Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Robert Sapolsky: Free Will Doesn’t Exist! Leading Neuroscientist Claims ALL Behavior Is Biologically Determined | E262
Episode Date: December 18, 2023Dr. Robert Sapolsky has accomplished so much in his life and career, including winning the MacArthur “genius” grant and authoring several best-selling books. But as he puts it himself in his most ...recent book: “I’ve been very lucky in my life, something which I certainly did not earn.” This sentiment is consistent with his view that we lack free will entirely, and in today’s episode, Professor Sapolsky is going to make his argument to Hala as to why that is indeed the case. Robert Sapolsky is a professor of biology and neurology at Stanford University, who is an expert in several fields ranging from stress to baboon behavior to human evolution. His work has received many awards including the esteemed MacArthur Fellowship. He is also the best-selling author of several books including Behave, Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers, and The Trouble with Testosterone. His newest book is called Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will. In this episode, Hala and Robert will discuss: - Why free will doesn’t exist - The epiphany he had as a 14-year-old - Is meritocracy an illusion? - The neuroscience of decision-making - The myth of grit - What predetermination means for entrepreneurs - Why Jeff Bezos was born to create Amazon - Does spontaneity exist? - How no free will impacts our morality - The science behind moral disgust - Why you can’t reason someone out of an opinion - Why we should overhaul the criminal justice system - And other topics… Robert Sapolsky is a professor of biology and neurology at Stanford University and a research associate with the Institute of Primate Research at the National Museum of Kenya. Over the past thirty years, he has divided his time between the lab, where he studies how stress hormones can damage the brain, and in East Africa, where he studies the impact of chronic stress on the health of baboons. Sapolsky is the author of Behave, Why Zebras Don't Get Ulcers, A Primate's Memoir, and The Trouble with Testosterone, and is a regular contributor to Discover. He has published articles about stress and health in magazines as diverse as Men's Health and The New Yorker. Sapolsky received the MacArthur Foundation's “genius” grant at age 30. Resources Mentioned: Robert’s Website: http://www.robertsapolskyrocks.com/ Robert’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robertsapolsky/ Robert’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/Robert-Sapolsky/100063871383510/ Robert’s new book Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will (2023): https://www.amazon.com/Determined-Science-Life-without-Free/dp/B0BVNSX4CQ/ref=sr_1_1?qid=1699016118&refinements=p_27%3ARobert+Sapolsky&s=books&sr=1-1 LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course. Sponsored By: Shopify - Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at youngandprofiting.co/shopify Greenlight - Sign up for Greenlight today and get your first month free when you go to greenlight.com/YAP MasterClass - Right now you can get Two Memberships for the Price of One at youngandprofiting.co/masterclass Articulate 360 - Visit articulate.com/360 to start a free 30-day trial of Articulate 360 Help Save Palestinian Lives: Donate money for eSIM cards for the people of Gaza at https://youngandprofiting.co/DonateWHala More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/
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I think there's no free will whatsoever.
When you're choosing Coke over Pepsi, you feel like such an agent of choice.
You feel like you are independent of everything that came before.
Where's we never are for a second?
Why do you feel like your view of free will is controversial?
People initially freak out over the,
oh my god, people just run a block of people stop believing in free will
and will have mirrors everywhere and we won't hold anyone responsible for anything.
Primal justice system makes no sense at all.
If there's no free will, meritocracy's no-dye there. What
people believed forever was that you think your way to a moral decision. And what
all the science now shows is you feel your way to a moral decision. And then your
conscious cognitive self suddenly leaps up and scrambles to try to come up with
a rationale for why it makes perfect sense that you did that.
We don't have free will, but what about free wounds? Do we at least have the ability to veto stuff and dance?
Welcome back to the show Young & Profiters, and today we're talking about Free Will. Free will is something that we often don't speak about.
We kinda just take it for granted, like it's this definite thing that we all have.
We all have agency, we all have choice.
Well, the guest I have today is going to turn that thought on its head.
Dr. Robert Sapolsky is a professor of biology and neurology
at Stanford University.
He's an expert in several fields ranging from stress
to baboon behavior to human evolution.
His work has received many awards,
including the esteemed MacArthur Fellowship.
Robert is also the author of several bestselling books
including Behave, and his newest book,
perhaps his most ambitious yet, is called Determined, a science of life without free well.
Robert, welcome to Young & Profiting Podcast.
Well, thanks for having me on.
I am really excited for this conversation.
We have not spoken about free well on the podcast yet, and I think all your material
is really interesting.
So I just want to cut straight to the chase in a nutshell. Tell us what is your outlook on free well? And how does
that outlook differ from the traditional outlook on free well? Well, just to start off in a very
subtle nuanced way, I think there's no free will whatsoever. And that puts me, well, basically, from the overall population
that puts me in the lunatic fringe among neuroscientists, puts me a little bit more extreme than the
average, but it certainly puts me way outside the pale for 95% of philosophers these days
who believe there is free will. So I'm sticking out a fairly extreme stance here.
And I'm going to dig into this a lot, but why do you feel like your view of free well is
controversial?
What does it turn on its head?
