Ten Percent Happier with Dan Harris - The Science Of Getting Out Of Your Head | Annie Murphy Paul
Episode Date: May 20, 2024An acclaimed science writer on how to upgrade your mind by using more than your head.When you think about thinking, most of us think of it as a supremely solo pursuit. You’re in your head, ...concentrating and cogitating, all by yourself. But the science shows that if you want to improve your thinking, you need to get out of your head. Today we’re going to talk about a concept called “the extended mind.” Your mind isn’t just in your skull: it’s in your body, it’s in the people around you, it’s in your surroundings. The best thinking requires that you break out of what the writer David Foster Wallace called “the skull sized kingdom” and access these other resources. This may sound abstract, but our guest today makes it very practical. Annie Murphy Paul is an acclaimed science writer whose work has appeared in the New York Times, the Boston Globe, Scientific American, Slate, Time, and The Best American Science Writing, among many other publications. She is the author of Origins and The Cult of Personality, hailed by Malcolm Gladwell as a “fascinating new book.” Currently a fellow at New America, Paul has spoken to audiences around the world about learning and cognition; her TED talk has been viewed by more than 2.6 million people. A graduate of Yale University and the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, she has served as a lecturer at Yale University and as a senior advisor at their Poorvu Center for Teaching and Learning. Her latest book is The Extended Mind: The Power of Thinking Outside the BrainIn this episode, we also talk about: How to use your surroundings to think better My favorite of the three areas of this book – thinking with our relationshipsWhy “groupthink” isn’t always a bad thing (OR you can say, the benefits of thinking in groups)What she called “extension inequality” – that this benefit of the extended mind isn’t available to all peopleRelated Episodes: Ancient Secrets to Modern Happiness | Tamar GendlerFull Shownotes: https://www.tenpercent.com/tph/podcast-episode/anniemurphypaulAdditional Resources:Download the Ten Percent Happier app today: https://10percenthappier.app.link/installSee 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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This is the 10% Happier Podcast.
I'm Dan Harris.
Hey, gang.
When you think about thinking, I think most of us think of it as a supremely solo pursuit.
You are in your head concentrating and cogitating
all by yourself.
But the science shows that if you really want to improve
your thinking, you need to get out of your head.
Today we're gonna talk about a concept
called the extended mind.
Your mind is not just in your skull, it's in your body,
it's in the people around you, it's in your surroundings.
The best thinking requires you to break out of what the writer David Foster Wallace once called
the skull-sized kingdom and to access all of these other resources.
This may sound abstract, but my guest today is going to make it very practical.
Since this interview, I've been using many of her techniques.
Annie Murphy-Paul is an acclaimed science writer whose work has appeared in the New York Times, to make it very practical. Since this interview, I've been using many of her techniques.
Annie Murphy-Paul is an acclaimed science writer whose work has appeared in the New
York Times, the Boston Globe, and Scientific American.
She's currently a fellow at New America and has spoken to audiences around the world and
even given a TED Talk.
She's a graduate of Yale and Columbia, and her latest book is called The Extended Mind,
The Power of Thinking Outside the Brain.
I love this interview.
I love her work.
If you're interested in improving the way you think, this is a must listen.
Annie Murphy-Paul coming up.
But first some BSP.
As you've heard me say before, the hardest part of personal growth, self-improvement,
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Every week I list one quote that I'm pondering right now, and then I give you two of the
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It's really for both me and for you to get these messages into our molecules.
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I'm Afua Hirsch.
I'm Peter Francopan.
And in our podcast, Legacy,
we explore the lives of some of the biggest characters
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This season, we're exploring the life of Cleopatra.
An iconic life full of romances, sieges and tragedy.
But who was the real Cleopatra?
It feels like her story has been told by others with their own agenda for centuries.
But her legacy is enduring and so we're going to dive into how her story has evolved,
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Love Cleopatra.
She is an icon.
She's the most famous woman in antiquity.
It's got to be up there with the most famous women of all time.
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Hi, I'm Anna.
And I'm Emily.
And we're the hosts of Terribly Famous, the show that takes you
inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And we are really excited about our latest season
because we are talking about someone very, very special.
You're so sweet.
A fashion icon.
Well, actually, just put this on.
A beautiful woman.
Your words, not mine.
Someone who came out of Croydon and took the world by storm.
Okay, Anna, don't tell them where I live.
A muse, a mother, and a supermodel who defined the 90s. I don't remember doing the last one. Wow Emily, not you. Obviously I mean Kate Moss.
Oh I always get us confused. Because you're both so small. How dare you. We are gonna
dive back into Kate's 90s heyday and her insatiable desire to say yes to
absolutely everything life has to offer. The parties, the Hollywood heartthrobs,
the rockstar bad boys, have I said parties?
You did mention the parties,
but saying yes to excess comes at a price,
as Kate spirals out of control
and risks losing everything she's worked for.
Follow Terribly Famous wherever you listen to podcasts,
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Annie Murphy-Paul, welcome to the show.
Thanks for having me.
As I understand it,
and maybe this is just my language in my notes here,
but the basic thesis of your book
is that if you wanna upgrade your mind,
you need to use more than just your head.
Is that reasonably accurate summation?
Yeah, that pretty much boils it down
in a way that I found very difficult to do
when I was having to give an elevator pitch for my book.
But yeah, that says it.
And I should say that I'm someone
who is very much in my head.
I'm a writer and a reader and I live in my head.
And so this book was actually for me a way to explore
the fact that we have
bodies that were embedded in physical surroundings, that we are related to other people in deep
ways and that all of those things can enhance our thinking, not just the lump of tissue
inside our skulls.
So this is like the science of getting out of your head by somebody who's in their own
head.
Yeah, I think it was a learning process for me
and hopefully I was able to share the fruits of that
with the reader.
How did you get turned on to this idea?
So I actually had been reporting and writing
for a number of years about the science of learning.
I had two little kids who had just started school
at that point and I was really interested
in how they were learning,
how their teachers were teaching them. And I thought I was going to write a book about the science of learning,
like here's how we learn. But there wasn't a big idea in the science of learning, at
least not one that I could find that had that sort of transformative power, like that kind
of, oh, wow, this idea makes the whole world look different. And that's always what I'm
looking for as a writer and as a reader.
