Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 330: How This Plague Ends (and What It Tells Us About Human Nature) | Nicholas Christakis
Episode Date: March 15, 2021We all remember that fateful week, almost exactly a year ago, when it all seemed to sink in for so many of us–when Tom Hanks got sick, the NBA suspended games, and the (now former) Presiden...t addressed the nation in primetime. The big question now is: When and how will this plague end? My guest today has a clear vision for how things are likely to play out from from here. His name is Dr. Nicholas Christakis. He’s a physician, sociologist, and director of the Human Nature Lab at Yale University. He’s written a number of books, but there are two that we will discuss in this episode. His latest is called Apollo's Arrow: The Profound and Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on the Way We Live. The other book we’re going to talk about is on a related subject. It’s called Blueprint: The Evolutionary Origins of a Good Society. In it, Christakis argues that human beings are fundamentally good. In fact, as you will hear, it is our goodness that the virus exploits. One more order of business: when COVID began affecting our lives, most of us were in immediate crisis, wondering about the answers to very basic questions: How do I get food safely? How do I care for my children and/or do my job under less-than-ideal circumstances? Will my loved ones and I be safe? In response to our changing reality, we’ve used this podcast to help you figure out how to navigate our new world. We’ve spoken with experts about how to cope with this crisis, from dealing with anxiety and grief to parenting in a pandemic to worries about money. As you know, the practice of meditation undergirds all of the practical takeaways you hear us discuss on this podcast–and as you may or may not know, many of our podcast guests have contributed to our companion meditation app. We hope that you'll subscribe to the Ten Percent Happier app to learn how to care for yourself and others during crises (which are, after all, inevitable). To make it easier, we're offering 40% off the price of an annual subscription for our podcast listeners. We don’t do discounts of this size all the time, and of course nothing is permanent—so get this deal before it ends on April 1st by going to to https://www.tenpercent.com/march for 40% off your subscription. Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/nicholas-christakis-330 See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Before we jump into today's show, many of us want to live healthier lives, but keep
bumping our heads up against the same obstacles over and over again.
But what if there was a different way to relate to this gap between what you want to do and
what you actually do?
What if you could find intrinsic motivation for habit change that will make you happier
instead of sending you into a shame spiral?
Learn how to form healthy habits without kicking your own ass unnecessarily by taking our healthy habits course over on the 10% happier app. It's taught by the
Stanford psychologist Kelly McGonical and the Great Meditation Teacher Alexis
Santos to access the course. Just download the 10% happier app wherever you get
your apps or by visiting 10% calm. All one word spelled out. Okay on with the
show. to baby. This is Kiki Palmer on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcast.
From ABC, this is the 10% happier podcast. I'm Dan Harris.
Hey gang, we all remember that fateful week almost exactly a year ago when it all seemed to sink in for so many of us when Tom Hanks got sick, the NBA suspended
games and the now former president addressed the nation in prime time.
The big question now, one year hence, is when and how will this plague finally end?
My guest today has a pretty clear vision for how things are likely to play out from this
point on. His name is Dr. Nicholas Christakis.
He's a physician, sociologist, and director of the Human Nature Lab at Yale University.
He's written a number of books, but there are two that we're going to dig into today in
this episode.
His latest is called Apollo's Arrow, the profound and enduring impact of coronavirus on the
way we live.
The other book we're going to talk about is on a related subject.
It's called Blueprint, the evolutionary origins of a good society.
In it, Christakis argues that human beings are fundamentally good.
In fact, as you're going to hear, he believes it is our goodness that the virus exploits in order to spread and it is our goodness that will
ultimately allow us to beat the virus. One order of business though before we dive in.
When COVID started affecting our lives, most of us were in immediate crisis mode wondering how to
answer very basic questions such as, you know, how do I get food safely? How do I get to work? How
do I care for my kids? When and how will they go to school?
How do I do my job under deeply suboptimal circumstances?
In response to this changing reality,
we here on the 10% happier podcast,
really scrambled to figure out how to meet the moment
and help you navigate this new world.
As you know, we've spoken with experts about how to cope
with the crisis from dealing with anxiety and grief, to parenting in a pandemic, to financial concerns.
As I think you also know, the practice of meditation undergirds, pretty much all of the practical takeaways
you hear us discuss on the podcast.
And as you may or may not know, many of our podcast guests have also contributed to our companion meditation app.
We really hope that you will consider subscribing
to the aforementioned app,
which is also called 10% happier.
We really think, and I believe this quite strongly,
that the content on the app can help you take care of yourself
and other people during the various crises
which we are currently living through.
And let's be honest, there will always be crises.
To make subscribing easier, we're right now offering 40% off the price of an annual subscription
for our podcast listeners.
We don't do discounts of this size all the time, and of course, to get a little Buddhist,
nothing is permanent.
So go get this deal before it ends on April 1st by going to 10% dot com slash march.
That's 10% one word all spelled out dot com slash March
for 40% off your subscription.
We'll put a link to that in the show notes.
Okay, let's dive in now with my guest today,
Dr. Nicholas Christakis.
Nicholas, thanks for coming on the show.
Great to meet you.
Dan, thank you so much for having me.
So I've been following your work for a long time.
I've been talking about having you on forever.
So I'm delighted that we're finally able to make it happen.
And we're going to be posting this on the one-year anniversary
of when you know what hit the fan.
And we all kind of hunkered down or most of us hunkered
down. And I'm curious as we mark this kind of unhappy anniversary, where are we? Where are
we now? And how far do we have left to go? I think we have far in certain ways. It depends
on, I mean, there's a lot of conversation now about when will the pandemic be over and
when will life return to normal? A lot depends on how you define over or normal. So with your indulgence, I'd like to answer the question at some longer length,
because what I'm going to say is that we are not at the beginning of the end of this pandemic. We
are just at the end of the beginning. And here's what happens with these diseases, with these
serious pandemics like this, is that the virus has had an ecological release. What that means is that it's like an invasive species that
you release on an island somewhere, an untouched terrain, and the species just takes over. And
for the virus, our bodies provide that terrain. We had no natural immunity to this virus.
Once it leapt to our species and was not immediately contained,
and it's unclear it could have been immediately contained, and a few thousand people were
infected with it.
It was just going to spread and spread throughout the planet as it's doing, and ultimately
it will become endemic, that is to say it will live among us forever, and in fact us in
certain ways.
And maybe later we can talk to about certain other aspects of that.
For example, the virus is likely ultimately to become less deadly and harmless less. But for now, we're still in
the acute throes of this virus spreading among us. And I think the pandemic is going to unfold in
three phases. The first immediate phase is going to go to the end of 2021. The second intermediate
phase will go to the end of 2023. And then intermediate phase will go to the end of 2023.
