Stuff You Should Know - Thrill to the Stunning Bicameral Mind Hypothesis
Episode Date: August 4, 2022Psychologist Julian Jaynes came up with a stunning hypothesis in 1976, that human consciousness only developed in the last 3000 years. And he seemed to have proof in ancient texts. Scholars have been ...picking it apart ever since and today we join the club.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hey friends when you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn?
So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lisa in Manitoba who got the idea to Airbnb the backyard guest house over childhood home now
The extra income helps pay her mortgage. So yeah, you might not realize it
But you might have an Airbnb to find out what your place could be earning at air bnb.ca
Slash host hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
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What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place?
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Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey and welcome to the podcast, I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too and this is stuff
You should know the ongoing
amazing mind-blowing
edition
You've been into this stuff lately. What's going on with you?
I don't know. I don't know man, but yes, I'm definitely into it lately. It's weird
approaching 50
existential crisis I
Don't know about crisis. Maybe more like pondering existential pondering. I don't think it's a crisis yet
I've still got five years till 50. So give me time. Are you 45? I thought you were
47 I'm 45 and eight ninths
Yeah, you got time
Yeah, great. Thank you for that
But no, there's no like one thing that's making me say like hey, when did humans become conscious or when did humans become?
Intelligent or what do we do if aliens come down like for some reason?
It's just maybe a little more appealing to me than it has been in the past lately. I don't know
But yes, I'm definitely into this kind of thing right now and this stuff what we're gonna talk about today
It's based on a house tough works article that Robert Lam wrote and I'm not at all surprised that Robert Lam is into this
But I just want to note that I've heard about this years and years and years ago and have been meaning to do an
Article or an episode on it. So I don't want you to think this is something you just stumbled across
This is actually the fruition of years of planning and hope and dreams
coming to pass in
Maybe the best episode we'll ever make
And of course Robert and not Robert Lam the lead singer of the band Chicago
Just to make there's another Robert Lam and he was in Chicago
Still is in Chicago. Is that Peter Satara stage name? No
Satara was the bass player and part lead singer
Along with Robert Lam who played keyboards and also sang lead on some and before Terry Kath died
He played guitar and also sang so they had three singers in the early days of Chicago
That's just confusing but none of them are our colleague
Robert Lam who along with our colleague Joe had been doing stuff to blow your mind for many many years another great show
Yeah, and I didn't check but I would place a substantial amount of money on the idea that they have their own
Episode on this Julie and Jane's bicameral mind
I bet they have and we should also shout out philosophy for life psychology today and
Frontiers in psychology and I'm gonna make one up
Psychology food young okay. I've got two more that aren't made up
late star codex and
poster name hazard on the site less wrong
It sounds like a great source. It is hazard knows what he's talking about. Oh and one more
I'm sorry a guy named Joff Ward or Jeff Ward, but you know when they say yeah, Joff
Yeah on medium so all of those combined with Robert Lam's article the coalescent again
Probably the greatest episode we'll ever do. Yeah, and I sort of get some of this
I think you're gonna help me out some because I do have some questions
That I'll just throw out here and there because at times I found myself reading this stuff and going yeah, but isn't that just blank?
Okay, great. I'll do my best to answer and you're probably right when you're thinking that the answer's probably like yes
All right. Well, I mean, I guess we should say then that the whole
Hypothesis is that we're gonna be kind of breaking down today is
Controversial and it's not provable necessarily scientifically speaking. Mm-hmm. So it's sort of one of those
I mean, I think it goes beyond thought experiment for sure definitely into true hypothesis land
But it was proposed by a psychologist here in the United States named Julian Janes in the mid 1970s, of course
Yeah, the year I was born
Yeah, 76 baby
so what he proposed was an answer to a long-standing question and that was
When did humans become conscious like when did consciousness emerge?
Is it something that came along like in the earliest archaic humans?
Is it something that came along much later than that and how could we ever possibly answer that?
Like what relics have been left in?