And so I don't know if you've had this experience
with writing books, Dan,
but my experience is that in the middle of every book
that I've written, there's a moment when I just think,
I can't do this.
Or maybe multiple moments.
I was just gonna say, only one?
That sounds like you're doing it wrong.
And I reached that moment with the science of learning book
that I was just like, you know,
I don't want to write a manual for parents and teachers
and students.
I want to understand in some transformative
and radical kind of way what it really means to live
in the world, to learn, to understand.
And so what I did at that moment when I didn't think
I could go forward or didn't see a way forward is I started reading philosophy.
And it was in a philosophy journal that I discovered an article written or published rather in 1998 called The Extended Mind by these two philosophers, Andy Clark and David Chalmers.
And a lot of philosophy goes right over my head, but this article grabbed me from the very start.
The first line of it was, where does the mind stop and the rest of the world begin?
And I was like, oh, that's an interesting question.
You know, I think I know the answer.
I mean, the mind stops at the skull, right?
I mean, like the mind is pretty much the same as the brain, right?
So that question intrigued me because I
thought it had a pretty obvious or at least conventional answer that the mind stops at the
skull, that the mind and the brain are kind of the same thing, right? Like that would have been my
answer at that point. But Clark and Chalmers were arguing that no, actually the mind extends beyond
the skull into the movements and sensations of our bodies, into
our physical surroundings where we think and learn and work, into our relationships with other people,
and into our tools and devices. And that just seemed like such a deeply interesting,
provocative, generative idea to me. So then I kind of dug in and years later,
my book came out.
Just to say it can sound like an academic or abstruse if I'm using that word correctly idea,
but you make it very practical and we'll get to the practical aspects coming up. But back to this
article, there are a few passages from your book where you I believe are quoting Chalmers and what's
the other guy's name? Clark.
Clark.
The mind does not stop at the standard demarcations of skin and skull, they argued.
Rather, it is more accurately viewed as an extended system, a coupling of biological
organism and external resources.
Once the hegemony of skin and skull is usurped, they concluded, we may be able to see ourselves
more truly as creatures of the
world.
It's fascinating.
Yeah, yeah.
Pretty deep stuff, I'm thinking, as I hear you read that.
I don't know if you have this experience when you go back and read your own book, you're
like, who wrote that?
Yeah, yeah, that guy's a genius.
Hopefully you think that.
I've always been someone who lives very much in my own head.
And so the idea that thinking is a process that we sort of assemble from the raw materials
in our environment that we're actually thinking with our bodies, our spaces, other people.
That to me was a really exciting idea and something I wanted to explore.
I mean, you said earlier, you're always looking for ideas that make the whole world look different
and this seems to fit the bill. Absolutely. Yeah. So as someone who writes about academic research for a living and I live in a
college town and I live this life of the mind, this idea that actually the mind is not inside
the skull but out here in the world, that to me was really intriguing. I wanted to make it practical,
as you say. Like it seemed like too good of an idea to leave to the really intriguing. I wanted to make it practical, as you say, like it seemed like
too good of an idea to leave to the philosophers. Like I wanted to operationalize it and say,
okay, if we think with something more than our brains, how can we use that fact to think better?
You know, how can we think better with our bodies, with our spaces, with our relationships? And
I ended up writing a manual of sorts in the end
for how to think with your extended mind.
We'll go into the various aspects of it
because I found it really interesting and useful.
But just on a higher level here,
this idea sounds like it rhymes with Buddhism in some ways,
that Buddhism talks about the fact that the self,
the mind, isn't ours in a conventional sense.
It doesn't have some solid core,
graspable, essential nugget.
And this seems to be at least parallel,
if not the exact same thing in different words.
Totally, yes.
And even that insisting upon a graspable,
essential self is the root of suffering, right?
So if we can give up that idea and explore the alternatives,
it's not just an idea about how to think better,
it's about how to live better
or how to live in accord with who we really are
because we are creatures with bodies and relationships
and we're embedded in physical surroundings.
And yet the life that so many of us live, I mean, I don't know about you, but I'm on zoom a lot. I'm
literally like a head in a box, you know, and I've always valued my ability to read
and think and write. So the idea that there's a world beyond that definitely
appealed to me and I am very interested in Buddhism. I didn't see at first the
connection between the extended mind and Buddhism,
but it became more and more clear to me as I wrote the book.
And although I didn't reference Buddhism at all in the book,
people have said to me after the book came out,
after having read it,
that they felt that the book had a Buddhist flavor,
which really pleased me because Buddhism
is nowhere mentioned.
But I do think there's a lot of commonalities
between the two thought systems.
Yeah. Let's get practical now.
So one of the first sections of the,
the first section of the book after you established the idea
is about thinking with the body.
What does that mean?
Yeah. So, you know, in our culture,
we so often separate mind and body,
and we kind of imagine that mind is up here.
If those of you who are listening, I'm sort of raising my arm to suggest that the mind is
elevated above the body. You know, the mind is this cerebral kind of pure sphere
all the way up in the air and then the body is a sort of grubby animal thing down here, you know.
And I think that shows up in the way that we approach thinking and learning.
We imagine that the body has nothing to contribute to intelligent thought.
And what I learned in the course of researching this book is that that's really not the case.
That, for example, we all have this faculty called interoception,
which is basically our ability to tune into the flow of sensations and signals that are arising
in our bodies at all times. So we are so focused in our culture, in our world, on all the stimuli
that are coming at us in the outside world, and we get very caught up in that. But all
the while, there's this continual stream of information that's arising inside our bodies.
And again, you know, to return to Buddhism,
a lot of what meditation is about is paying attention
to those quieter internal signals,
learning to tune into that.
And it turns out, this is back to the extended mind,
it turns out that flow of internal sensations
carries a lot of information, a lot of wisdom
that we don't have access to
when we don't pay attention to it.