And then in the beginning of, what are the approximate dates? The beginning of 2024 will have
that kind of post-pendemic period. In this first phase, what's happening is, the virus is just
spreading naturally among us, and it's killing us. Ultimately, I have been saying for quite some
time, and it looks like I'm right
about that, that between half a million and a million Americans will die. We've already
crossed a lower bound of that before the pandemic is ultimately over. And these pandemics
come in waves and we're going to have another wave in a year next winter of 2021, 2022
winter. It'll be much better than the one we're having now, but it'll still be there. We'll
have a nice summer, and then it'll blip up again next year. So the virus is just spreading. Now,
we are the first generation of humans to confront this ancient threat of a plague that is able to
develop a specific countermeasure in real time in the form of a vaccine. It's miraculous what we have
been able to do. But as people are aware,
we have to manufacture hundreds of millions of doses of this vaccine. We have to distribute those
doses and we have to administer those doses and persuade people to take the doses. And that's
going to take time. And we have to get at least half of the people vaccinated. Now, there's this
concept called herd immunity.
Herd immunity is the idea that a population can be immune to an epidemic, even if not every individual within that population is immune. So, for example, if you think about measles,
if you vaccinate 96% of the population against measles, and one of the 4% unvaccinated people
gets ill, you don't get an outbreak because that person has no one to infect. That percentage
of people who needs to be vaccinated in that type of a situation that that percentage
should depend in part on how infectious the disease is. And measles is like the most infectious
disease known. So you need a large number of people vaccinated, but diseases that are
less infectious, you need a lower herd immunity threshold. And so for a variety of reasons, we can go into if you want later on, for SARS-CoV-2,
it's at least 50%. So we've got to get at least 50% of the people vaccinated. It's going to take time.
I would say to the end of 2021, meanwhile, the virus is spreading. And right now, maybe 20% or
25% of Americans have acquired immunity naturally,
but the virus is gonna keep spreading.
And so by the end of 2021,
we'll have reached this herd immunity threshold,
either artificially through vaccination
or naturally because the virus is spread
through the population and killed us.
And until in that time,
we're gonna live in the changed,
acutely changed world,
wearing masks, having gathering bands,
intermittent school and business closure,
border closures, travel restrictions, all of bands, intermittent school and business closure,
border closures, travel restrictions, all of this stuff that we're doing now that we
you know, revile.
And then we'll finally have put, at the end of the immediate pandemic period, we'll have
put the epidemiological and biological force of the pandemic behind us.
But we're going to have, it's like a wave, like a tsunami receding from the shore, we're
going to have to clean
up the debris.
We're going to have to address the social, economic, psychological and clinical aftershocks
of the virus.
And if you look at hundreds of years of epidemics across the world, like the bubonic plague
and the cholera outbreaks and smallpox outbreaks and so on, it takes time, often a year or two
years, for a society to recover from this shock, this
economic and social and psychological shock. And then we will enter finally the post-pandemic period.
And I think that's going to be a little bit like the roaring 20s, in the 21st century,
compared to the roaring 20s of the 20th century. So during times of plague, what you see is that
people become more religious. And that's been happening for thousands of years during times of play. Why, well, when death is a foot,
people turn to God, you know,
they think about their own mortality.
During times of play, people stay at home.
They avoid social interactions,
happening for thousands of years.
During times of play, people stop spending their money,
either because they've lost their jobs
or because the economy has collapsed,
or because they're risk averse, they want
to save their money in case they need it, if they get sick, this is typical of plagues.
And we are seeing all of these things, the heightened religiosity, the esteeminess, the
risk aversion, the saving of money, savings rates are very high in the United States right
now, the social avoidance, the fact that people are avoiding each other.
And then what you see when the plague finally ends is the reversal of all those trends.
So I think by sometime end of 2023, beginning of 2024, we'll begin to see a kind of roaring 20s,
the religiosity that had risen will now plummet. The sociality, the fact that people have been restraining their social interactions,
people I think will relentlessly seek out social interactions in nightclubs and bars and restaurants and sporting
events and musical concerts and political rallies. We might see some sexual licences. People
have been pooped up. They have desires. People will start spending their money,
having been restrained. I think we'll have a booming economy. I think we'll see an efflorescence
of the arts and of entrepreneurship. I think it's going to be a quite distinctive
time in the history of our country and around the world, too, when the plague is finally behind us.
The full biological epidemiological, clinical, social, economic, and psychological impact is finally
behind us. I'll just say one more thing about that intermediate period that I forgot to mention,
which is that people who think that when we vaccinate half of Americans,
that life will return to normal, aren't aware of the ripple effects of a serious plague like this. Millions of people are out of work. Millions of businesses have gone out of business.
Millions of children have missed school. Millions of Americans will be disabled. It's hard to
know precisely, but probably five times as many people as die will have some form of long-term disability. So if half a million to a million Americans
die, that means we have 2.5 to 5 million Americans with some significant disability afterwards,
even after the wave of the epidemic recedes. So all of these are things that we're going
to have to cope with during the intermediate period as we write the ship. Anyway, that's
too long an answer I suspect to your question,
but that sort of sets the stage at least in my mind,
like where we are in this serious event
that once in a century event that we're experiencing.
Definitely not too long an answer,
and I tease up in my mind a bunch of questions.
In particular, I'm just curious about the interim period
that I've had this assumption,
yes, I know the long term effects,
the psychological effects, the health effects, the health effects,
the economic effects are profound.
And yet I've had this sense,
and I kind of, even after having listened to you speak,
I still have this sense, which might be firmly
in the land of denial, that once we hit herd immunity,
both naturally and artificially,
the efflorescence you mentioned,
the money coming off the sidelines,
the humans coming off the sidelines,
will happen in 2022,
while we clean up the mess.
But you don't think we're gonna be prepared for that.
Well, no, I don't think it'll happen quite so easy.
I mean, I think, first of all,
these aren't punctuated moments in time.
These are feathered wave and then another wave of effects and then
another wave of effects. So, it's not going to be some people and some aspects of life
will gradually return to normal and, you know, beginning in less than a year now towards
the end of 2021. But there are a lot of kids that have missed a lot of school that have
lost a lot of progress on their reading, for example. Those kids will need to remediate
that. The tens of thousands of restaurants that went out of business
still somehow need to be recapitalized.
That capital was lost.
You can't just instantly restart where's the money come from.
How do you reconstitute the workforce?
The real estate sector, the hospitality sector, yes,
people will begin to travel and things will pick up.
But it's not like airports are suddenly gonna be as full
a year from now as they were a year ago.
That's just not gonna be the case, right?
The clinical effects, if we have just a benchmark, there are 750,000 Americans
that have end-stage renal disease that are on dialysis who are disabled, in other words,
they have a significant problem with their kidneys.
Two and a half million Americans disabled in some other way because of the virus is
a very large burden on our society.
I mean, we have to provide health care for these people and finance that care.
And those people may be less productive if you have one of the features of coronavirus,
it's so-called neurotropic, it can bind to our nervous tissue. That's a class. These types of
pathogens do this. So some large number of Americans are going to have persistent COVID fog
or other deficits, people with cardiac problems, pancreatic problems, pulmonary fibrosis, you know, there'll be all these people
will need care and attention and on and on and on. Plus, let's not forget,
we are printing money to cope with this pandemic, right? We're borrowing
trillions of dollars. The economic aftershocks of this will also be very
material. When those appear is very hotly debated by economists. And I honestly
don't know exactly when that effect will be felt, but it's not like we could just borrow $4 trillion and never pay the price for that, right?