history
In prehistory that would say like hey, this is evidence of of consciousness
And Julian Janes took that up and he did it as an outsider
Which was a huge strike against him because automatically
Legitimate scientists are like well, I can't build upon this theory possibly this man is in a actually in my field of consciousness studies
But the thing is is this this hypothesis is so
Well liked it's just roundly like people just like it
It's just such an interesting hypothesis that it just won't go away
It hasn't gone away and in fact there's like a Julian Janes Institute
There's like groups that have sprung up based on this hypothesis and what he says in a very small nutshell is that sometime
About 1,000 2,000 years ago
Humans became conscious in the way that we understand consciousness today
They developed the ability to think about thinking they developed the ability to think about that other people are thinking
they developed basically what's called subjective introspection and then as a result of that they
Almost automatically gained free will in volition
So what he's saying is that if we went back in time in the way back machine Chuck and we met somebody who lived
3,000 years ago 4,000 years ago
They would not be a conscious human in the way that we understand conscious humans
that's right and he thinks that it was a learned thing and
And the idea that he throws down is that our our mind our brain is or was rather
Very important was
Because it no longer is right by cameral
Which means split into two parts and we'll get to some actual science about the hemispheres of the brain later on
but in this case he means split into two parts where you have a
Part that makes decisions and a part that follows and that neither one of them were conscious and
And here's where I get a little tripped up
Okay, right out right out of the gate sure is basically he says that instead of an internal dialogue which
We all have in which indicates a consciousness
Like us talking to ourselves us saying things like everything from like, you know, hey
I get up and go do this to just internally thinking about things like
humans do that instead of that
We were sort of like human zombies and that we were creatures of habit
We had routines and behaviors that we followed to a tee and whenever something disrupted that behavior
Which is when like a conscious mind you would think would speak up
that instead of that the
In external agent in this case, they thought they were gods
Would enter their brain and create an auditory hallucination
Yeah, and that they unquestioningly obeyed that auditory hallucination and that's what helped them get through novel
Situations that they didn't have like a basically a prescribed script for you know a mindless
Automatic thing something new came along that got in their way. This God would speak to them and say go around that rock
It wasn't there yesterday. Don't worry about it. Just go around it and it could be one of their gods
It could be an ancestor guiding them. I think one
One I think the Sumerians maybe made reference to angels walking beside them
Or and this is really important later on. It's a big part of Jane's hypothesis
It could be your local ruler the divine king who's in charge of you and everybody else that you know and love and have
Ever lived among it could be that person guiding you in your life, too
and the idea is
They these people heard this in the same way like you said that we hear our own internal dialogue
But they never chalked it up to themselves. It was always coming from the outside
All right, here's I guess where I have my first issue kind of grasping this is
Is there were no gods speaking to them and guiding them? This was just their internal dialogue
They just didn't know it
Yes, yes, yes, there was no gods
But to them and this is a really important point to them
It definitely was a God talking to them or an ancestor talking to them
and in the same way that if if an actual God got into your brain and like was speaking to you and you
Responded to it if you could have looked at their brains lighting up presumably in like a wonder machine
It would it would respond the same way
So it was entirely real to them in the same way that a placebo effect has real effects on your body
This would have been the same thing and then in addition to that it was culturally supported
everyone that they knew
believed the same thing that the gods were talking to them and
So like that just lent support to this idea so that no no one questioned it. It was just that's the way it was
Well, so this I guess brings me to
Let me macro this out a little bit in my own dumb brain and it may just be 20 a century 21st century person
thinking right that I'm engaging in
but if the idea is that
Before this there was no consciousness
But what we're really saying is there actually was consciousness. They just didn't recognize it as such
Is that the whole point was that if you do not recognize it as consciousness?
Therefore, you are not conscious. Yes, because you're not
Experiencing consciousness in any way that we would recognize as you being conscious. You're just kind of
Julian James referred to what this guy's doing now. Okay, so so but the thing is is there's like a lot of
Scholarly discussion on like okay, what did James mean exactly how literal was he because he used words like automaton
He never called them zombies other people called them like zombies
But that no one talked about zombies back then. No, that's true
But well evil dead head or not evil dead living dead night living dead had come out by then. Yeah, but it wasn't like today
Okay, no, no, I know they're definitely over
So he called them automaton's and it's essentially the same thing that they were they just behaved automatically
They didn't stop and think about how they felt they and this is really important to Chuck
Of course, they still had feelings. They had feelings about the people that were in their kin group
They had feelings about their local ruler. They had feelings about
You know
Stubbing their toe. It's not like they just had no inner life whatsoever
It's that they weren't they didn't reflect on their inner life
They didn't think about thinking they didn't they didn't have what we would recognize as consciousness
And in the terms that James is describing consciousness, which is a really narrow definition of consciousness
And then on top of that, he also goes to great lengths to say, hey
I understand that you're gonna get all up in a tizzy that I'm saying that these people weren't conscious
I'm not talking about consciousness in general and I think that you over over estimate just how much
consciousness makes up our lives
Okay, how about we take a break? Okay
I'm gonna go rip a bong
Kidding
We'll take a break. We'll come back and we'll talk about what lots of other stuff right after this
Hey everybody when you're staying at an Airbnb
You might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could what could it earn?
So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lauren and Nova Scotia who realized she could Airbnb her cozy backyard treehouse
And the extra income helps cover her bills and pays for her travel
So yeah, you might not realize it, but you might have an Airbnb too
Find out what your place could be earning at Airbnb dot ca slash host
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place?
