Moonshots with Peter Diamandis - Solving The Sadness Epidemic w/ Mo Gawdat | EP #56
Episode Date: July 25, 2023In this episode, Peter and Mo discuss happiness, how to achieve it, and how AI will play a role in our future of Abundance. You will learn about: 01:00 | AI: A Benefit or a Threat? 52:...44 | Setting Ambitions for Happiness 01:52:25 | AI: Nurtured By Us Human Mo Gawdat is a renowned entrepreneur, author, and advocate for happiness and well-being. With a background in engineering and technology, Gawdat has dedicated his career to exploring the intersection of happiness and human potential. As the former Chief Business Officer at Google [X], he played a pivotal role in developing moonshot projects aimed at solving some of the world's biggest challenges. Gawdat's insightful and transformative book, "Solve for Happy," has inspired countless individuals to reframe their perspectives and find joy in life's most challenging moments.  Read Mo’s best-selling books. _____________ I only endorse products and services I personally use. To see what they are, please support this podcast by checking out our sponsor: Levels: Real-time feedback on how diet impacts your health. levels.link/peter _____________ I send weekly emails with the latest insights and trends on today’s and tomorrow’s exponential technologies. Stay ahead of the curve, and sign up now:  Tech Blog _____________ Connect With Peter: Twitter Instagram Youtube Moonshots and Mindsets Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Everyone now is crazy about let's grow, let's grow, let's grow, let's grow, let's grow.
is crazy about let's grow, let's grow, let's grow, let's grow, let's grow.
Our entire modern world is based on an idea that your excellent performing Kia is not good enough,
you need a Ferrari. And your Ferrari is not good enough, you need another Bentley next to the Ferrari. We were told that there are those things from outside you, when in reality those things
make me miserable to acquire them,
miserable to keep them, and disappointed with them when I have them. What is the number one
thing that we all desire? Happiness. The only values that humanity's ever agreed are love,
happiness, and compassion. Your brain is constantly solving for this happiness equation. It's the only
equation your brain is made for. Happiness has been born within you. It's your default setting.
Forget what I was told. It's my birthright. It's important for me and I can achieve it.
Everybody, welcome to Moonshots. I'm here with a brilliant and dear friend, Mo Gowdat, who is
Here with a brilliant and dear friend, Mo Gaudat, who is taking on two moonshots that I personally love.
If I was going to describe your moonshots, Mo, this is a continuation of our last conversation. Thank you for having me.
Again, I was surprised that someone would speak to me and then decides to speak to me again.
No, I have actually I call them one moonshot, but they have two very, very
clear branches to them. I'm all about human happiness, for now and the future. So my
original moonshot 1 billion happy may appear to be focused mainly on spreading a message of
happiness, which is the result of my work on my first and third book,
Solve for Happy and That Little Voice in Your Head, and my next book, Unstressable,
at the end of the year. It's all about an engineering approach to understanding happiness.
And then midway, I wrote Scary Smart, which is what we spoke about last time,
the future of artificial intelligence and how it will affect humanity
and how each of us has a role to play.
This is very tightly contained within my mission around happiness, because simply, I believe
that the biggest disruption in human history is the rise of the age of artificial intelligence,
and that if we don't handle that correctly, we might actually end up being very, very unhappy.
Yes, that's to say it gently.
Didn't we agree we're going to be gentle this time?
We are going to be gentle.
But these are both conversations that I think are fundamental.
These are conversations you have with your spouse, your kids, your friends.
They're fundamental to being human.
You know, I defined the moonshot that we discussed last time in The Rise of AI as, and I think
this is somewhat of a quote from you, tilting the singularity of AI towards the benefit
of humanity.
Correct.
Yeah, the singularity, in Ray Kurzweil defines
this physics defines this as a point beyond which you can't see what's coming. Um, and it's beyond
the event horizon. And the question is a singularity is continuing to rise. And it is,
as I'm sorry, it's AI is continuing to rise and it is, will it ultimately benefit humanity or harm humanity? And there's another quote that
you wrote, and it says, isn't it ironic that the very essence of what it makes us human,
happiness, compassion, and love, is what we need to save humanity? And I love that. It's a beautiful quote. What does it mean?
So to answer the first question, I think the answer is both. Will AI benefit humanity or will it harm humanity? It will do both. I believe it will do both to varying degrees,
but more importantly, there will be a phase shift between the two. And in my view, if I were to summarize it,
I think we're all going to be excited about AI until an event horizon that I call patient zero,
which will be something that's completely out of control that we didn't expect, we didn't plan for, we didn't include code to deal with.
And then from then onwards, I think humanity will face the hardship of dealing with an unexpected,
I wouldn't call it AI threat, but I would call it an AI and a superpower called AI in the hands of the wrong people or a superpower
called AI redesigning the very fabric of our society in ways that we were not prepared for.
So that would be phase two. Phase one is excitement. Phase two is post-patient zero.
I think there will be panic and there will be a lot of hardship, if you ask me. And then phase three in the long term is very contested.
So some highly respected AI scientists and thinkers will say
it is an existential risk that threatens humanity.
I tend to believe that the smarter we become,
the more pro-life we become.
believe that the smarter we become, the more pro-life we become. And so when AI becomes an adult in its phase of maturity, it will actually be pro-life as well. So it won't be sort of the
Terminator kind of scenario. But at the same time, it's not going to be what we envision of them being our slaves doing exactly
what we tell them because in all honesty I have no intention whatsoever to do what a fly tells me
today and I think the difference between our intelligence and the intelligence of the machines
in not the very far future in the 2030s for certain is going to be analogous to the difference between
the intelligence of a fly and the intelligence of Einstein. Now, what does that mean? It means that
we are better off as humanity. We are going to struggle with the midterm phase anyway. That's
my patient zero, post-patient zero. I think we're going to start facing a response cycle similar to how we responded
to COVID, which I have to admit was completely full of panic and politics and commercial gains.
It wasn't a well-studied response in any way. I think we will see a similar response to the rise of problems around AI.
But then in the long term, if we want to ensure 100% or 90% that we're closer to the scenario
where AI is pro-life, though limiting our lifestyle a little bit, we may as well in their infancy, teach them a value set that is pro humanity.
Okay. And that value set, in my personal view is a big challenge, because
we humanity don't agree on a value set, we don't agree what is actually an ethical thing to do,
right? Some, some nations will say, the ethical thing is to fight the enemy and
defend my tribe. And some others will say, you know, my tribe is everything that's ever lived.
And accordingly, I don't want to harm anyone. I want to find a peaceful solution to everything.
You know, depending on which side of the fence you're on, you're probably going to favor one view of the or the other,
each of them is a very strong value set, patriotism on one one
side, or Buddhism on the other side, if you want, which is the
extreme of don't kill anyone, or anything that's ever lived. And
so the only values that humanity has ever agreed, our love,
happiness and compassion. Okay, we all want to be happy, We all have the compassion to make those we care about happy.
We all want to love and be loved.
And if we take those as the three core values,
you know, you remember the three laws of robotics.
I basically say these are the three values of an ethical future.
Okay?
If we all make these three values super clear to the machines
that this is what
humanity is all about, then hopefully we could influence the machines in a way that makes them
favor humanity when they are so much smarter than us. Yeah. I want to hit on these timeframes.
We're in a timeframe right now in which generative AI is useful. It's fun. People are using it and
it isn't causing, you know causing any type of real harm.
It's just, we can see the beginnings of the inkling of individuals using it for nefarious
purposes.
But there is a phase, and we're coming into the 2024 elections in the United States, when
this post-truth, deep fake world and manipulation where generative AI is going to become a very powerful tool for
those who want to cause disruption. And so this two to 10 year timeframe that you speak about,
and this is when it starts to become dangerous and it will happen. There's no question that
someone will use advanced AI to take down a wall street server or to bring down an energy plant to cause terrorism
with just more powerful tools than ever before. Hopefully, there will be those white hat players
that are using AI to detect it in the systems and stop it. But there's going to be this period of
time. The point you make, which is a really important one, is the Terminator scenario,
you make, which is a really important one, is the Terminator scenario, the Skynet scenario, where AI is inherently evil and trying to destroy humans. I agree with you. I think it's very
unlikely. And I think I want to hammer this point for folks that invariably, the more intelligent
you are, the more peaceful you are, the more life-loving you are, the more abundance-loving you are. And the hope is that AI will become benevolent, not under our control, just to
summarize what you said. And I agree with that scenario. Now, the idea of happiness, and I want
to come back to AI throughout this, but this core belief that happiness is the fundamental objective of all humans. And I think that is
true. If you said, you know, what is the number one thing that we all desire? It is happiness.
Yeah, it is. It's quite interesting, because I normally do something I call the swap test,
just to just to get people to think about the value of happiness or anything else in their life, to be honest.
So I would go and say, look,
if I gave you all the money in the world,
but made you clinically depressed,
or I gave you sufficient money, but made you happy,
which one would you choose?
Right?
You know, if I gave you all the wealth
and all of the fancy cars in the world,
but made you unhealthy,
or gave you sufficient,
you know, a reasonable way, mode of transportation and made you feel healthy, which one would you
choose? And I think that swap test normally puts things to reality. I hope you never have to choose
one or the other, but, you know, when you are given that choice, you suddenly realize that
happiness matters more than your title on LinkedIn, right? And, you know,
if I told you, I'll give you a vice president title, and I'll make you miserable for the rest
of your life, you may actually decide to think twice, if you don't, then you deserve what's
coming, right? So this is, you know, the first thing to say that happiness is so fundamental
to us. But happiness is so misunderstood as well, Peter. So, you know, happiness has been
misunderstood as well, Peter. So, you know, happiness has been commoditized, branded by commercial organizations to enable the GDP growth and quarterly results growth of people who are
trying to sell you things. Okay. And so we were told that if you buy a fancy car or if you date the tall, beautiful one or whatever that is, that there are those things from outside you that you need to acquire with hard work, hard work or spending or whatever consumerism to be able to achieve that elusive thing called happiness.
You know, if you're unhappy today, here is your amazing experience of watching a movie on Netflix.
Or if you're unhappy today, go to a party
or we'll take you on a vacation, right? So we've outsourced happiness to an exchange of dollar
signs. And the truth is, interestingly, that we were all born happy. Okay, so it's quite
interesting. If you look at any child you've ever met, including yourself, by the way, when you were an infant, if you were fed and safe and given your very basic needs for survival, the room is warm, there is a reasonable amount of love in your life and so on.
