I think he's not over a 90 years old.
E.O. Wilson is a famous evolutionary biologist at Harvard
who I highly suggest all your listeners and viewers
get into his work. By trade, by scientific specialization, he's a entomologist. He studies
social ants. And he has a wonderful quote, which I think, if I remember correctly, I quoted in
the parasitic mind. So he says, socialism slash communism, great idea, wrong species.
Now, what does he mean by that, right? Social ants are perfectly suited for socialism slash
communism because by definition, the way that societies are structured amongst ant colonies,
every single member of the ant colony is interchangeable. They're all equal except
this one reproductive queen. So there's this one entity that is above everyone else, but then
otherwise everybody is on the exact same plane. No hierarchy, we're all the same, we all have a job,
we're all interchangeable. So when you're creating, in this case, a socioeconomic political system like communism or socialism,
and it fails in every single place that it's been tried, it's precisely because we are
not social ants, we are hierarchical beings.
Now, that doesn't mean that we're not equal under the law, but some of us are taller,
some of us are shorter, some of us work harder, some of us are more handsome, some of us
have greater drive.
And so, as you said, equality of opportunities is great.
Equality of outcomes is a cancer on the human spirit.
How much of our biology drives our culture?
In other words, sometimes I think we look at cultural things and behaviors,
and we think, oh, we just created that, or that's just an old way of thinking. But I think sometimes it seems obvious that, well, I think it might be our biology
that drove that. So we created cultural structures around kind of preferences or how we are driven
biologically. Is that like a big driver of our culture?
Yeah, another great question. So I'll answer it in several ways. So first the nature versus
nurture dichotomy is really a false one. And it's false for the following reasons. So let me, I'm
going to use here what I call the cake metaphor. So if you take all of the ingredients of a cake before
you bake the cake, there's the sugar, there's the eggs, there's the butter,
there's the baking flour, you know, the flour, whatever. I could point to each of those things,
and I could say, here are the eggs, here's the sugar, here's the butter. Now, once I bake
the cake and it becomes an inextricable mix of all of those original ingredients, if I were
to tell you, please point to the eggs, you wouldn't be able to. That's really how nature and nurture is.
On some things, yes, it's a bit more driven by nature, on some things it's driven more by nurture,
but we really are an inextricable melange of our nature and nurture. And as you correctly elude it,
to say that something's due to nurture really explains nothing because nurture occurs in its forms because of nature, right?
So, for example, it's not that socialization, for example, is irrelevant. Of course, we are socialized,
but the important question to ask is, why do socialization forms take that particular instantiation?
So, it's no coincidence that all certainly Abrahamic religions socialize girls to be more
chased in their sexuality than they do boys. So irrespective of which religion you're talking about,
God really, really, really cares about female sexuality much more than he does about male.
So if I am an evolutionary psychologist, I come along and say, I'm not negating the fact that
the environment is important, that learning is important, that socialization is important. But ultimately,
I have to explain the Darwinian causes for those socialization forms. So everything is
nature. Even nurture is due to nature.
Oh, so, okay. So along those lines, you know, I'm a man, obviously, and I know how driven men can be by sexual
novelty and wanting to be with different people.
And yet, the most successful societies today push for and advocate for monogamy in some
way, shape, or form, like getting married, staying with one person, raising a family.
It seems like it would be counter to our nature, at least on
its surface.
How would you explain something like that?
Yeah, wow, great questions, I love it.
So usually what you have across societies is the following numbers.
About 85% of societies, documented societies, have allowed for what's called polygene.
So to use the word polygamy is actually wrong in that case.
Usually people use wrongly the word polygamy simply means one with many.
But polygamy can take two forms.
It could be polygyny, one man, multiple women, or it could be polyandry, one woman, multiple
men. So about 85% of documented cultures
have allowed affordances for polygeny.
Most of the rest are, as you said,
when you refer to monogamous societies,
and very, very rarely do you have polyandrous societies.
The most famous case is called a fraternal Tibetan polyandry. So it's where
you have multiple brothers who share sexual access to a woman. And evolutionary theory actually
provides a framework to explain under which conditions humans will channel their mating
arrangements to one of these forms. So the kind of the default, as you
you know alluded to, is for us to be polygionist. But by the way, this doesn't imply,
so it is true that men have a greater desire or greater pension for sexual variety, that doesn't mean that women also don't have it, right? It just means that on average men have it
more. So there's fantastic data that looks at the extent
to which women are also the xirus to go around the bushes
with someone else.
Would you like me to talk about some of that?
Yeah, please.
So for example, there's a gentleman by the name of a scientist
by the name of Robin Baker, who in the 90s
wrote a book called Spurmores, where he argued and had done some research,
although others have contested some of his findings, but he argued that there are really
three types of Spurmatozoa, three phenotypes of Spurmatozoa.
There is the one that you're familiar with, there is kind of a head with a tail that's
vigorously looking for the egg to inseminate, but that's only
one form. Then there are the killer sperm that actually have no interest in looking for
an egg, rather they're looking for other men's sperm in the reproductive track of women.
And then there's a third type of sperm called blockers that really try to block entry
at the women's reproductive tracet, no new sperm can come in.
And the idea is that if men have evolved the chemical weaponry to engage in these types of realities,
when we know that sperm can only be viable in the reproductive tract of a woman for 72 hours,
that means that, evolutionarily speaking, it would have been very high probability that
your ancestors and mine might have made it with more than one male partner within 72
hours.
So that's one line of evidence.
A second line of evidence is if you plot, for example, the size, so cross primates, including humans, you
plot the size of the species, the animal, the male, to the size of their testicles. Here's
what you find, for example. Mountain gorillas, the males are gigantic, 400 pounds, they have
the weight of, I mean, they have the strength of 10 men,
human men, human males. They have very, very small testicles. Why? Because they live in
polygamous societies where the singular male controls access to all the females, so there isn't much,
much sperm competition. On the other hand, chimpanzees are basically walking testicles.
Right, everything in their body is there to support these massive testicles because they're
having sex left, right, and center. So sperm competition is incredibly intense. Well,
if you're wondering where human males fall, we fall a lot closer towards the chimps than we do
towards the mountain gorilla. That serves as a second line of evidence
that females were actually quite promiscuous.
So to answer your question in this very, very broad, although I hope interesting way, the
reality is that there are very compelling reasons why we should have monogamy as a legal structure,
but our innate instinct is one that is consistently pulling us to stray from
that union, both men and women.