And it turns out in the research that I report on in the book that one of the best ways to become more
interoceptively attuned, more attuned to our bodies is through a body scan practice wherein we pay open-minded,
non-judgmental, curious attention to whatever is arising in our bodies at that moment. And research has found that when we do that for at least a few weeks, we end
up becoming more interoceptively attuned.
We are more aware of say when our heart is beating, which is one common way of
measuring how interoceptively attuned a person is.
And again, the benefit is that if you have more awareness of the sensations and processes of your body, you can make better decisions because the body is sending you information.
Exactly. Because although we focus so much information we couldn't possibly
process all of that on a conscious level, but we are taking it in on a non-conscious
level and storing those patterns and those experiences.
And then the question is, well, how do we have access to all that experience and knowledge
if it's non-conscious?
The answer is that the body lets us know.
It's interoceptive signals, whether it's, you know, we feel a little nervous or we feel
a little excited, those sort of very subtle shifts within us.
That's the body sort of tapping us on the shoulder or tugging us on the sleeve to say,
pay attention, there's something here that you've encountered before or that is a danger
to you or an opportunity to you.
And if we're not in touch with our bodies, then we don't have the same access
to that depth of experience.
One of the people I work with,
she often talks about the notion of a full body yes.
You know that expression?
No, I don't, I like it though.
The idea is that she's able to tell
whether this is something she wants to do
if it feels good holistically throughout her person.
Like her whole body is nodding and saying, yes, yes.
I like that.
Well, and then there's the full body no, right?
Which we should also pay attention to.
Of course.
What is the overlap between this thinking with the body
and the subject of intuition?
Yeah, you know, this term interoception
is the wonky kind of technical term
and not one that I was familiar with
before I started researching this book.
But I think terms like intuition and gut feeling, those capture that same phenomenon.
They have a little bit of a woo-woo kind of, you know, like if you hear that someone's relying on their gut intuition,
you might think, you know, better think that through instead.
But what the research is showing and what I find so fascinating is that there are times,
and this has been scientifically demonstrated, that our gut feelings, our interoceptive signals
are quite a bit more informed and more adaptive than our conscious thought processes.
This strikes me as tricky because I believe the research here and that intuition has been kind of demonized in a probably a pretty sexist way.
And we should think about listening to our hearts, listening to our gut, feeling something in our bones, full body.
Yes, there's a reason why we have all of of stereotypes and mental shortcuts that we've arrived at either through our family life or through the culture or whatever. And if we were listening to that, we can make very dumb and unfair decisions. So I don't know how to walk the line there.
that concern of yours, Dan. And so I've read in the book about the benefits of keeping what's called an intercepted journal, which is a way of tracking those internal signals
and what they're telling you and then comparing them against, you know, the outcome of the
thing that you were contemplating when you were paying attention to your body. And by
doing that over time, you can kind of see, yeah, my body is steering me correctly.
Say I have a feeling about this stock that I'm thinking about buying.
I can note that down and then after I've purchased that stock I can take a look at how it did
and compare the feeling that I had about that decision at the time that I made it to the
outcome and see over time, you know, is my body kind of coming through for me in terms of giving me accurate knowledge or maybe this is a situation which I should rely more on my conscious mind.
I like that because what you're saying is just as we shouldn't give
undo preference to our thinking mind, we should also not give undo preference and credulity to the signals our body might be sending to us because
both the thinking mind and the body can be biased and wrong.
Right, right. And so the best thing to do is to collect evidence and then try as best we can as
biased creatures to evaluate the evidence of what those two modes are bringing us.
Speaking of practicality, you talk about using the body
to help us think more clearly,
in particular, thinking with movement.
And there are a bunch of different flavors of this,
but just give us a top line understanding
of what you mean by thinking with movement.
Yeah, so when we think about when we have to do
some really hard thinking, some serious mental work,
we assume that we have to be still usually, right? you know, some serious mental work, we assume
that we have to be still usually, right? You know, that we've got to lock ourselves in
a room and kind of keep our butts in the chair and like until the work is done, at least
that's always been my assumption. But it turns out that if we look at our evolutionary history
as human beings, human beings evolved to think and move at the same time. You know, our own particular kind of human intelligence was forged in activities like
foraging and hunting, which are cognitively demanding and also physically demanding.
You know, this idea that we separate the two, that we work with our brains during the day
and then maybe we go to the gym after work, we segregate those two things. It's really not so much in line with our nature as embodied creatures. So
I write in the book about ways to bring movement into our thinking lives. One might be taking
a movement break instead of a coffee break. I actually have taken to turning on music
and dancing around in between Zoom meetings, which is actually a pretty great way to,
you know, release some energy and get the body moving again. But also, you know, I think a lot of your listeners will have the experience or will identify with the experience of
just not being able to solve a problem or get something done as long as they're sitting down. And yet, as soon as they go for a walk or do something where they're moving their bodies the thoughts start flowing. And why is that? It may be that just as our minds
tell our bodies to do things, it works in the other direction as well. We can prime
our minds to be in a certain state by moving our bodies in a similar way. So you can see
this in our language. Like when things aren't going well for you, you know, when you're
brainstorming, for example, you might say, I'm stuck or I'm in a rut, like when things aren't going well for you, you know, when you're brainstorming, for example,
you might say, I'm stuck or I'm in a rut,
but when things are going well and you're feeling creative,
we say things like the ideas are flowing or I'm on a roll.
And it turns out that we can prime that kind of fluid,
dynamics, mental state by getting our bodies
to move in a similar way.
Just walking or riding one's bike
is a kind of loose metaphor for the kind of fluidity
that we're looking for to institute in our minds.
So I think that's one reason that kind of enacting
like a metaphor with our bodies,
the kind of metaphor that we use
to understand mental activity
can actually put us in that frame of mind.
And that's why we tend to have so much more creative ideas
when we're moving than when we're being still.
So if I want ideas to flow, I should go swimming
or do something with my body that's in a flowing motion?
It's worth a try, yeah.
Yes, actually there's been research to suggest
that people who are induced to move in more fluid ways
come up with more and more creative ideas
than people who are still or move in more constricted ways.
I find this body of research to be incredibly liberating
because I am very fidgety.
I hate sitting still.