I mean, that's happening right now.
We are borrowing against the future that debt will come due.
So no, I don't think it's going to be this sudden everything goes back to normal in the year.
Plus, there'll be people who have been shocked.
I mean, many people still won't feel comfortable and rightly so going around without wearing masks, for example.
So when you go out, there'll be many people still won't feel comfortable and rightly so, going around without wearing masks,
for example.
So when you go out, there'll be many people
still wearing masks.
Even if you're vaccinated, you might quite rationally
choose to wear a mask.
Vaccines are very, very wonderful to vaccines we have,
but they're not perfect, right?
They're 95% effective.
So you actually, you should wear a mask, at least,
for the next year, even if you're vaccinated.
Let alone the public health reasons for that, which is that we can't have some people not
wearing masks.
If there's a rule that you must, and they say, oh, I'm vaccinated, well, we just have to
have a rule that you have to wear a mask whether you're a vaccine or not, whether you're
in public.
So, anyway, the point is the world is not going to suddenly return to normal.
And I also think that one of the problems we have had as a nation in coping with this pandemic,
it was definitely a failure of leadership,
definitely at the White House in the prior administration,
but also at many governor's offices on the left
and on the right of the political spectrum.
And it is hard for politicians to level with the public,
especially with threats of this nature,
which are creeping slowly rising threats.
If you were a politician who was want to listen to epidemiologists like me back in February,
we would have told you, yes, their case count is low now, but that's deceptive.
There's this long as you learned in high school mathematics, with exponential growth, there's
a long, long flat part of the curve that it inflects in sky-rockets, and we would have advised
politicians to warn the people that it seems okay right now, but actually it's bad.
It's going to be really bad really soon.
But that's a very unpleasant message for any politician to deliver anyone, and it's difficult
for the public to hear.
You know, if a leader comes and says, the sky is going to fall soon and you look around and you think
nothing is happening, you don't believe them, right? So the public health messaging challenge in
our nation back in the spring was precisely that to invite people to understand do some basic
teaching of the American people. Here's what happens with epidemics. Here's why you don't think
there's a problem, but in fact, there is.
Here's what we need to do as a nation to cope with this threat.
We are going to suffer.
So first of all, inviting the American people
to shared hardship, educating them about what was needed,
pointing out the sacrifices that would be required.
Rich people are going to have to pay more taxes.
Essential workers, people are going to lose their jobs,
working class people are going to lose their jobs. Essential workers are going to have to double duty and take risks. Doctors
are going to die and nurses are going to die as has happened during plagues for thousands of years.
In the plague of Athens in 240 BC, Thucydides talks about how all the doctors are dying.
There's nothing new about the fact that healthcare workers died during time. Pope Clement VI in the
14th century with the first attack of the Black time, Pope Clement VI in the 14th century
with the first attack on the Black Death,
talked about how all the nurses they were nuns,
but all the nurses were dying, right?
This is what happens during times at play.
So the American people should have been leveled with,
should have been called to sacrifice and duty
and collective confrontation and threat,
they should have been educated,
they should have been encouraged not to be immature, not to be like a child that fantasizes that this bad thing isn't happening.
This bad thing is happening. This is a once in a century event. We happen to be alive during
this event and we need to cope with it. But none of that was done. So it's difficult for our leaders
to do all of that. I grand, but that is their job.
That's what they should have done.
And we American citizens also have a duty,
which is to be willing to hear bad news.
Not to vote the leader out of office
who gives us bad news and then vote in the guy who lied to us.
That's not good civics, right?
And that's not wise or mature way of operating a great society.
Like I think ours is and can be. So we fumble badly as a people.
And I'm ashamed, honestly, of how America has done. We're a great nation, we're rich nation.
We do have the world's best scientists, and we had expertise in epidemiology and the history of
medicine. Many experts knew exactly what was going to happen. We didn't listen to them, and we didn't prepare.
We didn't deploy our wealth.
We didn't deploy our open communications.
We didn't deploy our science.
And as a result, we've been playing catch-up.
From the moment this virus entered our species,
we were going to lose 100 or 200,000 Americans,
which is bad.
That's a third or fourth leading killer on the list.
Atop, we lose about 600,000 Americans a year to cancer and 600,000 to cardiovascular
disease.
And then if you're above two or 300,000, you're like right up there, third or fourth on the
list of killers.
But we didn't need to lose half a million to a million Americans.
And we are.
And it is a calamity. And I think one of the reasons that we have done so poorly
is that the virus is just deadly enough to harm us and it kills about 1% of the people that
get it and get symptoms from it, which is a serious infectious disease, like if you talked to an ID doctor that 1% fatality,
that's a bad disease.
And if you're hospitalized with COVID at any age, you have a greater risk of dying than
if you have a heart attack.
So if you're worried about having a heart attack in the hospital, you should be more
worried about COVID, just to benchmark you, no matter your age, 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80.
But the virus is not deadly enough to really force us to take it seriously.
And the amazing thing about that is that there's no God-given reason this virus isn't deadlier.
It's intrinsic lethality is a biological property of the virus.
And imagine if this virus was like the plague, it killed 30% or 50% of the people it infected.
We would have been facing annihilation, like we
would have been having an armageddon scenario in our country like the Black Death in the
21st century.
And unlike things like bubonic plague or cholera, which are bacteria, for which we have effective
antibiotics, we actually have no drugs to speak of.
We have some I'm exaggerating a little effective drugs for viruses.
And we still don't, by the way, for SARS-CoV-2.
We have dexamethasone steroid, which helps, but there's no drugs you can give to cure viral
diseases to speak of.
Anyway, we would have been facing an absolute calamity.
I think that we would have been taken more seriously.
Anyway, so the point is that the virus is just deadly enough to harm us a lot, but alas,
not deadly enough that we really took it seriously as we should have from the beginning.
Question about your timeline.
How might your timeline be affected by two things.
One, mutations that override the effectiveness of the vaccines.
And two, we still don't know how long immunity lasts.
So those two variables seem like they have the potential
to really warp your timeline.
Yeah, they would all make it worse.
Yes.
Let me start by saying that I think that it's likely
in the end that we will wind up needing
some kind of periodic booster shots for these vaccines,
either because the virus continues to,
the virus is always mutating,
but that strains emerge, which are problematic for us,
or because there's some waning immunity.
Although I'm not so worried about the latter, I think it's impossible to know for sure,
but I do think actually that the immunity conferred by either vaccination or by natural infection
will be sustained.
That if you recover from the disease or are vaccinated, then you are re-exposed a year,
two or three or five later, that you might get a mild course of the illness, but you won't
die. Let's say, I think that's likely, but again course of the illness, but you won't die, let's say.
I think that's likely, but again, not certain.
So I'll grant you that it's not certain,
but anyway, we'll cope with that with booster shots.