So it's a really tough act of balance.
Yes, probably one of the, I would imagine one of the reasons why we tend to be serially
monogamous, right?
We end with one person, we break up, and we end up with another person.
Well, what are the benefits then of monogamy? Why would so many societies
put that together in a legal way or at least culturally, why does that tend to be encouraged?
So there are several arguments. One is that you certainly don't want societies where
because of hierarchical realities, irrespective of these hierarchies come about it could be because there is the spotic rule right? You know I am the emperor and therefore I get access to 800 of the most
gorgeous women and all you other losers mailed sit around twiddly your thumbs. Well what that
doesn't create very stable society. So the best way to create incredibly unstable societies
is to have a bunch of unmated males running around
sexually frustrated.
So, one argument for monogamy is that it actually leads to a lot more stable societies, because
at least the most fundamental driver of our existence, which is first to survive and then
to make, is that we're instantiating that.
You really don't want to have tons of males
made that out when you have polygina societies
where you know one male
controls set
you know or has
uh... exclusive monopolize a sexual access to many uh... women
the only way that i could keep those other males in check
is usually because i'm so powerful that i can kill that right again get rid of
them i can
by the way heralds what did you typically used to do
if you were the emperor?
You would get these very strong, powerful guys
to protect the girls, but what would you do to them?
You'd castrate them, right?
Because I don't want when I'm an aging emperor
that really loves to have varied sex
with all these beautiful girls,
the thing that they are these strapping young guys
who are 20, 30 years younger than me,
who have equal art guarding these women.
But if I chop off their testicles,
then everything is good.
So everything in history, everything in reality
is rooted in evolutionary theory.
And this is why, I mean, I love what I'm,
when I start a new class,
I can literally see the epiphany in the students' eyes or faces
when they are exposed to evolutionary thinking because it suddenly is able to explain to them
behaviors that here and here and there were unable to explain.
So it's a beautiful thing.
Professor, where do you see the greatest pushback when you talk about this?
So yeah, another great question.
It really comes from completely different sources.
So before I give you examples of those sources,
what they all have in common is that evolutionary theory
attacks their pet belief system.
So if I am very religious, and I rightly or wrongly think that evolution in general and evolutionary
psychology conflicts with my religious worldview, then I hate that framework because if evolution
is correct and where is God or if evolutionary psychology is correct, you know, so on.
So you've got the religious that hated.
You've got the militant feminists who hated
because in fighting the status quo,
the sexist patriarchal status quo,
they have to espouse a position that argues
that there are no innate sex differences,
that men and women are genuinely indistinguishable
from one another, from one another,
less the socialization forces.
And then once you come in and say,
come on, you can't surely, you can't be serious.
Of course, there are innate sex differences.
Well, then you must be a rabid sexist Nazi.
So then that's the reason why militant feminists hate you.
Postmodernists hate you because they believe
that they are absolutely no universal truth.
They are no objective truth.
We are completely epistemologically shackled
by subjectivity, by relativity, and therefore when evolutionary psychologists talk about human
universals, things that are the same around the world, across all cultures, surely that can be
right, because there are no objective truths according to postmodernism. So, each of these
camps are vehement detractors of evolutionary psychology, albeit for different reasons.
And that's in a sense, that's what makes it so exciting to be in the field because, you
really are doing things that triggers people, not because you're trying to be contraindriate
but because people are involved, people are whether they like it or not, they're engaged
in it.
But it's frustrating in that with each new generation of evolutionary
psychologists, they have to fight the same canars, the same idiotic positions, the same
embecilic points.
So maybe I could give you the one that calls me the most.
Yes, please.
Is that okay?
And please forgive me if I'm speaking too long, feel free to interrupt me.
No, you're good.
So the one that I hate the most of all of the tractors of EP,
which is EP's, evolutionary psychology,
is the ones that say evolutionary psychology
is nothing more than fanciful, just so storytelling, right?
So an evolutionary psychology is basically six sits around,
you know, in an available suit, you know,
with a pipe and a cognac and just pontificates bullshit out
of his head, right?
Because after all, we weren't there when evolution happened.
I mean, how could we know what happened?
It's just so stories, which by the way is some of the most baffling idiocy because if
that were true, then we better quickly tell the physicists who are winning the Nobel Prizes that what they do when they try to explain the big bang is a bunch of just-so-story
telling because they weren't around 16 billion years ago.
So it's just speculative, just-so-story telling, right?
And geologists, you weren't there when the rocks were formed for billion years ago.
So what do you know?
So I mean, it's a level of stupidity that is really quite galling.
But so the reason why they think, you know, it's all just so storytelling,
is because they think that you could come up with an adaptive story for anything,
where you're actually doing the exact opposite of what they are accusing you of.
And here I'm going to give a very detailed explanation.
So in chapter
seven of the parasitic mind, I explain this incredibly powerful epistemological tool, which I call
nomological networks of cumulative evidence. So bear with me as I explain it. If I want to prove to
you that toy preferences are sex-specific for biological reasons. In other words, it's not that little boys learn to play with trucks and little girls play
with dolls only because mommy and daddy are sexist pigs.
They are actually universal biological reasons why those toy preferences manifest themselves.
How could I convince you guys of that?
I will build a nomological network.
What does that mean? I'm going to come up with distinct lines of evidence,
across culture, across time periods, across disciplines,
across methodologies, all of which
are going to triangulate in proving to you my point.
Therefore, what I'm doing is the exact opposite of just
so storytelling.
I am setting the evidentiary threshold for
me to support my theory at a much higher level than other sciences. Precisely because I am
very careful that when I'm making an argument that is evolutionary based, that I set the
bar very highly. And can I just give you a few examples of those distinct lives of evidence? Yes. So, I could get you data from children who are too young to be socialized, meaning by definition,
they haven't yet reached the cognitive developmental stage to be socialized.
So, it couldn't have been mommy and daddy that taught them to prefer the truck and the
doll.
