Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - 336: How Your Emotions Are Made | Lisa Feldman Barrett
Episode Date: April 5, 2021Today’s guest is at the forefront of understanding human emotions: what they are, why humans evolved to have them, how they’re different from feelings, and what science says about how to ...manage them (rather than get yanked around by them all the time). Dr. Lisa Feldman-Barrett is a University Distinguished Professor of Psychology at Northeastern University, with appointments at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital. She’s written several books, including How Emotions are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain and Seven and a Half Lessons about the Brain. In this conversation, we talk about how we can “deconstruct” our own emotions, and the overlap between her research findings and Buddhism. And one more order of business: Next Monday, April 12, we're launching a two-week series about hope. Hope was perhaps one of the cruelest casualties of the coronavirus pandemic. As we start to inch our way into a vaccinated world, there are ways we can skillfully engage with hope without setting ourselves up for disappointment. And not only are we exploring hope on the podcast, but we also have new bespoke meditations from our podcast guests and teachers dropping in the Ten Percent Happier app so that you can actually practice hope as a skill. If you don't already have it, get the app now so that you're ready to practice. To get started, download the Ten Percent Happier app, for free, wherever you get your apps. Full Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/podcast-episode/lisa-feldman-barrett-336 See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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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, team, I've often joked that as a man, emotions have not always been the most appetizing
subject for conversation. However, as I've learned
the hard way and repeatedly, emotions are there, whether you want to look at them or not.
And if you choose the path of denial or compartmentalization, you will inevitably be owned by those
neglected and overlooked emotions. But what are emotions anyway? How are they different
from feelings?
Why did we evolve to have emotions in the first place? And what does science say about how we can
manage emotions skillfully rather than being yanked around by them all the time?
My guess today is at the forefront of understanding all of these questions from a scientific
standpoint. She is Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett, a university distinguished professor of psychology
at Northeastern University,
with appointments at Harvard Medical School
and Massachusetts General Hospital.
She's written several books,
including How Emotions are Made,
the Secret Life of the Brain,
and seven and a half lessons about the brain.
In this conversation, we talk about how we can deconstruct
that's her term, our own emotions,
and we talk about the overlap between her research findings and Buddhism.
Before we get to that, here's just one quick item of business.
Next Monday, April 12, we are launching at 10% happier, a two week series about hope.
We're at an interesting and exquisitely at a difficult moment when
it comes to hope. There are a lot of reasons to believe that we're emerging out of this pandemic,
but there are also still lots of variables out there, including new variants of the virus that we
cannot control. So how do we skillfully engage with hope without setting ourselves up for massive disappointment.
So we'll be exploring the notion of hope as a skill here on the podcast, but we also
have new bespoke meditations from our podcast guests and teachers that will be dropping
in the 10% happier app.
So you can actually, as I said before, practice hope as a skill.
If you don't already have it, go get the app now
so that you're ready to do the meditations
that will be combined with the episodes
that will be dropping in mid April.
Download the 10% happier app for free,
wherever you get your apps to get started.
Okay, having said all of that,
let's dive in now with Dr. Lisa Feldman-Barritt.
Lisa Feldman-Barritt, thanks for coming on, appreciate it.
My pleasure.
Let's just start with a little background.
I'm curious, how did you get interested in emotions?
She's laughing already.
Is that a roofal laugh?
A little bit.
A little bit.
How did I get interested in emotions?
I suppose I got interested in emotions because
it was a perplexing problem. When I was in graduate school, I was doing research.
You know, I had my own little replication crisis when I was in graduate school, and that I was attempting to replicate published research findings, which is what you do as a graduate student at first. Before you conduct your own experiments, you try to replicate experiments that have already
been published, peer reviewed, and so on. And I wasn't able to replicate eight
experiments in a row, which led me to think that maybe I was trying to have the
wrong career, and there wasn't really cut out for science. But when I looked
closely at all of the evidence, what I discovered is that the measures of
emotion weren't functioning the way that they should have been functioning based on everything
that I had read.
And so the more I dug into it, the more I realized there were these really interesting paradoxes in the emotion
research literature that no one was paying very much attention to and I found it super intriguing.
But I thought really optimistically that I would just take a couple of months away from my
main dissertation topic and kind of solve this emotion, you know, this emotion measurement problem,
which is how I was thinking about it.
And then I would get back to my main topic, my dissertation, and then, you know, fast forward, almost 30 years, and here we are.
So the interest in emotions grew not out of some personal fascination they often say, research is me search. It sounds like it was quite a technical thing. I will also trained as a therapist and one of the things that I am really good at is
detecting what people say, what people tell themselves isn't necessarily what the evidence
from their own life indicates.
So when there's a disconnect between what people believe and what the evidence shows in their
own life, I'm really always drawn to that.
As a therapist, I was always drawn to it.
As a person in my own life, I'm drawn to it.
And as a scientist, I'm drawn to it.
So really what happened was in the emotion literature, scientists were writing about
emotion in a particular way.
But then when you actually dug into the data, it didn't match what the scientists were
saying.
And I found this to be really fascinating.
And also, really, like perplexing is a scientific problem, that there were these massive questions
that were kind of unanswered that other people didn't even seem to notice for questions.
And this to me just seemed completely fascinating.
And I just was hooked.
What were the questions that people were overlooking?
Well, for example, pick up any introductory textbook in psychology or you pick up many,
many popular books about emotion, many, many research papers, and it will tell you that
every emotion has its own signature in the body, right?
The anger and fear and sadness and so on can be distinguished from one another by just looking at people's heart rates
and how much they're sweating and, you know, their respiration patterns and so on.
And that really that this idea that each emotion category has its own fingerprint comes from William James,
the great William James
who is considered one of the founders of American psychology.
Well when you go and you read William James, he didn't say that.
In fact, he said the exact opposite of that.
I mean, literally the exact opposite.
He said, there's no physical entity for anger.
Anger can be many things.
It can feel like many things.
Your face can do many things. it can feel like many things, your face can do many things,
your heart will do many things.
So think about it, Dan, when you're angry, how often do you give that stereotypic scowl
that's supposed to be the universal expression of anger?
Do you scowl frequently when you're angry?
Well, I get angry a lot.
That's one of my big emotional go-to's.
Well, I remember from your book, but I'm just saying, do you, when you think about,
when you're angry, do you? Sometimes, but often I pretend it's not there and just revert
to passive aggressive behaviors. Do you ever scowl when you're not angry?
I think my resting face is pretty close to a scowl, so yes.
Okay, so interestingly, the evidence shows that people scowl
when they're angry about 30% of the time, which is more than chance, and we'll get you
a publication in a really good journal. But what that means is 70% of the time people
are not scowling when they're angry. they're doing something else that's meaningful with their face.
And sometimes that might be smiling. Sometimes that might be crying or frowning. Sometimes that might be
sitting silently and plotting the demise of their enemy. And your heart rate or your blood pressure will go up or go down or stay the same in anger,
depending on what physical action you're taking.
So if you were looking at someone's face in their body and trying to predict whether
they were angry or not, you would be wrong 70% of the time.