What I do think is worrisome is that
there could be emergent strains of the virus,
which throw a spanner in the works
and worsen the timeline that you and I discussed
a little while ago.
And there's three ways that this can happen.
You highlighted one, let me mention the other two.
The first is that viral strains could emerge,
which are more infectious.
They spread more easily.
We are not of this virus, the so-called R sub zero,
the basic reproduction number is about three.
That means that for each person that's infected
in a nonimmune population that is interacting normally, three new cases
will arise.
This is an intrinsic property of the pathogen.
It's how infectious it is.
The most infectious pathogen is measles.
For each case of measles, you get 16 or 18 new cases.
Ebola might have a R-NOT of two or lower.
And SARS-CoV-2 has an R-NOT of three.
That's quite a infectious disease, actually. The ordinary seasonal flu has an R-NOT of three. That's quite an infectious disease, actually.
The ordinary seasonal flu has an R-NOT of like 1.5 or something.
So if you have a case of the flu,
you create 1.5 new cases.
You should have the intuition that the fact
that that number is above one is what makes it an epidemic.
If the number were below one,
then the number of cases would decline with time.
Each case would not reproduce itself.
So if the number is above one,
it means the cases rise with time. That is, in fact itself. So if the number is above one, it means the case is
rise with time. That is, in fact, what it means to be an epidemic is to have an R-naught above one.
So one thing that could happen and has happened is that the virus variance of the virus could emerge
and come to predominate that are more infectious. And in fact, we know that, for example, with a B-1-1-7
strain that it's R-naught is probably closer to four. So that actually can be quite bad.
This is a lot of epidemiology now, but the gist is relatively earlier in an epidemic,
ironically, a germ mutating to become more infectious can be worse than the germ mutating to become
more deadly, because the germ can spread to, in fact, larger numbers of people and ultimately
cause more deaths than a slower spreading germ that just
becomes deadlier.
So even though it's more likely to kill you, if it infects you, it's less likely to infect
you.
Whereas another pathogen that becomes more likely to infect you, even if it's not more
likely to kill you, more people die.
So the epidemiologists were actually not so, didn't take much solace when the news came
out a few months ago that the mutants
had emerged that were more infectious. They were like, well, that's serious. That's a concern for
us. More people will die as a result of that, even if each case is not deadlier, because more people
will become infected. So that is happening. That's not too uncommon. The second thing that could
happen is the variance of the virus that become more deadly could come to predominate.
Now, that's typically not what happens.
Usually, from a Darwinian point of view, the virus wants, quote unquote, to become less
lethal.
The virus doesn't really want, quote unquote, to kill you.
It doesn't want to immobile, you know, infect you and then lay you low and kill you, because
then you don't spread it.
What it really wants to do is make you sick, but not stop you from moving around because
then you infect other people and the milder versions of the virus then come to predominate,
the less deadly versions.
The virus has no interest in killing you.
The virus has an interest in you spreading it.
So if it puts you underground, then you stop spreading the disease, which is not what
it wants.
So usually pathogens over time, from a Darwinian point of view evolved to be less deadly, but
there are exceptions.
1918 was a fascinating exception, which we can come back and talk about if you want.
And I discuss that in Apollo Zero as well.
And we may be seeing a little bit of that right now for very interesting reasons, but in
fact, we are seeing as the emergence of some more deadly strains.
The B-1-1-7 strain data just came out in the
middle of February of 2021 that that strain is probably more deadly as well, which is very concerning.
So that's another thing that could put a spanner in the works. And the third thing which you
mentioned, which is the most concerning to me and to you, is that we could get strains that evolved to evade the immunity conferred by vaccination.
Now, so far we've not really seen that. We have seen strains that emerged that reduce
the efficacy of vaccination, but these vaccines are so powerful that even at reduced efficacy
it's still good. So we haven't really seen that happening in a way that's too concerning
yet, but everyone is very frightened and worried about this.
And I know that the vaccine manufacturers, especially those Pfizer and Moderna that have
the mRNA technology, can very rapidly prototype and field booster shots that are sensitive
to emergent strains that have avoided the previous version, just like for our flu shots.
You know, you get a new flu shot every year. And I read recently that the FDA, quite rightly,
is going to allow the release of such boosters without a full-scale randomized control trial.
That would take too long. By the time you proved it worked, it was too late. Similar to what it does
with influenza. So that's all good. And I think, again, this technology that we have in the form of these mRNA vaccines
is miraculous. We're just very lucky that we are alive at this time. Many people listening to this
are probably stunned and shocked and maybe bewildered or annoyed and irritated by the way we've come
to live right now. And what we're facing, this, you know, this real unpleasant reality that we
are enduring right now. People have lost their jobs.
They now with half a million deaths, many more Americans
know someone who died or had someone in their family who died.
It's becoming more real the condition.
People are stuck at home.
Their children are stuck at home.
And people are suffering.
And it is a feature of plagues.
It has been for hundreds of years that they are grief making.
You know, plagues, they take our lives, they take our livelihoods,
they take our way of life. I mean, this is what they do. So people are aware that we've come to
live in this very unnatural and alien way. But what's important to understand is that plagues are not
new to our species, they're just new to us. We think this is nuts, right?
But plagues are in the Bible.
They're in Homer, right?
The opening of the Iliad is Apollo, you know,
coming down from Olympus to punish the Greeks.
You know, they're in Shakespeare.
They're in Servantes.
There's nothing new about plagues.
They're part of our history of our species on this planet.
Actually, that's not totally true.
They probably really became a problem in the
last 10,000 years when we abandoned a hunter-gatherer way of life and domesticated animals and moved
into cities, but that's another conversation. But anyway, so the point is that plays are not new to
our species, they're new to us. And you know, it behooves us to somehow take that fact in and
try to do as well as we can during our time in the Crucible.
Well, that's exactly where I was hoping to go to address this question of how we can do
the best we can in our time in the Crucible. This question of how to live, what are the
ethical quandaries that pop up nanosecond by nanosecond during this plague are intense. I'll just give you
just an example from my life today. A friend of mine was in town from LA. He's very COVID-sensitive,
and he made us a reservation at a restaurant. I thought, okay, we'll be eating outside,
because I've only restaurants I've been to during this plague have been either takeout or eating
outside. But actually, we got there and it was inside.
There was nobody in the restaurant.
We were literally the only people there other than mass staff.
So I started to feel, okay, I'm here, we'll go for it.
And then people started to show up at which point we had already eaten and we double-mast.
But that was scary for me.
And so what was the move?
Should I have just told, as soon as I walked in there and saw that it was, you know, there
wasn't open air.
I should have said, we're out of here.
Like, I don't so much need you to give me individual device.
I, although you can, I'm worth thinking like, how do we operate in this environment?
Because we all have different risk tolerances, et cetera, et cetera.
No, I think the story of the anecdote, you just told us a very good anecdote,
because it illustrates a more general principle, which is that there's no life without risk
during time of play.
There's no way, unless you become a hermit in the mountains, and then even then, you
know, some other hermit might walk by your cave and say, hello, and then, you know, you
get infected or something, for communicable diseases that spread from person to person,
short of being a complete hermit,
there's no life without risk.