Well, my best evidence that is controversial is the hate emails that I'm getting is showing
some really dramatic misinterpretations
of, well, actually, I have no evidence that any of these people have actually read any of this,
but what it seems to panic people most about once they get past the, is there no me inside there?
Am I not a special separate entity, separate from all my neurons and such?
People initially freak out over the, oh my God, people will just run a mock of people
stop believing in free will and will have murderers everywhere and we won't hold anyone responsible
for anything.
So that's usually the first sort of thing that people bring up. But with an audience like yours, my guess is the real thing that comes through always
takes about an extra 10 minutes or so, which is, wait, are you also telling me I've got
no grounds for being proud of my really prestigious MBA or my salary or my corner office or even my ability to work really hard.
In some ways, the notion that if there's no free will, criminal justice system makes no
sense at all. If there's no free will, meritocracy's don't either.
It's so interesting. And I've never even thought of the fact that free will could not be real, right?
We're just always taught when we're younger that we have a choice, we can change our lives,
we have free will to do whatever we want.
But you're basically saying that's not true, that everything is sort of predetermined
and based on your biology and your environment. Yeah, exactly.
And it feels like we have free will,
because when right in the moment you're choosing cocoa
or Pepsi or something, it's so in the momentness.
You're so there, it's so tangible.
You feel like such an agent of choice and all of that.
That is hard for you to imagine the billions of little threads
that have brought you to that moment and made you who you are.
And you feel like you are independent of everything that came before.
Where's we never are for a second?
So I was born Muslim and I know that in Islam, that's what it says.
Everything is written, like your life is already predetermined.
So your thoughts actually are more aligned with like major religions out there in terms
of what these religious books say.
Would you say that's accurate?
You know, with the key distinction in that, sort of your version is another version
of like the pilgrims running around with buckles
on their shoes and breath being Calvinist,
pre-determinists that everything has already said.
A scientific determinism absolutely deals
with the notion that things can change.
And you could change dramatically
Societies can change dramatically all that sort of thing rather than the don't bother because that's bringing us to sort of the next thing
That people freak out over oh my god everyone will run amok oh my god when somebody compliments me on having done a good job
I really can't take credit for it the next one is well if there's no free will
good job, I really can't take credit for it. The next one is, well, if there's no free will, nothing can change why bother, which is as far from the case as possible. We change
really dramatically at times. But what we think of is that we formed the conscious intent
to change. I decided it was time to change how I feel about something totally fundamental.
No, that's never the case.
Circumstances that have made you you are such that you will respond to this event
in a particular way, which you will say I changed afterward,
where in reality you were changed afterward.
Well, those are some really fascinating and unique thoughts. Can you tell me about when you first
started realizing that you think that there's no such thing as free will? Well, I was not quite a
scientist yet, but I think in retrospect I was thinking scientifically.
I was 14 and I was going through some sort of adolescent tumult that was very intertwined
with all sorts of ways I was being raised and it was terribly conflicting.
And then one night at two in the morning, I woke up spontaneously and like the sepiphany
of, oh, I get it. There's no God. And there's
no free will. And there's no purpose. And that's exactly how I've been thinking ever since.
Everything evaporated in one evening, one night.
And then you went on to become a scientist and you further established the fact that there's
no free will.
And then now you've come out with this new book called Determined.
So what was your intent with writing determined if we could call it intent?
Well, I'm glad we could view that as a temporary term.
I published this book about five years ago called
Behave, the biology of humans that they're best and worst.
And it's like 800 pages long and it's agonizing
and nobody in their right mind reads the whole thing.
But basically it's going through you do a behavior
and where did that behavior come from?
What was the science of what was happening
one second ago, one minute ago, one hour ago, eventually one millennium ago, how do we
make sense of us in the context of neuroscience and hormones and early development in genes
and culture and ecological stuff? And like this huge tour of that, where it seemed self-evident to me
that after you go through all of that evidence, there's like no space for free will in there.
And I'd hear from people afterwards saying, wow, just read the book, whatever. It seems to me like
this may like lesson, the realms of free will that we could lesson.
Are you kidding?
I think this is like emphatically showing
that there is no free will whatsoever
and saying, okay, well, amazingly enough,
800 pages was too subtle.
I now need to write a book just explicitly saying
when you look at the science of how we become who we are,
it's not just that there's a less free
world than we conventionally think, there's none. All we are is the outcome of biology.
We had no control over and its interactions with the environment that we had no control
over. Before we get into the actual science on why you believe there's no such thing as
free will, talk to us about your background, your experiences as a scientist, even your own genetics that make you the perfect
author of this book.
One thing that has helped an point I try to emphasize, ooh, if you study tons and tons
about neurobiology, you could see there's a lot less free will than people think, but it's
not a slam dunk.
And ooh, if you studied genetics, you reached the same conclusion.
Oh, if you studied cultural anthropology, whatever.
And it happens, I'm somewhat of a sort of generalist.
I've spent my sort of career oscillating
between being a laboratory neurobiologist
and studying wild baboons in a national park in East Africa.
I've spent 30 years going there annually.
So like the lab stuff gets me talking to molecular people,
the field stuff gets me talking bizarrely to like sociologists.