And also, people scowl when they're not angry.
My husband makes a full facial scowl when he's concentrating really hard.
And unbeknownst to me, so do I.
Which, you know, as I was telling my lab
when I first met my husband, you know, we were dating
and I was telling him, you know,
he makes this full facial scowl when he's angry,
you know, can you believe that?
And they're like, yeah, because you do that.
Do you know that you do that?
And it totally freaks us out.
And I'm like, seriously, because you do that. Do you know that you do that? And it totally freaks us out. And I'm like, seriously, I had no idea.
So my point is that not that what you do in anger
is not reliable, but that you have many angers.
You don't just have one.
There's no entity there called anger.
You have a whole anger for you and for me
and for everybody else in the Western world
is a population of variable instances. And, you know, your brain is constructing anger in a particular situation for you to
achieve a particular goal. And the expression of anger will be tailored to that goal. Sometimes
anger is unpleasant, sometimes it's pleasant, sometimes anger is very high arousal, sometimes
it's not. And so the idea that there's one set of features that defines anger in the face, in the body,
in the brain, or what have you is completely a myth.
But if you were to read most textbooks until recently, or most popular science books,
actually, you would be led to a very different story.
And I found that really, really interesting.
And it doesn't really matter whether you're looking,
you're studying the voice or the face or the body or the brain.
It's the same story over and over and over again.
Verability is the norm.
And that's just in Western cultures.
That's actually just within a single person.
So the idea that there are these universal signatures
is not the evolutionary story of
emotion.
There is an evolutionary story, but it's way more interesting and way more complicated
and way more useful, actually.
Can you tell us about it?
The evolutionary story?
Yeah, why do we have emotions?
I was going to ask one of my questions was, what are emotions?
What's the difference between emotions and feelings?
And why do we have them in the first place?
Well, that's a really great question. So let's start with feelings first because it's so much easier
for me to describe. So let's go all the way back in evolutionary time to the Eda Carri and period
in the Earth's history when the Earth was populated with creatures that had no brains.
These are really fascinating creatures and some of them are still alive today because
they are environment, they are niche, as it were, that's what it's called, a niche, an
ecological niche hasn't changed very much, so they haven't changed very much.
And these animals are interesting because they can move in sophisticated ways, but they have very few senses.
They can't see, they have no eyes, no ears, no smell, very simple touch.
Basically if something like literally touches their skin, their outside of their body,
they would react to it.
And they don't have eyes, they have an eye spot for light and dark.
That's to regulate their circadian rhythm.
And they don't have hearing, but they have one vestibular cell
that lets them keep their bodies upright in the water, for example.
But they can move, which means they have some kind of internal system
that keeps all the parts coordinated so that they can move
under their own steam if they want to. And really what these animals do is they
kind of plant themselves in the sand like a living blade of grass and they just
kind of filter food until the food goes away and then they eject themselves
from the sand and then they move themselves randomly to another spot
where, probabilistically, there's just more food
and then they plant themselves there.
So they're kind of like these little worms, essentially,
but they're not exactly worms
because they have little gill slits,
but they're kind of like worms,
they're either shaped like worms.
But they have these internal coordination systems
that help some move, like coordinate the parts of their body
so they can move under their own steam.
So when there's a looming darkness that happens really close to them or when something comes
up and nudges them, that disrupts their internal coordination.
So it's like they get a sense of the world for free.
It's not a great sense because it doesn't tell them what's happening exactly and it doesn't
tell them what to do about it exactly, but it just tells them, oh, something's going on
out there that I need to care about because my internal coordination has been disrupted.
And that means something outside in the world is happening. So if anything looms above it, like a piece of shell, or like a leaf, or another creature,
it doesn't really matter. The animal will react and move in a particular way,
like an instinct kind of. So that's what it has, okay?
But if you fast forward in evolutionary time, you see animals that have developed fairly large
bodies, and because they have large bodies, now they have internal systems like heart
and lungs and stuff like that, which has to be coordinated with each other, and they
have a brain.
Now they also have eyes.
And so when they see something in a distance, if it disrupts their internal
coordination, they don't know what it is, they just know it's important. If they've developed
a, what's called a lateral line system, to be able to sense things in the water, because
our field of touch actually evolved in the water as a distance sense. So they could feel a vibration,
and they won't necessarily know what caused the vibration, but they'll know, oh, something is
disrupting my internal coordination. That means something outside of me is important as happening
and so on and so forth, with all these distance senses. So now their environment has become not just this little shell around
their body, but this very large expanse by time because they can see at a distance and
they can feel a somatos touch at a distance. And our ability to hear comes from that lateral
line system. So they can detect vibrations at a distance. And so many things at a distance
can now just rub their internal coordination system.
So what do you feel that as?
You feel that as as affect as feeling.
When your internal systems is disrupted, you feel that.
You feel it as feeling pleasant, feeling unpleasant, feeling worked out, feeling calm.
That's what you feel it as.
So when you feel unpleasant, what does it mean?
Well, it means something's wrong, but like what? That's what you feel it is. So when you feel unpleasant, what does it mean?
Well, it means something's wrong, but like what?
Could be any number of things, really.
So it's this really basic feeling that comes from this disruption of or synchrony of this
internal set of systems that we have in our bodies that have to be controlled.
Now, why do we have a brain?
Which I actually found to be a really interesting question. Like, why do we have a brain, which I actually found to be really interesting question,
like why do we even have a brain?
Because it's like a really expensive organ.
So it's 20% of your metabolic budget.
That's the most expensive organ that you have, Dan,
is your brain.
That three pound blob of meat is like super, super expensive.
So why do we have it?
And the answer is we have it
because we have all these internal systems that have to be coordinated with each other.
So the way I talk about this in my popular writing is to think about your brain as running a budget for your body.
Your brain isn't budgeting money, it's budgeting salt and glucose and water and oxygen and so on, which are all the nutrients that are required to keep you alive and well.
And your brain is budgeting for your body, kind of like running a supply chain in a way.
It has to make sure that the nutrients are where they need to be before they need to be there
in order for the cells to use them so that you stay alive and well to perform your most important job.
Which is not anchoring a news show.
It's to pass your genes on to the next generation.
And make sure that generation lives to reproductive age.
That's actually your brain's most important job.
So regulating your body, the systems of your body,
is your brain's most important job.
And your body is constantly brain's most important job. And your body is constantly
sending information back to your brain about how coordinated things are or how copacetic
things are inside your body. And you feel that your brain makes that available to itself
as these feelings of feeling pleasant, feeling unpleasant, feeling worked up, feeling calm.
These feelings are always with you.
They're properties of consciousness.
They're always with you because your brain's always regulating the systems of your body
and the body's always sending sense data back to the brain about its state and you are always
in a state of feeling always. And sometimes, your brain has to make sense of that of the sense data that give rise to
this feeling.
So if you have a tug in your chest, you know, what is it?
Is it anxiety?
Is it that you ate too much at dinner?
Is it the beginnings of a heart attack?
I mean, what is that tug?