Doing interviews actually can be very hard for me
because I get fidgety.
I don't want to sit still.
And when I'm writing, which is most of my time,
I am at a standing desk.
I have a tennis ball or a stress ball on my desk.
I'm playing catch.
If I'm stuck on an idea, there's that word again.
I will pace around.
I'll go chase a cat.
I'll throw the ball against the wall and drive my wife crazy.
I feel in my body that I need to move in order to address
these seemingly insoluble problems that I'm confronted
with all day long.
Yes, yeah.
Well, next time your wife gets annoyed,
tell her that you're engaging in embodied self-regulation,
that you're actually regulating your mind
through the actions of your body.
I'm imagining the daggers that I will get in that moment.
Baby, this is embodied self-regulation, though.
You can't have any problem with that.
I'll have her call you.
On the subject of fidgety people,
you talk about engaging in micro movements,
playing with fidget objects.
Can you give us a sense of things
that we would have permission to do
if we're trying to think clearly?
Yeah, I'm glad you mentioned fidgeting
because part of what I wanted to do with this book
was push back against the sort of pro brain bias
that our culture has.
Andy Clark, the philosopher that we were mentioning earlier,
he likes to say that we're a very brain-bound culture,
meaning we're really focused on the brain,
we kind of fetishize the brain,
and we not just push aside or dismiss or ignore the body,
we actually kind of denigrate it.
And I think you can see that in, for example,
I don't know if you've ever been criticized
or sort of harassed for the fact that you fidget, but.
Yes.
School.
Yes, exactly.
School is really hard for me.
It's right.
Fidgeting is seen as at best something sort of distracting
and at worst almost like you're shady or something.
Like you've got something to hide or, you know.
But it turns out that fidgeting is actually a way
to very finely regulate and modulate our level of arousal and alertness.
And also the kind of micro-movements you mentioned that we make when we're at a standing desk.
Same thing. Those small movements help keep us alert. It actually takes a fair amount
of mental bandwidth to keep ourselves from doing that. You know, it uses up some of our
mental resources just to stay still, which is a problem for many kids, like kids who have an ADHD diagnosis.
It actually takes a lot of mental power to keep themselves still.
And research has suggested that actually for kids with ADHD,
the more they move, the better they're able to think.
And I think that can be true for a lot of us, including adults.
But back to fidgeting, fidgeting can be a way to very finely modulate
not just our alertness and our arousal,
but also our mental state.
So people use fidget objects of various kinds
to soothe themselves
because they might repetitively make the same movement
or they may take a paperclip
and start bending it into different shapes
and kind of be very playful and expansive.
So I think we need to really broaden our sense of what's acceptable and remember again that
we have bodies and that our bodies can really contribute to our thinking and our learning
and our working and they don't have to be something that's put aside as a kind of hindrance
or inconvenience.
It's interesting to think about what to do about this, because if you're a teacher or conducting a meeting at work,
crowd control seems important,
and yet there are a non-trivial number of people
and children and grownups like me do not fit in well
in these situations, and I hate being in meetings,
and I have trouble paying attention,
in particular hate Zoom meetings,
because it's even harder for me to pay attention
to something that's on a screen.
Are there workarounds for this beyond just,
you know, giving us permission to do a little bit of fidgeting,
because the person running the meeting, our boss,
might not be giving us that permission.
Yes, yes.
Well, I think that's been one boon associated
with remote work, you know,
that people who do need to move when they think and work,
do that more easily now when they work at home.
Schools are a little more complicated. I have seen in a number of schools a growing number of classrooms that
adopt what is called an activity permissive environment where students don't just have to sit, you know, in rows and chairs at desks.
They can sit on a yoga ball or they can stand at a standing desk or they
can sit on a wiggle stool and move as they're learning.
And I think initially I've heard from teachers that they feared that this would be distracting,
that this would be chaos.
But it's really just a norm that we've gotten used to this idea that students should be
sitting still in these rows at desks.
And it turned out for most of the teachers that I've talked to that students should be sitting still in these rows at desks. And it turned out for most of the teachers
that I've talked to, that students are more controlled,
more calm, more attentive,
because they're able to move
in ways that are comfortable for them.
And it doesn't end up being so distracting
to their classmates.
One more question on this thinking
with the body section here.
You also talk about thinking with gesture.
What's that all about?
Yeah, so I think if any of us think about gesture,
and mostly we don't, we think of it as like this sort of
clumsy add-on to what's really important,
which is what we're saying, right?
Our culture really elevates and celebrates verbal expression,
but gesture is often a few milliseconds ahead of what we're
saying with our words. Our hands actually get there first, which I think is
fascinating. Linguists think that before spoken language even came along, we
communicated with others with gestures. So gesture is actually, in a sense, our
first language, and for many babies, you know, it gets recapitulated with every
infant who, you know, gestures gets recapitulated with every infant
who, you know, gestures before they have words. So gestures really are first
language and it never goes away. We think of gesture as a way that we communicate
with other people and it is, of course, but it's also an extension of our own
thinking process and research has shown that when people are restrained from
making gestures, when they have to sit on their hands or their hands are constrained from moving, their thinking is less cogent
and their expression is less fluid. So we really actually want to be encouraging ourselves
and others to gesture as much as possible and maybe even in those Zoom meetings, sit
a little bit farther away from the camera, ask other people to do the same so that we're
not just seeing someone's head in a box,
but we're seeing their gestures as well.
You talk about rehearsing your gestures?
Like if I'm gonna say something to somebody,
I might wanna think about not only the words,
but what I'm gonna do with my hands during this?
Exactly, yeah.
Well, I'm sure if you are giving a talk, Dan,
you give some thought to what you're gonna say, right?
Yes, ideally. Yes, ideally.
Ideally.
But are you thinking about what your hands are going to do in advance?
No.
No.
Yeah.
And yet research suggests that the audience is really getting as much from your body language
from the movements of your hands as they are from your words.
This is another way I think in which we denigrate the role of the body.
We don't give much attention to that.
We don't rehearse and advance what our bodies are saying
along with what our mouths are saying.