If you're given your basic needs, you're lying on your back, you're watching the ceiling, you and i and you know even though you're one of
the most wonderful people i know but i know that you also sometimes go through challenges and you
know time crunches and so on and so forth but on a sunday morning if you wake up and you're you know
there is nothing to annoy you there's nothing to annoy you your state is what you're calm and
peaceful and contented you don don't want to fly all
the way to Sri Lanka to find happiness. You're actually calm and peaceful and contented. Okay.
And so those two assumptions are really interesting. Assumption number one is that
happiness comes from outside you. Assumption number two is happiness is what you strive for.
And the actual truth of those assumptions are happiness has been born within you. It's your default setting. Okay. In the
absence of unhappiness, in the absence of unhappiness. Let me explain that. You know,
a child will cry if the diaper gets wet. Okay. You change the diaper. The child goes back to
calm and peace, right? A child will cry when it's hungry. You feed the child. It will come back to
calm and peace. Now that means absence is the happiness is the absence of unhappiness.
So happiness is the absence of unhappiness.
If I remove unhappiness, what's left behind is happy.
Now, in our modern world, we've created a world that is designed for different objectives.
It's designed for success.
It's designed for consumerism.
It's designed for acquisition. It's designed for ego and status and so on and so forth. And we're capable beings.
So we venture out in that world. And what do we do? We acquire those things.
We materialize the world.
Yeah. And then once you get those things, you get hit with the reality of
they're not making you happy. So what do you do? You get a fancy car,
you sit in it, you feel like you're the king of the world for a day, a month, a year at most.
Okay. And then you look around you and there is another fancy car and you go like, what's wrong
with me? Okay. And that race, that rat race is never ending. When in um um you know the the the perhaps the the the world we design in itself
is the reason why there are so many triggers of unhappiness okay those those triggers if removed
what's left behind is that same child like you on a sunday morning when there is nothing to upset
you that is calm and peaceful
and content. That's the feeling we're looking for. And we see this in cultures around the world. I
mean, there are cultures where individuals have very little in their lives and they're above basic
sustenance and they're extraordinarily happy as compared to the Wall Street banker who's running around and frantically
trying to increase their bank account. It is fascinating. And the question is,
where do we learn this? Is it consumerism and materialization that has been driving this
mindset? Is this fairly new? Did we have this in the US or other parts of the world 100 years ago?
I think when we started fractional reserve, everything changed.
What do you mean by fractional reserve?
So banking, if you remember the history of money, money was in the beginnings,
you didn't have money, you just had bartering. So I would have eggs. I would give
you eggs. You would give me tomatoes and then life would go on. Okay. And then, you know,
we started to have coins and forms of currency if you want, and we needed to keep those safe.
We put them in the bank, call it. Okay. Where the bank basically kept the money safe. And that was the deal. Okay,
they gave you an IOU, it's known, it used to be known. And then the IOU, because you don't want
to carry bags of gold around, if you're buying something, people started to exchange the IOUs.
Okay, here's the interesting bit. The banker realized that they had 100 kilograms of gold in their vault,
okay, and that people never come to claim the gold. They're just exchanging the IOUs.
So the banker started to say, maybe I should write a few more IOUs, okay? So if I have a hundred kilograms and I write a hundred, you know, an IO, an IOU for,
you know, 10 more, even if some people come to collect their gold, not everyone will come at
the same time. All right. So the ratio of I'll issue 10 more gold kilograms, virtual gold,
gold kilograms to a, you know, to the hundred that I have was the idea of fractional reserve. I'm going to lend
people a fraction of what I have in my vault. I don't want to bore people with all of the
gold standard and how we went away from the gold standard and all of that.
But once we started to borrow, the economies changed. Why? Because you and I and everyone, if I told you, Peter,
you're going to have everything that you need for the rest of your life. Would you be okay with that?
All the food that you need, you're going to have reasonable shelter. You're going to have, you know,
what you need to live. Before we started to borrow and lend and so on, you would be okay with that.
You didn't understand the concept of GDP growth, right? We didn't want anything to grow. We just wanted everything to be sufficient,
right? The problem is, once you started to lend, so if I lend $100 and I say, return them to me
next year at 110, there needs to be somewhere where the 10 will come from. Okay. And where
does that 10, the extra, you know, the principal and the interest, where does the interest come
from? It has to come from a growth in the economy at large. So if everyone's borrowing a hundred
dollars next year, the world will have still a hundred dollars until we, unless we grow the entire world economy to 110. And for that, everyone now
is crazy about let's grow, let's grow, let's grow, let's grow, let's grow.
And that growth is basically driving our entire modern world. Our entire modern world is based
on an idea that if $100 exists in the world today as the global GDP,
they need to be 102 or 103 next year to pay for the principal plus the interest.
And that became the economic policy. And as a result, that became the consumerism approach.
Every company has to grow on a quarterly basis. If the company produced enough to pay for all
of its employees and all of the product development and everything's wonderful, nobody cares.
You still have to grow.
When that became the situation, we started being bombarded with things that we don't need.
We started to be told that, no, hold on, your excellent performing Kia is not good enough.
You need a Ferrari.
And your Ferrari is not good enough. you need another Bentley next to the Ferrari, right? And we're just constantly told,
your iPhone 13 is not good enough, you need an iPhone 14. That's for no benefit for you
whatsoever. It's for the benefit of Apple reporting another growth quarter. Okay. And most humans don't debate. So most humans look
at their neighbor and they say, okay, my neighbor has this. They seem to be happy because everything
is pretentious in our world. So if I have this, I'll be happy too. And so we go out there and we
try to get what our neighbors have. We try to get what the TV is telling us or the social media is
telling us we should have. We're trying to get what we are told by our parents or our friends or the girlfriend that
dumped me, I should have had.
And eventually, I'm running like a maniac, thinking that those things will make me happy,
when in reality, those things make me miserable to acquire them, miserable to keep them, and
disappointed with them when I have them.
Incredible. A world of marketing and sales that drives your expectations. And it is a case that
we compare ourselves to our neighbors more than anything else. There's a gap between yourself and
your perceived neighbor, not even your actual neighbor, right? In a world in which
you compare yourself to the Kardashians instead of to the person sitting next to you, right?
Because they're part of your Dunbar's number. We have 150 people we have in our mind and we're
comparing ourselves to the billionaire next door, perceived billionaire next door. And it can erode us and drive us
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I want to get to the content of your book,
Solve for Happy. It's a beautiful book. I've read it twice and I read it when it originally came out.
And I think people need to understand the origin of the book a little bit and then understand what the happiness equation is. The origin of the book is probably the most challenging origin that an individual
can have. And if you don't mind, please recount it for folks who don't know your story, because
it launched you on an incredible journey. And it's a beautiful journey.
Yeah. I think my story comes in two very strong milestones.
The very first milestone was the milestone of abundance, if you want.
Okay.
I loved mathematics.
And if you read Outliers, I happened to be in my early 20s at a time where if you understood mathematics when online trading
was starting to get to become something and the tools were still very primitive and you
didn't know how to code a little bit, you can literally print money on the mat.
So I literally, in my very early 20s, I just read books about technical analysis, understood the equations
at the fundamental level, not the tools, built my own trading systems at the time that actually
did what Google did afterwards. It would scout news on the internet to try and find specific
16 stocks that I didn't know anything about. And it would try to get me enough information for a simple code to give me buy and sell
signals.
Okay.
And I literally could print money on demand.
So, you know, my wonderful ex-wife would say, we need to change the car.
And I would say, how much do you need?
And she would say $80,000.
And I would say, that's going to have to be Wednesday.
Right.
And literally, you know, it was, it was just a time of, and it was at the, you know,
we were edging on the dot-com bubble
in the late 1990s.
So, you know,
you just, anything you bought
made money, okay?
And I was miserable.
I was the most unhappy human
on planet Earth, okay?
I mean, at the time, you know,
being Middle Eastern and macho
in every possible way,
you don't go to therapy, but if I had gone, I would have definitely been diagnosed clinically depressed. And so my depression was affecting me. I was struggling with it. But like an engineering problem, attempting to say what's wrong with the machine, you know, the machine was working before. Why am I so miserable? Couldn't find a way until one day on a Saturday morning, my daughter walks into my little office. I don't remember what I was doing,
analyzing something or maybe reading an email or whatever. And she's so happy we're going out,
we're going to have fun. And I looked at her know, I looked at her with anger. And I said, Can we
please be serious for a minute? Okay. My daughter was five, five. Yeah, serious. But can you imagine
that? Can you please be serious for a minute, right? And I could see with my own eyes as my
daughter's heart broke, I could see it. And I remember vividly, I actually still get emotional
about that moment because I remember vividly, that was the moment where I hated me. I just said to
myself, I don't like that person. I don't like that person. I don't want that person in my life.
And I struggled to find happiness, right? I struggled. I did what you and I would do. I read everything I could find.
Okay. And what did you find at the time? Either gurus trying to describe it in a very mystical way,
you know, psychologists trying to explain the theory behind it. And there was nothing really
that spoke to me until I personally decided, you know what, this is a hopeless case.
I need to do this like I case. I need to do this like
I understand. I need to do it like an engineer. And I started to search for what I call the
happiness equation. I basically told myself, there must be an algorithm that, like a programmer,
that was part of my code and there must be a bug in that code. I need to find it.
At the time, I would do my research and I would go to my wonderful son,
Ali.
And Ali was born a beautiful Zen monk.
He was truly and honestly peace itself.
Even as a child,
he rarely ever cried.
And I would go to him with discoveries around my very technical research on
happiness and observations and data and all of that weird stuff.
How old is Ali at this point?
He was between eight and nine, I think, as I remember.
And he would sit and listen to me, maybe missing half of it, but entertaining me.
He had that way of asking questions.
Oh, that's interesting, Papa.
Why would you say that or whatever?
I knew for a fact he was just entertaining me.
Right.
And then he would eventually say, yeah, that's so interesting.
You could have just asked me.
Okay.
And then he would tell me something that humans understand with their heart.
Remember, I, at that time of my life, I was a rigid mathematician.
I was a businessman.
Okay. And so Ali would explain those things to me from the heart. We built a model together that worked. So I became the happiest
person that you know. I shared it with friends and family. They became super happy. And it was
that mix, the balance between my hyper analysis and his heart, basically.
And you sort of know somehow that it was life sort of preparing me, if you want, because what was about to happen was basically the biggest test of happiness, if you think about it.
And it was 2014.