Your brain has to make sense of what's going on inside your body in relation to what's going on around you in the world.
And sometimes your brain makes sense of that orchestra of sensations as emotions.
So let me see if I can restate this back. You just really so that I know that I got it.
Feelings are like pretty simple in some way. They're the body, or at least
they evolved in a simple way. Want this, don't want this safe, unsafe approach, run away,
or neutral. Emotions are what we evolved to layer on top of that, which are more complex reactions to the raw data of the Felix.
Almost. I might make a couple of adjustments, so I would say I got to see from the professor there.
That's fine. I'll take it. No, no, but maybe a beat, maybe a beat minus.
No, I mean, what I would say is that your brain
is always running a budget for your body.
So when I say it's running a budget for your body,
what I mean by that is you can think about everything
that you do in terms of deposits and withdrawals.
Sleeping is a deposit.
Eating is a deposit if you're eating housefully.
If you're eating junk food, and I say this is somebody
who, you know, I love french fries.
French fries are like God's most perfect food, I think, really.
But even though I deeply committed to this view,
I also know that junk food,
that we could have a whole conversation about junk food
and what I've learned about how it completely screws up
your metabolism.
But what I'll say is that eating real food, whole food is good for you, is like a deposit.
Eating junk food is not.
Sudo food is what we call it in my house.
Exercising is a withdrawal because you're spending resources, but it's kind of like an
investment because if once you replenish it, you're actually resources, but it's kind of like an investment, because if once
you replenish it, you're actually going to get something for what you've spent, you
know, you get a healthier brain and a healthier body.
Maybe you keep your memory a little longer, you know, working into act and stuff.
You can think about learning something new, as also an expense.
It's an investment.
It's like a workout for your brain just like exercises.
You can think about someone giving you a hug that you love as making things slightly cheaper for
you to do. You can think about someone who gives you a hug who you don't love and who you don't
want touching you as actually making things slightly more expensive, like you're paying a tax, in a sense.
And these little taxes, you know, can add up over time to a really big deficit.
So you're always having some state of feeling.
The feeling actually just tells you that you're running a deficit, that there's some internal
coordination which is off.
It doesn't actually tell you what to do about it.
It's not tied to action in any particular
way. Even though creatures without brains have what we would call instinctual responses,
the idea that humans have these simple instinctual reflexes and layered on top of that or these
more complex emotions and layered on top of that is rationality or rational thought is that's also just a myth.
The idea that reflexes are these obligatory things that happen, just like, you know, you see
something or hear something and that triggers this automatic obligatory stereotype physical response,
like freeze or flee or what have you is also not exactly correct. Reflexes in a vertebrate are still very
context driven. They're still modulated by the context. And so what I would say is that
what your brain is really doing is it has to guess at what the sense date of mean. Like when you hear a loud bang, what is that loud bang?
Is that loud bang somebody slamming a door?
Is that loud bang somebody dropped a box?
Is that loud bang somebody back their car back fired?
Could it be a gunshot?
I mean, that's actually a reasonable question if you live in the United States
or in certain parts of the world.
So depending on what your brain believes, the meaning that it's making out of that loud bang,
that will dictate what the brain does, what it plans to do in order to keep you alive and well.
That's always true, always true. Every waking moment of your life, this is true.
Let me back up and say, where does the information come?
Allow the brain to make meaning out of what that sound means.
And the answer is it comes from your past experience.
So your brain is using past experience to guess at what sense day in a mean in order to plan so that you can act in a way that will
keep you safe.
And what you experience about the world derives from that action plan.
And that's true all the time.
It's just sometimes whenever your brain is using past experiences of emotion to make that
guess, then when it's doing is constituting an emotion in that moment.
Which may or may not be appropriate.
Well, appropriate may or may not be advantageous to you, right?
So for example, this is an example I use a lot because I just think it's a,
I just one of my favorite examples that has real meaning.
There's research behind it, but there's also real meaning there.
You know, when things are uncertain, or when there are multiple meanings that your brain
could give to something, or when you're preparing for a big metabolic outlay, so you know,
your brain's preparing you to do something super hard.
You have an increase in arousal. There are systems in your body that will increase arousal, there are systems in your brain that will increase arousal, you'll feel jittery.
How do we usually make sense of that? We usually make sense of it as anxiety,
sometimes fear, but you could make sense of it in other ways. It's not a comfortable feeling,
but you could make sense of it in other ways. It's not a comfortable feeling, but
you could make sense of it in other ways. When my daughter was 12 years old, she was a tiny
little thing, but she was testing for a black belt in Karate with this 10th degree black
belt. This guy is seriously a powerful guy. He's like a 10th degree black belt. I think
there are like what, like 10 of them in the in the country I mean like it's just really powerful guy and she's testing
Amidst all these like big hulking adolescent boys who she has to spar with
Okay, and what does he say to her? He doesn't say calm down little honey. He says get your butterflies flying in formation
And I was like, that's brilliant.
And it turns out there's this whole line of research about people who have difficulty with
test anxiety, who fail, not just fail tests, but they fail courses and they can't graduate.
And that actually, a college graduation massively changes your earning potential over your lifetime.
So we're talking about hundreds of thousands of dollars over your lifetime.
And if you learn not to reduce the arousal because you don't want to do that,
you have something hard you have to do, you can master those tests and you
can pass those courses and you can change the trajectory of your entire life.
Now that may sound like Jedi mind tricks to you, if I wasn't a scientist, it might sound
that way to me, but it isn't.
And in fact, you can train your brain to make sense of your sensations very differently
as emotions or sometimes deconstruct them into something that is not an emotion, but
just is that simple feeling, which is really, I mean, in a sense what mindfulness meditation
is attempting to do, right? But I mean, the example I like to give is your audience, like our listeners can't hear me now,
but I'll just show you and I'll hopefully they'll be able to simulate this.
Like if you pick up a glass of water, I'll jingle it so people can hear the ice.
So you look at a glass of water.
Now, to you, it looks like an object, a three dimensional object, but let's say you wanted to paint this on a canvas.
When I tried to paint this on a canvas, I would look at this object and I would try to render this three-dimensional object on a two-dimensional canvas,
and it would look like a pretty f***ing rendering of a three-dimensional object on a two-dimensional canvas.
But what a professional painter will do, an artist, will look at this
object and deconstruct it into pieces of light. Like, oh, there's white, but there's blue, and
there's a little green, and a little yellow, and gray, and then what the artist will do is paint the pieces of light. And poof, you have a reasonable looking three-dimensional object
on a two-dimensional canvas, unless you're me, in which case it will still look f***ed.
But the point is that what you've done is you've deconstructed the object and you've
constructed it closer to what you might call the stream of experience. And mindfulness meditation is attempting to do something very
similar to that, where you're attempting to not construct, not to grasp at perceptions and
construct things out of them, but just to try to experience them in their most basic form.
And one of the most basic forms is affect. So it would be, for example, waking up in the
morning and feeling like crap and not immediately trying to make sense of that as like, what happened
yesterday with your spouse or what's going to happen today or, you know, what new political
thing is going to drive you nuts or no, it could just be you didn't get enough sleep.