Because I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god. Seriously. I swear and you won't have to send an
SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh, man. And so my husband Michael
Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life
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I'm Mangesh Atikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology
But from the moment I was born it's been a part of my life in India
It's like smoking you might not smoke
But you're gonna get secondhand astrology and lately
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you it got weird fast
Tantric curses major league baseball teams canceled marriages k-pop
But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world can crashing down situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
And my whole view on astrology
It changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer. I think your ideas are gonna change too
All right, so I've kind of read my head around what this guy's saying now. It's uh, I will admit it's a little navel-gazy for me
On when it comes to certain types of philosophy and hypotheses I get a little bit like
What's the word
Maybe I can be a little too concrete or if the French might
Concrete and literal yeah in my thinking
Because it's not you know Friday night in college
It like two in the morning kind of discussion, right? So I think that's where I am now
But I do think it's very interesting in that he I mean, I think a lot of this is very interesting
But I think it's interesting that he thought around the first or second millennium
BC is when things
to him changed and a consciousness began to emerge because of
Well eventually language, but specifically metaphor
Which is to say that all of a sudden we could make analogies in our brain. We could link things together
we
saw ourselves as
Almost as if they were characters
Mm-hmm ourselves were characters that had like choices that they could make his characters
Yeah, and that as these things like connected in the brain
Then it created just an effect like a domino effect basically. Yeah, where all of a sudden
We could work out our own solutions or we knew we were capable of working out our own solutions
Well, it wasn't God saying a God saying walk around the rock
They realized it was ourselves making the decision to walk around the rock. Yes, but it's but in part of that that also
Required them to be able to reflect on the idea like you said that that they were able to now make their own decisions, right?
And you said something earlier where you're like, you know, you were talking about your own internal dialogue
Where you you think hey, I should get up and go outside for a second
Like that's that's different, right? You're thinking about you yourself and you realize that you are thinking about yourself
That's modern consciousness. What somebody who was a bicameral person during this time would have thought is
Get up and go outside
And they would stand up and go outside without questioning because God had just instructed them to do that
So it must be important and they didn't think about where it came from
They definitely didn't think it was from themselves and they didn't reflect on it. They just obeyed it
That's Jane's position and that if you compare those two things you're talking about two totally different forms of mental life
And it's so different. He said that this is that what we understand is consciousness
Just wasn't around until a couple thousand years ago
Okay, I can buy that. I like it as a hypothesis. I can swim in this pool. Okay, good good
But here's the thing it's really important to realize like you said something that you're a literalist, right?
That's actually really appropriate to approach this because Julian James one of the very radical things that he did was he took
the ancients
literally because when he started looking around and we'll talk more about this later, but he was looking for those artifacts that would prove his
Hypothesis or lend support to it at least and he was an expert in ancient languages, right?
So he was it was really appropriate
he could actually read Sumerian and Mesopotamian and he took what they were saying when they said things like
You know the gods told us to do this that that they thought that the gods told them to do this
Not that they were using metaphors so he took them literally on their word and there's a real departure from anybody else
Who's ever examined the ancients of what they were saying?
Yeah, and I think it's also something we should point out now even though it comes up later in our research is that
When you think of an auto I guess an automatic society or a society of automatons
That's not to say that they weren't successful. He's describing some of the most
successful, you know ancient civilizations that existed
But I think his contention is that it was a hive mind all working together as automatons that allowed this stuff to
Get accomplished and not the conscious mind right and he didn't I don't think he ever used it as like
I don't think ever explicitly said that it was an emergent property of a hive mind
But that's kind of what he was describing kind of like if you take one stone cutter and one stone mason and three stone
Carriers and multiply that unit by 500 and give it a year you have a ziggurat built
That that's just that's just all those people knew what to do
They knew their position and their place and they just did it and so yeah
You could totally do that with people who are thinking in this way and weren't conscious
You could probably actually get it done more easily than you could with people who stopped and thought I'm above this
This work is is not suited for me. I should be doing something else or why is the form and being so mean to me today?
Like they didn't think like that under Jane's
Hypothesis so they would probably get the work done more
Efficiently at least more quietly. I would guess oh, I mean
Consciousness proposes her brought along a whole host of problems. It's true. I imagine
If you're the ruling class, I think one thing that's interesting is that you mentioned
About what what is it Janes?
Not Jynes Janes. Yeah Janes thought about I love Robert Lam's Janes Addixon joke in here by the way
That was mine. Oh, that was yours. Mm-hmm. No way to go. Thanks
You said Janes says and then in parentheses you put ha
It's pretty good joke, but what Jane said was that
And it's something you mentioned earlier was that consciousness I think we think consciousness plays
too big of a role in what is actually a life that is can largely be
Still automatic on a lot of levels. Yeah, and this is from the actual book in 1976 and it's a little little mind-blowing
I kind of like it
Consciousness is a much smaller part of our mental life than we're conscious of
Because we cannot be conscious of what we are not conscious of it's like asking a flat and this is where it kind of comes home to me
It's like a asking a flashlight in a dark room to search around for something that does not have any light shining upon it
So that's where it comes home to me is when you and hey, it's metaphor. So how about that? Mm-hmm
He he lays down a metaphor that makes me understand it a little bit more
Yeah, because you know, wherever the flashlight looks there's light in his light
Yeah, and his point is is wherever your conscious mind looks there's consciousness
but that doesn't mean that there's consciousness all over the place and
Yeah, Robert Lam does uses a really good example of unloading a dishwasher, right?