I could show you that those pre-socialization children already exhibit those
toy preferences. Already that finding in itself has laid the death, the death nail on that
coffin, but I'm not going to stop there. That's only one line of evidence from developmental
psychology. I can get you data from comparative psychology, meaning across species. I can get
you data from vervet monkeys, from recess monkeys monkeys, from chimps showing you that those species exhibit those sex
specific preferences. Now that's really starting to look bad for the social
constructivist bollshutters, but I'm not gonna stop there. I'm gonna get you data
from pediatric medicine. So I can get you data from little girls who suffer from
congenital adrenal hyperplasia. This is an endocrinological
disorder whereby little girls who suffer from it have masculineized behaviors. Well, little
girls who have that disorder exhibit toy preferences that are reversed, that are like those of
boys. I can get you data from 2,500 years ago in ancient Greece where you do an analysis
of funerary monuments where little children are depicted and they're depicted playing with the same toys as we are playing with today.
So look how bit by bit I am tightening the epistemological news around you. So I don't have to scream, I don't have to get all hyper, I just build this tsunami of evidence that eventually drowns you and
makes you shut your mouth, right?
So that's why I get so angry because you get not just people on social media, you get
fellow scientists who say, oh, come on, but evolution, that's unfossifiable bullshit.
Well, it is it.
It's the exact opposite to that.
So that's why, so to answer your question in a very long-witted way, there is a whole panocly of the tractors and they all share
one commonality. They're all babbling buffoons.
Well, along those lines, how closely connected is our biological sex with our gender? This
seems like it's become, over the last maybe 20 years years a bit of an issue or I guess a hot topic
With people saying gender is a social construct and other side saying no, it's not it's totally based on your sex
From your perspective and what you know like how closely related are there is their truth in either side
It's extraordinarily correlated. It's not a perfect correlation, right? You have,
you have, I mean, you do have people, for example, who suffer from gender dysphoria, and they might be
biologically one sex and completely identify with the other. Those things are real. You have, you know,
men who are more feminine in their certain traits, and vice versa and so on.
So, but what is clear is that the correlation is very high.
Now, so in other words, if I were to put both variables
into a model, so when you're doing a regression analysis,
a regression analysis is you have a variable,
a dependent variable, that you're trying to predict
by a bunch of other variables,
right? So y equals x1 plus x2 plus x3. x1, x2 and x3 are the predictor variables, and y is the
thing that I'm trying to predict. Well, when you're building such a regression model, you often
want to make sure, well, you always want to make sure that the predictor variables don't suffer
from what's called multicoloninarity. In other words, you don't want that those two variables
are highly correlated. Because then in that case, you don't need those two predictors.
One of them already captures. So the reality is that biology and gender, while they are distinct
constructs. So when some person writes to me and says, yeah, but professor, gender is different
than biology. I mean, I obviously know that, but they're highly correlated. So for most people, they exactly move the same way.
Okay. So I want to take a bit of a left term because you're, you know, you talked about your
experience in terms of your education, your profession, what you do professionally, but also you
mentioned marketing. Now, right now, as of the recording of this interview,
we're seeing this whistleblower come out, talk about Facebook
and how they know the damage that they're doing,
but they continue to do what they're doing.
We've now heard of the last 10 years,
how damaging social media is from both sides
of the political aisle here in the US.
You have the left saying, oh my God,
because of social media, we had the people storming
the Capitol, although the reason why Donald Trump got elected and the other side, you hear them saying, You have the left saying oh my god because of social media. We had the you know people storming the capital
Although the reason why Donald Trump got elected and the other side you hear them saying
They're totally restricting our information and they're biased against conservatives and other people saying social media is the death of society and
Oh my gosh kids aren't playing with each other anymore like from your perspective
Is what is social media look like for us? Is this something we need to watch out for?
Is this a new form of marketing that's so powerful
that we probably should regulate it?
Well, I mean, social media has both
diabolical aspects and the enriching aspects, right?
We wouldn't be holding this conversation today.
Your world and mine would have never intersected. We're
not for these unbelievable tools that we now have at our disposal, right? Someone like me,
like me, meaning a professor, could have never imagined having the type of soapbox that I'm
able to have precisely because I've got all, whether it be my Twitter or Facebook or Instagram
or going on Joe Rogan or coming on your show or having my own YouTube channel and podcasts.
So those are wonderful things, right?
I am in the business of creating knowledge and then disseminating knowledge to the extent
that I've got all of these incredible vehicles, you know, that 15 years ago, I couldn't have
imagined were possible. Then of course,
I'm celebrating that. On the other hand, of course, just like most things in life, there are dark
aspects to social media. So, for example, as I, I mean, I think you alluded to the whistleblower from
Facebook, you know, Instagram is not really very good to young women. I mean, and here we're focusing
on young women because a lot of the images end up affecting young girls
psychologically because we are a hierarchical species.
We engage in social comparisons.
I want to look as good as she does.
She seems to have a happier life than I do,
a better looking boyfriend than I do.
And so we end up feeling really badly of ourselves.
So now in terms of the regulation,
if you need in terms of the monopolies,
that the kind of influence that these companies wield,
you know, it's difficult.
The libertarian side of me is gonna say,
no, no, no, let, you know, just build a better one,
but there are really pragmatic realities
that we're facing right now
that make some of these, you know,
libertarian recommendations rather, you know, infeasible. So it seems to me that
those folks need to be rained in because they're never going to stop until someone comes along and says,
you guys are behaving in a diabolical way and it needs to stop. I mean, I could just tell you
the number of times I've had things demonetized on my YouTube channel or on LinkedIn or on Facebook,
it's just unbelievable and there's really very little recourse you can do and I think in a free
society with a free exchange of ideas that shouldn't be tolerated. They really are publishers.
Yeah, so let's talk about cancel culture a little bit. This is very different from in the past where
I mean, I'm old enough to remember, you don't like a product, you just didn't buy it.
Now if they don't like what you say or they don't like your product, they want you gone
and they'll get enough people together to get loud enough to make that happen.
Is this a dangerous thing that we should look out for?
I mean, look, I come from a culture where you had
cancel culture, but the way you cancel people is you
decapitated them, right?
I come from the Middle East, right?
So the reflex to stop people with whom you disagree
from speaking is one that defines human reality.
What made the West such a beautiful anomaly is that we had built a system
where we had all of these checks and measures to truly allow people to flourish with individual
dignity, with true freedom of speech, with true freedom of conscience. But all it takes is a small
reverberation and then we go back to our instinctive desire to shut down anybody with whom we disagree.
And when I say with whom we disagree, we meaning the people in power. And so it
astonishes me the type of stuff that I see on university campuses where, you know, if, you know,
the most banal folks that are, I mean, not banal in a sense that they're not saying something
interesting, but they're really not controversial will be shut down because it's going to trigger someone.