So I think collectively I've got this kind of broad
interdisciplinary view, which is to say I I'm skating on very thin ice,
and a lot of different disciplines at once.
But when you have that perspective,
you eventually see they're not different disciplines.
They all connect, like for example,
if you're talking about the effects of genes on behavior,
by definition, you're talking about the evolution
of those genes. And by definition, you're talking about the evolution of those genes. And by definition,
you're talking about your childhood, which determined how readily turned on or off those genes are.
And by definition, you're talking about the last hour when those genes were specifying what
proteins are being made in your brain. It's not just, oh, all these different disciplines collectively,
they all turn into one discipline after a while, which is this like seamless arc of stuff
we have no control over. And when you look at it closely, there isn't a crack anywhere
in there to shoot horn in a notion of free will.
This is so interesting because I've never heard anything like this before. I've
never heard anybody say that there's, I have self-improvement people and entrepreneurs all
day coming on this podcast, talking to us about grit and determination and purpose and
all these things that, according to you, we don't have much control over. So your book
is really two parts or has two main points, the science of why we don't
have free will. And then what do we do with that information? How do we live our best life knowing
that there's no free will? I want to dig into the science, but I think let's get some terminology
and some foundation on the table. So first of all, can you define free will and can you define it determinism for us? Okay, free will.
Probably the best place to start is what I don't think
defines free will and 99% of people do
because it just feels so right,
which is the in the momentnessness.
You have an intent to do something you were consciously
or where you have the intent, you understand
if you do that, more to the consequences likely to be, you understand, you have alternatives,
you don't have to do that.
And for most people, if the answer is yes to all of those, yeah, you understand this, you
got free will.
And that's how our criminal justice system works on once they establish, if the guy actually
did it, did he intend to?
Did he know there were alternatives? Did he know what the concept went? And if the answer is yes,
that's it. Culpable, responsible act that is a free agent. And this gives me apoplexy because
this is ignoring virtually everything that's happening. This is like the metaphor I keep thinking is it's like
trying to review a movie based on only seeing the last three minutes of it. Because what you're not
doing is saying, okay, but where did that intent come from in the first place? And it's when you
look at where intent came from, or let's translate that a bit,
how you turned out to be the sort of person you are,
that's where you see, you had no control at all.
And in a sense, in my mind,
the definition of free will then,
is your brain makes you do something.
And if you can show that it did that something,
and it doesn't matter if you had completely different genes,
we're raised in a different home,
we're raised in a different neighborhood,
had glands that secrete a dramatically different levels
of hormones and like your eye color would different.
And if all of those things were different,
if your brain would have done the same exact thing,
it's acting freely.
And no brains do that because they can't do anything other than the ways in which they're
embedded in what just came before this and what just came before that and before that
and all the way back.
So what you're really saying is that we may have choice in the moment, but that choice in
the moment is based on our biology and environment, which we have no control over.
Yes.
And even more striking, there are circumstances where we're making a choice in the moment
where we even think and make sense to us why we form that intent.
Like, okay, okay, well, this is the person I turned out to be,
but this person who I am is now very consciously making that choice. And then all you have to do is
look at circumstances where just subtle manipulations of people and they make different choices.
And they have no idea that you have manipulated them. And they feel as if they are agentive out the wazoo
and this was entirely and even being conscious of what you are intending to do is not getting
you some free will because independent of how you got that conscious intent, a lot of
the time we're doing stuff where we're not even conscious of it. I mean one of the there's been this massive shift in sort of people who think about moral decision making and what people
believed forever was that you think your way to a moral decision. And what all the science now shows
is a whole lot of the time, most of the time, some of the time for the most important
things, you feel your way to a moral decision. And then your conscious cognitive self suddenly
leaps up and scrambles to try to come up with a rationale for why it makes perfect sense
that you did that. The guy at NYU named Jonathan Height has done this fantastic neuroimaging stuff,
showing somebody's making a moral decision. Here's the scenarios, this is the right thing to do,
is it wrong, whatever, and the more emotional parts of the brain activate and commit to an answer
before the more cognitive parts do. And we all know this. We know this when somebody sits there and says,
you know, I can't quite tell you why. I can't put my finger on it. But when those people
do that sort of thing, it's just wrong. It's wrong, wrong, wrong. You've caught them
at that point. Their cortex has not come up with a rationale yet for the gut intuitions
they're running on. And then when two seconds later,
they say, Oh, yeah, that's why that's why because those people tend to be this way or because
those people did this to my ancestors back in 1823. And what we're seeing is much of the time,
some of the most fundamental things were deciding like what counts as okay behavior, what counts as grounds for
condemning someone, etc. We have an acclue where our decisions are coming from.
I'm 100% Palestinian. So later in this conversation, I definitely want to ask you about your thoughts
on the conflict and like how people are thinking and stuff. But first, let's get through some of this material. So your book is called
Determined. Why did you title the book that and can you explain a little bit about what
Determinism is? Well, the determined was meant to be sort of a play on words.