There are two things we might keep in mind
when we're giving a talk like that.
That symbolic gestures are gestures
that capture some aspect of the content of what we're saying.
Those can be really helpful to our listeners and our viewers
in terms of understanding the import of what we're saying. And then there are beat gestures
that are more about establishing a cadence and bringing people on to our own sense of
excitement and engagement with the topic.
So like, sometimes pounding the table literally is a move.
It's a move. It certainly expresses something much more forcefully than words could.
You say let your hands share the burden.
Yes.
Research has found that when we're asked
to explain something that we haven't quite understood yet,
that we're still sort of getting our arms around,
there's an embodied metaphor for you,
we gesture more than when we're relaying something
that we understand perfectly.
And that's because coming up with ideas and thoughts
on the fly is really cognitively challenging.
And so we tend to offload some of that mental work
onto our hands.
That's why we end up gesturing more
when we're improvising than when we're explaining something
that we already know.
I remember wrestling with this a little bit as an anchorman.
I mean, Peter Jennings, who many young people don't remember,
but was the anchor of World News Tonight on ABC News
for many, many years and was a mentor of mine,
he had this like intricate little ballet
within this very confined space of the TV screen.
So, I mean, as an anchor, you don't wanna be stock still,
but you also don't wanna be gesturing wildly.
And I remember feeling a little constrained
and having to think about that a lot.
But the whole thing of being on TV is artificial,
so it might not be scalable to our normal presentation
of ideas interpersonally.
Did you model your own hand movements
on Peter Jennings' at all?
Yes, I modeled everything after Peter Jennings
for a long time.
Now I'm not on the news anymore,
so it doesn't really matter.
I used to hold a pen in my hand, and then my wife said
I was starting to seem like John McCain,
who always had a pen.
You know, he was injured as a POW,
and so one of his compensation techniques
was to hold a pen in his hand.
And so I tried to, like, over time,
have a limited repertoire of movements on air
that I would go to.
So sometimes I had a pen in my hand.
Sometimes I would just gently have my hands clasp
on my desk.
Sometimes I would rest my head in my head,
like I really depended.
But I remember thinking a lot about that.
Maybe overthinking it,
because as soon as you become aware of it,
it can become a little self-conscious.
I think your point is that we should not overthink it
and just do what feels natural
and not be putting ourselves in a situation
where we're telling ourselves, don't gesture.
Yeah, I'm thinking of research that suggests
that people who are watching someone talk,
they remember and pay attention to the things
that are accompanied by gesture,
the comments that are accompanied by gesture
more than those comments that are not.
But it's not only for our listeners that we want to be gesturing,
it's really for ourselves, for making our own thought processes less effortful and more fluid.
Coming up, Annie Murphy-Paul talks about how to use your surroundings to think better.
And my favorite of the three areas of her book, thinking with our relationships.
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We've talked about thinking with the body,
then there's a whole section around
thinking with your surroundings.
I suspect that might be a hard idea to grok for people.
What does that have to do?
I mean, I get that I think with my body,
but what do you mean by thinking with your surroundings?
Yeah, when I think about thinking with spaces,
I tend to think of a metaphor that we often use
for the brain, which is the brain as computer, right?
Like we think of our brains as sort of machines
that we put in information, it kind of chugs around,
spits out an answer, that's like how the brain works.
But I think that metaphor is really pretty limited, pretty flawed.
And one of the big differences between our organic biological brains and a computer
is that a computer works exactly the same no matter where it's located.
You know, my laptop, if I use it in my home office,
it's going to operate in exactly the same way as if I took it to a park and was working outside.
But the human brain isn't like that.
It's exquisitely sensitive to context,
to where it's doing our thinking.
We have different kinds of thoughts
and we think in a different way depending on where we are.
So one of the clearest examples of that is the outdoors.
I'm gonna go back to our evolutionary history. We evolved in the outdoors. What, you know, I'm going to go back to our evolutionary history.
We evolved in the outdoors.
What that means for us today, where
we spend most of our time inside buildings and cars,
is that it's still the case that our brains process
most effortlessly and easily the kind of stimuli
that we encounter outside.
A lot of us have had this experience when
we go for a walk outside.
It's very mentally
calming and pleasing, right? Like to look at the leaves of a tree or the clouds in the sky or maybe
waves on an ocean beach. It doesn't take a lot of mental energy or effort. That's very different
from the kind of hard-edged, intense kind of concentration that we have to pay when we're
at work or when we're at school. And when we're paying that kind of hard-edged, intense kind of concentration that we have to pay when we're at work or when we're at school.
And when we're paying that kind of hard-edged, intense attention to something, our mental
resources get drained really, really quickly and we kind of get burned out.
Whereas the kind of attention that we pay when we're outdoors is this diffuse, pleasantly
diverting attention. And so thinking outside is a very different
experience for our brains than thinking inside. And when we do find that our
attentional resources are drained, one of the quickest and easiest ways of
replenishing them is simply to spend time outside in that diffuse attentional
mode. I've been experimenting with this a lot since my family moved to the
suburbs during the pandemic,
and I will now take breaks outside even when it's cold, really cold.
And sometimes even maybe bring my work outside even when it's cold.
Just bundle up and if I've got some printed sheets of paper, I'll read them outside.
And I do find that has a real effect.
I even heard my wife telling somebody recently that she has found my doing that has made me less annoying in various ways.
How do you think that works for you? What does it do for you to be outside? I have no idea. I remember my wife telling somebody recently that she has found my doing that has made me less annoying in various ways.
How do you think that works for you?
What does it do for you to be outside?
I have no idea.
Well, I know I had heard on this show
that it was good to get yourself outside early in the day
for your circadian rhythm and sleep.
And then I had heard in some other episodes
that when we're outside, the mind can function
in some different and salutary ways.
And my fidgetiness and not wanting to be chained to my desk.
And it's working for you, that's good.
I think, I mean, it could be just a story I'm telling myself.
But it sounds like there's data to back this up.
Yeah, yeah, and here we are sitting next to a fake green wall.
There's actually research suggesting that even indoor plants
and sort of greenery and bringing a bit of the outdoors inside can be helpful.