Like when you're unloading the dishwasher, especially if you're one of those people who put like all of your knives in one place
All of your forks in one part of the basket all your spoons and so on right a maniac in other words
sensible human
If you do it like that, it's you can you can just be on autopilot because you've done it so many times
But when you do something like drop a fork, that's out of the norm
That's a novel thing that doesn't happen every time and so in the bicameral mind
God would have said
I command thee to pick up thine fork butter fingers and you would lean over and pick up the fork and that was that
Instead you you might not even think about picking up the fork. You might do that automatically
But it's still out of the norm. It's still different
You have to kind of think about it a little more than just unloading the dishwasher
Now if you take that dishwasher metaphor Chuck mm-hmm and you realize that
It's three five nine thousand years ago. There were no dishwashers. There was no ice cream scoop
There was no cookie scoop. There was no avocado splitter. There was nothing like that. Wait, what's that?
Is that a thing now? Yeah, you don't know you don't have one of those. No. Oh, I'll send you one. You're missing out
It's a it's a multi-tool for cutting avocados
Getting the pit out and then slicing them as you scoop them out
They're essential as a matter of fact. All right, I do pretty well with my knife, but I would love to see one of these
Okay, I'm gonna get you one for Christmas
So the point is is that like there wasn't a big variety of stuff
So there wasn't that many novel situations like we encounter novel situations like almost constantly
That's just modern life and that's the basis of James's
Like hypothesis that the reason that consciousness evolves is because we started to get faced with more and more novel
situations on a much more frequent basis
So it maybe it became inefficient for God to be talking to us every 30 seconds
Or maybe we just got better at thinking for ourselves and consciousness kind of evolved out of that
But the point is life was much less complex back then so you could have something like a bicameral mind
You could have somebody who who consciousness hadn't evolved in yet because they hadn't been introduced to enough experience in life
and with that experience came the
The the fork falling on the floor in other words
Yeah, or you know, there's a lot more dishes to put away in much more different dishes to put away rather than just forks
You know, okay, you know what I'm saying. Yeah, or you have one fork and you just carry it with you everywhere
You know, like you don't have to think about that. There was just less stuff to think about is what I'm saying
Well, now you're speaking my language because if I had it my way every member of my family would have
One fork one spoon one knife one bowl one cup one plate. Yeah
And they were all responsible for keeping them clean and put away man every time I hear one cup
I'm like, there's a joke in there somewhere, but I even if I come up with that
I wouldn't be able to say it. Oh
Yeah, that's true. All right. So now we're at the point where we can talk a little bit more about this idea of metaphor and
language sort of bringing about this change and
So what James was throwing down in 1976
besides apparently a bunch of roach clips was a
The emergence of agricultural society is kind of changing everything and that all of a sudden
We are not living in groups of you know, 10 or 12 people that are hunting and gathering where
Even if there was sort of a leader within that group, it was very easy to disseminate information and follow that leader
Once we started settling down
planting and growing things engaging in trade with other people's
That that did a lot of things that complicated every process and it meant that societies were much much larger and
That rulers couldn't necessarily
Speak directly to people anymore
Yeah, so the another part not to specific people like they could lay down and eat it and that would get disseminated in other words
right, so like I've read before back when I was an anthropology student that hunter gatherer bands usually numbered no more than 30
People like that was the absolute mass and once you reach that you'd split off into two different bands
So yeah, like the person in charge was like part of your moment-to-moment life
And if you're if you have if you're suddenly in a civilization and you're building a ziggurat for somebody's probably not daining to talk to you
and part of Jane's
Hypothesis is that this this bicameralism emerged from you know all those new novel situations like learning to plant crops learning to
domesticate cows learning to engage in trade and talk to other people that we started to like
need direction from the gods more and more and
It started to kind of get faster and faster
But in the meantime
It was a form of social control because one of the people you could think was talking to you was that local ruler who you were
Building the ziggurat for so that would be a way to keep an increasingly large population in check
Right and as they got bigger and bigger and they started, you know trading with people like we were saying that
You know, that's was sort of the beginning of the end for his
Not his bicameral mind, but the bicameral mind and one of the biggest problems with all of that was when we started writing stuff down
because all of a sudden
This these auditory hallucinations that he felt like everyone was having to instruct them on what to do
There was there was now stuff down on paper
That you could read and you could refer to and go back to and pass around and post on the
you know on tablets at the walls of the city or whatever and
That was all of a sudden you weren't waiting around for a god to tell you what to do. You could just go read that tablet
Yeah, so the power that we gave to the gods commands were kind of transferred to
The written word and yeah, that seems to have been like the death knell for the bicameral mind, right?