I mean, I'll give you a few personal experiences.
So in 2017, Jordan Peterson and I were supposed to speak at Ryerson University in Ontario, Canada, Toronto. And the title of the event was the stifling of free speech
on university campus. Well, that event was shut down, how ironic. So we then had to wait a few
months later, and the organizer regrouped and set up another event where we held it outside the
university. Now, what was amazing from that experience experience other than the fact that we were cancelled, well one, there were flyers that were sent everywhere all over
the place, you know, we don't want neo-nazi white supremacists here, I'm a Lebanese Jew.
And apparently I'm a white supremacist neo-nazi, right? So details don't matter to these
creatins, right? But the second thing that was amazing to me
is that when we spoke at the rescheduled events
a few months later, the amount of security
that we had around us, not only did we have the Toronto
police security, but apparently there was private security.
I think it was the company that had also
done private security for Coldplay, the group or something.
And so I'm walking into this gigantic place
where I'm gonna give a talk about the importance
of freedom of speech and so on.
And I'm like surrounded by a thousand guards.
I'm thinking, what world do I live in?
Like there's not a single word that I'm going to say
that is even remotely controversial.
And yet I need this much protection.
And as a, by
the way, as a result of that, the thing that happened where the first event was canceled
and then the second one was rescheduled, one of the members who was originally supposed
to speak at the first event was not invited to the second event. I had nothing to do with
it other than the event organizer asking us whether we thought
that that person should be invited or not. We gave her our opinion, but it wasn't for
us to decide. Now that person apparently had a lot of fans among some actual, you know,
supremacist type, white supremacist. So I started receiving for about a month or two
an endless number of death threats.
This is how we're going to boil you, Jew.
This is how we're gonna skin you.
This is how we're gonna do this to you.
Here's when we're gonna get to this.
And so I put together this whole montage of death threats
and I went to my university.
They were of course very concerned.
So then I had to go on campus,
whenever I would lecture with security and then they would
lock the door to my university class so that the student could leave freely, but then
if they have to come back, I'd have to open the door.
And then once I would kind of be whisked away to, you know, I'd go back to the car, my
wife would be waiting, I would literally have something akin to like a you know like an anxiety thing because I lived for another week
Because I didn't know when they're coming at me like where where my last minute was gonna come from
We even had to go to the Montreal police and file a report with that not not campus police the Montreal the actual you know the full police
And so you think this is all stemming from this cancel reflex, right? If I don't like you,
I will either kill you. If I can't kill you, I will try to fire you. If I can't fire you,
I will try to ruin your reputation. It is the most ugly basal reflex and it's terribly serious.
And if we don't fight back against it, we're only going to keep sinking into the abyss of infinite
darkness. Yeah. Go ahead, Justin.
Oh, now does this all tie back to you brought up postmodernism?
I'm curious as to where that ideology even stems from and how did that come about to be
so popular amongst the academic community.
Yeah.
Great question.
I mean, it originates from the Frankfurt School School but the last 40 or so years, so
post the Frankfurt School goes back a bit before that. You had a bunch of French postmodernists
I call them the Holy Trinity of Bullshippers. It's Jacques Lacan, Michel Foucault and Jacques
Derrida, who and there are others of course, who basically argue that as I mentioned earlier
there is no objective truth. We are completely shackled by our personal biases, by subjectivity. There is no truth
to speak of. Language creates reality. So that's that was Jacques Derrida's position. So deconstructionism
is the idea that we can deconstruct language so that we can understand reality, okay? And here I'll give you a wonderful
powerful story which I discuss in the parasitic mind, but I think it's worth repeating even if
some of your viewers have heard it. So in 2002 one of my doctoral students, and I'm
answering your question here, where is postmodalism come from and what type of nonsense does it
lead to? So in 2002 one of my doctoral students
had defended his dissertation so we were going out on a celebratory dinner. It was myself, my wife,
him and his date for the evening. And so he called me prior to us going out that night and he said,
oh I just wanted to give you heads up the date that I'm bringing is a graduate
student in postmodernism, feminism, women's studies, and cultural anthropology. I said, oh,
boy, really, kind of the inter-section of bullshit. And he said, yeah, so I understood what
he meant. Let's just have a nice evening. Let's not go wild. So, oh, don't worry.
Mums the word, I got you.
I'm gonna be on my best behavior.
Don't worry about it.
Of course, that was a lie.
And so about halfway through the evening,
I said, oh, I'm looking now at the lady.
I said, oh, I hear you're a postmodernist.
You study postmodernism, which was, yes.
I said, the postmodernism, they are no universal truths, which of course,
by the way, is quite a ridiculous position because it starts off with a
violation of logic. There are no universal truths other than the one universal truth that there
are no universal truths. So anyways, so I said, well, I mean, I'm an evolutionist, so I do
think that there are universal principles, universal truths. Do you mind if I throw, well, I mean, I'm an evolutionist, so I do think that there are universal principles,
universal truths.
Do you mind if I throw at you what I consider to be universal and then you can tell me
how I'm wrong?
Jesus, yeah, go for it.
I said, is it not true?
By the way, this proceeds by quite a while, the transgender activism craze that boys
can have, you know, that men can have children
and men can menstruate and so on. So I was already documenting that in 2002. So I said,
is it not true that within homo sapiens only women bear children? So she looked at me with
disgust. She couldn't believe that what a simple and mind I had. She was absolutely not, it's not true.
I said, it's not true that only women bear children.
She said no. So what do you please explain? I'm intrigued.
She was what there is a some Japanese tribe of some island in Japan where in their
full-chloric mythology it is the men who bear children. So therefore, by you restricting the conversation to the material, biological realm,
that's how you keep us pregnant, you know, and barefoot and pregnant and so on.
So after I recovered from my mini stroke at that level of stupidity,
I then said, okay, well, let me then not, you know,
hit you with such a controversial example like only women bear children.
Let's give a less divisive example. Is it not true that from any vantage point on earth, tailors
since time immemorial have relied on the following premise. The sun rises in
the east and it sets in the west. So here she pulled out of her, you know, bag of
nonsense, the deconstructionism, language creates reality.
So she said, what do you mean by East and West? And what do you mean by the Sun? That which you call
the Sun, I might call Dancing Hyena. I said, well, fine, the Dancing Hyena rises in the East
and sets in the West. She said, well, I don't play those label games.