The full thing is determined, the science of life without free will, determined
in the sense of biologically determined, but then going after exactly what you brought
up before and what's probably terribly relevant to your listeners, which is that whole issue
of, hey, show some determination, social grits, show some backbone. And that's speaking to like
this incredibly tempting, false dichotomy, which is most people are willing to say, okay, there's
stuff we have no control over. There's biological attributes that we have. I'm not seven foot four,
so I'm never playing in the NBA. I've got perfect pitch.
I didn't have to learn to do that.
I just, it turns out to be genetic.
I am really good memory for this, but lousy memory for that.
Yeah, we can accept that there are all sorts of traits that we were handed, but where
people then go berserk is saying, ah, but the true measure of a person is what they then do with
those traits. Do they show tenacity? Do they show gumption? Or if they've been given
all sorts of gifts, do they squander it? Do they throw it away at a self-intultant?
Ooh, in that totally incorrect view of the world, stuff like your memory spat,
that's made a biology, but your grit, your tenacity, that, that stuff's made out of, like,
fairy dust or something.
That's different.
And a key critical thing is when, just as an example, you have someone who is prone towards
alcoholism, and they're
feeling an urge to drink something.
That's a biological phenomenon.
And when they then either give into it or say, no, actually, I'll have ginger ale instead,
that's just as biological.
The part of your brain that makes you do the harder thing when it's the right thing to
do, something called the frontal cortex, is as sculpted by everything that came before you.
And we think of like attributes as being the hardware in your brain, but the what you do with it
and do you stick to the tough sort of thing that that's the you sitting inside there,
that somehow separate of all that biology yuck. And it's made of the exact same biology.
So that if someone has no control over they were handed the biology of a tendency towards
alcohol craving, they also have no control over the biology
of whether or not they're good at resisting it.
It's just a very different sort of biology,
but it's one that you had no more role in choosing
than choosing your eye color.
So do you believe that, let's say,
somebody else was born and looked exactly like me,
had the same biology as me, had the same environment as me, but they're not me, that they would be the host of young and
profiting podcasts eventually, and like the same things that I did, they would,
they would have done. Well, if they had the same genes were raised by the same
parents in the same way, and the same environment, all those other things,
including prenatal environment, which is a major factor in what kind of adults we turn
out to be. If it was exactly the same, everything else would be the same, assuming the rest of
the world was the same as well, because it's the rest of the world that would have been
shaping you. But showing random stuff, brownie emotion, I guess, like all of us had to learn what brownie
emotion was for about three and a half hours in chemistry, somewhere in like ninth grade
or something.
And brownie emotion makes molecules float around in random, indeterministic ways. And a consequence of that is you and your identical twin
are both in the same exact womb
and seemingly having the same exact environment
for nine months, but you aren't.
Because somewhat random brownie and sort of stuff
is good to determine that your sibling
has two and a half percent more capillaries going to them than you have.
Or because a blood flow, you're getting 4% more of this stress hormone for mom circulating
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twins at the time of birth.
And their gene regulation are already different. Already, not only have you
been sculpted by your prenatal environment, but which corner of the womb and things like that.
So you can't really do the thought experiment of having everything being exactly the same, but
in principle, yeah, you'd still be here, sending the same exact thing.
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So let's break down the science and the mechanics of why we take action, with code profiting free.
So let's break down the science and the mechanics of why we take action, why we behave a certain way
if there's no free will.
Okay, well, we look at like you do some behavior
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and we all know context that could be
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Like all you've done is flex your finger.
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seconds to minutes before?
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Have you fallen in love with all those things,
changed the structure of your brain. And then before you know it, you're back to adolescence,
and childhood, and fetal life, and your genes, which don't determine anything, but which completely
determine what will happen in a particular environment. And then the most bizarre thing of all is,
you've got to start thinking about culture.
Like what sort of culture did your ancestors come up
with 500 years ago, parentheses,
what sort of ecosystems make certain cultures more likely?
And you look at that and say,
what does that have to do with,
because within minutes of birth,
your mother was mothering you differently,
depending on which culture she was raised in.
And she was raised in the one that came before and came before and went all the way back.
Like here's one example that just in terms of like how you view the world, I love this
one. In terms of our shared nomadic pastoralist roots that people desert cultures tend to come up with monotheistic
religions. Rain forest cultures come up with polytheistic ones. And you further
see that rainforest cultures tend to come from hunter-gatherers with polytheism.
Monotheistic cultures come from the desert or the open grasslands and people who were pastoralists
with their cows and sheep and camels and goats and stuff and
that's where the
Judeo-Christian Islamic world came from that's why that's dominating this planet rather than
people from
quacky-udal cultures or Trobrian Islanders or something like that. That has
something to do it. Yeah. And you can see centuries later, those patterns of who your ancestors
were, for example, explains patterns of violence in the United States, depending on who settled
what parts of the country back. Okay, so you even have to go back to culture. So, geez,
everything from what you were smelling a second ago,
to whether mom was stressed when you were a fetus, to what your ancestors were doing,
all of those collectively merge into one set of influences,
and then you throw an environment on top of it,
and that's how you became who you are.
And that's why you did the thing you just did.
I'm trying my best to grapple my head around this because it's like I was saying in the
beginning, it's something I've never heard before.
It seems really outlandish compared to other things that I've heard before.