And so everything one does, you have to sort of decide,
is this worth the risk?
Should I send my five year old back to school?
Should I travel by car to visit my ailing parent?
Should I go to the restaurant outdoors?
Even outdoors is not a guarantee. If you
had had the same meal outside, there's no guarantee it would have substantially lowered your risk,
but not eliminated it, right? These are all relative statements. Even mask wearing is not even the
vaccine is not 100% effective. Vaccines 95% effective. Mask wearing is, you know, 75% effective.
There's no one thing you can do or even set of things that completely eliminate your risk.
And therefore, all actions you see require some consideration.
Like most Americans have rightly stopped wiping down
their packages that are delivered to their houses.
Many people probably remember back in March,
in April, people were wiping down their packages
and all these hot and clean your vegetables videos
that were going viral.
Partly was at the time we didn't know that FOMI's that is to say surface transmission
wasn't a serious problem.
But now we now know that it is not a serious problem.
No, it's not zero, but it's not a serious problem.
In most Americans, the package delivery guy delivers the package and you pick it up and
you bring it into your home and you open the package and you're done.
People don't think about that.
So about there is some to risk. I mean, some non-sourced there. So, the question is, well,
what should you do? How do you manage that? And so, I think your anecdote is quite a good one.
You know, and you said, look, there are a number of issues here. I'm getting some satisfaction
from being at this restaurant. When you were telling the story, I was very jealous because I have
not been to a restaurant to eat out in a year. We do take out food, but I haven't been,
you know, dinner with another couple just sounds like heaven right now, like my wife and I, we would love to have
another couple.
Erica and I have had meals and drinks with local friends outdoors at like a distance,
you know, so like one of our friends who lives next to us who's actually a screenwriter,
a man, I, I absolutely adore it and his wife, Bob and Elizabeth, that they would invite
us over to their house.
This was last spring and or over the summer and they would set up chairs like face to face
at like 12 feet apart and they would be two little tables with a drinks cart and you
know, we could have, I mean, now as I'm telling you, sorry, I'm like, oh my god, that's
so great.
But we've had such limited social interaction.
So anyway, the point is that you might say, you know, screw it.
I'm going to go out to a restaurant, have a meal, and take some small non-zero risk.
And that's, you know, what do you have to approach all your problems with right now?
But it's not as simple as the risk I'm taking for myself because it's everybody I see
subsequently.
It's the burden I would place on it over burden hospital system.
So it's not as simple as my own risk tolerance.
So the ethics are murky. Yes. Yes. sun it overburdened hospital system. So it's not as simple as my own risk tolerance.
So the ethics are murky.
Yes, yes, I'm really glad you emphasized that.
And it's that kind of altruistic sensibility, which I think is so important.
You see, there's something interesting about a collective threat.
Contagious disease is intrinsically a collective threat, and it requires some so-called
other regard.
That is to say, you can't a group of selfish
people, each independently confronting a collective threat, it's not effective. It's the nature of
the threat requires us to work together to fight it. It's like if an army was invading our country
and you took your gun and you went to the frontier, you'd be useless against one of you
against the army, you'd be useless, right? And if everyone took their gun and ran to the frontier,
that also wouldn't be effective.
You need an organizing force.
You need people to take charge and organize groups
to mount a defense, an effective defense
against this collective threat.
That is what a collective threat is,
or for example, air pollution or climate change.
I mean, you could reduce your carbon footprint,
but it will have no effect on climate change
until unless everyone works together
to reduce their carbon footprint.
So there's certain kinds of threats which are collective or polluting the waters and things of this nature and contagious diseases of that kind.
So we have to work together. And as I discussed in Apollo Zero, this is one of the also the virtues of our
us as a species. So in another book called Blueprint, I give an account for the evolutionary origins
of a good life.
So the title of the book is Blueprint,
the evolutionary origins of a good society.
And I talk about how and why we humans have evolved
to have all these wonderful qualities.
For example, we don't just have sex with our partners,
we love them.
We evolve the capacity to form a sentimental attachment to the people we, let's
say, reproduce with, and incidentally, secondarily, even to the people we don't reproduce with. And
that's very rare in the animal kingdom. We also do something else that's extraordinarily rare,
which is we befriend unrelated individuals. We have friends. We form long-term, non-reproductive
unions to other members of our species. This is exceedingly rare.
We do it, certain other primates do it, elephants do it, certain cetacean species do it.
We form social networks with unrelated individuals.
We equate with each other.
We act altruistically to strangers.
We give money to homeless people.
We adopt children that are not related to us.
We band together with unrelated individuals
to hunt big game, for example.
So this capacity for cooperation that we have
is also very distinctive and not common in the animal kingdom.
And we even do something that's almost,
perhaps the most miraculous,
which is that we teach each other things.
So any animal can learn a little fish in the sea
can learn that if it swims up to this slight,
it'll find food there.
That's called independent learning.
But some animals learn socially.
For example, you put your hand in the fire
and you learn that it burns.
That's independent learning.
So you get some knowledge, fire burns,
but you've paid a price, you know, you have a burnt hand.
Or I watch you put your hand in the fire.
And I get almost as much knowledge, fire watch you put your hand in the fire. And I
get almost as much knowledge, fire burns, but I pay none of the price. This is incredibly
efficient. Or for example, we go into a forest and I see you eat red berries and then you
drop dead. You've paid an enormous price for acquiring the knowledge that red berries
are deadly. But I learned that red berries are deadly and I don't pay any price at all.
That's social learning, which is rare, but also seen in the animal kingdom.
But we do something even more rare, which is we teach each other things.
I teach you to build a fire and this capacity, which we evolved, and which is also seen
in certain other animal species.
But rarely, it gives us the capacity for culture that is to say our ability to
accumulate knowledge and transmit it to each other. And so one of the iron uses
that contagious pathogens like SARS-CoV-2
exploit all of that good stuff.
The fact that we live in groups and hug and touch each other and form friendships and interact socially and share information. We come together to share information and then we share germs. In fact, one of the arguments
that I've made is that the spread of germs is the price we pay for the spread of ideas.
But the irony is that it's all of those same qualities, these wonderful qualities of the ability to work together
and the ability to share information, for example, that will allow us to beat back the
germ and emerge victorious.
So you're highlighting our capacity for cooperation, for example, in working together to fight
the virus, and there's this tension because that's what the virus exploits the spread,
but that's what we need to do in order to win.
And the fact that we invented these vaccines reflects thousands of years of our ability
to accumulate knowledge in the form of culture and transmit it across time.
So we right now are benefiting from the efforts made by scientists and doctors for hundreds of years.
Each generation contributing to this body of knowledge, not only across time, but across
place.
So, as the epidemic was striking, Chinese scientists were posting preprints describing
the virus online that people like me were reading, right?
That was sharing information that made it easier for me to survive because
this Chinese scientist for posting information and so on. And then I just, because you highlighted,
I'll just read a, like a kind of an optimistic take on plagues, like Albert Camus, who wrote this
novel called The Plague in 1947. It was inspired by Bubonic Plague attacks from the 19th century,
but it was set in the 20th century.