And there's something really interesting that's worth pointing out
James apparently didn't have any high hypothesis on what came before the bicameral mind
Because he said it started as a result of the increasing
Organization that agriculture brought along and that there wasn't bicameral minds before then
But he doesn't say what was before then and people even asked him like okay. What about you know?
Hunter gatherer societies that are still around today, you know
Where would they have gotten consciousness and he never really answered that but it's it's definitely worth pointing out that that's an open question
But he basically says bicameralism
Or the bicameral mind I should say bicameralism is the Senate in the house
But the bicameral mind lasted from the advent of agriculture about 11,000 years ago till about
2,000 ish
Maybe 1,500 or no 3,000 ish years ago. So it was about a 7,000 year span of
Bicameral mind and then as life got more and more sophisticated. We started thinking for ourselves and
what he says is
that language and in particular the written word but also language got more and more
Sophisticated and as they got more sophisticated
There was more of a potential for us to start thinking in metaphors and metaphors as you said is the basis of
Consciousness and the way we think in Julian Jane's mind and there's actually a lot of support for that Charles may I oh
Please so that post by hazard on less wrong. Oh, yeah, let's see what hazard has to say
It's called consciousness as metaphor what James has to offer and what hazard says
Is that it like hazard just puts out like a paragraph from like an economic report and it's about
Recessions in Europe and it talks about Germany plunging into recession or the UK falling deeper into recession or France
Emerging from a recession and what hazard points out is that all of these descriptors
Imagine a recession as a three-dimensional physical thing that we can entire nations can move into and out of that's not true
Recessions aren't three-dimensional. They aren't physical things. You can't emerge from them
You can't fall into them, but we just think about it like that and that's metaphor
So right we think in metaphors so frequently
We don't even recognize it anymore and that was James point that
When we gain the ability to think in metaphors we became conscious we started thinking for ourselves
We became capable of introspection and it was the evolution of language that led us to that point
Like basically it just we just hit a threshold where suddenly language is sophisticated enough that it could unlock new thoughts in our brains and
in turn it unlocked consciousness. I mean that makes sense because
You know and a metaphor is literally not literal and if you were if you did if that was not a thing yet
Then it chibes with the whole notion that everything they were doing was very literal up to that point
Yes, and that that would have been a pretty seismic shift
If you can compare like with like, you know all of a sudden yeah, and you even see this in like
like movies that are trying to emphasize how
Backwards or back in time, you know some group is
And they emphasize it by having that group take everything literally usually to comic effect
Like in Kingpin when Randy Quaid was an Amish person, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah
He took everything literally and it was hilarious hilarity ensued
But it was also to demonstrate how just simple and behind he was he couldn't he couldn't engage in metaphors
He didn't think like that. That's actually based on I don't know whether on purpose or not, but that's based on
Julian Jane's hypothesis. Yeah, and you know what that's a nice segue to
children
Because when you have a human child
It's very funny to see how literal they are for those first years. Yeah, and that they don't understand metaphor
they don't understand certainly don't understand things like sarcasm and
You have to change the way you talk to get little kids because they do take everything so literally and think so literally and
children are our reference are referenced with James at the idea that I
Think what age like kids up until the age of five basically
Don't really have much of a human consciousness
And it's and you know the idea that children are just little narcissist walking around is a fun joke
But it's true because they don't know that other people think differently than they think up until about the age of five
They don't realize there are other
Lines of thought and ways of thinking and ways of feeling about things right that other that other people have exactly
that's what's called theory of mind right and
On slate star codex Scott Alexander went to great lengths to basically say
The that Julian Jane's using the term consciousness just really muddied the waters unnecessarily
Yeah, you just use theory of mind
It would have made a lot more sense and Scott Anders Scott Alexander
I think I said Anderson Scott Alexander makes some really a really good case for it
And that's kind of what he's pointing out is you know like it's it's possible that
Because you learn
It's not you're not born with it. You would you learn it through experience
It just kind of evolves in you as you grow as a person and experience more and more novel stuff and interact with people more
almost like a
Cosm of what happened in civilization a few thousand years ago. Yeah, you gain theory of mind
So the fact that you can learn and that you do learn something that
Integral to consciousness
Really supports the idea that maybe consciousness as we understand it was learned it did evolve
It was an emergent property of an increasingly sophisticated language
It's a fascinating thing to see happen in a child's life
To see these little light bulbs come on
Seemingly out of nowhere, but you realize it is you know, very much a learned thing man. I bet very fascinating
All right, I say we take a break and we'll talk a little bit about
Just some other fascinating stuff when we get back right after this
Hey friends when you're staying at an Airbnb you might be like me wondering could my place be an Airbnb and if it could
What could it earn? So I was pretty surprised to hear about Lisa in Manitoba who got the idea to Airbnb the backyard guest house of her
Childhood home now the extra income helps pay her mortgage. So yeah, you might not realize it
But you might have an Airbnb to find out what your place could be earning at air bnb dot c a slash host
Hey, I'm Lance Bass host of the new I hard podcast frosted tips with Lance Bass
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when questions arise or times get tough or you're at the end of the road
Okay, I see what you're doing. Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would Lance Bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation if you do you've come to the right place?