So help me understand, let's look at Jeff Bezos and Amazon.
Was Jeff Bezos born to make Amazon?
What it is today?
Was that always going to happen or was that just what happened?
I guess I'm just confused about it all.
Well, he certainly wasn't born to make it by the time he did start Amazon.
It's not by chance that he did and somebody else did not. By the time he had to go how many
years was it before Amazon started making money and somehow they kept still going, it is not by
chance that he turned out to be that sort of person who could hold on and hold his breath for that
long and not only do that, but convince other people to hold their breaths also.
And it's one of those where, okay, you get three people, each of whom start to the same
sort of business and their side by side.
And it's not making money for years.
And one of them like gives up and like steals the investor's money and buys a yacht.
The other one like collapses into despair and like goes back to working in a
kinkos. And the third one is Jeff Bezos and just keeps pushing it. It is not by chance
that each one of those wound up being the sort of person that they are that would respond
to it that way. In the same way, like you go to some inspirational heartwarming movie
and one person comes out saying, that's it. I'm going to go do a random act of kindness tomorrow.
And the next person comes out and say, Oh my God, that was such amazing cinematography.
And the third person comes out and says, that was the most manipulative boring
plot I've ever seen.
How do they wind up?
It just exposed them to the same stimulus, but a world of influences from one second before
or two million years before blah, blah, blah, turn them into people who were going to be changed
by seeing that movie or changed by the news that they still had not made a profit that quarter,
but they were going to be changed in different ways because of who they were sculpted into being
outside their control.
Can you talk to us about Laplace's demon and why it can help us think about what determinism
is and isn't?
Well, it's sort of that's 18th century version, but a sort of a logical precursor, answers to all of this,
this was his notion that if you could arrange
every particle in the universe as it was
at the time that God created the world,
this was pre-big bang, but if you could set
every single condition exactly the same as it was back when
you'd have the exact same role right now.
It was just spooling out a tape of pre-recorded contingencies that we're going to produce this outcome.
And what we've learned since then is there's randomness thrown in,
there's quantum indeterminacy that has virtually nothing to do with free will,
but still mucks around with things
their systems chaotic systems that are by definition unpredictable even though they're determinists.
Okay, so we got a 21st century view but he's basically still like the the poster child
for the notion of saying all we are now is the end product of what came before.
And like anyone writing about free will somewhere by the second paragraph, they have to mention him. And his demon was
this supposedly infinitely insightful being who, if they knew where every single particle
in the universe was right now, could tell you like that you're going to sneeze
three centuries and 23 minutes from now.
So that's sort of the grandfather of the notion that whatever came before, came before of
what came before that and before that and before that and all of that collectively is what
made you into the person who's like standing here right now. Yeah. And so just to further clarify what you're saying, you give a really good example
about a garbage collector and a college graduate and you kind of compare their lives to each
other and how they could basically be swapped, had you just swapped the conditions.
Can you tell us about that?
Yeah, this was actually at my son's graduation sitting there and it's totally heartwarming
and it's like great.
And the parents and everyone's tearful and it's totally wonderful.
And I'm a sucker for stuff like that.
And all of this is going on.
And sort of at the corner, out of the corner of my eye, I saw this guy back there who was
the grounds crew guy who was bagging
the garbage from all the nice like box lunches, all the parents had just tossed her
consume. And thinking, wow, so we're sitting here and there's the graduate and there's
this guy collecting the garbage. And you know damn well that if they switched genes and switched childhood and switched which one of them got
ice skating lessons from their parents and which one of them had to move every six months because
like these issues are undocumented which one of them grew up in a dangerous neighborhood, which one went to a fancy-ass prep school bit, et cetera, to switch all of those.
And the guy with the garbage would be the one up on stage now getting the diploma.
And that's what a deterministic world looks like, the fact that we know if all of those
advantages and disadvantages were traded, they would be trading their positions in life
at this point.
But at some point in our lives, we're making decisions, right? We are making decisions at least
in the moment. So can you talk to us about where deciding and where intent comes from?
Okay, so tell me about a time, a very explicit decision that you made. You chose this instead of
that, where you initially thought,
eh, I'm probably going to do this and you wound up changing your mind and doing that instead.
Well, six years ago, I was working in corporate and I quit my corporate job to start my business
and take my podcast full-time. So my whole life, I thought I was just going to be in corporate,
or for a long time, I thought I was just going to be incorporate.
And then within a month's time, I just decided I wanted to start my business and I
quit my job. Okay. So that's great. And we know for certain all sorts of people in
the exact same position would now be like heading towards their 45th anniversary
of working for the same company, that sort of thing.
Why do you turn out to be the sort of person who would be bored by being in the same environment?
Why do you turn out to be the sort of person who had enough self-confidence to walk away from that?