And one of the protagonists is a doctor by the name of Dr. Riyou.
And this is Kamu writing. He goes, Dr. Riyou resolved to compile this chronicle,
so that some memorial of the injustice and outrage done them might endure.
And to state quite simply, what we learn in time of pestilence, that there are more
things to admire in men than to despise. And that's how I feel. I think that many of us,
and much of our society, is manifesting these wonderful qualities, which are making it easier
for us to survive. You have once again magically led me exactly where I wanted to go because I wanted to spend a good
amount of time on Apollo's arrow, the new book, but I also do want to spend some time on Blueprint.
It's predecessor. I've heard you say this, and I hope I'm going to reproduce it correctly, and I
not only your sentiment, but also the context of the sentiment. But I believe that one of the arguments you're trying to make in Blueprint and an argument
you've been trying to make for a while in your role as an expert on or a student of human
nature is that humans are fundamentally good.
Is that true that that's what you believe and what is the evidence for that?
Yes, I believe that.
I believe that as a matter of evolutionary biology, and I believe that as a philosophical
and moral observation about human beings.
Now, I need to say I'm not naive.
You know, I'm not like Dr. Pangolos.
I recognize that humans are capable and manifest, tremendous evil.
I'm quite familiar that every century is replete with horrors, with pogroms and enslavement
and conquest and violence and torture and warfare and cruelty and all kinds of awful things
that we do to each other.
I'm well aware of all of this, But even so, we are good, actually. And I think that
the mere fact that we live socially is evidence for this in some way. Because if every time I came
near you, you lied to me, or you injured me, or you killed me, I would be better off living
separately. We would live as isolated individuals. We wouldn't live socially. So the benefits of a connected life must outweigh the costs. And natural selection has shaped not just the structure and
function of our bodies, you know how our pancreas words, how our lungs work and or why you know
children are relatively less affected by SARS-CoV-2 given the distribution of ACE-2 receptors in their
nose and lungs and so on. Natural selection
is equipped our bodies with these properties that affect our susceptibility to pathogens
and so on. So natural selection has shaped not just the structure and function of our bodies,
not just even the structure and function of our minds, you know, how we think, for example,
is a product of natural selection, our capacity for language, for example, but also the structure and function of our societies.
We evolved to manifest certain collective properties that equip us for social life.
And I mentioned some of these before. Love, for example, friendship, cooperation, teaching.
There are others, sort of we evolved to live in groups that are what I call have mild hierarchy.
There's some intrinsic hierarchy that's necessary
for the proper functioning of groups.
Groups that are completely egalitarian do not succeed
and those that are too lopsided also do not fare well.
We evolved the capacity for social networks.
We evolved something called in group bias,
which is very depressing.
You know, we prefer the company of people we resemble.
All humans do.
And this same property, incidentally, is seen in dolphins and elephants and other social
mammals, so it's not distinctive to us.
These are all things that I call the social suite, this set of eight features.
We also evolve the capacity, ironically, part of our capacity for sociality, for living
socially, is the capacity for identity.
Here's an idea.
Why are all our faces different?
In other words, our kidneys to do their job in principle should all work the same.
What our faces to do their job should all be different.
And the region of our genome that codes for the structure and appearance of our faces
is, in fact, very variable and equips us with the ability to have many different kinds of faces.
And not only that, not only do you have a distinctive face, but I can detect, until the difference
between your face and Sam, the sound engineer's face, and I can tell who is who.
And so there's a big part of my brain that's devoted to the ability to distinguish faces
from each other. So we have evolved the capacity to signal and detect unique identity.
And part of the reason for that is that if you want to avoid forgetting who you've had
sex with or you want to be able to signal to your parent, I am your child, you know,
not someone else's child, or you want to remember who was nice to you, who shared food
with you in the past, and you might owe a favor to, you need to be able to track individuals. So, to be
capable of social life has required us to evolve the capacity, ironically, to have a unique identity.
So, this whole suite of features, which I call the social suite, I think satisfies many philosophical
traditions, avoiding something called the naturalistic
fallacy, which maybe some of your listeners are already hearing me and leaping ahead.
I went there too.
But anyway, these, I think most people would regard these as good qualities.
I don't think anyone would say that love and friendship and teaching and cooperation
are bad.
So we evolved to have these qualities, which I revere.
So not only do these qualities,
I think have an evolutionary basis,
but they also can be defended
as I was suggesting on moral and philosophical grounds.
And finally, on dispositional grounds,
like I am an optimist, I am the kind of person
who sees good in people.
And I'm not a fool.
I mean, if someone tries to hold the gun to me,
I might recognize that that might have something to hold the gun to me, I might recognize
that that might have something to do with the way this person was raised. And they may
have had quite a challenging upbringing, or they may not know how to restrain themselves,
or they may need to feed themselves or something. You know, I can provide all those rationalizations.
But nevertheless, I don't want you to hold the gun to me. You know, I don't think that's
a good thing to do. So I am an optimist in that way and I feel like it's quite rational for me to have this
disposition.
Let me see if I can sum that up in a way that would convince me and maybe you that I've
understood it.
Yes, human beings are capable of all sorts of horror, but at our core, we are wired for cooperation and friendliness and
love. And when there's horror, that is what? A misfiring?
No, I think we're capable of both. It's just that the good outweighs the bad. I mean,
in some ways, the argument I make is the following argument. In Catholic theology, there's this field known as theodicy,
which is how can we understand God to be good,
given all the evil in the world, right?
Given all the suffering and evil,
how would a omniscient, omnipotent,
beneficent God allow all of these horrors, right?
So this was a serious problem for the Catholic theologians.
How can we provide an account for it? Then that branch of theology is called Theodicy.
It's the vindication of God despite his, quote unquote, failures.
Vindication of a belief in God despite the presence of evil.
And I think what I'm attempting to do in blueprint is what I would call
sociodicy, which is a vindication
of a confidence in the goodness of society, despite the evil in society.
As I said, I'm well aware of all of these awful qualities, but still even so, there are
all these wonderful things about us as a species and about our societies.
I believe that we have spent far too much attention on the dark side of our nature,
and that the bright side has been denied the attention it deserves.
And furthermore, that the bright side predominates, actually.
It's a little bit like star horse, you know, like the dark side of the forest and the bright
side and the light side of the forest.
And you know, I'm not even thinking the light side is stronger.
And I think the evidence supports my belief.
Actually, and that's the evidence I tried to marshal in Blueprint.
I hope this isn't repetitive, but what's the elevator pitch for the evidence? Is it the
social suite? Or is there?
Yes, it's the fact that the simplest way to make that point is just to invite listeners
to imagine that if we were always so awful to each other, why do we stick around?
Right.
There must be some countervailing force that makes us continue to live socially, despite the fact that we are so awful.
And that is the balance that I'm trying to illustrate.
I'm trying to put the weights on the scale or shine a light on the weights of the scale that are tipping the balance towards our living the way that we do.