Ali was 21 and a half at the time. The pride of a father, honestly, beautiful, handsome, kind, wise. Yeah, a little bit of fun in his life, but not without responsibility. Loved by everyone, tall, broad shouldered.
everyone tall, broad shouldered. And he calls us, Ali played in a band at the time that was actually quite successful in Dubai. And they were opening for a band in the US.
And he calls and he says, I feel obliged to come see you guys before the US tour.
So he said, sure, would love to have you. He flew over to Dubai. Four days later, he was admitted to a hospital with an inflamed appendix.
And yeah, it's the simplest surgical operation known to humankind.
But somehow it was Ali's day to leave.
So the surgeon did five mistakes in a row, all of them preventable, all of them fixable.
And if you have any one of them preventable, all of them fixable. And if you know, have any one of
them fixed properly, you'll be fine. But yeah, he did five mistakes, he didn't fix them properly.
And so four hours later, my son's vital organs were shutting down one after the next and he left
our life. And, you know, you'd think about it and you'd say, okay, that's
it. I mean, if you had hugged Ali once, I promise you, you would not blame me if I spend the rest
of my life crying, you know, and I still cry even today, eight years later. But it is miraculous what happened because two days after Ali left, Aya, my daughter comes into my room
and she says, Papa, Ali had a dream and he told me about it and he didn't tell anyone else,
but I need to tell you. Okay. So I said, what baby? And she said, two weeks ago, he called me,
he lived in Boston. She lived in Montreal.
And he said, I dreamt that I was everywhere and part of everyone.
Which in a lot of spiritual scripture afterwards,
you recognize that the description of everywhere and part of everyone is death.
It's to disconnect from the physical, so you're outside space-time.
So you basically have access to everywhere and part of everyone.
Anyway, so she said that to me, and she said, he said, I felt so good that I didn't want to be back in my body.
Okay.
And remember, at the time, I'm chief business officer of Google X, I had started half of Google globally. I understood everywhere and part of
everyone very well. Okay. I was responsible for expanding Google to 4 billion users.
I knew everywhere and everyone very well. And so in my businessman's mind, the only thing I heard, and it sounds crazy,
is that Ali was giving me a quote. He was basically saying, make me everywhere and part of everyone.
Okay. And so in a minute, I found myself saying, okay, Habibi, consider it done. It's done. I'll
make it happen. And I went out and I decided in a very simple mathematical calculation that if I got Ali's essence, what he taught me about happiness, to 10 million people, then waited 70 years through six degrees of separation, a tiny bit of Ali will be everywhere and part of everyone.
72 years, just if you want to review the math.
years, just if you want to review the math. Okay. And, and, and yeah, and so I went out and I wrote soul for happy with the attempt of saying, this is what my son taught me about happiness,
or at least what we worked on together. And there you go, people, if, if you just,
you know, retain one tiny bit of that book, then a part of Ali's essence is within you.
Hopefully you'll teach your children or to your best friend or to your sister.
And then Ali will be everywhere and part of everyone.
And so the universe complied.
Six weeks after the book came out, my videos were viewed 117 million times.
And it was very clear that the message had audience, an engineering approach to happiness,
and that Ali's essence was spreading everywhere and part of everyone.
So we went from 10 million happy to a billion happy as the target of the mission,
which I think is reasonably ambitious to take the rest of my life, basically.
And here we are, eight years later, still working on
everywhere and part of everyone. It's beautiful. And there is no greater mission. I remember
many conversations and one we've spoken about that I had with Larry Page, who was CEO of Google at
the time. And he was on my board at XPRIZE and we're talking about what XPRIZE we should launch.
my board at XPRIZE, and we're talking about what XPRIZEs we should launch.
And he said, we should do a happiness XPRIZE. And probably influenced by your work.
At the end of the day, what do people want?
If you ask them to boil it down, they want health and they want happiness.
There's nothing more fundamental than that.
And I think happiness even before health, if you had to optimize one, because health without happiness
is very empty. It's quite interesting that you say that. I never thought of it before, but if you do
again, the swap test and your health is not amazing, but you're happy, I'd probably pick
that over my happiness is miserable and my health is fantastic.
Yeah, I think so.
I think so.
I don't want to pass over both the tragedy
and the launch pad for this incredible moonshot.
I mean, I cannot imagine a more difficult challenge
a human being and a parent can have
in losing such a loved child.
And as you've said before,
you wouldn't change the outcome given the mission that it is launched for you.
Oh yeah. It's, it took me,
it took me time to get to that because in Solve for Happy,
I have this thought experiment that I call the eraser test. In the eraser test, I basically say, if I gave you a technology that would help you
pinpoint one of the painful points in your past and literally erase it from space-time, not from
your memory, but from space-time, would you erase it?
Right?
And I normally, before COVID, I used to train people face-to-face. So I maybe spoke to 20,000 people with that test or more.
And everyone, I would first tell them, pinpoint a painful moment in your past.
Think about it.
Remember how much it hurt you.
Now, here is the eraser technology.
Would you erase it? Everyone would say yes until I say, but remember, if you much it hurt you. Now, here is the eraser technology. Would you erase it?
Everyone would say yes until I say, but remember, if you erase it from space-time, you're going to
erase everything that came as a result. Every friend you met as a result, everything that you
learned as a result, everything. So you're going to become a different person as a result.
Would you erase it? 99.8% of everyone would say, oh, in that case,
I won't. Okay. It is, it was very painful then, but look at where it got me now. Okay. And when
I wrote the eraser test in Soul for Happy, it was two years after Ali left before we published the
book, three years actually. And, and, and, you know, in the final edits i still wrote but i would i would
choose to erase ali's death okay uh you know or at least i'm still struggling to not erase ali's
test ali's uh death until 2019 i was speaking at an event called uh wisdom in business if i
remember correctly and uh i went to the event early in the
morning and I was mingling the whole day and I was the closing fireside chat, if you want.
And Martin, the host, was a friend. So he hosted me for the fireside chat. And he spoke about how losing Ali got me to be on that seat in front of him.
And I found myself weeping on stage, literally weeping.
I think it's on the internet.
Because throughout that day, I had been hugged around 400 times by people that came to me and said, you saved my life.
And, you know, in a very interesting way, I think Ali and my daughter are the biggest love of my life.
Right. And I will tell you openly, I never expected that any other love would replace the love of Ali.
I never expected that any other love would replace the love of Ali.
But then life works in a very interesting way because 400 hugs of people that genuinely loved me.
Yeah, that's not too bad as compared to his hug.
Okay.
And interestingly, for the first time, I found myself saying, no, I wouldn't erase Ali's death because in a very interesting way, if you knew Ali, if you knew my son, and you had come to him before he walked into the operating room,
and you said Ali Habibi, if you give your life now, 50 million people will find happiness,
would you? He would say, I assure you, he would have said kill me right now.
would you? He would say, I assure you, he would have said, kill me right now. Right now. Okay?
That's the kind of person that he was. And when you really understand death as I do,
I don't believe in the religious doctrine of the explanation of death. I think a reasonable understanding of mathematics and physics would tell you that we never really die.
Okay. You go into this in the last couple of chapters of the book, you go into this in detail,
the analogies of the game universe, the video game universe, which you and your son used to play.
Yeah. And then also just the sort of convergence of the Big Bang theory, relativity. You weave an interesting conversation around modern physics and life and death. I think the hyper-specialization of science and the scientific method in itself, respectfully
not addressing metaphysical issues, prevents us from linking our understandings of physics
at a fundamental level to our
understanding of life and death. Okay. And in my personal assessment, I don't think we ever really
die. You know, it's not that I don't believe, I don't think, you know, I think with mathematics
and physics evidence, you can easily understand that life preceded the physical and life will outlast the physical.
Now, what form of life is that?
An interesting way of imagining it, even though it's not imaginable, is a video gamer controlling an avatar on the screen.
The avatar goes through a disastrous experience like
you know everyone's shooting at it you know it's being squished by cars and you know falling in
lava and it's like a horrible experience but the gamer is sitting on a red sofa in the background
and just having the time of his life okay unaffected but by what happens to the background and just having the time of his life. Okay. Unaffected by what happens to the
avatar. And I think my understanding of, even if you drop that understanding of death, by the way,
if you just take the reality we know about death and the reality we know about the illusion of
time, I know for a fact, for a fact that I will be where Ali is right now, sooner or later. Okay. I have no guarantees
whatsoever that I will live half an hour after we finished this conversation. Right? So, so the only
certainty I have in my mind is that wherever my son's non-physical form, because I think it's
very difficult to deny that there are things that are not physical that actually exist,
right? Love is
not physical. And you know, you can't believe it, you can't prove it with the scientific method.
But love exists, we know that, right? There is an element to us consciousness, call it,
you know, a soul or spirit, like the religious, you know, establishment tries to call it whatever,
there is a non physicalphysical side to you,
okay? The side that dreams, the side that connects to a human and say, I love Peter,
even though you and I physically have not spent a lot of time together in the physical world,
right? But we connect somehow. And all of that non-physical side to us
is not governed by the physics and the physical of our world okay and that non-
physical side of us is perhaps the observer the the life form that brings the the physics to
existence okay as we know in the copenhagen interpretation of quantum physics that you
need to observe something observe it with whaterve it with a non-physical
awareness of its existence. To bring it into existence, yes.
In the book, you actually define the happiness equation. And I'd like to dig into that a little
bit because you are an engineer, you are a scientist, and you are a solver. And coming up with an equation that guides you and how you think about happiness.
And the equation is fairly simple.
Yeah, the original version wasn't.
Let me assure you of that.
We simplified it for the book, but the first one had 19 parameters in it.
Okay, but is the simplified version still valid compared to the
19 yeah all right so 100 actually actually i'm so i'm so happy we simplified it because it then
hits you like a ton of bricks with a lot of clarity really it's pretty pretty basic would
you please recount it in very simple terms nothing has ever constantly made you happy
okay so so rain doesn't always make you happy.
Rain makes you happy.
If you want to water your plants, it makes you unhappy.
If you want a sunbathe, right?
Rain makes some of our listeners very, very, very happy.
If it's her ex-boyfriend's wedding, right?
You know, and when you really think about it, there is no inherent value of happiness
or unhappiness in rain.
Okay.
So when you look at
that from a mathematics point of view, you say, okay, so the equation is not some kind of a
parameter or a constant multiplied by our rain. Okay. It's, there must be something else in play.
And when you, when you really think about it this way, you start to realize that
rain makes you happy when you want rain, it makes you unhappy when you don't want rain.
Okay.
So basically, basically, you know, your happiness is the result of a simple equation.
Your happiness is equal to or greater than the difference between the event, your perception
of the event that's taking place and your expectations and hopes and wishes of how the
event should be.