Why do you have the certain degree of risk taking that you do? We know all about half a dozen
different genes that have an influence on how risk taking someone is do. We know all about half a dozen different genes that have an
influence on how risk taking someone is, how sensation-seeking they are, and it influences who you
marry and you're voting patterns and your economic stability. So how do you wind up being that sort
of person? How do you wind up being somebody who I assume was extroverted in the right ways to get people to
back you? If your parents thought this was the most like disastrous decision on earth,
where do you turn out to have the ability to respect them but only so much? Or if they thought
this was wonderful and they had been prompting you to do that. How do you turn out to be the sort of person who thought that your parents actually had sensible things to say to you, et cetera,
et cetera? I was once lecturing a bunch of judges. I do some of these read, judges continuing
at things and telling them how they're in this ridiculous occupation because it makes no
sense and they have no free going all of that. This judge said, well, that's nonsense the other day, like the day ended in court where I figured, okay, I'm
going to throw the book at this guy. And I thought about it that night and realized, you know,
actually this and this, and I decided, no, I'm going to go easier on the guy the next morning.
And he said, you're telling me I didn't decide that? And I said, who told you to turn out to be the sort of person
who respects reflecting on your thoughts?
Who taught you to vow you thinking objectively?
Who taught you to be the sort of person
who wouldn't be so threatened by the notion
that you're changing your mind?
What do you mean?
I'm nipidant.
Had you turned out to be somebody who could deal
with the fact that your first thoughts were wrong and
none of this comes from nowhere and
you know, I am sure
Codra is of people who would have been too freaked out to make the leap that you did and
that didn't come from nowhere and the fact that they're changing,
the fact that they're still at the same job, didn't come from nowhere,
and the fact that they're still there and are bored out of their minds,
or that they're still there, and this is totally great,
neither of those responses came from nowhere.
That's how we become who we are. That's why Jeff Bezos stuck it out for all those years and lots of other people would have given up.
So I have two follow up questions to this. Do you feel like there's no such thing as being spontaneous and then how about the choice of not doing something? Do you think we have the freedom of won't. Yeah. Being spontaneous, no, we're never spontaneous. What we think
of as spontaneous is when you have absolutely no insights as to what was going on implicitly
underneath the surface. Like every now and then we're capable of saying, oh, that's why
I'm being all irritable. I haven't eaten yet. And I should. There
we have some insight into the implicit stuff boiling beneath the surface. But what we
call spontaneous is like, we're just not aware of what the pieces were. And we're not
aware most of the pieces in terms of, okay, okay, we don't have free will, but what about free won't? Do we at least have the ability to veto stuff?
And the answer is no, because when you look at the nuts and bolts of how your brain goes
about deciding to do something, and you conclude actually there's no free will going into that,
all you need to do to figure out is the nuts and bolts of when you've decided to do something
and then your brain says, nah, don't do it.
All you've done is just added a little minus switch to your circuit instead of a plus
there sort of thing.
But it's the same exact stuff that it's built on.
And if you find people who at every single juncture in their life when they have an opportunity to finally
get their act together and they can't do the free won't they can't say no they do the wrong
thing each time. That's the same exact biology playing out there as if they instead had said time
to like reform myself and I'm never going to do X again. And now I'm mother Teresa or some such thing.
All it does is it just has a little like additional glitch
in the system there and you get the opposite
on spontaneous decision.
That makes me sad kind of because it makes me feel like
if somebody is born in a bad environment
and has or genes or trauma in their genes, that they're never
going to have a good life, or be able to change their life to have a better outcome.
Well, absolutely, they can change, but we know it's an uphill battle.
We know, despite whatever myths we have in this country, if you're born into poverty,
I don't know what the number is,
but there's like an 85% chance,
you're still gonna be in poverty as an adult.
And if you're born into a family with three vacation homes
and you know, an IPO coming up next season sort of thing,
you know you are going to get a large inherit
in somewhere to add,
you are gonna have freedoms in your life that 99% of people on this planet don't have.
Yeah.
Every now and then, somebody does completely counter all the expectations, but we're running
a planet or at least a country on the notion that it's okay to treat some people much better
than average because the stuff they had no control over
and to treat other people much worse than average. And not only do we think that's okay,
but we invent all these myths to explain how the person actually had a role in bringing about those things.
And here's like a great example in terms of like ongoing biology.
You know, you look at all sorts of implicit bias studies and people are getting less biased
against people from this background and this other background and all of that so that there
might actually be some good news occurring there. But one area where there's not been a decrease in implicit bias and the fact there's been an increase is against people who are obese.
That calls for very negative judgments, both visceral and reasoned pseudo-reason that this is someone who has no self-control.
So how are they going to do self-control in this job they're applying for, et cetera, et cetera?
It's one of the groups where stigma is
increasing against them. And then a long-come somebody who everyone in their family is morbidly obese
and they were by the time they were 11. And this is how they've been incorporating their view into their whole life. Yeah, I keep trying. I can't. I what can I say? I have no self-discipline, blah, blah, blah. And then somebody
discovered this hormone called leptin. And leptin sends a signal to your brain telling you
to feel less hungry than you were. And it turns out this person has a mutation in the receptor
for leptin so that they don't get a satiation signal. It's a goddamn mutation that their family is all had,
and that's why, no, they're not lacking self-control. No, they don't hate themselves,
or any of that. This is what it is. And we run a world where, because of this one stupid feature
about their endocrinology, they're less likely to get jobs and other people. They're
more likely to be convicted by a jury. They're more likely to spend their life alone and lonely.