It could just be your dehydrated because it's the morning.
It could just be that maybe you're not a morning person and it's not your time of the circadian
rhythm to feel a lot of energy.
It could be that, you know, for example, throughout this whole COVID mess, a lot of times people
would ask me how I'm feeling and I would say, my body budget is running a deficit today. And that's not just simple
wordplay. That's me saying, well, I'm kind of feeling like crap today, but I'm not going
to blow this up in making it meaningful psychologically in my life that would lead
to me engaging in actions with people.
I'm not going to take this feeling as a sign that something is wrong with this relationship
or something is wrong with not paying that bill or something is wrong with, right?
I'm just going to say, well, I'm running a body budget deficit.
This is a really hard time.
I'm paying a little extra tax.
Bear with me today because I'm not feeling quite at my best. And I think
this is a very meaningful difference in how to architecture experience.
Because you're not being yanked around by the sensations in your body and adding on top
of it this whole story that can make everything worse.
Yeah, I'm adding a different story. The different story is my brain is running a body budget
and there are feelings that come from that body budget. And my brain tries to make sense of those
as emotions or perceptions or whatever to guide my action. And so the action that it's going to
guide is that I'm going to go to sleep a little earlier tonight and I'm going to drink a little more.
Maybe I might have some a little more tea today than I might normally because I need to use
that caffeine to borrow a little energy from tomorrow
because I kind of really need it today.
Maybe I'll allow myself to have an extra piece
of chocolate or something.
Again, some kind of internal coordination thing
is going on, right?
I'm running a body budget deficit today,
but what I'm not gonna do is make sense of it as anger
or as fear or as anxiety or as sadness
or as any of the other very
easily and justifiable emotions that would lead to different actions that I don't think
are particularly productive in this circumstance.
But maybe it is one of those things.
Maybe it is sadness that you need to know.
No, it isn't.
Well, there is no, maybe it really is because your brain is making it fast.
So, here's the thing.
When you have a tug in your chest or there, you have a tightness in your chest.
You're at risk for a heart attack.
There's a real there there, okay?
Because you really have a heart and your heart really does work in a particular way, okay?
But when you feel a tightness in your chest,
and that tightness is caused by anxiety, or I would say it's a sensation
that you've made meaningful as anxiety,
the tightness actually, like when your brain
is making sense of something,
it's not just always that the sensation is there
and then you make sense of it.
Like based on what's going on around you in the world right now and what the state of your body is right now,
your brain basically uses past experience to make a guess of what's going to happen next.
And what is that guess?
That guess first is it attempts to change your physical state and prepare you for an action.
And that's actually where your experience comes from.
You know, if there's a rustling in the grass,
and based on past experience, my brain predicts that it will be a snake,
the first thing that my brain is doing is
changing my physical state. It's actually changing the state of my body.
So I will start to feel arousal, anxious.
I'll start to feel like a worked up sort of feeling,
and it's preparing me to run.
And that prepares me to potentially see a snake.
These predictions are actually the brain
changing the pattern of its own firing.
It's changing its own neurons, basically firing.
So when anxiety is causing, in scare quotes, causing you to have a tight chest, there's
no like there there.
It's not like anxiety lives in your body somewhere and your brain is perceiving it accurately
or inaccurately.
It's that your brain is responding to the world and the body as it is to make a prediction
about what's going to happen next.
Those predictions are actual changes that your brain starts to execute.
So the tightness in your chest can be caused by your heart,
but it can also be caused by your brain preparing you to feel anxiety.
There's no real anxiety anywhere except the fact that your brain makes it.
When you go to the gym or you work out, There's no real anxiety anywhere except the fact that your brain makes it.
When you go to the gym or you work out, I mean none of us go to the gym, right?
Because we're in COVID.
But when you work out, when you go for a run or whatever, do you sweat?
Yes.
Yeah.
Do you feel that wetness?
Is it real to you?
That wetness?
Yes.
Yeah.
Sure, of course, right?
But you don't have any wetness sensors in your whole body and your skin.
So how is it that you feel wet with sweat when nothing in your skin gives you the feeling
of wetness?
And the answer is because your brain constructs it.
Because your brain takes temperature information, because there are temperature sensors and your brain takes touch sensation because there are touch sensors
and it combines them to completely construct an experience of wetness that you take as
normal. And that's what your brain is doing when you feel anxiety or anger or sadness or
anything. So again, I would say your brain is constructing experience for you
that you take as completely normal part of your life
and you're completely unaware that your brain is doing it, but it is.
Your brain doesn't make itself aware that it's doing it, but it is.
And that's the same thing with creating emotion. It's exactly the same thing.
Are you saying that we can just choose to tell ourselves a different story? So we may feel
feelings again, these are physical sensations. And instead of, for me, it's not a comment to walk
around with some tightness in my chest often produced, well, the story I've told myself is often
because I mean, I'm writing a book and that feels anxiety producing to me. But I could choose to
tell myself a completely different story. Is that where you're taking this?
Yeah, I mean, choose is a hard word here because I'm making it sound like oh, so much simpler than it actually really is in real life.
But you never will have as much control over the stories that your brain tells
itself as you would like, but you definitely have more control than you think
that you do.
The control, though, doesn't really happen so easily in the moment.
You have to really, I think, extend the horizon of control is what I would say.
So for example, if you're feeling worked up, you can try really hard to just talk to
yourself differently and calm yourself down and that won't work as you know.
Really? You know, changing actually your affect, the mood or the simple feelings that come from
body budgeting is actually really hard to do. It's not impossible to do, but it's not easy. I mean,
even just deep breathing, unless you're very practiced at it, deep breathing isn't going to immediately calm you down.
I mean, it sometimes will, but it's really, you have to do it for a long time for that effect to be able to occur.
But you can definitely make the sensations, those simple feelings, give them a different meaning.
If you try to do it in the moment as it's occurring, it's going to be really hard for you.
If you try to do it in the moment as it's occurring, it's going to be really hard for you, because you have to give a lot of effort to it.
It costs something metabolically to do it, and you might not have those resources available.
But if you practice doing it when you're not in those moments and you practice, it's like
any skill, you practice it, and you get automatic at it. It's like driving, you know.
At first, when you learn to drive, it's really hard, and you have to give it all your attention,
and it's metabolically expensive, because you're doing something new,
and it's metabolically costly, but eventually, if you practice enough,
it becomes a pretty automatic skill, and then you don't even really think about it,
and it doesn't become very costly at all, because your brain is predicting
really, really fluidly
and really, really easily.
And so it's kind of like that.
It becomes easier to do because it becomes automatic.
And that means your brain is predicting easiest,
constructing the narrative, it's regulating the body,
just much more easily.
It just takes some practice.
So I'm from Toronto.
And it's snow's in Toronto, not as from Toronto and you know it snows in Toronto,
not as much now as it did when I was growing up, but it does still snow there. And I lived
in Winnipeg for a year and it snows really a lot there. And so every year I would have
to remind myself how to drive on IEC roads. And so what would I do?