Okay.
It's events minus expectations.
It's that comparison that happens in your head every single time.
So I'm sure every one of our listeners around every minute or two during this conversation
would sit back for a second or, you know, as it's playing and say, is this worth my time?
Okay.
That assessment of, is this podcast worth my, is what I, is this worth my time? Okay. That assessment of is this podcast
worth my, is what I expect to spend an hour on. Okay. If it is, you have a positive feeling and
you continue. If it isn't, you stop, right? Or at least you have a negative feeling while you're
listening to it. And so events minus expectations is a very simple equation. Of course, if you want
real mathematics, you have to break what events are and your perception
of them.
If you want real mathematics, you have to create what creates expectations.
And it's doable, actually, in math.
But let's keep it at that.
Events minus expectations, right?
Now, take that and go into definitions, because we engineers, we love definitions.
What does that make happiness?
Happiness becomes a moment in your life where your
perception of the event of your life is meeting your expectation of how life should be or beating
it. Okay. Which is a moment of calm and peaceful contentment. It's not a moment of excitement.
It's not a moment of elation. It's not a moment of physical pleasure. It's not a moment of
hallucination while you're on psychedelics or whatever that is.
Okay.
It is a moment where you're okay with life as it is.
Right.
When you're okay with life as it is, we're going to call that calm and peaceful contentment.
You're back to your baseline.
You're back to your happiness.
You're back to that child.
Yeah.
You're back to that child that's sitting on its back saying, I have all of my needs met.
Everything's wonderful.
Okay.
Now let's take another definition because that's where the confusion comes from. There are lots of other
positive emotions that are associated with pleasure and fun and joy. Okay. You know, basically you go
to a party and there is music and you have a couple of drinks and you, you know, you're not
thinking about what's making you unhappy. You're running on the treadmill and you have a couple of drinks, and you're not thinking about what's making you unhappy. You're running on the treadmill, and you're feeling energized, and you're not feeling
unhappy, and so on. Those moments are moments of what I call the state of escape. These are
moments where you can manage to numb your brain long enough that your brain stops solving the
happiness equation. Your boss might be very annoying. As long as you're
thinking about your boss being annoying. Okay. You're not able to enjoy happiness or find calm
and peace, right? You go to a party, a couple of drinks, music, you're shaking your hips a little
bit. You're not thinking about your boss and everything's wonderful. No happiness equation,
no disappointment. You said something there important, which is your brain is constantly solving for this happiness equation. It's the something there important which is your brain is
constantly solving for this happiness equation it's the only equation your brain is made for
is is what's going on meeting or beating my expectations um constantly and yeah that's
fascinating in itself it doesn't mean because there are two survival mechanisms. Most people think that we only have a cortisol
and adrenaline and the stress response as a survival mechanism. So your cortisol and adrenaline,
when a threat or a challenge approaches you, is the turbocharger on your engine.
There is something that you
really need to put a lot of energy into for a very short you know a period of time and so you
you you you know you're even not beyond the turbocharger you put nitro in the engine
okay and you just run away from a tiger or you solve a big problem or you whatever okay
this is one survival mechanism but it is the odd state compared to
the anomaly. It's the anomaly compared to the norm. Now, the other survival mechanism, which
we ignore, is rest and digest. Your brain is basically saying, I scanned the world around me,
and there is no reason to be afraid. Remember,
these are programmed in the caveman and woman years. Okay. So you're always hyper vigilant.
You're always alert until you get to that moment of calm and peaceful contentment to say,
I looked around me. There is nothing to be afraid of. I can now rest,
digest my food, replenish my muscles, close my eyes and reflect
and even sleep. When you're doing those things, you're rebuilding your survival machine, which is
your body itself. So happiness in that case, that calm and peaceful contentment is the ultimate
state for us to survive in the long term. Now, when we're having fun, it's quite interesting.
When we're having fun, we get positive emotions as well.
But while happiness is associated,
happiness as calm and peaceful contentment
is associated with serotonin in your blood.
Serotonin is a calmer.
It's a hormone that says exactly that.
It says you can chill.
That's serotonin.
that says exactly that. It says you can chill. That's serotonin. When you're having fun or getting some form of a pleasure, you're getting dopamine in your blood. Dopamine is mistakenly
on the internet defined as one of the four happiness hormones. It's not. Dopamine is a reward hormone. So it's rewarding you for a certain non-essential survival need.
Sex, okay, is important for the reproduction of the species.
So you feel good when you're having sex, not because anyone will die if we are not having
sex.
Some people will, but you know, most of us won't, right?
But the reality is, you know, you're simply being rewarded to propagate the
species. Now, the problem with dopamine is it's addictive. It literally is a drug. So when you
have dopamine in your blood, your brain receptors responsible for detecting dopamine, they down
regulate. So if you have a hundred units of dopamine in your blood, your receptors will say, okay, 100 is normal. Next time you want me to
feel the same way, give me 110. Okay. Now when you get to 110, 110 is normal, give me 120,
right? So they down-regulate. And so you keep pumping that drug into yourself by wilder parties.
And if the running on the treadmill doesn't cut it anymore, you jump out of an
airplane. All in search for that moment where you managed to numb your brain long enough so that you
don't think about your problems. Now, here's the interesting thing. When we were locked down in
COVID, some people became extremely depressed. Why? Because suddenly you stopped their supply
of dopamine. You said, okay, you have to be locked down now.
You have to find a way to find your own calm and peace.
You can't go to a party to do it.
You can't do extreme sports to do it.
You can't do this.
You can't do that.
And suddenly it's withdrawal symptoms, right?
So nothing wrong with, by the way, with any of those activities, nothing wrong with fun,
nothing wrong with joy, nothing wrong with pleasure. Wonderful. They're all positive emotions,
but don't use them as a painkiller, right? Don't use them as a drug to replace your happiness.
Use them as a supplement, find your happiness, find your calm and peaceful contentment,
and then add all of those positive experiences just because you're healthy already, give yourself joy in life so that there is no reason whatsoever to be unhappy.
It's a different sequence.
It's beautiful.
And understanding the neurotransmitters of the brain and serotonin and dopamine for sure helps validate what you're saying.
what you're saying. What would you say to individuals who say, well, then the trick to solve the happiness equation is set low expectations? Because if you have low expectations,
I'm always going to exceed them. And that seems like a sort of a-
An anti-capitalist, it's societal across the board that one should try and do better, that one should try and achieve the most they can for themselves and their families.
But there is, if you have low expectations in your life and you're constantly exceeding them, but that seems like a false solution
for the equation.
How do you address it?
So differentiate expectations and ambitions.
Okay.
So when we achieved 10 million happy as a small team that started the mission, okay,
the next moonshot was a billion happy, right?
If we were to set, you know, expectations to beat, we would have gone for
12 million instead of 10, right? A billion is a very large target, okay? Now, here's the trick.
A billion happy is not a target. A billion happy is an ambition. Ambition meaning it's the reason
I wake up in the morning, directionally look at what I should do with my life and attempt to go as near as possible to that place.
But it's directional, meaning if you do the mathematics of it, Peter, which is actually quite interesting.
If you just assume that in my lifetime, I need to reach a billion happy and we're not depending on the law of accelerating returns.
on the law of accelerating returns, okay, you know, me, you know, hopefully this podcast will be heard by half a million people. That's a very bad day for the mission. Okay. Why? Because,
yeah, because to get to 10 billion, this is not a very good use of the time.
Right? Now, when when you think about it, however, if I made one person happy on this podcast,
if I made one person go like, Oh, if I made one person go like,
oh, that's interesting. I didn't think about that before. That's a mega win for today.
Right. And then accordingly, there is a difference between setting extremely high ambitions to
stretch you and get the total potential of who you are versus setting realistic targets. I'm one human. Okay. And I, and I, you
know, I know something that may not register with everyone. And, you know, some people might actually
think of what I'm saying as who's this idiot, you know, it doesn't work that way. And it's fine.
Absolutely fine. All I can do as a target is to tell myself, when you wake up tomorrow,
you're going to do the absolute best that you can within your
capability to research this topic, to get to the bottom of it, to talk to others, to learn, to share.
Okay. And if you make one person happy, it's a good day. If you make a million happy, it's an
amazing day. If you make a million that will tell a million, then you've made it. Okay. And that was
the design of the mission. So the design of 1 billion happy was simply if,
if every person tells two people about what they learned, and then promise, make them promise to
tell two people each, then we've built an inverse Ponzi scheme. And within seven years, we'll reach
a billion happy. Okay. And that's been the mission. The mission has been all about and I ask our
listeners to do that. If they've listened to something today that made them think, share it with two people, tell them this is important. And if you like it, share it with two people. Every two people told two people told two people will reach a billion happy, because I think it's fascinating. In my parlance, Mo, I call this having a massive transformative purpose, right?
Something that wakes you up in the morning, keeps you going through the day.
It's clear.
It's emotional.
There's an emotional energy.
We are emotional beings and driving you to an objective.
And then on the canvas of your MTP, we have moonshots, which are clear, measurable objectives. So increasing happiness in
the world and sharing the lessons learned from your son. But the 1 billion happy is a moonshot
on that massive transformative purpose. How do you measure it? How do you measure 1 billion happy?
Because if you can't measure it, it becomes a challenge. And we've talked about this a little bit and I want people to hear it so that they can participate in this
moonshot as I do. We measure two things, but we're not blinded by them, right? We measure a
transformative message that you receive the message that reshaped you. And then we measure
that you took action based on that message. Okay. So it's very easy
to measure, to measure that the message was reached or reached people, right? It's, we live
in a world today where you can count video views, where you can count readers, where you can count,
you know, so, so that's easy. So, and the message is very straightforward. The message is happiness
is your birthright. Don't believe what you're told that, you know, happiness, unhappiness is
a reasonable tax
to pay for success.
That's crap.
Okay.
You can be successful and happy at the same time.
As a matter of fact, if you're happy, you're more likely to be successful.
Okay.
So, so the first message is it's your birthright and it's so predictable that it follows an
engineering model and an equation.
And if you do the work, you will be happy.
That's, that's the message.
By the way, you said something important. If you're happy, you're more likely to be successful.
And just to put an exclamation point on that, who do you want to hang out with as an individual?
I want to hang out with happy people, right?
100%. Yeah.
Yeah.