I'm like, how screwed is this? And it's this way in all those domains. And yeah, it's kind of like
horrifying if somebody just because they were born with a silver spoon, they're going
to have a life of privilege and comfort. But you know, it's 100 fold more horrifying when
you look at all people who spend their lives with less and their needs less considered and
marginalized or mistreated or disenfranchised or what. Just because of their just crappy luck,
there's something very wrong here.
As you're explaining this,
it gets me thinking that a lot of your work
can actually make the world a better place
because we'll have more empathy for people who are overweight
or people who have drug addictions and things like this
because we'll realize that in a lot of part
or in your opinion
and 100% it's not their fault. They don't have free will. And likewise, if we see somebody who's
like a master of the universe and has just had like their six successful startups in a row or whatever,
and they kind of have decided they're pretty damn special and they're entitled
to better treatment and they're more deserving of this and their needs have, and they've
earned more consideration. They haven't for a second. If all of this has to change your
world view into not blaming for people for the ways in which things didn't turn out
well for them, Absolutely the same,
nobody, including you and me, are entitled to anything that makes them better than anyone else,
because the cool, lot of bold, impressive things we may remain out of pulled off had nothing to do
with who we are, because we just had good luck with it. And like meritocracy goes down the tubes just as surely as
blaming people born into poverty for still being poor 20 years later.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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Yeah.
So let's talk about some of the ways that we create these decisions and some of the
causes of these decisions.
You give a lot of examples in the book.
One of them is between odor and disgust.
Can you talk to us about how odor and disgust
can actually change our decision making in the moment?
Yep, I love this in terms of, whoa,
that's got something to do with it in the 30 seconds
before you make a decision.
This is not a big effect,
but it's been replicated.
It came from some very good psychologist, Danielle, and sort of a broader, the sort of version
of that has been out there. And it's the flip side of what I mentioned before. Take somebody,
sit him down, haven't fill out a question here about their political views. Social politics,
economics, geopolitics, whatever. and then bring them back a month later
and put them in the room saying, here's another question, Arab, we want you to fill out about
your political views. And it happens, they're sitting at a room that smells of totally rancid garbage.
And you can actually go buy a vile of rancid garbage like odorant and you like take the lid off it just as you could buy freshly baked chocolate chip cookie
smell, vials and open them up, but you're sitting in that room. And if somebody is sitting in a room that smells bad,
they become more socially conservative.
Doesn't change their economic views. Doesn't change their change their geopolitical views. But what's happening, a part of the brain
called the insular cortex, which for the last 150 million years in every vertebrate on earth,
tells you if you've just taken some rancid food into your mouth, and it tastes disgusting,
and all sorts of like toxin receptors in your tongue Wake up this part of the brain and it causes you to gag and throw up and spit it out all of that
Somewhere in the last 40,000 years. We've evolved the ability not only to do those neurons to disgusting tastes and smells
They do moral disgust also
How did this happen like 40,000 years ago, that's like a blink of an
that's not enough time to get a new part of the brain. They had like some big committee meeting
and they said, well, insular cortex, it does disgusting tastes. Okay, it'll do disgusting
actions from now on. Like give me some duct tape. Let's like push that in there and expand
his portfolio. And you've got neurons in there,
which literally cannot distinguish between
a disgusting taste and disgusting moral act,
which is why when we hear about them, we feel queasy.
It leaves a bad taste in our mouth.
We almost want to throw it, it makes us nauseous.
That sort of thing.
And once you've got that, you've got people
who are then running their moral decision making on stuff that just kind of feels disgusting
is wrong, wrong, wrong. And that's letting you then have a 150 million year old part of
your brain make your decisions as to whether those people are okay just because they
Despite looking different from you or sounding or praying or eating or loving or whatever it is because you're running your brain on like one of the most
Savagely like ancient parts of it and it's powerful and you take that person at that point say whoa
That's really interesting because you know four weeks ago
You said that should actually be legal if people want to do that and just now you said it shouldn't be legal
Why why do you change they're not going to say because the room smells disgusting and my insular cortex can't tell the difference between metaphor and reality
They're going to say oh, I thought about it and I saw this thing in the news and then I reflect it and
They're just making it up because they were running on just an intuitive sense that
disgusting sensations
make you think of disgusting actions and
Ideologies and theologies and things like that and like whoa where'd that come from?
all, a geez and things like that. And like, whoa, where'd that come from? That's fascinating in and of itself. And what's even more fascinating is when you this asked the person who made
that different judgment, and they're going to fabulate something from like freshman year
philosophy or something to explain. And nah, it was other stuff going on underneath the surface. And it's mostly
other stuff going on underneath the surface. So are you saying that we can't have rational
logical thinking and we are really just pretending to have logical thinking, masking our reptilian
brain or something? Well, that's very apt that you brought in that part of the brain because that's
exactly sort of where that comes into. We, we and dinosaurs were doing some very
similarly impulsive things with some very similar parts of the brain, but do we ever
actually think and reason and come to a rational? Yeah, we do.
But under some circumstances, more readily than others.
If you're tired, you're going to run on instincts and intuition.