Because I'm here to help this. I promise you. Oh god. Seriously. I swear and you won't have to send an
SOS because I'll be there for you. Oh man. And so my husband Michael
Um, hey, that's me. Yeah, we know that Michael and a different hot sexy teen crush boy bander each week to guide you through life
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I'm Mangeh Shatikular and to be honest, I don't believe in astrology
But from the moment I was born it's been a part of my life in India
It's like smoking you might not smoke
But you're gonna get second-hand astrology and lately
I've been wondering if the universe has been trying to tell me to stop running and pay attention
Because maybe there is magic in the stars if you're willing to look for it
So I rounded up some friends and we dove in and let me tell you it got weird fast
Tantric curses major league baseball teams canceled marriages k-pop
But just when I thought I had a handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
My whole world can crashing down
Situation doesn't look good. There is risk to father
And my whole view on astrology
It changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer, I think your ideas are gonna change too
Listen to Skyline Drive and the iHeart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever you get your podcasts
I was gonna summarize what we were gonna talk about but I didn't feel like it all of a sudden before the break
I think that's nice. It's loosey-goosey
I think that's how it should be. Can I talk about one of my favorite parts of this this
The hypothesis definitely is we were we're kind of jumping around now, but jumping back to where
We talked about
Writing things down all of a sudden
It was around here in human history
That there was a collapse of societies
In the Mediterranean around the Middle East. It was called the late bronze age collapse
And it didn't take that long and it met like these very advanced sort of societies in a matter of decades a number of them
Uh, a lot of their culture was lost
That was it's sort of they called it in fact the Greek dark ages and it lasted for hundreds of years
and
Jiving with this was when humans started to lose and it kind of all makes sense that they were losing
Um with the written word with metaphor and language coming along. They were losing this voice as a god
They were they felt like they were losing their gods because all of a sudden the gods were silent to them
They weren't speaking to them in their mind because they were gaining consciousness
And here's where it gets super interesting
James has a hypothesis
That says it's about here where
Where the organized religions that we know today were born out of a kind of nostalgia basically
For these gods that left them, right? Yeah, I think that idea is really interesting
It is and I mean the the timetable really jibes and it is really interesting that that late bronze age collapse happened when it did
Um, but but the idea is not just nostalgia, but also uh desperation
Yeah, because these people had guidance. They didn't have to think and this poor
set of generations over a few hundred years
Are maybe some of the most pitiful humans that ever lived
Yeah, because they went from just knowing what to do because the gods told them what to do to having no idea
What to do because their gods had abandoned them and they that as a result of that they started forming
Uh religions they started, um, you know beseeching the gods to to give them a sign
This is when oracles started to become a thing profits started to become a thing
superstitions
Like omens grew like there was a Sumerian omen if a horse comes into your house and bites you you will soon die
And your family will soon be scattered stuff like that, right?
So this this didn't exist before because the gods were in charge of everything now
They were suddenly gone and I just think it must be must have been really pitiful and dark to live through that time
Yeah, I mean they were lost I guess
Mm-hmm as a people
Yeah, and and I mean that was figuratively they were lost but literally too because that late Bronze Age collapse
They think was brought on at least in part by climate change and probably invasion
There's this mysterious group called the sea peoples that seem to have overrun different cultures
And so like culture after culture would fall those people would become refugees
Descend upon another culture end up
Pushing that to the breaking point that culture would fall. It was just like a domino effect of collapsing cultures all at once
So they really felt like the gods had abandoned them like they'd angered them or something like that. They were genuinely lost
So what James did uh to help support his hypothesis, which makes sense was to go back and look
at literature
And of the time and see if it sort of supported this
I know one of the things he wrote a lot about in his book in 1976 was that it was Homer's Iliad
Because he's kind of like here's proof right here. I mean if you look at the Iliad
They were basically automatons. They they just listened to the gods and did what the gods said
and
they substituted um like the words that we would use
To substitute in for the Iliad to indicate consciousness just weren't there
Right, so they were more like physical descriptors like my belly was quivering or my heart was fluttering or something like that not
Um, I think the example that's used is fear filled Agamemnon's mind
Yeah, well, there wasn't a mind. So they would describe fear in other physical terms, right?
It's like a stomachache
Yeah, and that it wasn't until later on when um new translations were coming along that people who were now conscious
Turned the stuff into metaphor and James is saying they didn't mean it as metaphor before
They meant it as literally and they didn't have descriptors for minds and when they say the gods were guiding them along
They meant it literally and he was saying that the the Iliad in particular
Um started to be written about 1100 BCE and then around 700 BCE
It was like in its form that we see it today
but along the way it was kind of added to and it
It it was written during the transition from bicameral mind to modern consciousness
So right he sees it as basically a document that that traces that transition. Yeah, very interesting. There was some other stuff too, right?