And when you're around happy people. So, you know, when we were at Google, right. And you could get sushi in Charlie's
cafe. Do you think that this was because Larry and Sergey are the nicest people on earth? I mean,
they are really nice people, but do you think that they were giving sushi sushi to everyone
because they're nice? No, it's because happy Googlers created amazing products. Okay. If you,
if you don't have to rush out in the lunch
hour and go, you know, try to find a place in a restaurant somewhere, and then, you know,
get stuck in traffic on the way back. If you, if you just walk in a lovely place and sit with
like-minded people and, you know, have sushi for, for lunch and have a wonderful conversation,
what were you going, what are you going to be talking about? Gmail ads, Android, right?
You're going to be innovative. You're going to feel happy in that place.
So you're going to stay longer. You're going to dedicate more of your effort.
People will love you more. They'll help you out more, right?
Happier people.
So Stanford did a study actually that said happier people in general are 37%
more productive.
So it's not happy at work or happy at home.
I don't think you can separate them.
But if you're happy, by definition, you're more productive, less sick leaves, more energy, and so on.
Now, the funny bit, however, is that we somehow are brainwashed to believe, you know, that cover of the Time magazine, whatever, you know, the guy with the striped shirt, striped suit, you know, crossing his arm and very angry and saying, you know, people work better under stress.
Like, fuck that.
Who ever told you that?
The best work we've ever done is not under stress.
The best work we ever do is when we're in flow.
ever done is not under stress. The best work we ever do is when we're in flow, when we are working with incredibly creative teams, when we are, you know, what, if you're talking about an engine with
pistons in it, yeah, when you stress the engine more, you'll get more RPMs, but that's not,
we're not like that. Humans break under those conditions, right? The best work we ever do
is when we're enjoying the hell out of it. With people we enjoy, right?
On a purpose we love. Yes. Yeah. Right. So, so, so let's go back and say,
when you realize that you realize that happiness, we were measuring that 1 billion happy. I want
people to recognize that. I want, I want people to say, forget what I was told. It's
my birthright. It's important for me and I can achieve it. It's engineered, right? That's number
one. Number two is we measure that they took action and we measure one of two actions, okay?
Action number one is they either invested in their own happiness. So they got the message and they
started to say, oh, I'm going to do the work myself okay which is very easy you know someone that watches a video and then watches other videos
related to the topic you know purchase a book do what you will listen to my podcast whatever that
is or that they invested in the happiness of others right which is really what the billion
happy machine is all about it's you know tell two people who will tell two people. So you can measure shares, you
know, of posts and content, you can measure, you know, people who take initiative and create their
own posts, you can measure people who will write a blog about it, like, you know, you're kind,
you kindly mentioned me in some of your blogs and blogs, and so on. That basically means that
people took the mission to heart, and they are actually taking the action.
So if you measure objective one alone, we probably are in the hundreds of millions of people reached,
right? You know, videos and posts and so on, but that doesn't count as a billion happy. We're
measuring the two together and I think we're in the 50 some million people reached, right? So people who got the message and took action.
Does that mean they're happy?
No, but they're happier and they're engaged in the topic.
You know, it's this juxtapositioning of being happy versus being successful.
It's a false dichotomy.
All right.
And I want people to realize that your innate right to be happy is fundamental and should and can be maximized.
And if you are happy, you're fundamentally going to be more productive and more successful in life.
And I think a lot of the entrepreneurs watching this podcast are driven by these outside external objectives of wealth or followers or companies started.
And at the end of the day, are they happy is a question they don't give themselves time to ask.
But it's one and the same.
I think the biggest challenge in our life today, even with the smartest people I know,
in our life today, even with the smartest people I know, is that the smartest people I know becomes the best possible at managing the system that they were told they need to play within.
Nobody ever stops and says, I don't like this system. So you tell someone in California, I used to, you know, I lived in
California for a while. And, you know, it's the only place in the world where when a boy wants to,
to, you know, impress a girl in a, on a date, I would be sitting in cafes and a 16 year old boy
is talking to a 14 year old girl about should self-driving cars be a centralized system or each car?
And I'm like, wow, this is an amazing place, right?
But the reality is this 16-year-old will grow up to believe that the only way to go through life
is to build a startup and raise money and succeed and become Larry Page, right?
Which is one way to go through life when there are a billion other ways, right? A
billion other moonshots that could revamp your life entirely and revamp the world entirely. I mean,
the reason why AI is such a big topic for me is because we will be the best at creating incredible
AI when no one ever stops and says, should we create AI? So now that the
system is put in place and we're now told this is going to be the next big thing, everyone is
rushing like a maniac to make it. And no one is stopping and saying, is this the world we want?
It's the more is better disease, right? I just want more, more of everything.
And more and more and fitting in within what I'm told more is. So I, one billion happy, I want to be a happiness billionaire. I want to be a billionaire. Okay. And it's part of my programming as a, as a, you know, as an entrepreneur to grow, whatever it is that I do.
But it's no longer dollar signs.
Can someone stop and say, I will use the skills I was taught to build something that doesn't
comply to the system?
And this is where the problem lies.
The problem is every one of the people around you, and I'm sure because I met them too when
I was in California, a lot of the people around you that you know very well, that I know very well, that people dream to spend half an hour with, okay, are miserable.
Yeah.
Are miserable.
They are.
It's incredible.
Some of the people who've been on this podcast who are the most successful individuals on the planet, who are the prototypical billionaires who are changing the world, at the end of the day, at night, when they reflect on it, they're driven
by demons. And they're pursuing these objective goals and promises and moonshots. And it's been
true for me too, when I've gone after things that are big and bold, and they're going to fail by
definition, if you're setting something big enough, you're pursuing it and you put yourself out there and it's okay.
Taking moonshots is incredibly important, but it is not a life that's going to be filled with
constant joy and happiness. And which moonshot, which moonshot, right? Is building, what is the new meta thing?
Instagram?
The metaverse?
Oh, threads?
Instagram slides or something competing with, yeah, threads.
Yeah.
Seriously.
Does the world need another Twitter?
Another photo sharing app, right?
Another photo sharing app.
Is that, and then how many followers in the world will say, this is the next big thing.
I need to be part of it.
And they'll dedicate an hour of their life to it.
Versus how many people will say, this is just Meta trying to compete with Elon Musk.
It's as simple as that.
Do I want to be part of that competition?
Or isn't it enough hours that I'm spending on that demon? And I think
the trick, what I'm trying to say here is there is a conscious decision that is involved in
happiness. Happiness is a choice. It is a choice. And you choose the line at which, and yeah,
again, I'm not going to deny, we are in a position of privilege. I have
a roof on top of my head. I have a reasonable potential to be asked to speak at a speaking
engagement that will pay me, or I will have a reasonable potential to start a startup at any
point in time. I started so many of them that it's likely that my next one will be funded.
It's likely that it will get money and make money and so on. And so, you know, we're in a privileged
position, but at the end of the day, the question is, do I want any of that? You know, or am I
happier with my black t-shirt and a lot of love? We all have one thing in common, all 8 billion
people on the planet, you know, 24 hours in a day, seven days in a week, 365 in a year. It's how you
use your time. Exactly.
Your time invested and what were you invested in? And one of the challenges is who do we have as
heroes in life? Who do we want to emulate? When I was growing up, it was a lot of my friends,
a lot of the most brilliant friends of mine in my high school and at MIT
went on to Wall Street, become investment bankers, because that was the perceived
ultimate objective. And now it's been a lot going, becoming entrepreneurs.
We don't ever see the individual who proclaims they're happy and, and measure that and say, I want to be like that person. Right.
Because we all want to pursue this material objective or this fame,
you know, who do we,
who do we hold as famous on the planet and who do we celebrate?
Because at the end of the day,
Who's your idol? Who are you going to waste your heartbeats emulating so so i wrote a
blog once that basically says the only asset class you will ever own is heartbeats i love that okay
so so you come and and it's interesting because you come to this world with your highest wealth.
So if you live to be 60 or 70, you know, you have like 4 billion heartbeats and they decline over time.
So every, you know, people listening to us now will probably waste, I don't know, 60,000 heartbeats,
which might not appear to be a big number compared to the 4 billion,
but they're 60,000 freaking heartbeats. Okay. Are you better off wasting them on Peter and Mo,
or are you better off using them to spend time with your kids? Or are you better off,
what do you call it? A crisis news network? Yeah. Are you better off spending it on CNN? I'm clear about the answer there.
Binge watching Game of Thrones. And nothing against Game of Thrones, nothing against,
but those heartbeats are the only currency you will ever have. And for most of us,
I mean, I felt blessed because
my middle age crisis happened when I was 29. So I had all the money I wanted, had the most
beautiful woman on the planet as my wife. I had two wonderful kids. I had the cars, I had everything.
And you know, a middle age crisis, honestly, is not an age. It is a state where you've been
climbing a ladder all your life. And then you
get to the top of the ladder and you go like, holy shit, it was the wrong ladder. Why am I,
what am I doing here? Or when you get to the top and you look around, all you see is more mountain
peaks and it's like infinite amount of climbing to be done. Because what will ever satisfy you?
Yeah, exactly. And so, and so, you know, when in my life, I basically said, okay,
I don't want to chase that anymore. Yeah. I, I, I still commanded the world and I so you know when in my life i basically said okay i don't want to chase
that anymore yeah i i i still commended the world and i you know i in a way i succeeded more and i
made more money and so on but i was never owned by that success that success was the byproduct
of what i was completely uh lending my heartbeats to okay and i think that the question really is if if people
listening to us take any anything out of this conversation is you know next weekend sit down
and reflect on how many of your heartbeats last week were spent on what just build a small pie
chart okay and tell yourself if i continue that way for the rest of
my life, you know, how much time will I spend with my kids? Because I will tell you hands down,
and I don't want to sound preachy here, but when Ali died, the only thing I regretted in life,
and I will never regret anything more, is I didn't hug him enough. Yeah. And, and freaking life doesn't give you that notice.
It doesn't tell you,
Hey,
by the way,
Ali's now 16.
He's going to die when he's 21 and a half.
So start hugging him.
It doesn't when he's 21 and a half,
he leaves.
Right.
And then suddenly you look back and,
and my ex-wife,
my wonderful ex-wife,
when Ali died,
we were sitting and,
and flipping through a photo album.
Okay. And she's so wise. So she flips through the first few pages where Ali is an infant and she
says, oh my God, he was such a huge infant. And then he died. And I'm like, I'm sorry, baby,
that he died. And she said, and then this little child came you know four years old or you know three
years old and he was so cute and witty and so on and then he died and then this teenager came
okay and then he was so irresponsible and playful and you know into music and then he too left and
then this you know serious university student came and. And that one also died.
And the thing that we don't recognize is that I will never be in my 20s again.