Much more of my conversation with Nicholas Christakis coming up right after this.
Celebrity feuds are high stakes. Much more of my conversation with Nicholas Christakis coming up right after this.
Celebrity feuds are high stakes.
You never know if you're just going to end up on page 6 or Du Moir or in court.
I'm Matt Bellasai.
And I'm Sydney Battle, and we're the host of Wonder E's new podcast, Dis and Tell, where
each episode we unpack a different iconic celebrity feud.
From the build up, why it happened, and the repercussions.
What does our obsession with these feuds say about us?
The first season is packed with some pretty messy pop culture drama, but none is drawn out
in personal as Brittany and Jamie Lynn Spears.
When Brittany's fans form the free Brittany movement dedicated to fraying her from the infamous
conservatorship, Jamie Lynn's lack of public support, it angered some fans,
a lot of them.
It's a story of two young women who had their choices taken away from them by their controlling
parents, but took their anger out on each other.
And it's about a movement to save a superstar, which set its sights upon anyone who failed
to fight for Brittany.
Follow Disenthal wherever you get your podcasts.
You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music or the Wondery app.
I'm very curious.
I come out of personally the Buddhist tradition
and there's this idea in certain schools of Buddhism,
there's this idea of Buddha nature.
You may be familiar with this,
but just in case, I'm gonna say what it is, just so that you know
and that the listeners know.
The idea is, and I hope I have this right,
but basically that human nature is fundamentally good
and that the bad stuff is the consequence of confusion.
I think it's sometimes compared to like a gem
that's been encrusted by whatever dirt or whatever,
some sort of muck that's gotten dry over the gem,
and that you meditation in an ethical life
and all sorts of other practices promulgated by the Buddha,
that's how you clear away the muck
and bring forth our sort of Buddha nature, our loving nature.
How does that land for you as a scientist?
I mean, it sounds terrific to me.
Does it sound true?
I mean, whether it's terrific.
What?
I mean, lots of things sound terrific.
What would be the empirical test of this philosophical proposition?
I suppose the experiment you would want to do is to see, well, I mean, it's a bit like
the thought experiment I do in the book, which is I say, what kind of society would come naturally
to us if we were left to our brothers?
Would we be evil to each other or would we not?
And in that part of the book, what I do is I think about potential natural experiments
of this, for example, I consider the case of shipwrecks, which you would really love to
do if you could do it.
Just take a group of people and raise them
without any kind of culture.
Don't teach them anything.
And then see, did they live a virtuous life?
Did they manifest love and friendship
and cooperation, all these wonderful qualities?
And of course, this has been called the forbidden experiment.
But it hasn't stopped monarchs for thousands of years
for thinking about it.
So analogously, what we would really like to do is to test the idea I think that you put
on the table is to like take a group of people who somehow were put on an isolated island
and miraculously raised in some fashion and provided with all the necessities.
And then when they grew up, you know, how moral were they?
And what type of social life did they manifest?
And then we could maybe test that.
Of course, that's, we can't really do that.
I'm kind of meandering.
I didn't, I'm not answering your question directly
because I don't know what right now the best answer
isn't coming to me.
But I'll say one other thing that is connected to what you said,
which is most of the, our virtues, not all of them.
Most of our virtues are social.
We don't care if you love yourself or
are kind to yourself or adjust to yourself. We care whether you love others or
are kind to others or adjust to others. That's what we think of as as virtuous.
So, most virtues, not all, most virtues are social virtues. And I think it's not a
coincidence that our moral and religious
systems are so connected to our way of living socially. So I think that if we wanted to test
this theory of a gem and crusted in muck, were you born with that muck and then over life
you get rid of it? Or did you acquire that muck over the course of life? We'd have to
think about the empirical test of this idea. I wonder if you said before that our social, you know, our virtues are measured socially.
That doesn't, we don't really care how you are with yourself. I wonder if that's a fundamental
and disastrous misunderstanding because how you are with yourself determines, I believe,
how you are with other people. I think that people who are able to cultivate some self forgiveness and some self insight.
Yes, I think those types of people tend to do better.
On the other hand, even that, you don't want too much self forgiveness, right?
We don't want you to, you know, or too much self-reflection makes you narcissistic, right?
We want you to have some self-awareness, some kindness to yourself in
terms of your recognition of your humanity, which I think those dispositions could then equip you
to be nice to other people. So I guess I would grant part of what you said, but on an abstract level,
I don't think that's the case. I don't think that if someone was manifesting a lot of self-love,
we would think that was virtue. We would say, no, what we really care about is if you're nice to other people. Yeah, to be clear, I, you know, this self-compassion,
self-love thing is something that my listeners will be quite familiar with just because I Yammer
on about it a lot. It is not self-love in that you feed yourself ice cream and perpetuity. Well,
you know, it's not Maria Antoinette, let them eat cake. It's holding yourself setting high standards,
but not
ruthlessly kicking your own butt in the process. It's also aware a wise
Self-compassion is aware that it feels better to be nice to other people than to be a homicidal
Luna. Yes, and so if you just go through the pleasure centers of the brain as your guide, a self-compassion
and person, I believe will be a better citizen. I think you're right in some sense, like the most
of the people that I know that are kind to others are also kind to themselves. So I would agree with
that. On this question of, are we fundamentally good? I've spent, you know, some time thinking
about this and you've got a range from, you know, original sin
all the way to Buddha nature.
And then maybe in the middle, you've got the sort of
indigenous theory of the two wolves in your mind.
You know, one is the good wolf, the other is a bad wolf.
And they're always in combat and the one that...
Or like in loony tunes, the two, the little devil
and the spainter on your shoulders.
But the punchline and the indigenous thing is that the wolf that wins is the wolf you
feed.
And so if you spend time feeding the virtuous wolf, it will predominate.
And so I wonder at the end of the day, is this all sort of academic when it comes down
to the level of an individual life?
And when it comes down to the level of an individual life, should we be just paying attention
to what I said before, which is that it feels good, and this there's plenty of science behind,
to be kind, to be friendly, to be generous, to be cooperative, and follow that?
Yes, that is true what you said, but then you must ask the question, why did we evolve to have those
warm sensibilities when we act in these altruistic or loving ways.
That's exactly the argument that I'm making is that natural selection shaped us.
Many listeners will know that, you know, why do you feel good when you're with your friends?
Such a good feeling.
Just be with a nice friend of yours.
Even as I'm saying this, many people are going to be like, oh, yeah, I know what he's talking
about.
It's like being with someone understands me.
And it gets, it's called a warm glow. Or why does it feel good to give money to a poor person? You don't
know this person, you'll never see them again, there's no expectation that they'll reciprocate,
and yet you feel good. Most people feel good making a donation of that kind. Well, that sensibility
is only partly culturally dictated. I would argue it's mostly evolved, this sensibility that
you're describing. And we evolved to have those sensibilities precisely, I would argue it's mostly evolved, this sensibility that you're describing.