Literature wise. Yeah, so that wasn't the only one. Um, he also found in some of the religious texts
Like evidence that people felt like God had abandoned them. There's something a Mesopotamian poem
called the Lidlul Bel Nemeke
And it says my God has forsaken me and disappeared
My goddess has failed me and keeps at a distance the good angel who walked beside me has departed
And again, most other scholars would say
There's something happened. This guy was blue. He was in a funk. Who knows, but it's all metaphorical and James is saying
No, this guy had God talking to him. Now he doesn't anymore
So should we talk a little bit about actual science here with the brain?
Yeah, I think so because this is something we've covered before in the past when we talked about
uh alien hand syndrome
Oh, is that where it came from? From a gazillion years ago. Um, we
There were there was evidence that when the
Um, there there were certain epilepsy epilepsy patients who where it was so severe
That they would uh sever the corpus callosum undergo a corpus callostomy
And the corpus callosum is basically the the thing that makes the two hemispheres of the brain
communicate with one another
And with alien hand syndrome, I think they found that it could be brought on by
this surgery
Where all of a sudden the left arm was doing something and without being told to do it by the the right brain
And they have uh
Janes I think are people uh since janes and was it janes or was it just people trying to uh
Uh
Sort of proof his theory. I think that people saw this these experiments as support for janes's theory
Okay, so they looked at these surgeries these corpus callosumies
And they they're called split brain patients basically where they you know after the surgery
It's not like they felt all out of whack. They felt like a regular, you know, whole human being
But they learned that there were these little things that would pop up where a hemisphere would take an action
Uh based on this information that it didn't have access to and the example they gave was
Uh, if they like instructed the right hemisphere to just walk to the kitchen
Uh, and they would get up and walk to the kitchen, but they would say hey, why did you get up and walk to the kitchen?
The language the left hemisphere the language dominant hemisphere
Uh is the only part that can respond to that
But the left hemisphere doesn't know why it got up and the really fascinating part is that
They wouldn't say well, I don't know. I'm not sure why I just did that. I just did it
They would make something up on the spot and say, you know, I felt like getting up and uh going to make a bowl of cereal
Right, and it's it's almost like we had this natural instinct to BS somebody
When faced with a question that we can't answer about why we did something
Yeah, because the the left hemisphere wants to explain things it wants to tell the story
Using metaphors usually and this is this became the left brain interpreter theory and it kind of supports
Jane's idea that the the consciousness is a flashlight looking for a dark spot in a room and it just can't find it
and um the idea is that
That the the left hemisphere creates the explanation the stories for our behavior even if it doesn't know why we did something
But that's just what it does and there's a saying in consciousness research
Among people who subscribe to the left brain interpreter theory is that
Consciousness isn't in the oval office like it thinks it is it's more in the press office
Like it's the one that's public facing and explaining what you're doing, but it might not have all the information
So sometimes it's just BSing
It's very interesting stuff. Yeah
Uh and sort of tying in with the kid thing
Um, who is this? How do you pronounce the name of that one researcher kushjin?
Ashton kutcher k k u i j s e e n
Oh, yeah
I'm just gonna say kushjin. I think that's pretty pretty dead on that's the the person who runs the julian jane's
Um, uh society today because jane's died in 1997. I don't think we ever pointed that out. Yeah, uh,
But this person basically says hey if you look at
people who hear voices
And that's not necessarily to say someone that has schizophrenia because that is
uh one percent
Of the population
Apparently is the highest 10 percent of the population
And can you know does hear things basically
so these uh
It's the idea of the the command voice basically is to to do something and
If you're hearing a voice that says, you know move to the window and look out on the street
That's one thing if you hear a voice that says take the knife from the drawer and
You know put it in someone's head
Then that's another thing all together
and uh, we were talking about kids earlier
You know the idea of the imaginary friend
Kind of jibes with this lack of consciousness 65 percent of kids
Uh have imaginary friends. I had an imaginary friends. My daughter had uh per year is what she called her ghost friends
Which is a lot creepier way to put it
Uh, but I think that's all just sort of to say that like
That nine percent of people who are hearing voices
Who are not
Suffering from schizophrenia is that's proof of that initial
bicameral mind at work, right? Yeah, and and I mean, um,
Julian janes believed that children go from a bicameral state to a conscious state as evidence by that development of theory of mind
Or as evidence by imaginary friends
Um, and that they they're kind of recreating what society or the human species went through thousands of years ago as they age and develop
Very interesting. So, um, there you might be out there, especially if you're a concretist like chuck
Um thinking like you you might be rocking in your seat right now face flushed about to faint out of rage
Oh, wait, is my camera on?