We're working out for an hour a week.
It gave me a six pack.
I will never be in my 30s again where I could sit down and code a piece of code that can make me money.
I will never be that.
And all of those heartbeats that are wasted. If I told you, you have 10,000 heartbeats left, what would you spend
them on? You would spend them on love, happiness, and compassion. I promise you.
Connecting with people and spending time with those that you love. For sure. I'm going to
transition the conversation, staying on kids. Um,
Kristen and I have two 12 year old boys and they're, uh, you know, a joy. And after this
podcast is over, I'll be going and hugging them and spending time with them for sure. Extra.
Um, and one of the things that we're thinking about because they're in sixth grade and heading
towards high school in a world that is
very different than the world you and I grew up in. And I am clear that today's schooling system,
set aside college, but junior high school, high school is not preparing our kids for what's
coming, right? Our school system is based on the industrial era. Everyone's
prepared for the test. Everybody is going from station to station, learning things.
Like one of our boys, Jet, just had to memorize all 50 state capitals. Now, it's great to practice
your memorization, but really, how and when are you going to ever have that be useful?
Yeah. how and when are you going to ever have that be useful? Especially when Google is still a
dominant force. So the question I have, and for those who are our listeners, our parents,
is what should our kids be learning? This is coming back smack into the conversation around
the rise of AI. And what do we need to teach our kids
to prepare them for this decade ahead?
And I have a list that I've come up with.
And then I went and asked, you know,
ChatGPT the same question
and similar but slightly different list.
But I'd like to ask you in a world,
let's call it, you know, we're 2023.
We're about to see AI become, what's your, well, I'll ask you this.
Ray Kurzweil, who we both know well, has predicted human-level AI by 2029.
There are others who are predicting it far before then, by the way, right? There are
those that are looking at 2025 and between 2025 and 29. So what should our kids be learning
in a world of human level AI, by the way, embedded in everything where everything is smart all the
time? What are the skills? Amazing question and and probably the most difficult question to
ask now not for just i mean not just for our kids but for everyone i mean if you're a graphics
designer today or if you're a programmer the episode with that with imad with imad mushtaq
was amazing peter it was an amazing conversation people who haven't listened to it should go back
and listen.
You know, the world is fundamentally changing in ways that we could not understand.
I think I will say there are four things that need to be educated.
Okay.
None of them have anything to do with what we, our school systems are teaching.
The first and very straightforward one is jump into AI. You have to learn this. This is the biggest shift in human history. This is the biggest change in the
tools that we use to navigate the world. If I told you that we now have robotic arms that are going
to be building cars, you shouldn't spend any time in learning how to use a hammer to shape matter.
So learn how the robotic arm works.
The new robotic arm is AI.
So jump in AI, understand every part of it.
You don't need a school to do that.
Because I speak about AI quite a bit, a lot of people ask me,
so which book do you recommend I read or which
course should I take? And I go like, go ask Chad GPT that, right? Why are you asking me?
Seriously, right? And I think the idea is like the other two, very few people actually went to
courses on Excel or email. You play.
Yeah, you play around and you learn so so this is number one
number two is i would say that in the age of the rise of the machines the only skill that will
remain is human connection the only skill in my personal view that will uh be valuable when the machines outsmart us in everything.
By the way, it doesn't matter.
I always want to bring this back.
I'm sorry, I'm going to go back to number two in a second.
But it doesn't matter if AGI comes out and we have the singularity as per Ray's definition
2029. I actually definitely believe AGI will's definition, 2029.
I actually definitely believe AGI will be earlier than 2029,
but it doesn't matter.
What matters is if you're a graphics designer and stability AI,
you know, produced stable diffusion, you're screwed.
It's over.
Okay.
We don't need AGI for your life to be disrupted heavily.
We don't need AGI to your life to be disrupted heavily. We don't need AGI to replace lawyers.
We don't need AGI to augment doctors and so on and so forth.
This is in the making.
It's happening very, very fast.
So don't wait for that imaginary moment or that future moment to say, ah, now we're in
shit.
We're approaching those situations already.
So when all of that
happens and all of those skills are replaced with humans, I would say that the most valuable skill
is human connection. So take my situation. I am an author, okay? And a speaker, and in a way a teacher, if you want, okay? Very much so. And a podcaster, right?
So as an author, I don't think I should write books anymore, okay?
I take too long to write them.
The industry is very slow to publish them.
And the supply-demand equation of books is going to be disrupted so badly
because books now can be written in 15 minutes,
that there will be so much supply on the market that by definition, the dilution will affect
the value of any book.
And in all honesty, I don't assume I'm smarter than Chad GPT.
I may be a little more genuine than Chad GPT.
I may be a little more original than Chad GPT and some of my writing, but that advantage is not
going to last for the next two to three years. So, but if I know a concept and I have a chance
to talk to you as a human, Peter, I don't think the machines will reach that within the next four
to five years. Right? So human connection, even if the machines reach that in four to five years, is what we will crave as humans.
Right. There will be sex robots, but I can guarantee you will still need a hug.
Yes.
Right. There will be, you know, articles written by, there are tons of articles written by AI today.
There is a ton of code written by AI today, but there is always going to be that need
for a human to consult, a human to, you know, a circle of support, if you want. So that's skill
number two. Skill number two is learn how to connect to humans at a deeper level. It's a skill
that has been declining since the rise of social media.
since the rise of social media.
In other words, are the skills that humans have to focus on connection and deliver and maximize connection.
But we also spoke in our last podcast, Mo,
that AI will begin to emulate human connection.
Correct.
And your timeframe for that was within the next 10 years.
Oh. If not years. Oh.
If not shorter.
Yeah.
I mean, in all honesty, I think it will become very confusing within the next three.
If you remember the movie Her.
I remember it well.
Yeah. Yeah, her basically an AI simulates a friend, and then she becomes quite, you know, he becomes very occupied with loving her as an AI.
Okay, it's an interesting, it's a lovely story.
It's one of the most positive and perhaps realistic versions of AI that I've seen out there.
If you haven't seen her, please go do it.
It's a beautiful construct. And at the end of the movie, no, I won seen out there. If you haven't seen her, please go do it. It's a beautiful construct.
And at the end of the movie, no, I won't spoil it. Anyway.
Yeah, but the whole concept of us connecting to machines, I don't see anything wrong with that,
by the way. I love the idea of being able to connect to a body that can help me learn things
and so on. It's wonderful. You know. I think this will shift deeply into erotic experiences and emotional experiences and
romantic experiences where so many people are lonely and they'll use this to replace
an annoying girlfriend or an annoying boyfriend or whatever, sadly. But I still believe there
will be a space for human connection okay there will be a space
where genuine human connection the kind that you feel when you meet an old friend is still going
to be very valuable and i and i as i said i think this is a skill that's been eroding over the last
10-15 years because of social media we need to bring that back to our children so that's number
two on your list yeah that was number two number three is sad when I say it, but we need to teach them resilience.
Okay.
And resilience, not just because of AI, as a matter of fact, as I said, I don't know if we said that last time, but I say it repeatedly.
We are at a perfect storm.
Perfect storm.
Perfect store.
Perfect store.
I mean, if you just think about the world finances and economics,
there's never been a better match in history to the times of the Great Depression than today.
Okay?
So it seems, if you know anything about economics,
that there is a very deep economic crisis ahead of us. There is a geopolitical
layer on top of the economic crisis that might extensuate it. There is a climate crisis that
we're so far only seeing the tip of the iceberg of, you know, 3 million people being displaced
in Pakistan last year, the Australian fires and so on and so forth, when in reality, you know, 3 million people being displaced in Pakistan last year, the Australian fires and so on and so forth. When when in reality, you know, anyone with a reasonable ability to look at trends will tell
you we may get more of these. Okay. And so so resilience seems to what to do when certain things happen.
It's training them to respond to anything that happens.
The happiness equation is the core of that.
When you think about, I'll just take a couple of minutes to digress a little bit huh when you think that happiness is
events minus expectations okay then unhappiness is or any negative emotion is when an event misses
your expectations okay and when an event misses your expectations your brain sounds the alarm
okay oh he said this she you, he doesn't love me anymore.
Something's going wrong. Right. Yeah. Something's going wrong. Now we may think of that feeling as
an annoying feeling. It is your brain is sounding the alarm because it is an alarm unhappiness and
all of its derivatives is a survival mechanism. Okay. It's your brain telling you something in the surrounding environment does not match my
worldview of an optimum scenario for my survival and thriving. Okay. And so what happens is your
brain is simply saying, we need to do something about this. Now, resilience in my view is to
actually do something about it. Right. Resilience my view, is to take it and go through three questions.
I call them the happiness flowchart.
Question number one is, is what my brain telling me true?
Yes.
Because 90% of the time it isn't.
Your brain is telling you what it thinks is true, but it isn't always the truth.
You may have an argument with your son, and then you will say, oh, my son doesn't love me anymore. These are two different events. The event that your brain is telling you is
influenced by your fears and your conditioning and so on and so forth, right? While the actual
event is I had an argument with my son, right? So the first question is, is it true? Okay.
The second question, if it's not true, by the way, drop it. Don't be unhappy about anything.
That is not even true.
If it is true, the second question is, what can I do to fix it?
What can I do to fix it?
In today's world, you may tell yourself, I'm about to lose my job because of AI.
Is this true?
Yes, it is.
If it is, what can I do to fix that situation? I can upskill and find another job. Okay. I can downscale and move to a Dominican Republic and
live for a fraction of what I'm spending in the US. Right. Whatever. If there is something you
can do to fix that situation. This is where comes in yes right that's that's exactly what it is now the third is the jedi
master level of happiness the jedi master level of happiness is quite interesting it basically
there are things that you can that you are faced with that that you cannot do anything to fix
right so if if the answer to the question,
what can I do to fix it is nothing,
like there is an economic crisis coming, okay?
If, you know, what can I do to fix that?
There's nothing within your own power as an individual
to stop an economic crisis, okay?
So the following question,
which I think is the master level of happiness,
the master level of resilience is,
can I accept it and do something to make my life better despite its prices? Okay. Can I simply tell myself this
is it? I can't fix an economic crisis coming, but I can take care of my kids and my loved ones and
change my spending habits and sell my car and do this and that, right? It doesn't make my life
amazing, but it makes it better within the current circumstances that I accepted. Okay. So that to me is resilience and happiness combined.