What about other aspects of design?
How important is that in terms of having our mind functioning of greenery and bringing a bit of the outdoors inside can be helpful. What about other aspects of design?
How important is that in terms of having our mind function at its best?
Yeah, so since we are inside most of the time, as much as we would probably all like to be
outdoors more, it's worth giving some thought to what we see around us when we're in our
place of work, when we want to be thinking or creating or
doing our work really well. And psychologists talk about what they call
evocative objects, meaning material objects that kind of evoke a certain
feeling or association for us. And these fall into two main categories, cues of
identity and cues of belonging. So when you're at your desk, for example,
you might want to think about what you see around you.
Are there reminders of who you are
and who you are specifically in that setting?
Of course, you are many things.
You're a father, you're a podcast producer,
you're a citizen, but in the place where you do your work,
I would imagine you want to be a creator, a thinker,
and are there objects, signs, symbols
that remind you of that identity there
out of your many identities?
And then also, are there cues of belonging?
Are there mementos of the fact
that you belong to valued groups?
Because that too can prime a kind of association for us,
make us feel more powerful
maybe than we would be on our own, more secure because it reminds us of those groups to which
we belong.
You also talk in this section of the book about thinking with surroundings, about thinking
with the space of ideas.
That might require a little unpacking.
Yeah, yeah.
So I mentioned earlier that we live in this sort of
brain-bound society that really fetishizes the brain and one of the ways we see that is that we
really value doing things in our heads. You know, we admire people who can do complex math problems
in their heads or sort of the chess master who can game out multiple rounds of chess in their heads. But it turns out that it's actually more efficient
and more effective in most cases to get ideas
and information out of our heads and onto physical space.
So that could be a big whiteboard,
it could be a bunch of Post-it notes
that you can move around,
it could be a multi-monitor setup on your computer
so that you're not just looking at one little screen
and having your brain fill in for all the space
that you could be spreading out your ideas on.
And one way I like to think about this is that, again,
going back to our evolutionary history as human beings,
our brains really evolved to do a certain number
of limited things really well.
Things like navigating through physical space,
moving and sensing the body,
interacting with small groups of people.
The brain didn't really evolve to do what we ask it to do so much these days,
which is to wrestle with abstract concepts and symbols.
So the more we can make our thinking work resemble those activities that the brain really evolved for,
like navigating through three-dimensional space or manipulating material objects, the better we'll be able to think.
So rather than try to keep everything in your head, if you put that all out on a whiteboard, you can sort of move up and down the whiteboard,
zoom in, zoom out, and I don't mean digitally, I mean like physically with your body.
Or if you are organizing a book chapter, for example, you can have an idea on a bunch of
Post-it notes and then move them around like they are objects.
That's taking advantage of these embodied resources that would be dormant and unused
if we just tried to do all of that in our heads.
One whole wall of my office is a giant whiteboard,
and I would have a bigger one if I had a bigger wall.
I have attention challenges
and I don't like staring at a computer screen.
So stepping away and ordering ideas on a huge whiteboard,
and then erasing it, and then moving them around,
I find that incredibly satisfying.
I suspect a lot of people listening to this are thinking,
I'm intuitively doing a lot of the things
that you're talking about systematically.
Yes, and some of the most enthusiastic readers of this book
turned out to be teachers, and a lot of them said to me
that your book is just telling me stuff that I already sort of figured out on the job,
but thank you for giving me a framework to think about it in
and providing me with some scientific citations that I can say,
see, I was always right about this, you know.
And the other group that got the book right away was artists, interestingly,
because I think artists, you know, of all kinds have always been thinking with their bodies,
thinking with spaces, thinking in collaboration with other people.
It's only in these like really weird environments like universities and certain kinds of workplaces where we think the brain alone is enough for is the highest level of achievement.
Don't you think in part that has to do with crowd control? I mean, you can't get a million people into a classroom or a meeting and have them walking around fidgeting and, you know, playing with objects to express their ideas.
Why not?
I suspect the story that these, I'm presuming mostly men,
running these institutions told themselves was,
we need to get asses into seats, not moving,
so I can impart information and they can absorb it.
Yeah, well, people talk about this sort of factory model
of schooling, of education, and I think that was the notion was just get students into their seats.
And a lot of workplaces, of course, were and are still arranged on this kind of model.
But I hope that we're at a place where we can be rethinking that model and whether that
really works for people.
We're rethinking so many things about how work is undertaken these days, I think, and education.
I think maybe opening up the door to let in all these other outside-the-brain resources.
This might be the time to do that.
So if you, Annie Murphy-Paul, were running a meeting with five to ten people in a room, not on Zoom,
how would you organize it based on everything you've learned in writing this book?
Well, let's see. I might suggest if we're in the same place,
I would suggest that we all have a walking meeting.
First, kick it off with a walking meeting.
Kick it off with a walking meeting.
I'd certainly wanna be encouraging people
to use their hands.
I might say what I say to my kids.
I have two teenage kids and when I feel like
they're struggling to grasp something,
I'll say, try moving your hands when you say that. And I advise them to look for instructional videos
also that show a teacher or an instructor who's moving their hands. I definitely want us to get
outside. That's part of, I guess, with the walk that would be sort of killing two birds with one
stone. Maybe I would start off the meeting with a body scan so that we're all
attuned to our bodies and feeling what's going on internally. And then, you know, this is
getting onto the next part of the book, but I think I would try to create a sense of groupiness,
meaning a sense that we're not just a collection of individuals, but actually an entity unto
ourselves, a group by having some synchronized movement.
Maybe I'd make people dance with me.
I'll end with a not so wacky idea
that I think it can be very powerful and meaningful
for people to share a ritual together,
which can be something just like sharing a meal.
Would you give people permission to sit, stand, pace,
do whatever they need with their body,
or would that get a little too hectic?
You know, a spirit of experimentation,
I think is welcome here.
So I might give it a try,
allow people to move and gesture as they want
and see how that goes.
And maybe after a few times of that,
I'd have everybody sitting in their seats
and being very still.
Got it.
Who knows?
All right, so let's talk about thinking
with our relationships.