So when I couldn't get this graduate student
to agree with me that women bear children
and that there is such a thing as east and west
and there is such a thing called the sun,
that's what postmodernism is.
Now, why is it so alluring?
Well, it's alluring because it frees us from the pesky shackles of reality, right?
There is no truth, capital T. There's only my truth. There's only my lived experience.
My genetilia doesn't determine my sex, right? Because I could be whatever.
I put the transprief and voila, I could be transracial.
I could be an elderly Korean woman, right?
I could be, as I explain in the personal mind, trans-transgravity.
So, for example, at the time when I wrote the personal mind, I was over 200 pounds,
I wanted to participate in the under-eight-year-old judo competition.
Number one, because I self- as under eight, that's trans
ageism. But I also was trans gravity in that I self identified as being 40 pounds. It
sounds satirical, but that's the beauty of postmodernism. Anything goes. It's a form
of intellectual terrorism. So why are people so attracted to it? Because there is something
attractive about the liberating epistemology of
freeing yourself from the shackles of reality. It's as simple as that.
Yeah, you know, I personally, I remember experiencing something like this recently when
here in the U.S. obviously we're all going through the pandemic and we were told, don't go around
crowds, don't be around people, you'll transmit the virus. Please don't get together. And then there were the George Floyd protests where there were like tens of thousands of people together and
By the way, I'm very pro. I think people should be free to protest. I have no problem with that
But what shocked me was watching the media and the news and seeing these news anchors say literally say
media and the news and seeing these news anchors say, literally say, there was no real main transmission happening right now of the virus or this isn't really impacting how
many people are getting COVID during these protests.
And I remember thinking, this is crazy.
I feel like when I read stories of the Soviet Union when they would just say things that
were so counter that people just put their hands up and said, just tell me what to think.
It was quite frightening.
And science, in my, I mean, for my understanding, one of the goals of science is to, at least,
is to be objective to look at data.
And regardless of how you feel, sorry, the data says this, it feels like post-Martinism
has totally, or the way you explained it, totally permeated
all the sciences and now has become even politicized.
You've been doing this for a long time.
Is it worse now than it was 20 years ago?
Is it just getting worse and worse?
Yeah, so postmodernism as a framework in academia,
I think is slightly on the way down,
but offshoots of postmodernism, or some of the offshoots that originally had
their genesis within a postmodernist framework have now been, you know, weaponized. So,
so for example, what I call the die religion, right, diversity, inclusion, and equity, and I like
to organize the acronym that way because it truly is the death of science,
the death of meritocracy, right?
So the die principle on universities right now
is basically permeates everything.
So if you wanna apply for a science grant, right?
So let's say I'm applying, I wanna do a study on,
I wanna develop a research program
on how pathogenic infestation, I am working on such a project right now,
how the density of pathogens across cultures,
how that affects certain consumer behaviors.
For example, are you more likely to engage
in conspicuous consumption in cultures
that have high pathogenic load?
So if I were to apply for a research grant
through one of the
granting agencies in Canada, but the same applies in the US by the way. Now the
most fundamental thing that I first have to do is I have to write a whole
dive thing where I say, you know, what are all the things that I've done in my
life to support die causes, diversity, inclusion, equity, how will my research
program support those things? So I will be hiring transgender people of color. I will be
right in the lab. I will certainly refrain from hiring disgusting white heterosexual males.
That's a given. I'm absolutely not going to that you can rest assured
granting agency. There'll be no white guys in my lab. That's for sure. No way. That's disgusting. That's white science.
Okay, so you know, I say this with with venomous satire, but it literally is that right?
So I have a colleague of mine who is a person of color.
And, you know, me, truly visibly, he's from,
I think, India originally.
He used to be very liberal now, he's completely, you know,
as they say, red-pilled.
He's a physical chemist at one of the sister universities
here in Montreal, very prestigious university.
His grant was refuted,
rejected, without even looking at the substance of his scientific grant.
He failed at the die level.
So I mean, think about what that does to science, right?
I mean, you are no longer, what makes the scientific method so beautiful, so liberating, is that it forces us to leave
the shackles of our personal identities at the door.
There is no Lebanese Jewish way of doing evolutionary psychology.
The distribution of prime numbers does not change as a function of whether I am a transgender
Muslim or I am an Orthodoxodox Jewish guy, right?
That's what makes science so beautiful.
And yet we are, you know, very quickly reverting back to the dark ages.
And we're doing that while cloaking ourselves in the robe of progressivism.
It's the testable, it's grotesque, and that's why I fight.
And that's why I do all these public appearances because I truly think that
We have this wonderful
System that we are giving it away for reasons that are truly baffling
Are we are we just seeing the inevitability of having a very successful society
To where there's just not like obvious problems to go on to anymore
But now we're just sort of creating these problems to
Approach and attack and you know, it just seems like it
Over time and different empires have gone through this and we've seen the inevitable downfall
But are do you think that we're going through that right now?
I I I think you're exactly right if you look at throughout history
I think you're exactly right. If you look at throughout history, oftentimes the collapse of a civilization implodes from
within, right?
You just have this kind of orgyastic, illegal, like mechanisms.
And look, people in Ethiopia who are worried about tomorrow's caloric intake are not concerned
that you address them by the right gender pronouns, right? Because
there is a hierarchy in terms of what humans try to achieve in a given day, right? If my hair is on fire literally, then I don't worry about my cholesterol level until I have made sure that my
hair is no longer on fire. I first have to make sure that that's all before I worry that, you know,
my cholesterol should be lower.
And by the same token, to your point, I think that we've had it so well in the West for
so long that we think that this is just the default reality, right?
But as Ronald Reagan explained, and I have the, I don't remember the exact quote, but it's
in the book, every generation has to engage in a redefence of those fundamental principles.
You can't take things for granted, but incidentally, it's precisely why some of the most doggy
defenders of Western values are typically people who were not born in the West, whether
it be myself or other people who are high-profile. that's because we've sampled at the buffet of societies.
We know what's out there, and therefore when we are welcome into the West and we see the freedoms that are afforded to people in the West,
and the beautiful societies that have been created by these foundational tenets, we're amazed that the Westerners are so apathetic,
so cowardly, so laissez-faire in terms of throwing it all away.
So it's no coincidence that some of the most vociferous
fighters for the West were not born in the West.
Yeah, well, before somebody says,
well, that's just God's white privilege talking right now.
You have a very interesting story.