I would deliberately, the first snow of every year,
I would go into a parking lot or on a street
and I would deliberately put myself into a spin in my car.
So I could remember how to get out of it.
And I would just do it a couple of times.
Just to remind myself how to do it, right?
What was I doing there? Well, I was practicing. I was
getting like reminding my brain how to do this and reminding my brain how to do it so my brain could
just do it automatically when it was necessary. And so it's kind of like that.
How do we, because you know, it sounds like, I mean, I'm gonna imagine you have no small amount of
practice here and you talked before about how occasionally you're asked how you're doing and COVID times and instead
of telling yourself a big story about or even repeating the story aloud about sadness,
anxiety, whatever, you'd reframe it as the body running of a deficit.
How is that a skill that we could develop? Well, there's really, really nice research to show that the more flexibility you have
to make meaning of your sensations in multiple ways, the more resilient you are.
And so the way that you develop this skill is that you practice making meaning of your sensations
in different ways. So for example, I have a set of things I do in the morning every morning.
You know, I wake up, I tell myself I'm not going to go to my computer and read my email
and then I go to my computer and I read my email.
And then I tell myself I'm going to go downstairs and have a protein shake and get ready for
my workout, which I do every morning.
And so I go downstairs and I have my protein check.
I tell myself, I'm okay,
you're just only gonna look at the front page.
I tell myself I'm not gonna get engrossed
in reading anything, I'm just gonna scan the front page
while I drink my drink.
And of course, that never happens every day.
And as I'm reading the newspaper,
this is before the election, recently, I would remind myself,
you know, I would say you're drinking something and if you are stressed within two hours of eating
a meal, it's like adding 104 calories to your meal because, you know, your brain will direct your
body to metabolize that food in a less efficient way. So it's like the equivalent of adding 104 calories, which I think I talk about this in seven and a half
lessons about the brain, but this is one of these things that I find like really interesting as a
scientist and sort of horrifying as a person, right? And so I'd be telling myself, don't read the
newspaper while you're drinking. Like this is just going to infuriate you, don't you know. And so in those moments though, you know, I have increased arousal and my brain is constructing
anger, hugely fury often.
That's a great opportunity to practice deconstruction right there.
And so I would.
How does that go?
So what does that look like when you're doing deconstruction?
I might try to cultivate curiosity instead.
So I might attempt to take the sensations and conjure curiosity.
And so instead of being infuriated by something that happened or somebody who did something or didn't do something,
I might be curious. And like, honestly, like authentically try to be curious,
or sometimes I might conjure determination to see what I can do to change things.
And sometimes, you know, the only thing I could come up with
was to bake my neighbor a loaf of bread.
But one small act of kindness does a little bit
to change the world and make it a little bit better.
Right, so sometimes it was only that.
That was all I could muster that day, you know.
One thing I often tell people is,
here's a practice that I still do.
I still do this every day,
but now I'm inherently a skeptical person. That's just me. So there was this emerging literature,
you know, on gratitude and awe and how important it is in your psychological life,
how beneficial it is. And in fact, one of my colleagues actually is very well, not me. He's
one of the people who's done this very excellent research on gratitude.
But I am skeptical. And so I'm like, there's no way that all in gratitude can have that kind of
an effect on your life. I'm sorry. It's just like, no, I just don't believe it. I just don't believe it.
And so I don't, and you know, but I'm reading the research and I'm like, as a researcher, if you ask me in general, I would say, I would always believe the data
in a well-designed experiment over my own experience.
Because the experience of one person is not really diagnostic.
So, you know, so I'm reading this like incredibly well-designed research.
And I'm thinking, I don't believe this for once.
I can totally, this doesn't match my experience. And I'm like, okay, fine. So all right, I'm going, I don't believe this for one second. This totally doesn't match my experience.
Well, I'm like, okay, fine.
So, all right, I'm gonna try it.
I'm gonna try every day.
Gratitude is easy.
The hard one is awe for me, anyway.
So I thought, okay, every day for five minutes,
I am going to practice feeling awe.
I'm gonna practice feeling like like a spec for five minutes.
Because if you're a spec, then your problems are a spec, and then the burden on your body
budget just goes right down, right?
So I'm going to practice this.
And I did, and I still practice it.
There are some easy ones, right?
Like when I would drive to work every day along the mass pike, there was a billboard.
I talk about this in my other book, How Motion's Are Made.
There was a billboard of this totally adorable orangutan baby.
Like you just want to eat this baby up.
This baby is adorable.
Actually, the name for that emotion from the Philippines is called Geagle, which is like,
you know, you just want to squeeze something so cute.
So it was like that.
It was just just a adorable, adorable infant.
So that was easy to make awe at every day.
What I didn't anticipate was that my moments of awe
would expand into the, you know,
because I could start simulating or predicting,
which is really like visualizing in your head,
the image of that infant before I even got to it
because I knew it was coming up because my brain could predict because I drive on this
road all the time.
And so my moment of awe would, you know, I'd be starting to smile like well in advance
of reaching this.
So that's easy, but there are harder ones like you're walking on the street.
You're walking on this sidewalk and you I don't know if it's ever happened to you, but the tip of
your shoe kind of catches on the sidewalk and then you kind of lurch forward a little bit and you sort
of you don't exactly trip, but you know, you like kind of lose your smooth gate and you try
to look cool and you try to look like it's not a big deal that you almost like tripped over
your own feet, right? And you look down and then what do you see?
You see this ugly, little, gnarly little weed popping out of a crack in the sidewalk that
you just tripped on, and you can make a moment of awe.
You can look at that weed and you can see it as a thing of beauty, of grandeur, of the breathtaking power of nature that will not be constrained by human
attempts to constrain it, to control it.
And even now when I talk to you about this, I'm getting like little shivers.
I know this might sound like psychological mumbo jumbo, but it's not.
And I think now, when I need it, when things are getting really stressful, I can shift into
a moment of awe really, really easily.
My relationships have been almost exclusively other than my little pod on Zoom for a year.
And sometimes Zoom fails.
And not just Zoom.
I mean, sometimes it's Microsoft, whatever, or whatever, like all these different platforms,
but they're all over the internet.
Sometimes it's satellite moves,
and you lose your internet connection,
or it's delayed, or whatever.
It's really frustrating.
And when you're connecting with a family member who's sick,
or when you're trying to talk to your doctor,
and you're worried, or when you're trying to talk to your students
and trying to keep them on track,
or whatever, it's really, really frustrating. And so, those are moments where
shifting into awe is really useful. Like, where are you, Dan? Are you in Washington or New York?
Outside of New York City. You're outside of New York City. I'm in Boston, so what are we? A couple
of hundred miles away from each other. But look, here we are just talking to each other like we were having coffee together.
And I can talk to people halfway around the world and see their faces.
That's miraculous.
So in those moments when in the internet fails as it does about once a day, at least, you know,
I say, well, you know, I know this is really frustrating, but let's just take a minute and realize that we're actually seeing each other and we're
halfway around the world from each other. And that's pretty amazing. So this sucks, but it only
sucks because we also have this awesome thing that we're doing. And, you know, it works. It's just
you have to really practice it and you have to take it seriously. Much more of my conversation
with Dr. Lisa Feldman-Barritt, we're out of this this. Life is short, and it's full of a lot of interesting questions.