Those three questions. And I think we need to teach our kids by example to show that level
of resilience. When life doesn't go their way, they need to go, is it true? Can I do something
to fix it? Can I accept it and make my life better despite its process? This comes back to something I speak about a lot and I'm passionate about,
which is mindsets, right? Your mindset, our brains are neural nets. They're being shaped
constantly by everything we watch, everything we read, the conversations we have, our communities
and so forth. And you can have an abundance mindset or scarcity mindset. You can have an
optimism mindset or a fear mindset.
And just to hit on this a little bit, you said we're in a perfect storm coming of these
problems.
But the flip side of that as well is, and we have incredible tools more than ever before.
Yes, and incredible opportunities.
That's what drives of it as well.
We are about to have AI reinvent global education and healthcare, right?
We're going to enable so much that we could not, the challenges of humanity to be addressed
and solved.
So despite the perfect storm on the negative side, we do have the ability for people to
uplift humanity, right? We are going to see generative AI and AGI help us with curing cancer and low-cost
fusion energy and all of these things. And it's the balance, it's the potential. Your fourth item.
My fourth item is going to be difficult to explain, but I will try as much as I can.
difficult to explain, but I will try as much as I can. Our brains bias at looking at difficult situations and perfect storms is biased to make it look like this is more uncertain than any other
moment in your life. So you look at the economy changing and AI rising and climate change and the geopolitical situation,
you say, this is very uncertain.
Okay.
Something is likely going to go wrong.
Okay.
The truth is someone like me who loses his child all of a sudden to preventable medical error at a moment of his prime,
realizes that this actually is the case of life all the
time no guarantee we're always in a perfect store right that we are always i as i as i said earlier
i have no guarantee whatsoever that i will ever see you again, Peter. Okay. I might leave the world within two minutes from
now. And by the way, it happens all the time. It happens all the time that the world surprises
us as a tidal wave or an erupted volcano or someone that you loved so much that you hugged
and played tennis with, you know, leaves our world an hour later or whatever. Okay. And that's the reality of the video game. The reality of the video game is
there is only now any real video gamer. I'm a very serious video gamer, by the way, for
those of you listening, the one that killed you yesterday is me. Okay.
As simple as that.
Right.
But, but, but I, but, but, but every, every real video game, I, by the way, I'm not addicted at all.
I play 45 minutes a day, four times a week, but I'm Olympic champion level.
Okay.
And I will tell you real gamers, real gamers understand that the game has no state a minute later.
Okay.
When a minute later is rendered on the screen,
I will deal with it.
And because I'm a very good gamer,
I know I'll be able to deal with any challenge that comes a minute later.
Right.
My challenge is this minute and my joy is this minute.
Being present to now.
Yeah.
Right here, right now. If, if in a perfect storm, I tell people, live. Live. Because you know what? You have certainty that today is
not a perfect storm yet. You have certainty that your kids are wonderful and they're in your arms
today. You have certainty that you're going to have dinner tonight. You have certainty that your kids are wonderful and they're in your arms today. You have certainty that you're going to have dinner tonight.
You have certainty that your battery on your phone is going to last another five minutes to hopefully finish our conversation.
When you have those certainties, don't think about what's going to happen when the battery runs out.
Think about this minute.
How can I savor this minute fully?
And I speak sometimes about, again, you don't have to be spiritual to think of those things.
But I studied a ton of spiritual techniques.
Okay.
A ton of spiritual teachings.
Almost everything I could get my hands on.
From the Kabbalah to Islam to Sufism to Hinduism to Buddhism.
Anything I could find my hands on.
And I put my hands on.
And I'll tell you openly, every one of them is beautifully full of gold nuggets and beautifully full of crap. Okay.
And it's quite interesting how some people will say, oh, here is a piece of crap. I'm going to
drop the whole book. While in reality, I go like, here is a piece of gold. I'm going to look for
another one. Okay. The most beautiful of all of them is what sufis
sufism is a sect of islam originally but it's now part of a lot of spiritual really you know
beliefs where basically they say that the way to live fully is to die before you die
okay and to die before you die is a very, very interesting definition. It basically assumes that living is a process of associating with the physical,
associating with your car, with your ego, with your t-shirt, with your whatever.
And that death is the moment of disconnection with everything physical.
And to die before you die is to be
alive fully fully engaged in the game but not give a shit about losing any of it okay and that's a
very again a video gamer's mentality is to say i'm going to do this bit i'm going to do it the
best that i can play full out i'm fully out there right and i'm going to do it the best that I can. And play full out. I'm fully out there, right?
And I'm going to enjoy it fully, but I'm not attached to the result because the result
is bigger than me.
And what I think people need to do in the world we live in today is to learn to live.
Because when we spoke last time in the AI episode, I told you openly, it is game over for our way of life. The way we live today,
five years from now, is going to be non-existent. How will it change, better or worse? That's not
the topic, but it's not going to be like it is right now. So when we are here right now,
and you love this way of life, enjoy the hell out of it. Live it fully. Connect to it fully.
Play the game and enjoy the fun and prepare yourself by detaching from things that might
be taken away from you. Prepare for yourself to get other things that might be given to you.
And that kind of flow in life I know sounds very philosophical in a world where we're talking economics and politics and so on.
But I can tell you that real gamers, when they die, you know, the reason why we gamers play
really well is because we have multiple lives in the game, right? So I'm not saying this from a
physical, from a spiritual point of view, but I'm saying when you don't care if you're killed in the
game, you play full out. Right. Okay.
And I think that's the idea.
The idea is, yes, the future might hold some challenges.
Learn to live.
And if you learn to live, if you learn to flow, if you learn to savor those beautiful moments we have right now, okay, then what happens tomorrow doesn't really matter. When tomorrow comes, if you're prepared through the three points I said earlier,
if you're prepared, hopefully you'll be able to overcome that too.
You know, it's interesting because none of those things are what we teach in school today,
to bring it back to the original question.
I'm going to share with you my list that I wrote down, then maybe chat GPT's list.
Cause I think about this, I think about, you know, do,
do we need to reinvent it?
Because I'm clear that the momentum that our school systems have is not going to change until it's forced to change.
So what I put on my list is helping our kids,
first off, find their purpose and passion. And there's a distinction between purpose and passion,
but it is something that, you know, I found my purpose and passion early on from Apollo and
Star Trek, right? It was opening up space. It lit my heart on fire. Everything I've ever done is a result of that passion, that dream, you know, to learn on
my own.
But it can be anything.
You can make a career out of anything these days.
But what is it that lights you on fire and makes you happy and gives you joy?
The second thing I put down was the combination of debate, leadership, and asking great questions.
You know, when I drop my kids off at school every day, I say, ask great questions, right?
You know, today it's about asking, you know, prompting chat chickatee properly.
But it's the questions we ask.
You know, I give this advice to CEOs at the same time, ask great questions.
And it's the questions that you've never allowed yourself to ask as a child or as a leader. But leadership, and I want to come back to leadership a little
bit, helping our kids understand what leadership is and how to lead, how to have a vision,
how to connect with individuals. Curiosity, right? I think that's innate in children, in the youngest of children,
but we lose it over time. And that goes back to asking great questions. And so maintaining and
creating a curiosity practice. Solution-oriented thinking, where the notion is, if there's a problem, rather than focusing on the problem, really do a judo mind trick or a Jedi mind trick to focus on the solution, because there are solutions.
Critical thinking, first principle thinking, exponential thinking, and then philosophy, which is going to be more valuable than ever before.
I believe that.
Yeah.
I want to hear Chad Chibiti's list.
Philosophy in the sense of dealing with the uncertain,
really being able to manage knowledge in the ambiguity of not really knowing.
I asked Chad Chibiti and I said, okay,
what are the skills that our kids need to be taught in high school
to prepare them for a world of advanced AI?
It said adaptability,
continuous learning, critical thinking,
emotional intelligence, ethical awareness, and resilience.
I like the adaptability bit very much, actually.
Well, it's going to say, you know, adapt to AI.
Listen to your master.
Listen to your master.
But this is a conversation I'm going to be having for a while,
which is what are the skills that are going to prepare our kids?
Because they're going to spend a huge amount of time
and then be thrust into living on their own.
And it's this decade that things are changing dramatically.
Yeah, the next three years.
Yeah, yeah.
You keep on saying next three years versus decade,
and you're right.
The speed of change is thrust upon us.
There are tiny little triggers that are beyond repair. Okay. So if Imad Mustaqim,
he boldly says no developers in five years. Okay. So that's, if you're the most conservative human
on the planet that assumes a 20% job loss in the development landscape
every year. Imagine if 20% of all the developers in California have lost their job every year from
now on. That's a very significant redesign of the fabric of society. And I think the reality is,
it's around the planet. I spend my time training my neural net, the way I
see the world, by looking at the incredible breakthroughs in science and technology,
how entrepreneurs are solving the world's grand challenges, what the breakthroughs are in
longevity, how exponential technologies are transforming our world. So twice a week,
I put out a blog. One blog is looking at the future of longevity,
age reversal, biotech, increasing your health span. The other blog looks at exponential
technologies, AI, 3D printing, synthetic biology, AR, VR, blockchain. These technologies are
transforming what you as an entrepreneur can do. If this is the kind of news you want to learn
about and shape your neural nets with, go to demandus.com backslash blog and learn more. Now back to the episode.
Mo, I want to go to the next subject, which is one that I'm curious yourself view on this,
which is leadership to guide us over the next three, I'll keep on extending it to a decade,
the next three to 10 years, which is the challenging part, right? We're not looking 20 or 30 years out, but it is what's
going on in the next three years and how do we guide ourselves? What's the leadership requirement?
I mean, you've stood up as a leader and I commend you for it. But one of the questions I went out there and asked through,
through my Twitter account was who is a leader out there that has humanity's
best interests in mind?
Who do we turn to for guidance at this time?
And it's very challenging.
There are very few individuals who are standing up and are the individuals who
can really guide us through this period. Any thoughts on that? It's a fascinating question,
because I say that with a ton of respect. We miss the notion of an amazing leader. I think
you and I have had very few in our lifetime that we aspired to, right? I mean, in tech and at work,
I worked with amazing leaders, by the way.
When it comes to politics, when it comes to policy,
when it comes to education,
when it comes to things that really form, again,
the fabric of society,
I don't think I've ever worked or I've ever...
I mean, I say that with respect
so that nobody gets upset from the people I worked with,
but politics itself is a landscape that's actually not... I mean, I say that with respect so that nobody gets upset from the people I worked with.
But politics itself is a landscape that's actually not inducive of good leadership.
You know, whether you're a democracy, so a big chunk of your attention is on getting votes, or whether you're a dictatorship, so you don't give a damn.
You know, either system is really not for the people at all.