You've kind of referred to Lebanese Jew, but it wasn't like you just came over wasn't that big of a deal
you can you tell us a little bit about how you got here? Right so by the way
according to the woke nomenclature I'm a person of color so I don't have white
privilege because I'm from the Middle East. I'm an Arab Jew who's a child war
refugee who escaped execution at the hands of all sorts of people
who wanted to detach my head from the rest of my body because we were one of the last remaining
Jews in Lebanon.
There was in the Middle East, in all of the Arabic-speaking countries, historically, at various
points, they were Jews that lived there.
We are endemic
to that region. But depending on, you know, the historical context, on a drop of a dime, you
go from being tolerated. You're not accepted as an equal. You're never accepted as an equal.
You are tolerated until you're no longer tolerated. And when you're no longer tolerated, you really better put on your best sneakers. And hopefully you're
really good shape because it's time to go for a sprint time and get out of there really
quickly. So that's why it also is kind of difficult to try to cancel me because when
it comes to the metrics that the blue-haired people care about, which
is, you know, how do you score on victimology poker? Well, I hold the top hand. So I can
get all sorts of incredibly obnoxious, you know, people of color coming at me. And I
say, be very careful. If you play the victimology game I'm gonna outrank you within
five seconds right? You're boohoo, you grew up in a rough neighborhood in Detroit you can
f-off with that sob story. Let me tell you my Tuesday in my childhood in Beirut and then they run
away very quickly. So in a sense my tragic upbringing in Lebanon regrettably has empowered me against all these freedoms,
because rather than them listening to the strength of my arguments
to try to convince them,
I simply have to pull out my victimology cards and then they run away.
And isn't it tragic that that's how I defeat you
by the strength of my victim story being more powerful
than yours rather than just me having better arguments than you.
It's just horrible.
It's terrible.
A lot of these bad ideas and stuff, you keep talking about coming from academia.
I've heard that from other people.
What makes academia so vulnerable to this?
Because I mean, you figure these are supposedly the smartest people in society.
Yeah.
Why is it so alluring to them? Yeah, they're learning, they're studying.
Why is that?
Why is that where some of these terrible ideas start from and flourish?
What makes them so vulnerable?
Yeah.
I mean, honestly, you guys have come up with unbelievable questions.
I'm not trying to blow smoke up your asses, but really great preparation, guys.
Thank you.
Fantastic.
Look, it really stems from a decoupling of the ideas
that you espouse and pontificate,
and these being tested by reality.
So what do I mean by that?
So I'm housed in a business school.
It's no surprise that there aren't
too many of these idea pathogens in the business school,
because that's a real thing, right? If you're
building a mathematical model to understand consumer choice or big data using AI so that you could
understand Facebook behavior, you can't build a mathematical model in the business school using
postmodernist mathematics. You can't build a bridge as an engineer using postmodernist mathematics. You can't build a bridge as an engineer
using postmodernist physics.
So some of these disciplines are somewhat more
inoculated against the BS because they are coupled to reality.
There's a feedback loop whereby the ideas that you espoused are going
to be tested in a real world and if you're not doing a good job, you're going to get metaphorically
slapped. The problem in academia, so to answer your question, is that many of these disciplines
are perfectly decoupled from reality. So I can espouse anything within the confines of my tenured position
in the ivory tower and there are no repercussions to the bullshit, right? So if I say that Easter's
West and what's West and dancing hyena, so what? I can publish that in an academic journal
that's spirit, by the way, you guys probably heard of the story with the grievance studies where they faked all those papers.
Yeah, I was pregnant.
Right?
Well, those guys, the original, came from Alan Sokow,
who was a physicist at New York University,
if memory serves me right, and he wanted to demonstrate
how nonsensical all this postmodernist stuff was.
So he wrote a paper, a fake paper, on the
hermeneutics of the social construction of gravity. I mean, really, just unbelievable. And
it was accepted as a breakthrough, amazing piece. And then he said, oops, I've got an admission
to tell you. Now you would think that if they were epistemologically humble, they would
have said, oh, God, we've been, you God, we've been exposed as the charlatans
that we are. They doubled down. They said, aha, this actually proves that we're right because
meaning is relative. So even though you may have generated this paper in a semi-random
gibberish way, our reviewers extracted meaning from it. So it's all good, buddy. So to answer your question, that's why this
orgeastic nonsense happens because it's a form
of mental masturbation that's fully the coupled
from reality.
Yeah, this is probably why I mean,
I've been an entrepreneur since I was 22
and I've hired people who've come out of business school
and oftentimes their ideas don't match,
what we see in the business world.
And then they learn through practice.
Earlier what you said, you guys were talking about how
we need to create problems because things are too good.
Reminds me of a scene from the movie The Matrix
where they're trapped in the Matrix
and the agent Smith says to him,
we created a perfect world for humans
but it crashed because your minds couldn't comprehend
a perfect world, so we had to make it
so that it was challenging and whatnot.
What are the biological evolutionary roots of that?
Like, why is it that we can't be okay with things,
I guess getting easier and better?
Why do we need to figure out ways to make things so hard
or at least go backwards, you know,
all the things that we move from? Why do we need to figure out ways to make things so hard or at least go backwards? All the things that we move from.
Why do we have to go backwards?
Well, I don't think the people who are espousing or generating or beginning all these idea pathogens.
I don't think they do it with the willful intent of, as you said, go backwards.
I think they all start. So when I was trying to find a common cause to all of these idea pathogens in the book.
So again, to give you a sense of some of these idea pathogens, most modernism is one.
Social constructivism is another.
Identity politics is another.
Biophobia is another, right?
So cultural relativism, who are we to judge other cultures?
So each of these idea pathogens
is a different manifestation of a departure from reality, the departure from reason.
But I wanted to look if there was something common to all of these. So to kind of answer your
question, why do people come up with this nonsense? And so here I will analogize with cancer.
So if you think of cancer, different cancers behave very differently.
The trajectory of leukemia is different than liver cancer is different than a melanoma.
But what they share fundamentally as a common mechanism is the unchecked cell division.
So at the very least, we can agree that all cancers have that mechanism that has gone haywire.
Okay. So now I want to use a similar principle to say, okay, yes, these idea pathages are
all very different, but what is common to them?
And I think what's common to them is they all start with a noble cause, but and in the
pursuit of that noble cause, then you put on what's called a consequentialist ethic,
which is you lie in the service of that
noble cause. So example, if radical feminists think that by espousing the idea that men and women
are indistinguishable, it is more likely for them to fight the sexist status quo, then so be
it. But I argue that when it comes to the truth, you have to be de-entological.