What does happiness really mean?
How do I get the most out of my time here on Earth?
And what really is the best cereal?
These are the questions I seek to resolve on my weekly podcast, Life is short with Justin
Long.
If you're looking for the answer to deep philosophical questions like, what is the meaning of life?
I can't really help you.
But I do believe that we really enrich our experience here by learning from others.
And that's why in each episode, I like to talk with actors, musicians, artists,
scientists, and many more types of people about how they get the most out of life.
We explore how they felt during the highs, and sometimes more importantly,
the lows of their careers.
We discuss how they've been able to stay happy
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between friends about the important stuff.
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Follow Life is short wherever you get your podcasts.
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or Wondering App. Is there any danger that in the process of deconstruction you could stifle or stuff or compartmentalize
in a way that would be deleterious to your psychological health?
Oh, for sure. I mean, there is a whole diagnostic section
of the diagnostic and statistical manual,
the DSM that we use to diagnose mental disorders.
Well, I say we, but I mean, I don't do that anymore,
but the people use to diagnose mental disorders.
That's called somatization, which means not acknowledging
the affective.
Well, they would call it emotional, but that's because they're mistaking emotion and affect,
which people always do, that not acknowledging the affective significance of things and only
experiencing them as physical symptoms.
And that's unhealthy.
So if I was, let's say, hypoth, having difficulty with my boss and I'm constantly experiencing
this as a stomach ache and nothing else, that's not useful either because while it is true
that you are experiencing a stomach ache, that stomach ache isn't telling you what to do differently.
It's not helping you solve the problem.
And it might be actually exacerbating the problem
that you're not making a fuller psychological meaning of it.
So I don't think that there's a right or wrong answer here.
I don't think that you should always make a mental meaning
out of your physical sensations and I don't think that you should always make a mental meaning out of your physical
sensations, and I don't think that you should always not. I think it really depends on, you
have to understand that your brain is using knowledge from the past to predict your immediate
future, which becomes your present. When it's doing that, it's not just constructing your experience, it's also guiding
your actions, it's planning your actions. And learning how to use that knowledge is a skill.
It's a skill like any other skill that you can build. And you want to build that skill so that
your brain does it pretty automatically, but that your brain has lots of options to choose from, because that gives you flexibility and that allows you to be resilient.
And sometimes, it's better to have your actions guided by the physical sensation of a stomach
ache, and sometimes it's better to be meeting more productive for you, for your body budget, to make sense of those sensations as anger or
as fear or as guilt or hunger.
Sounds like art and science.
You know, it's like there's a lot of science here, but the application of the skill involves
some, you know, it's not black or white.
You got to figure out for yourself when to apply and when to listen to your feelings.
Yeah, I mean, I would still see you to science. I guess I would say it's like personalized medicine,
really. What it is, it's like there isn't one anger. There's a population of anger. For example,
if I, if I, we published a study like this recently, if I instrumented you out, Dan, like,
I measured all kinds of physical signals on you, Your heart rate, your blood pressure, your respiratory rate and depth, and maybe your, the electrical,
what's called skin conductance, which is just like how much, it's really a measure of
how much you're sweating, which is a measure of your sympathetic nervous system activity.
And let's say I measure your facial movements, I'm just measuring all kinds of things about
you.
And I'm measuring them, you're out and about in your day, okay. If your heart rate changes and you aren't moving, that means something psychological
has just happened. Like something in your brain has just shifted what it's predicting. And
at that moment, you hear a little signal, you know, you're queued and you're asked to
rate your affect and then label your experience. What are you feeling right now? And let's say I just did this across like two weeks hypothetically because that's what
we did.
We did it for two weeks with people.
And sometimes those labels would be anger and sometimes they'd be fear and sometimes
they'd be sadness and sometimes they'd be gratitude and sometimes they'd be happiness
and sometimes they'd be whatever.
Okay.
And if you just look at one person and you just look at their physiology, you can see that
the physiology, their reliable patterns there.
Your brain is returning your body to particular patterns of physiology over and over again
throughout all of these weeks, days, weeks, whatever.
And the labels that you give have a many to many correspondence with the patterns, meaning
sometimes, when you're angry, you're in one pattern, meaning sometimes when you're angry, you're in one
pattern, and sometimes when you're angry, your body's in another pattern, and sometimes
when you're angry, your body's in a third pattern.
And a given pattern can be associated with more than one label.
So what does that mean?
What that means is that what's happening is that your brain is making sense of that pattern
as a particular emotion and sometimes that that pattern can happen and your brain will
make sense of it as a different emotion.
And that sense making, you know, in air quotes, like what does it mean to make sense of?
It means it's preparing your actions in a particular way
that your brain has learned in the past, occurred in the past.
And that learning can be that you, yourself experienced it,
or you watched a movie, or you heard someone tell you about it,
or you learned about it in a book.
You might be thinking to yourself, well,
it's not, my brain does this automatically.
It does not always do it really productively.
And that's because, well, you know because your brain is usually juggling multiple goals, and so may not be productive
for one thing, but it's definitely going to be productive for something else.
Your brain doesn't spend metabolic resources frivolously.
The things that we sometimes label as not rational or unproductive, what that means is
that there's some other set of prediction,
some other goal that your brain is attempting to optimize
and you just have to figure out what that is
if that's what you want to change.
I want to make sure, because we started on this
or at the beginning and I don't feel like I ever got it
straight, at least in my own head.
The difference between
feelings and emotion, because I think they're often used interchangeably, but if I'm here,
you're correctly, feelings are physical sensations. Emotions are the story we tell,
or the sense we make of those sensations. Yeah, so let me just say that scientists don't agree
on how to define emotion.
Okay, so one scientist will tell you,
an emotion is an action.
Like when a scientist tells you,
well, there is a circuit in your brain for fear.
The translation is, there's a circuit in your brain
for freezing behavior.
And the scientist has determined,
has stipulated basically that freezing behavior, and the scientist has determined, has stipulated basically that freezing
behavior is fear. They've defined emotion as a specific action. Okay? There are other
people who define motions as feelings, the feeling of terror, the feeling of delight, the
feeling of awe, the feeling of anguish. That's the emotion, it's the feeling.
But you've said their feelings were physical sensation, sorry to jump in. the feeling of anguish. That's the emotions to feeling.
But you've said their feelings were physical sensation. Sorry to jump in.
Well, I'm talking about affect. I'm talking about simple feelings of feeling pleasant, feeling unpleasant,
feeling worked up, feeling calm, like tranquil, quiet. Your body feels quiet. Your body feels worked up.
Your mind feels jangly. Your mind feels like you can focus and pay attention.
I'm saying those simple feelings, I'm not saying every feeling, I'm saying those feelings are very closely connected to your brain's modeling the sensory state of your body. Your brain is making predictions about what's going on in your body.
Your body is sending sense data back to your brain.