Like this is by definition
Unscientific it's not provable in the form that janes put it forth. It's more of a concept
Uh an idea and apparently he was well aware of that. He didn't tout it as as anything more than that
but um kushin
The director of the julien jane society likes to point out that
It was he was basically laying the groundwork for an entirely new way of looking at things
So that other people could come along and you know, take it up and and figure out
How he was wrong how he was right what needed fleshing out what made sense in its that form
And uh people have been doing that again
This is this is like a crackpot theory that has never gone away
Yeah, because the more people pay attention to it and the more we start to understand about the brain
The more sense it kind of makes uh, and it it seems to be gaining traction rather than losing it over the
Like 50 years that it's been around
I think it's interesting. I don't hate this stuff. I'm not rocking in my chair
David Bowie loved it. He said that the um the origin of consciousness is the breakdown of bicameral mind
I think that was it the book song
No, he said it was one of the um top hundred books to read
Oh, all right. I believe that totally. It's a very Bowie thing
for sure
And other people too
And then one other thing another way to put all this to kind of sum it up that I saw it put is that um, we developed at some point
Back in the in history a left brain bias
That's it, you know, which kind of ties into your original view of the whole thing which was
You know, they weren't conscious that they were conscious
Right. I like that
You got anything else?
I might but I might just not be aware of it
man
As I said, this is the best episode we've ever done
Since Chuck Giggles, which everybody loves I think then it's time for listener mail
Uh, this is about the freedom of the press
episode
And this was a josh request
Hey guys, how freedom of the press works struck a particular chord with me
I used to work as a science teacher
But was finding more and more students were being duped by pseudoscience on the internet
And weren't being provided the tools to recognize this so I did a masters
in library and information science and now a school librarian on a mission to vanquish disinformation
Awesome. Uh, while I've included the topic of journalism in terms of approaching news critically
As with any online source of information your recent podcast
On how freedom of the press works really inspired me to put forward more information and content about media freedoms and the risks for journalists
Uh, here in sweden, uh, it's very easy to take freedom the press for granted
Last year in sympathy with my american colleagues. I put up a display of banned books
uh tracked by the ala
And each book had a tag
Listing the years and ranking
A book was challenged and I encouraged the students to guess what for it led to a lot of really good
That's it. I love this experiment. I've been students
I led to a lot of really good discussions many students
Hadn't realized the scale of how many books have been banned or challenged
We're horrified to see their own favorite books on display
And we're also shocked by the justification
As are we always
Now the coveted restrictions are being lifted. I'm very much looking forward to taking students to the world's first library of censored books
The dowet isaac library in the malmer
archives
As a new mouth. Yeah, uh, so that students can see the extent of
Both limitations on the press and media freedoms around the world
Uh, thanks again for the fascinating show and all around amazing series kind regards
Uh, medvengliga helsnegar
That is uh, must just be a
Salutation in swedish. Mm-hmm. That comes from miss miss alice
Antonsen she her hers. Thank you alice. That is amazing. I'm so glad we got to that listener mail because I've been proud of
That person for a very long time ever since that email came in
Totally, how about sweden, huh keeping the american dream alive? I love it
And chuck also before we sign off there's something i've been meaning to address that you said earlier
You said you have a dumb brain. No, you don't
Did I say that? Yeah, you did
Okay, so if you want to get in touch with us like alice did and show the world what a hero you are
We would love to hear that kind of thing. You can email us to stuff podcast at iheart radio dot com
Stuff you should know is a production of iheart radio for more podcasts my heart radio visit the iheart radio app
Apple podcasts are wherever you listen to your favorite shows
Hey, i'm lance bass host of the new iheart podcast frosted tips with lance bass
Do you ever think to yourself?
What advice would lance bass and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do you've come to the right place because i'm here to help and a different hot sexy teen crush boybander
Each week to guide you through life tell everybody you everybody
About my new podcast and make sure to listen
So we'll never ever have to say bye. Bye. Bye. Bye
Listen to frosted tips with lance bass on the iheart radio app apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcasts
I'm munga shatikler and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to believe
You can find in major league baseball international banks k-pop groups even the white house
But just when I thought I had a handle on this subject
Something completely unbelievable happened to me and my whole view on astrology changed
Whether you're a skeptic or a believer give me a few minutes because I think your ideas are about to change too
Listen to skyline drive on the iheart radio app apple podcasts or wherever you get your podcasts
Hey, y'all it's caroline hobby host of get real with caroline hobby interviewing the most fascinating people in national and beyond
I talked to artists. I talked to the wives of artists
I talked to women entrepreneurs who have created businesses who are moms who juggle a million hats and do it all
Each episode will leave you inspired feeling like you can accomplish your own dream and calling
Listen to new episodes of get real with caroline hobby every monday on the national podcast network available on iheart radio app
apple podcast or wherever you listen to podcast