The ontological means there is an absolute reality. So for example, when it comes to lying,
a de-entological statement would be, it is never okay to lie. That would be de-entological.
Consequentialist would be, well, it's okay to lie if you're trying to spare someone's
feelings. Well, for many things, it's perfectly natural to be consequentialist. So if you're trying to spare someone's feelings. Well, for many things, it's perfectly natural
to be consequentialist. So if you want to have a happy marriage, you better know how to
answer the following question. Sweetie, do I look fat in those jeans? But on your consequentialist
hat really quickly, I say, are you kidding? You've never looked more beautiful, right? There
I might have lied, but for consequentialist reasons,
when it comes to the truth though,
I only have my de-intellogical hat on.
There is nothing that I won't sacrifice
a millimeter of the truth in the service of a lot of goal.
So I think, so to answer your question in this,
you know, circuitous way,
it's not that they
start off at a prairie with the goal of setting us back to the dark ages, but because they're
so empathetic, because they're so progressive, because they want to make the world of a better
place, if in the pursuit of those goals, we end up raping science, murdering truth, so
be it, those are just casualties for a better Combaiat world.
So it's good, good, good roots or good motivators, but bad results. I would even argue,
along those lines, you use the example of the radical feminists. I feel like it's terrible
because it also moves us away from understanding each other really, because we ignore
the hard science, and we just say, no, no ignore all that we're all the same and it
D-values the value that we all bring to each other because we're you know, we're so different
Exactly and by the way, that's what I mean that's what makes life so beautiful the fact that so oftentimes in my
Euclidic psychology courses. I ask students. Why do you think?
Personality traits have not evolved towards a singular optimal personality?
In other words, just like now everybody in this Zoom meeting, we all have fixed traits, we all have two eyes, we all have 10 fingers,
unless we have a congenital problem, right? Those are fixed traits, in other words, they're not any longer, you know, under the influence of selection pressures. They're fixed within our genome.
Yet our personality is not fixed, right?
Some of us, as I've had the number one thing that differentiates us other than the fact
that we look different from one another, is our individual differences due to personality
differences.
Well, but that's what makes life so enriching, right?
Is that there's such heterogeneity of personality types.
So, I completely agree with you that, you know,
variety is the spice of life.
Hatter, genetic is the spice of life.
Creating echo chambers of intellectual conformity
is in a front to what makes life beautiful.
Yeah, you know, a lot of these beliefs
seem to take on a religious fervor,
where it's almost like people worship them, and it seems like
oftentimes they definitely is true religion. So a lot of them are atheists, or at least they
don't follow religion, but then they end up worshiping this ideal. Are there any evolutionary
roots to religion? It's obviously something practiced worldwide, it has been for thousands
of years. It seems like when we throw that away, we tend
to go in a different direction and oftentimes it turns worse.
Like, what are the roots behind that?
Do we need to believe in something?
That's metaphysical.
So there are two ways I can answer.
I can answer it from a functional perspective, meaning, are there benefits to being religious? And so let me answer in several ways.
So the evolutionary approaches to understanding religion
can take one of several forms.
There is what's called the adaptation perspective.
The adaptation perspective would be that you'd have
to answer the question, what is the adaptive benefits
of being religious or religiously?
Does it confer a survival advantage?
Does it confer a mating advantage?
In other words, what would have been selection pressures that would have caused the religious
imperative to be selected for as part of the human repertoire. And so the one who has the best argument along those lines, along the adaptation line,
is a gentleman by the name of David Sloan Wilson, who used to be a close friend of mine
until he was parasitized by walkeness and was very, very unhappy that I criticized Lord Pelosi and noble prophet Obama. So I went from being
a scientific hero of his and a great guy to being a disgusting, wild creature because I
violated his religious impulse of praying at the altar of Obama and Pelosi. That's literally
the case. We had a falling out because he thought
it was disgusting that I would criticize Pelosi
because she's just beyond criticism.
She's above that.
So, but Kudos to him and scientifically,
he's a very, very accomplished evolutionary biologist
and I admire his work greatly.
He argued that, actually, people should read his book.
It's called Darwin's Cathedral.
I think it came out in 2002.
He argued that groups that have greater religiosity
will outlive groups that have lesser religiosity
because religiosity confers greater commonality,
greater cohesion, greater
the limitation of in-group out group members. So it creates greater cooperation with in group members and lesser cooperation with out group members. So for all of these earthly reasons
being religious confers an adaptive advantage to groups that are religious. Now his work is controversial because here he is using what's called a group
selectionist argument. He's basically arguing that group A out survives group B whereas almost
all evolutionary theorists today argue that evolution actually occurs at the individual level,
not at the group level. But anyways that's a technical difference. So that would be
individual level, not at the group level. But anyways, that's a technical difference. So that would be
answering your question about what are the evolutionary roots of religion using an adaptation argument? You're with me so far? Yes. That it's adaptive to be religious. Got it. There is
another approach very different and here I'm going to introduce a word that probably very few
of your listeners have ever heard. It's called an exactation, not an adaptation.
An exactation is an evolutionary byproduct.
In other words, it just came about, but it has no adaptive value.
So for example, the color of our skeletal system is that color, not because that color
confers greater survival to us, it's because it's path-dependent.
Because of other evolutionary pathways, that's the color we ended up with.
It's a by-product.
It's a path-dependency.
So if I were now studying religion as an ex-aptation, what I would then do, and the guy who
developed that, is a evolutionary anthropologist by name
of Pascal Boyer, both of whom both these guys by the way have been on my show, I mean,
really truly brilliant scientists.
So he argued in his book that religion piggybacks on neural circuits that evolve for other
purposes. So in a sense, it is parasitized,
parasitizing mechanisms that evolve for other,
it's a byproduct.
So for example, we have in our brain
a co-olitional psychology architecture, right?
And meaning that we view the world as us versus them,
blue team, red team.
We're already born with that pension.
Well, here comes religion,
and certainly Abrahamic religions, Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and much of their preaching is built
around that co-olitional psychology. So it is piggybacking on neural systems that are already in me,
and therefore it's easy for me to succumb to the religious impulse because
Those systems are already built in me. Do you follow what I'm saying?