It does a calculus that creates those feelings,
that these simple feelings affect or mood in the same way that your brain does a simple calculus,
or maybe not so simple calculus, to create flavor or to create a feeling of wetness.
It's creating a feeling
that it doesn't have a sensor for. You don't have a sensor for feeling unpleasant or feeling uncomfortable.
There's no sensor for that anywhere. There's no circuit for that anywhere either. Your brain's
constructing it out of a combination of neurons firing in a particular pattern.
So that's what I'm saying.
You know, when you see red, you're experiencing red.
That's a feeling of redness.
It's not like when you hear a loud sound,
you're experiencing the loudness of it.
You're feeling it.
I mean, so experience and feeling in general are words that are used interchangeably.
And what I mean by a feeling is these simple feelings, feeling pleasant, unpleasant,
or feeling comfortable, uncomfortable feeling, worked up and jangly feeling, you know,
tranquil and quiet. They are simple feelings that come from your brains modeling the state of
your body, the conditions of your body. There's a whole drama going on inside your body that you hopefully are unaware of.
If you're aware of it, I feel really bad for you because it means something's wrong and you're really uncomfortable.
But most of the time we're not really aware of like all the Michigan's going on inside our own bodies.
Instead, what evolutionist provided us with is a brain that will make
a feeling of feeling pleasant or unpleasant or, you know, it's like a barometer for your
body budget. Like how is your body budget doing? Okay, in the red, you know, that's what it's
telling you basically and not much more.
So then what are emotions?
So emotions are, when your brain is attempting to make sense of that. What is it doing?
It's using past experience to predict what to do next and
predict what you will see next and what you will hear next and what you will smell next and all of that and that whole
Shebang is an emotion. The whole narrative, the whole thing is the emotion.
So is it a preparation for acting in a particular way? Yes, it is. The whole narrative, the whole thing is the emotion.
So is it a preparation for acting in a particular way?
Yes, it is.
But that doesn't mean that fear is always preparing you to run or freeze.
Because sometimes fear leads you to, for you, it prepares you to approach something.
Sometimes fear leads you to laugh.
But what I'm trying to say is that,
why are we calling it an emotion?
We're just calling it an emotion
because the information the brain is using,
the past experience it's using,
our past experiences of emotion.
There's nothing that's different
about the construction of an emotional event in your life
than there is about an event of belief,
or an event of thought, or an event of rationality,
or an event of perception.
If somebody cuts me off on the highway,
and I'm in my car, I mean, I don't drive on,
I haven't driven on the highway in a year,
but let's imagine I'm in my car, I'm driving a work,
I have a pass and drive inside me,
and out of my peripheral vision, I'm unaware, but my perutial vision, I can in my car, I'm driving a work, I have a passenger inside me. And out of my peripheral vision, I'm unaware, but my peripheral vision, I can see a car
about to drive into my lane and come me off.
Just as I initially, my brain is basically detecting the most simplest like change in
my peripheral vision.
It's making a set of predictions about what's going to happen next, what's going to happen next, and it's predicting, predicting, predicting.
And so by the time I actually see that car consciously, I already have a flush of adrenaline
already because my brain sent it in preparation and actually prepared me to see that card cutting into my lane.
And I respond with, what an
that person is, we're doing that, right?
And as if the is in the person, right?
It's like a property.
Like so my negativity there is like a property of that person's
is now you would say, what are you experiencing?
And I'd be like, I'm experiencing that person as an
p-
And an onlooker might say, no, no, you're angry
right there, that's anger.
Well, who's right?
Is that a perception of a person?
Or is that anger?
And the answer is it's a completely scientifically
meaningless question.
Because it's a completely scientifically meaningless question, because it's both.
Because that event has a bunch of features.
One of the features is this seeing a car cut me off.
That feature is also constructed by my brain,
but it's close to the sense data that are coming in from my retina.
So we call it a property of the world.
But really, my brain constructed it.
You see in your brain, you don't see in your eyes. And my brain is also constructing the experience
of my sweaty armpits in that moment because I don't have any sensors for wetness on my body
and like anybody else, right? So my brain is constructing that feature. So my brain is constructing
the feature of unpleasant feeling and my brain is constructing all of these
features and so is that an anger up instance? Sure. Yeah, you could say that the word anger might come to mind in me or in you and so anger could be a feature of that event
And is it a perception of a person?
Absolutely. It's a perception. There is also those features. I mean basically
It's like a signal ground problem like a signal foreground background problem,
or it's basically, you know,
your brain is creating a set of features in that instance.
And people who study emotion,
wanna call that an emotion.
And people who study memory, wanna call that memory.
And people who study perception,
they wanna call that perception.
But it's all those things.
And what it is for you is whichever feature
is in the focus of your attention.
So labels become tricky when you're trying to apply them to dynamic multi-variant processes?
You know, an engineer could not have said it better than you just did.
I was looking for a better grade. That's all I'm doing.
Yeah, no, I would say you're totally up. That actually gets you like, I would say an A, actually, that was an A. Yeah.
But then you can change the meaning.
You can ask yourself consciously, deliberately, if you must, but maybe if you've done it
enough, you might automatically ask yourself, it might automatically happen that your brain
is predicting something different now because you practiced.
You might say, maybe that person
has to get their sick kid to a hospital
or maybe that person has to be somewhere
really importantly to help somebody else
or maybe that person just didn't have enough coffee
this morning and just didn't see you.
Any of those things could be true
if your brain is prepared itself.
With enough variation and experience, you have options
to feel differently and eventually it will affect your affect. First, it might just affect
the story that you tell and whether the affect is prolonged by the actions that you take,
but eventually it might actually affect the affect because you are always cultivating your past
as a means of predicting who you will be in the future.
And I'm saying that not as somebody who believes in mystical things, I'm saying this to you
as a scientist who studies how the brain works.
And as I understand it, while you're not a practicing Buddhist, you've done quite a lot of work with Buddhists, and there seems to be quite a lot of overlap between your research findings and
2600 years of contemplative practice and thought.
years of contemplative practice and thought. Yes, I will say that I am, I'm a very big fan of philosophy in general.
I think about philosophy as whether it's Western philosophy or contemplative philosophy.
I think a philosophy is tools for living.
And to some extent, I also think of science this way as well.
And I've been very fortunate to have conversations with people who are very
learned scholars and contemplative traditions, including John Dunn, who actually works with
Richie Davidson at the University of Wisconsin, and one of my former postdocs actually works with
them as well. And I'm mentioning this because previously to this taping, Dan, you and I had a conversation
about Richie's work. And so what I've learned through talking to various people, including
John, is that there's an Abidarmic tradition, the Abidarma tradition in Buddhism that is very consistent with much of what my scientific work
aligns with.
The self is a fiction and that these fictions can interfere
with your ability to experience the world authentically
and that the world is made of dharmas.
There are that experience, I should say,
is made of dharmas.
But this is where things get a little tricky, because in the Abhidarmic tradition, there
are dharma's for pleasantness, unpleasantness, for arousal, like so valence and arousal,
these, you know, properties of simple feeling that I'm talking about.