This is perhaps my favorite of the three areas
that you explore in the book.
Give us the top line description of what you mean
by thinking with our relationship.
Yeah, so again, this book was really meant to be
kind of a critique of our culture,
and we are in, of course, a very individualistic culture,
one that says that, you know, if you have an idea,
that's your idea.
If you have an achievement, that's your achievement.
Whereas, certainly, if we were to approach it
from the spirit of Buddhism, we would see that everything
is a collaborative undertaking, that there's these very rigid
divides that we insist on between people are really
a delusion, you might say.
So what would that mean if we thought about our thinking processes, if we thought about
thinking as a truly collaborative enterprise and not something that goes on, you know,
sealed inside your own head?
That might open up all kinds of possibilities for achieving what you might call a group
mind, which I think we need more and more
in our incredibly complex world,
which let's face it,
is full of some really daunting problems.
I don't think that an individual brain
is going to solve the problem of climate change,
for example, or even the problem of our politics.
We actually need to come together
and form that group mind in productive ways
just to meet the moment that we're in.
So let's get practical here.
There are a couple of ways to think with our relationships.
One is thinking with experts.
Yeah.
The model we have for how novices become experts
is that they learn from past masters, from experts.
But there's a problem with that, which is that by the virtue of being an expert,
an expert thinks differently from a novice.
You probably experience this with someone who's really good at what they do.
They've been doing it for a long time.
Their minds work differently.
A lot of what is very effortful and conscious for a novice has become
automatized for someone who's an expert.
It's actually almost impossible for them to explain how or why they do what they
do to a novice in a way that the novice can learn.
You know, it's kind of like following around someone who's in the kitchen,
who's a really good cook.
And you say, well, how did you know to add the spices then
or stir it then?
And they just say, oh, you know,
it just looked like it needed it.
There's a lot of hurdles for a novice
to learn from an expert and how we might address that
involves again, getting ideas and information
out of our heads where the novice can't really see it
and laying it out for them in ways
that make the experts' knowledge more accessible.
Got it.
So if I wanted to operationalize this in my life, what would be the practical steps?
Well, say you're mentoring somebody on your staff who's a sort of baby journalist who
doesn't have your years of experience in reporting and
writing the news.
You would have to break it down for them why exactly it is that you make the choices that
you do.
And you no longer have to think about those choices, right?
It's like second nature for you when you're interviewing somebody or when you're researching
a topic.
It's all become automatic for you.
You will actually have to slow down,
break it down into steps and even micro steps for that novice, for that intern. You might need to
exaggerate certain aspects of what you do to make the important stuff leap out for the novice.
It's again, so much second nature for you that you don't even realize it anymore. But the novice
is confronted by this welter of information that all seems
the same to them.
They don't know that they can attend to this, that they should attend to this, but they
can ignore that.
All of that stuff, you're going to have to think about a lot more consciously than you
have in years if you want to effectively convey it to a beginner.
Got it.
Thinking with peers.
Yeah.
So just as our culture separates mind and body like we were
talking about earlier, I think we also really separate intellectual life or mental life from
social life. We'll work on our own all day and then go to a happy hour at the end of the day,
as if social life and interacting with other people is somehow different and separate from
interacting with other people is somehow different and separate from our work. And this is same with kids that like we let them run around at recess and make as much noise as
they want but when they come into the classroom they have to sit quietly and you know don't talk
to your neighbor and all of that. But actually the social brain you know we are such fundamentally
social creatures and we're social all the time, not just at happy hour
and not just on the playground. What we wanted to do is to think in terms of harnessing our social
natures in the service of thinking and learning. And some of the ways that we can do that are
things like generating a debate or an argument or telling stories to others
or teaching others, teaching our peers,
because all of those activities,
those really deeply social activities,
they activate processes in our minds
that are gonna again lay dormant
if we just do that work on our own in an unsocial way.
Starting an argument sounds pretty anti-social.
Well, a productive debate can flesh out different positions in a way that is very hard to do
when you're just thinking about that idea on your own.
Got it.
Yeah, no physical violence here, just hearing different perspectives and having them embodied by different people
rather than having them be kind of lifeless concepts
in your head.
I find that I cannot think clearly on my own.
There's a point at which I need to run something
by somebody, and I've sometimes said that, like,
I don't know what I think until I've talked about it
with my wife.
Does all of this fit within this rubric for you?
Yeah, yeah. In fact, the philosopher Andy Clark, who I keep referring to him,
he's one of the originators of the idea of the extended mind.
He likes to say that human beings are intrinsically loopy creatures,
meaning that our particular kind of human intelligence benefits by making
as many loops as possible.
Andy Clark says that we're intrinsically loopy creatures.
And I think what I hear you saying, Dan,
is that you need to make a loop
with whatever you're thinking about.
You need to loop that through somebody else's mind
and it comes back to you, you know, enhanced or improved
in a way that it wouldn't if it just stayed
sort of inert in your own mind.
Yes, yes.
This is like a positive version of loopy.
Right, this is a good way to be loopy.
Coming up, Bandy talks about why groupthink
is not always a bad thing
and what she calls extension inequality.
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Well, Stoic philosophy is more relevant now than ever and it's a really powerful
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And like all important journeys, this is one that begins from within.
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So the other aspect of thinking with relationships is thinking with groups.
You know we've all heard that term group think which generally we think of as a bad thing,
right? That like a group can head down the wrong path,
thinking as an entity,
and that can lead to some pretty bad decisions,
even catastrophic decisions.
It's also the case that lots of people hate working in groups,
and yet, as I was saying earlier,
so many of the challenges of our world
require us to think in groups.
So we're going to have to learn
to have a group mind that is actually more than or better than the some of the individual intellects in that group. And I think there are ways that we can think effectively as a group while avoiding
the pitfalls of conformity and that kind of irritation or unpleasantness of working in a group that
so many of us associate with group activities and group projects.
What are the ways?
So we were talking earlier about how I would lead a meeting. A lot of those suggestions I had were
aimed at creating this feeling of groupiness, which is actually a term that psychologists use. And a lot of that is about hacking into a very old,
very visceral kind of capacity that humans have
for losing themselves in a group, which can be dangerous,
can have negative effects, but is also responsible
for some of the greatest achievements of humankind.