But I would argue that the most fundamental reason why we're never gonna get rid of religion so that atheism is actually a
at the non-default value is because
We are the only animal that I think we're aware of that is aware of their mortality,
right? So if I have high cholesterol, I go see my physician, he hits me with some statins,
cholesterol goes down, everybody's happy, but I don't have a pill for immortality. I
know that I'm on a death sentence. That's not really a good thing. I don't want to know
that the party's ever going to end. I know I want to come back on my pump when I'm 130 and talk with some more stuff. Well, there is a pill I can take. It's
called religion because that pill will offer me a wonderful, infinite future, right? So
very few religions say, oh, believe in us and we guarantee you, it's going to end soon
the party. No
Coming to our camp and we'll grant you you're gonna see Roscoe the dead dog that you missed in your childhood again
Just come to Jesus. You everybody your uncle Joe. You're gonna meet him
That's a really nice message and so until we solve the mortality problem. I'm afraid we're stuck with religion
Well besides that it feels like when people don't have, I guess, a religion to follow or whatnot.
It seems like they're more likely to worship postmodernism or their government.
Money, power, sex.
Yeah, so are there any roots to that or any value to that?
Actually, in the next book that I'm working on now, I actually talk about that because the book is really
about how to live a good life.
But it's not very preachy.
It's not very self-helpy.
I take personal anecdotes backed up with science
to say, here's my recipe to a good life.
I hope it helps you.
And at one point, I talk about the relationship
between happiness and religiosity, right?
And actually, I was just working on that section two days ago.
And so I'm conflicted because on the one hand, I truly see that there are great benefits
that come with being religious.
It provides you with structure.
It allows you to understand certain things that are otherwise too cruel for you to understand.
Why did this young child die from leukemia?
Well, because God calls his angels to be close to him.
Well, that feels like a satisfying answer, because otherwise I can't make sense of the randomness, the cruelty in the world.
So on the one hand, I truly understand that there are wonderful benefits of being religious.
But as a purist, I say, in a sense, it devalues life if I need religion to be so spiritually
engaged in the beauty of life.
In other words, I don't need some supernatural force to make me see how magisterial life
is.
Having this conversation with you guys when an hour and 15 minutes ago, I had to
met you where you're challenging me with all these questions, that is a spiritual
experience.
Going to the Grand Canyon and seeing the beauty of nature, that is a beautiful experience.
Seeing my children learning stuff through hanging out with me and hopefully I'm giving them a good
education, I'm seeing how their minds are developing. So in a sense I find that
while I can understand why people have a functional need of religion, I think
that there's so much magic in the world that you could seek that spiritual
connection with the majesty of the world without necessarily rooting it in a supernatural cause.
Taking this full circle, I just wanted to see
if you could identify.
So if I were to take some antibiotic pills
to sort of help with these parasitic ideas,
what would those pills consist of?
Right, so what are the pills would be, or the vaccine, if you'd like to be
okay, back to that idea. So one I already alluded to when I talked about
nomological networks of cumulative evidence, where I was telling you about how
to build these networks so that you can arrive at truth. The best way to
inoculate yourselves against bullshit is to understand the most powerful epistemology
epistemology is philosophy of knowledge, right?
So what is the best epistemology to garner truth to pursue truth?
Well, the scientific method is certainly that.
The the normal logical networks that I'm speaking about is that.
So the way that you try to protect yourself from being
Poresetized is to have this arm this epistemological armament that allows you to navigate through this
Mind field of information
filled with bullshit, right? So now and by the way, this allows me to also have
Epistemic humility so that if you were to ask me right now, for whatever reason you said, hey, you live in Canada, just in Trudeau, your prime minister
was the one who legalized marijuana, one of the first countries to do so.
So what are the pros and cons?
My answer would be, I simply haven't built the required, nomological network for me to offer you a complete answer.
So I'm just gonna pass on it
because I don't know enough about it.
So in other words, I know what I know
and when I know it, I walk with all the swagger
of someone who knows it.
And when I don't know, I walk with the humility
of someone who simply doesn't know.
So I think by understanding how you get at truth, the epistemology of getting
to truth, that's how you really inoculate yourself against these bad ideas. The other thing
that I would say, more of a behavioral thing, I always implore people, number one, to not
defuse the responsibility onto others to fight in the battle of ideas. Number two, I always
tell them activate your inner honey badger.
And the reason why I do that is because the honey badger is a wonderful metaphor for
ferocity and fierceness. The honey badger is the size of a small dog, and yet it is so fierce,
so intimidating that it can keep six adult lions at bay. How does it do that? It's intimidating
as hell, right? And so what I argue is you have to have
that ideological reflex. If your professor says something that is insane in class, I'm not asking,
being a honey badger doesn't mean you have to be in polite or insulting or obnoxious, but you have
to be committed in defending the truth. Be a honey badger. If someone says something on Facebook
that you disagree with speak your mind so
Affitize people say oh, you know when I meet you in person you seem so much nicer and warmer than when I see you sometimes
Taking down people on social media. It's not because suddenly I become violent on social media. It's because you know
Depending on the situation I could be loving and sweet when I talk my children to bed. I'm sweet if you mug me in an alley
I'm violent right that I haven't changed
This position read the situation has changed so when you come at me on social media with your bullshit
It activates my honey badgerness, right? I get
Personally offended by your nonsense and so to answer your question
I think that people have to have the personal reflex to not diffuse
this battle to others.
I get tons of messages.
Sometimes I can't read all of them where someone says, thank you for existing.
I couldn't have gone through my education if it weren't for you.
Oh, if you're going to read my message on your show, please don't mention my name.
That's not a honey badger.
If I can't even get you to side with me publicly,
to publicly say I support you, Professor Sad,
then you're part of the problem.
The guys who landed on the beaches in Normandy,
most of them who knew they were going to be mowed down
by Nazi machine guns within the next 10 seconds,
didn't have assured safety passage, right? They knew they were going to be mowed down by Nazi machine guns within the next 10 seconds didn't have a sure safety passage, right? They knew they were going to be killed. They
said, Hey, I'll do it. So I get it. I get that you don't want to be a martyr. I get that
people are going to defend you on Facebook. I get that you might lose your job, but we
all have a cross to bear. Stand up. Don't be an inverted, inverted grade. Have some
testicle at fortitude and speak your mind.
Beautiful. That's a great way to do it. Yeah great great talk with you professor.
This has been a lot of fun. We really appreciate you coming on the show.
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