But there are also dharma's for anger and fear and so on.
And so that's where we diverge, I think, because I also think of these things as constructed.
They're constructed with the knowledge that you have from your past.
And we haven't talked at all about concepts.
But what I understand the brain to be doing when it's making a prediction is to generating
an ad hoc concept basically out of the past.
And I can unpack that if we had more time.
But what I will say is that interestingly, in Buddhist philosophy,
there is also a revisionist version of that philosophy,
which I think the key figure is Darmakirti,
who I think lived in the,
I think it's second century or seventh century,
sometime after the Buddha,
who came along and said,
no, these dharma's are not actual
essences of true experience. They're just constructed by the human mind, you know, with
human concepts. And I was like, yes, that's totally consistent with what we're driving
at with science that we do. So in every Western science, in physics, in chemistry, in biology, and
hopefully, in some day in psychology, you see science moving from this very essentialist
view of the world to this more constructionist or relational view. Right, so that's what quantum
mechanics is. It's not saying that electrons don't exist. It's saying, well, that what we
measure, this energy change that we measure,
in the way that we measure it, we could describe as an electron. What exists is always in relation to whatever else is going on.
And that's very much a constructionist view of the brain and of the mind. And it turns out that you see this kind of trajectory in all of these Western sciences, and then you see the same trajectory in Buddhist philosophy,
which is I think really cool, right?
So you go from the Abhidharma where, yeah, sure,
the self is constructed, but it's still essentialist
in assuming that the dharma's have essences
and are real in nature, and then you go from that
to Dharma Kirti, who says, no, no, even these things that we think of as essences, are real in nature, and then you go from that to, you know, Darmakir
to you who says, no, no, even these things that we think of as essences, no, they're actually
constructed to. You go to this really much more completely relational view of meaning.
And relational view of meaning doesn't mean like what postmodern, you know, like the
stereotype of postmodernist views, right? It's not like nothing is real and there's
no meaning in anything. It's that everything is meaningful in relation to something else, and a lot of
that meaning, which is real, comes from humans who impose that meaning together. You know,
we impose meaning, we impose functions on things that by virtue of their physical nature,
don't have that function,
but we impose that function collectively and then poof, they have that function.
Like little pieces of paper serve as value, as carrying value of his money, because we all
agree that those little pieces of paper can be traded for material goods.
And then when someone decides they can't anymore, then they don't have value anymore.
So that's what caused the mortgage crash,
right? In 2008. So much of what we do works that way for humans. And what I would say is there's
no physical change in your body that is uniquely or distinctly meaningful as an emotion,
unless you make it that way. And why would you make it that way?
Because somebody taught you that that's the meaning that you should make and that other people
make that meaning too. So just in the same way that we impose a function on pieces of paper
and then proof those particular pieces of paper have value as money, we impose meaning on the raise of an eyebrow
or the curl of a lip or the, you know, beat of a heart, and then poof, they have real
meaning as that. Maybe I'll close with one of my favorite quotes that comes to mind sometimes
on having a discussion like this. I've probably set up a four on the podcast, so apologies.
having a discussion like this, I've probably said it before on the podcast, so apologies.
I'm keying in on the word real.
There is a great Buddhist master who said to one of his students,
once it's not that you're not real,
you're just not really real.
And I mean, so yeah, so things are,
I mean, money's real.
It's not really real.
It's still on some level paper.
And it kind of just depends on what angle
you're looking at it.
For sure.
For sure.
And so is your name.
And so is your reputation.
And so is, yeah, exactly.
So in my vote.
So the way I would, yeah, I think the way I would say it is,
your brain constructs everything you experience.
So when you experience redness, like, you know,
an apple is red, you know, your brain is constructing that experience of redness.
It's not in your retina.
Even the cones in your retina are have to three different kinds of cones have to work together
in order to send the signal to the brain that will allow you to see red.
It's not even a single cone. It's always a cooperation of things. It's always a pattern.
And so your brain is constructing the feature of redness.
It's computing that feature for you to experience. Now that feature tends to be really close
to what's in the world, which is a wavelength of light at 600 nanometers.
But then your brain also can construct features that are not so close to the world like wetness, right? In the sense that there is something wetness in the world,
but your brain isn't sensing those sense data of wetness. Your brain's using other sense data to kind of
conjure or put together a feature like wetness that you experience. So it's a little more distant from the actual world. And then there are some features that we just make up.
We just make them up.
But if we agree on them,
then we can in certain cases make them real.
So you and I can agree that we could walk through walls,
but that actually doesn't mean that it can happen, right?
We can't just make that happen.
We can agree with each other that we can eat glass
as food, but that doesn't mean that we can, right?
I mean, it doesn't change the physical reality
constraints, the meaning-making, right?
We could agree that COVID is not an incredibly contagious
virus, and that we don't have to wear masks, but a virus
really doesn't care what we think.
All it cares about, if you can say that it cares about anything, is that we have a nice wet
set of lungs.
But there are things.
We can say, you know what, this air space, this empty air between two buildings, we're
going to call that air rights, and I'm going to sell it to you,
and then you give me money, and then you can build anything you want there. And then poof,
if we all agree, then we can use one made up thing called money to get another made up thing
called air rights that we can build something on and make it real. We can all agree that making
a particular mark on a particular piece of paper is called a vote.
And then those votes get counted to elect a person who has particular powers.
They only have those powers because we all agreed they have those powers.
And if we took those powers away, if we stopped agreeing, they wouldn't have those powers anymore.
They only have those powers because we all agree they have those powers.
And actually, some people might come along and say, powers anymore. They only have those powers because we all agree they have those powers.
And actually, some people might come along and say, well, those little pieces of paper,
for certain people, they don't count as votes. So all of this is what we call social reality.
It is a kind of reality. And it has a very direct relationship often to physical reality.
There's so much more to say about this and we really have to wrap up,
but social reality is constrained by physical reality,
but it can also influence physical reality
and it does so all the time.
And it does so when you make a stomach ache
into an emotion, because that dictates what you do next
and that will influence not only your own body budget and whether or
not you're paying a little tax that will leave you to be vulnerable to a metabolic illness
in 10 or 20 years from now, but it also influences how other people treat you in that moment,
which then could set you on a very different trajectory. So how you make meaning of things is not just, like I said before, it's not,
well, it is, it may be like a jet on my mind trick
in the sense that it actually is real implications.
It's not just a game.
This has been delightful and so interesting.
And I realize that we've held you longer than we've intended.
So I'm gonna let you go,
but not without saying,
thank you, thank you, thank you, really appreciate it.
Yeah, my pleasure, my pleasure.
I love that conversation.
We're already talking about bringing her back
because as you probably have concluded by now,
she's pretty awesome.
This show is made by some equally awesome people,
Samuel Johns, DJ Kashmir, Kim Baikama,
Maria Wartell, and Jen Poient, who we call Poit-Poi, with audio engineering by ultraviolet audio,
and as always a big shout out to Ryan Kessler and Josh Cohan from ABC News.
We'll see you all on Wednesday for a fresh episode.
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