So it turns out, for example,
that when we move in the same way
as other people at the same time in the same place,
our brains kind of get the idea
that maybe these people are actually extensions of us,
or maybe we're all one big creature.
I'm thinking of raves where people lose themselves
in this joint activity.
But that happens on a smaller scale, even when we're taking a walk with someone. It turns out that when
we walk alongside someone we just naturally fall into a synchronized rhythm
and research has found that people who take a walk together they find it easier
to cooperate and to collaborate because they've had this experience of kind of
like oh that person's body is moving in the same way and at the same time as cooperate and to collaborate because they've had this experience of kind of like, oh, that
person's body is moving in the same way and at the same time as mine, maybe we're kind
of mentally on the same page as well.
It's kind of like that embodied metaphor that we were talking about earlier.
Are there other practices that you recommend for this portion of thinking outside the head
in the area of thinking with our relationships?
Some of the things I've seen you write about are, I don't know exactly what this refers to,
but leaving traces of your thinking is an idea. I've heard you talk about generating
a sense of shared fate. Yes, yeah, well, so much of our work these days happens
inside the head and that can create real problems, as I was saying earlier about
in terms of novices learning how to master a skill.
You know, in the old days, when you had an apprenticeship, the master carpenter or shipbuilder or whatever could physically show the novice what they were doing.
The novice could give it a try.
The master carpenter could sort of guide him or her and what he was doing.
But so much of what we do now is inside our heads.
And so there's a really neat idea coming out of psychology
called a cognitive apprenticeship,
which would mean modeling for someone else
the way that we're thinking, making that explicit
in just the way that a tailor would say,
this is how I cut a bolt of cloth, you know.
And one way that we can think with GroupStand is known as
a transactive memory system, and that refers to the fact
that the projects that we deal with today in the modern world
are so complicated that no one person can know everything
required to make that project a success.
And so we can actually sort of exponentially multiply our access to knowledge and to stored
information as long as we know who in our group has the information that we need.
We don't hold it in our own heads, but we know who on the team is the expert on that
given piece of the project. And then together in a transactive memory system,
we're actually operating as a kind of superorganism
that has this kind of amazing access to knowledge and information
far beyond what any individual could have.
And research has found, for example, that teams of doctors
that have a robust transactive memory system,
they know who's the expert
on this and who to go to if this happens.
Their patients actually do better and leave the hospital sooner.
So I think we need to think in terms of not just improving our own memory or our own store
of information as individuals, but how are those things working together in systems with
other people, with
other minds?
This has all been really interesting.
Just to sum it up, we've talked about three aspects of the extended mind, thinking with
your body, thinking with your surroundings, thinking with nature.
One of the things you talk about at the end of the book, though, is that this kind of
extended mind is not extended to all people, that there is what you call extension inequality.
Yes.
So can you talk about that before I let you go?
Yeah, thank you for asking me about that because that became more and more important to me as I
was working on the book that I was writing over and over again how important it is to
have the freedom to move one's body, to have access to green spaces, to have people in your life who are very knowledgeable
and accomplished. And the fact is that there's in no sense, you know, an equality of access to those
things in our country, in our world. And so if we are going to take seriously this idea that
the raw materials we have access to in the world are a really key part of our thinking processes,
then we need to pay more attention to the fact that not everyone has equal access to those raw materials.
You know, as long as intelligence is basically a lump of stuff that's sealed inside your head,
we can act as if that lump of stuff can be weighed and measured with tests,
and it doesn't matter so much the access to outside the brain resources that people have.
But if we're going to take the idea of the extended mind seriously and say,
no, actually our thinking processes are assembled from these raw materials
that we do or don't have access to in the world, then that access really matters
and we need to take that seriously when we're evaluating people and deciding their fates as we do when we hire people or when we let people into universities.
So when I'm looking at somebody's test score, I might think, oh, well, actually, there was some extension inequality here that this person didn't get access to experts, green space and the freedom to move.
And so perhaps there is some untapped potential here that yes this number and I'm staring at does not speak to exactly
because those methods of evaluation that we've developed over over many years and
that have become so dominant in our society are really very brain-bound
measures and I think we could begin to think about how could we not only measure but also
Encourage the development of all of our extended minds
I think we're gonna need every bit of intelligence that we can muster to
Tackle the problems of this world. And so I think the extended mind is gonna be ever more necessary
Before I let you go. Is there something you were hoping to talk about that we didn't get to yet?
You know, you had asked early on, Dan,
where my interest in this topic came from.
And I said that I had these two little kids who are now
strapping teenagers and much taller than me.
I was interested in how they were learning.
And what I noticed as they've grown up
is that when kids are little, we're
OK with them thinking outside the
brain. We're okay with them using manipulatives, you know, using their hands, getting their
hands dirty. We're okay with them moving their bodies, spending time outside, learning from
their peers in play. And then we're all supposed to put that aside increasingly as our kids
get older and then as we live our adult lives.
And I kind of think we need to return to that spirit of including our whole selves in how
we think and how we learn that we think is natural for young kids, but actually would
benefit all of us.
I'm glad you said that.
That's a nice place to end.
It's rousing and I'm not being sarcastic.
The real final question though is can
you just remind everybody of the name of the book and any other things you've put out into the world,
books, websites, whatever that you want to let people know about. Yeah, so the title of the book
is The Extended Mind, The Power of Thinking Outside the Brain. That's it. I just would love
to share that book with anybody who's interested. Awesome. Thank you. Thank you.
with anybody who's interested. Awesome. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you again to Annie Murphy-Paul.
Go check out her book.
And if you want to listen to an episode that is similar in many ways
and shares many of the same themes,
I'm going to drop a link in the show notes
to an interview I did with a professor from Yale named Tamar Gendler.
The episode is called Ancient Secrets to Modern Happiness and Tamar
is actually the one who suggested we get Annie on this show. Before I go, don't forget to
check out danharris.com, my new website. You can sign up for the newsletter where I talk
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