And we evolved to have those sensibilities precisely, I would argue, in the service of a certain
kind of social life. And one of the many lines of evidence in support of this sensibility
is that we see convergent evolution in some of these traits in other animals, with whom
our last common ancestor was tens of millions of years ago. So, for example, elephants have friends,
seem to prefer the company of certain other elephants that are their friends.
But our last common ancestor with elephants was 90 million years ago,
and that animal did not live socially so far as we know.
And so elephants independently have evolved this capacity for friendship,
which is miraculous, actually, if you think about it, very moving, actually.
In fact, one of the arguments I make is that
if we can share the capacity for friendship with elephants,
surely we can share it with each other.
You know, like, you know, like this recognition,
one of the ironies is that when we see these
deeply human traits, like friendship or cooperation
in other species that are very alien to our own, deeply human traits, like friendship or cooperation
in other species that are very alien to our own. Ironically, if anything, it heightens our recognition
of our common humanity, the fact that all of us
share these fundamental qualities.
Now, I need to be clear, I'm speaking here
about us as a species.
I mean, there's certain people who are not interested
in having friends, and that's fine.
There's variation across people in how kind they are to strangers.
That's also typical, just like there's variation in the other trait, like our capacity to
do calculus.
What we're talking about here is that we have a brain as a species that is capable of doing
calculus.
We're not saying every single one of us can do calculus at the same level.
That's not what we're saying.
We're sort of giving a general description of the powers of our wonderful species.
We were talking about non-human animals
I was thinking about our three rescue cats,
none of whom is related biologically to the other.
I've seen them cooperate to knock snacks off the counter
and eat them together and it's bittersweet.
Final question for me.
During this plague, we have seen the best of, I believe, the best
of humanity, in particular among our frontline workers in areas of medicine and food delivery
and lots of other aspects with that are sort of now we call essential.
We've also seen some pretty anti-social behavior in terms of people denying the basic facts
of the pandemic, refusing to do basic good citizens things like wearing a mask.
We've seen tribalism.
We've seen violence.
We've seen racism.
We've seen misinformation lying.
You describe yourself as an optimist who believes that human beings are fundamentally We've seen racism, we've seen misinformation, lying.
You described yourself as an optimist who believes
that human beings are fundamentally good.
You're also described yourself as somebody who's not naive.
So you see these problems.
What do you think is the best way for us
to get over these bugs in our nature?
I don't think we can escape some of these bugs. Honestly, any more than ants can
wake up and make beehives. We are destined to manifest some of these qualities, both
good and bad. But I do think that we can, by more thoughtful attention, like you said,
maybe that's a nice way to wrap up this, you this, which wolf do you feed? I think if we feed
the good wolf, it will inextrable lead us to a better path. And so I think that making
ourselves aware of these wonderful qualities, especially when we are challenged. What's
happening here is this kind of unstoppable force of a deadly pathogen is meeting the immovable object of a human nature.
But it's not the first time these pathogens have afflicted us before and we have survived.
And we have seen the other side of these plagues in the past.
And we've done so through a variety of means, both our biological evolution has equipped us in certain ways.
But our social evolution has equipped us in certain ways, but our social evolution has equipped us in certain
ways. So I remain optimistic that we will see the other side of this plague, and I retain my
confidence in human beings. So in some ways, the personal is political. If we tune into the fact
that it feels good to hold the door open for somebody else or give somebody who needs it money,
et cetera, et cetera, to be cooperative, then we can contribute that light
to the sum of light, as has been said.
I mean, I would agree with those statements,
but maybe I'm preaching to the choir.
I mean, there's also a cynical take on this,
which is, it doesn't really matter what we do.
Surgeons, for example, have this joke
that all bleeding stops eventually.
And plagues end eventually.
After, since I started talking about this joke,
I've since learned that firemen have the same joke,
which is that all fires stop eventually.
Now, the point is that they could have certain,
and a certain way, which is not so good.
But I think like we were saying earlier,
I think that we are in a crucible right now
of facing this ancient threat.
And I think both as individuals and as a society, we can tilt ourselves towards the better
way of coping with this threat, the more humane way, the way that's kinder.
And I think ultimately, actually, the way that is more effective, not only in combating
the germ, but in preserving the rectitude of our society.
I promise this is the last question, but you mentioned cynicism.
So let me just double click on that.
What is the argument against just being fully out for yourself?
I keep talking hammering on about how it feels good.
You both of us about how it feels good to be generous, et cetera, et cetera.
It doesn't feel good to just like take all the, you know, all the toys, you're like, you're like, you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like, you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like,
you're like, you're like, you're This hypothetical sort of cynical example you gave of someone says,
well, I'm just going to take care of myself.
That doesn't work in a contagious disease.
You care about whether there's an outbreak in the local homeless shelter,
because that homeless shelter or the prison or the meat-packing plant or your school,
all of these are places where
conserve is petri dishes for the virus that can reach you.
You cannot just be an island and ignore what's happening around you when there is a contagious
disease.
Any more than you can ignore climate change, for example.
There are certain threats which are individualistic, which you can insulate yourself from and
address on your own.
But there are other classes of threats which in their very nature are collective and require
some kind of other
regard and some kind of collective effort and epidemic disease is one of those types of threats.
Yes, if you want to withdraw completely from society during a time of a contagious disease, that could work.
But unless you're willing to do that extreme, then you really are in it with everyone else and you know, you have a stake in
working together
to address the threat.
Nicholas has been a total pleasure to meet you.
You wanna just remind people of the names of your books
and where they can find more about you on the interwebs.
But today we discussed two books.
One is Apollo's Arrow, the profound and enduring impact
of coronavirus on the way we live,
which was published in 2020 in October. the other we discussed as blueprint, the evolutionary origins of a good
society, which was published in March of 2019.
I wasn't expecting to write another book so fast, but then the plague struck and I was
stuck at home and I thought maybe I could help people understand what was happening to
us, which is what motivated me to write Apollo's arrow.
And I am privileged to run the Human Nature Lab at Yale University. And if you're
interested in any of our work, you can find us there at humannaturelab.net and all of
our scientific publications, videos and other stuff about what we're doing is available
there.
Like I said, I followed your work and listened to you on various podcasts over the years,
really appreciate it. And it's a pleasure to speak to you.
Thank you so much.
Dan, thank you so much for having me.
Thanks again to Nicholas Christakis.
I really enjoyed talking to him.
This show is made by Samuel Johns, DJ, Cashmere,
Kim Baikama, Maria Wartel, and Jen Poyant
with Audio Engineering by Ultraviolet Audio.
And as always, before we go,
a hearty salute to my ABC News Comrades,
Ryan Kessler and Josh Cohan.
We'll see you all on Wednesday
with a delightful and fascinating episode
with Rochie Norma Long.
We're gonna be talking about
one of the most inventorable
and imponderable Buddhist and spiritual concepts, oneness.
Hey, hey, Prime members. You can listen to 10% happier early and add free on Amazon Music.
Download the Amazon Music app today. Or you can listen early and add free with 1-3-plus in Apple podcasts.
Before you go, do us a solid and tell us all about yourself by completing a short survey
at Wondery.com slash Survey.