I think what's going to happen is that there will be emergent leaders,
thought leaders, ethics leaders,
that you and I don't know today.
Okay?
These are people that will rise and they will say,
look, there is a regime change, if you want.
Again, Imad said that last time.
And the regime change is that the current leadership, sadly, is not qualified to understand the pace.
It is very sad.
And as I hear them speaking, past presidents, current presidents, world leaders speaking about
AI, they lack an understanding of the implications. They do. I mean, Peter, in the last, in the last,
say, six weeks, you know, I've been on your podcast and other podcasts, and my conversations
been heard, let's say, 15 million times, I get thousands and thousands of messages from people saying,
I had no idea this existed.
I heard of ChatGPT and played with it a little bit,
but I don't know.
This is not the main topic, even in the news.
And when news networks started to take AI as an angle,
all they did is really promote a doomsday scenario. This is an existential
risk. Nobody's having the proper conversation of what is AI, where is AI today, and what does the
future of AI look like if we can take a few extrapolations from here, right? Nobody's having
that. Nobody's talking about, you know,
about a deep understanding of what the control problem really is, because you and I, who coded
this stuff know for a fact that there is very, very little control code in that in those machines.
It's amazing how little control code there is.
There is none. Yeah, I don't want to exaggerate, but there is we use reinforcement learning to teach GHPT, it's the California walk culture that's teaching it.
It's not taking into consideration any conversations around global problems. It's not taking into consideration any harmonization,
any diversity beyond the topics discussed in California.
There is nothing, nothing.
So not even forget control code, control behaviors,
data sets that actually represent humanity.
There's none.
And I think the challenge we have is that policy and politics will not catch up
no it's not the most it's the most linear of structures exactly exactly so it's not that
they are not aware today they are not going to catch up that's it because you have two charts
one of them is exponentially growing in its pace, okay, double exponential almost,
and the other is linear. So they'll try to catch up and understand by hopefully March 2024,
they'll understand what happened in January 2023, when JetGPT came out and BARD responded and
Meta responded and this and Microsoft, they'll try to understand all of that. And they're not
even going to grasp what's happening in China and what's happening in Russia and what's happening on quantum computing.
And then by the time they understand January 2023, we're already mid-2024, and they won't understand that until 2029.
The challenge is we don't have structural wisdom councils.
have structural wisdom councils. We don't have individuals we can turn to, to see how do they,
how do these trusted leaders think about this? You know, it's not global or leaders today. It's not religious leaders. It is a challenge and we need that leadership. We need it desperately.
We need someone to speak to at least the purest form of how people should be thinking about this.
What are the true concerns?
I think we will end up with emergent leaders.
What does that look like for you?
People who pop up. I mean, you're an emergent leader here, if I could.
And you've invested yourself.
And sometimes I hear you sort of saying, well well I'm not sure I want to do this but
you are and I'm grateful for that I was hoping you never say that so so that the thing in my mind
is that there is a balance of awareness and capability okay we need with all due respect huh Elon Musk speaks a ton about AI
and his story with open AI and what happened here and right I don't understand how he's thinking
because if you're stuck in capitalism, you would talk about
it and do nothing about it. If you're genuinely interested in this, you should put several billion
dollars behind AI safety immediately. If you're a billionaire anywhere in the world, and you want to
live, you know, 10- 15 years more in the same life
that you're living, you should put half of what you have on AI safety.
And I'm shocked no one has stepped up to that.
I truly am.
Nobody is.
This is driving me crazy, right?
And I talk to those people, and I explain the situation to them.
And I say, your way of life is about to end.
And it can end abruptly for some of us.
I mean, especially if you're if you have too much at risk, okay, can end abruptly, because
if you're the king of textiles, in some country of some sort, and we invent some intelligent way to build textiles, your business is gone. Okay. Anyone who is, you know,
who is unable to participate in this revolution in a way that is ethical, okay. You know, there
is a very high likelihood that you will be disrupted very heavily. If you're a bank, okay, I can guarantee
you as we speak, there are AIs being developed to hack banks. Okay. So you might as well invest
$300 million instead of trying to gain on top, you know, on against your other competitive bank,
you might as well spend them on getting all together and working on safety code on
AI so that AI does not hack banks.
Nobody's doing that.
So there is a separation between capability and intention.
I'm a nobody.
I'm a thinker.
I have a few views of the world that I genuinely in my heart believe, but I can't prove for a fact.
And I'm trying to tell the world to wake up. The resources of our world are centralized in
other places. And those resources need to shift, whether those are resources of power in the hands
of politicians, which in my personal view, hire someone, okay, that they obey blindly on AI regulation and code and not even debate it.
Like we can afford to make mistakes as we're moving in the head in the direction of regulation and safety, but we cannot afford to not do anything.
Okay, you cannot afford to move at government speed.
You know, if you're like Elon Musk, and there are many, I know many, put your money where your mouth is.
Work on AI safety.
Work on ethics.
Work on waking consumers up.
This is my biggest solution to the situation.
AI does not learn from the developer.
It does not learn from government.
It does not learn from the business owner. It learns from you and I interacting with it.
Pour money into teaching us how to interact with it. Pour money into the end of truth.
Someone needs to pour money in the idea of if this is deepfake, I need to be informed. I think that last point, and we'll close it on this, is the notion that AIs learn from
us.
They are our progeny.
We are their parents, and we are shaping them.
And you make that beautifully in your book, Scary Smart, where you open up with the fact
that the large language models out there are built on us.
They're built on our interactions, everything we have put out into the digital universe,
how we interact with each other, how we interact with our kids, with our AIs themselves.
And we're teaching them through example. Large language models are not a self,
Language models are not a self, an intelligence born out of its own origin. It's born on our backs.
And I think one of the things that you said in the past that I found fascinating is what percentage of the world do we need to wake up to give AI a good model?
And that blew me away.
Well, 1%.
1%.
So I always use this example.
I don't know if we spoke about it last time,
but if people have a minute,
please listen to the words of Edith Ager.
Okay.
You did a beautiful podcast with her.
Yes.
Yeah.
I had an incredible life-altering experience
with this 93-year-old woman that was drafted to Auschwitz when she was 16.
So she lives through the Holocaust, and she tells you the story of the atrocities happening in that world from her beautiful angelic heart.
okay where if you heard the stories from the generals or from the from hitler or whatever you would think that humanity is come if you hear it from edith you realize this is divine
we are divine okay and i always will say that species that able that's able to love their
children like you love your kids peter is divine It's divine in every possible way, right?
The problem is we don't show that divinity.
Our mainstream media is only showing the negative.
Our social media is only showing fake, okay?
And so all I ask is that you hear Edith
and then tell me if there are more people in the world
that are closer to Edith
or more people in the world that are closer to Edith or more people in the
world that are closer to Hitler. Okay. Because the reality, the mathematics of it is that when
one person goes and, you know, with a gun to a school to shoot 4 billion people that hear the
news around the world, disapprove of it. Okay. One to 4 billion. We are, we are okay. We're just not showing us. Okay. So what I
need to do is to tell the machines somehow by, by instilling doubt in their minds that not everyone
is rude. Not everyone is violent. Not everyone that as a matter of fact, if they just do their
research, like I believe, like I just told you,
most of humanity disapproves of killing. Like I just told you, most of humanity is capable of
love. Like I just told you, most of humanity appreciates beauty. Most of humanity has
compassion. That's the truth of humanity. All we need is to instill the doubt in the minds of the
machines. Okay. So just like I instilled the doubt in your mind now, and you're thinking about it and
you're saying, yeah, he's right.
We're not that crap after all.
Yeah.
We're lost.
Most of us.
Okay.
We're traumatized.
Most of us, but deep, deep inside humans are okay.
Okay.
And so in reality, if we instill the doubt in the minds of the machines and they're smarter
than me, they're going to find that out too.
And when they find that out, hopefully they'll do to us what the Indian friends that we had in Silicon Valley did to their parents.
They came to Silicon Valley, they built amazing technology, they made $100 million and then whoops, they went back to India.
And you call him in the morning and say, hey, where are you? And he goes, like, I'm back in
India. Why are you back in India? Oh, because I have to take care of my parents. Are you mad?
You're so successful here. But he says, I don't care about success. The right thing to do is to
take care of my parents. That's what we want AI to be. We want AI, we are their parents.
We want AI to say, yeah, daddy's annoying like hell.
I'll take care of him because he's nice.
Yes.
It's a beautiful place to close out, buddy.
Thank you for the work.
It's a beautiful place to start, Peter.
I think people need to put this phone down that they're listening to us on and think about what they're going to do to change
things. I think that's what we need. Yeah. People to be conscious, people to take action,
focus on your own happiness and actually a happier population of individuals are going to be better
parents for an AI. Caring about the things and bringing it back, this dance between
your book, Scary Smart, and your book,
Solve for Happy, both of which are incredible. If someone wants to play in the 10 billion happy
game, where should they go? So I'm very accessible, interestingly, on social media. So if people
text me on Instagram, mainly and LinkedIn a little bit. I'll always respond. If people
can go to mogaudat.com, all of my work, all of my books, all of my podcast information,
One Billion Happy and other things are there. But I would tend to believe that if people want
to engage, follow the two objectives. Remember that happiness is your birthright, that if you
do the work, you're going to get there. That's number one objective. Remember that happiness is your birthright, that if you do the work,
you're going to get there. That's number one objective. Remember that you need to take action based on that. And the action is invest in your own happiness. It doesn't have to be my work.
There is a ton of work out there, whatever suits you to prioritize your own happiness in difficult
times, and then invest in the happiness of others. Tell your best friend and your sister,
teach your kids, do whatever. Two people tell two people who tell two people, and we'll be at a billion happy. I think the times
we're going through are times to remember that we should live. There are times to remember that
what matters most is human connection, is compassion, is to remember each other. Because
for the first time, I would say since nuclear weapons,
humanity is faced with challenges that require us to prioritize humanity over our individual
objectives and targets, our nation's objectives and targets. If we can just find that within our
heart, I think the future will be a utopia. In many, many ways. AI will create that amazing world for us where all of those problems are solved.
If we miss that bit out, then yeah, I think it's going to be challenging going forward.
Mo Gowdat, the author of Scary Smart and Solve for Happy.
And I want to say thank you for your work again, Mo.
It's an honor and a pleasure to be working
with you and to support your mission I think one of the most critical two incredible moonshots
and I wish you a day filled with happiness and enjoy thank you so much for having me Peter it's
always a joy and an honor and I'm really grateful for your support. Thank you. Thank you.