If you're in pain, if you're scared, if you're stressed, if you're hard as pounding because
of desire and arouse on all of that, you're going to make completely different sorts of
stupid decisions. Or if you're sitting there and you're deciding how are you going to assess
this person, if they count in your brain as a them, instead of as an us, you don't have
a chance to get your more emotive reflexive parts of the brain to step down and let's
think about this carefully. Wonderful example of this research by this guy at Harvard named Josh Green, who
will show if you're having to make a decision about acting morally or not, am I going
to act in a generous, sharing way right now?
If it's concerning a bunch of your friends, people who are us's, if you have to make a
very fast decision about that, you're
going to be generous. And as you have more time to think about it, that's when you come
up with, well, you know, it's really their fault that they did that and somebody else is
going to take care of it and it's really not my problem. And you want to do something
selfish. When you're considering a them, someone who looks totally different from you all of that has all those all arms going off unconsciously
If you've got to make that decision instantly you're gonna act aggressively and selfishly and
Preemptively sort of looking out for your side. It's only when you have more time to think that you may come to you know
Maybe they're not so different and maybe,
you know, way, they wound up this way because, you know, their circumstance were real different
from mine. When you're around us, your reflexes are towards prosocial nice behavior. When
you're around them, your reflexes towards just the opposite. And it's in both cases
that when you can sit and think about it,
that's where you come up with a completely different answer. So in a world in which somebody has to decide in the next three
seconds, should this person get a green card? Should this person get this job? Should this person be arrested?
You know, in those cases, that's exactly where you should be on guard
that you're going to be making your most stupid, emotion-driven decisions, stop and think
about it and think about it again and again and again.
And all of this gets encapsulated in this quote that I think is like incredibly informative,
which is you cannot reason somebody out of an opinion that they weren't
reasoned into in the first place. If they got to that out of emotion and fear and hatred and
stress and love or whatever, and they just made up a rationalization afterward, no amount of
reason is going to change that. We've seen that, you know, our national political
landscape over the last eight years showing counter to what every sort of rational social
psychologist would have taught you. There's a whole realm of having extremist views where
the more convincing the evidences that you give them that their views are wrong, the more they're
going to believe in it. Because oh my god,
they must really be having to come up with a big lie if they're pulling out the big guns
like that. Like we know the whole world I'm talking about here. Yeah, reason is not going
to reason someone out of something they were not reasoned into in the first place. And
circumstances where we can actually like come to, that's not what I normally would have thought,
but I thought about it, and I thought about it again, and I put myself in that person's perspective,
because there's is a whole lot different from mine, and I showed that I'm capable of understanding
somebody else can feel pain about something I have no understanding
of.
And when you work your way towards that, that's where we come up with interesting different
outcomes.
And that's where it's not by chance that some people do that and some people don't.
One more example that I think really helps illustrate this.
You talk about judges who are hungry, who end up giving different sentences based on
their level of hunger.
Tell us about that.
Yeah.
This is another one of those.
I love this study and it was done by some really good scientists in a very prestigious
journal and it's been attacked by all sorts of people since then.
But this was looking at more than a thousand judicial decisions in this parole board system over the course
of the year, looking at when do the judges parole the person, when did they send them
back to jail and looking at every variable they could think of. And the strongest predictor
was how many hours had it been since the judge eat Nameal. Appeared before the judge right after they had lunch,
you had a 60% chance of being curled by four hours later, a 1-2% chance. Oh my god, what is this about?
What it's about is doing the harder thing, looking at the world from somebody else's perspective,
instead of jumping to immediate gut decision thinking
about again, all that takes work in a very literal way that's more energetically demanding
for your brain.
And if you have low blood glucose levels because you have an eaten in four hours, you get the
easier answer every single time.
And what's amazing about that is you asked the judge why they like made this
decision, and they're going to tell you about, I don't know, Spinoza or Aristotle or something,
and they're not going to tell you because my blood glucose level was below this. Now that study
has been attacked by all sorts of cranks complaining about how the statistics were done.
The authors have come back and completely put that confound to rest some other things
that people have complained about, which when you look at it closely makes the case even
stronger for that and it's been replicated in other realms.
Don't go apply for a home loan if the loan officer has gone a lot of hours since eating
a meal.
You're less likely to get alone. If you're an outgroup member
and somebody's looking at your job application, the more hours it's been since they've eaten,
the faster they're going to toss your application in the garbage.
Whoa, all of us. But then, then on top of that, where I was talking before about culture even matters, there's
one circumstance where as judges become more hungry, they become more merciful.
What's that about?
That's in Islam, a court during Ramadan.
Because you're hungry and you're reflecting on the nature of justice and goodness and
all of that.
If you're in a sharia court and you're a judge,
hunger makes you more merciful if it's in a religious context. If you're hungry because you didn't
have time to get lunch, you're more likely to throw the book at the guy just like a judge sitting here
in the Bronx or something. Whoa! So there's a cultural aspect to it as well. Totally cool that it works that way.
So with all this information, knowing that your environment and your circumstance really
shape your decision making in the moment, if you're hungry, if you're stressed, if you
have hormones, if you're PM messing, if you're a girl, like there's probably all these different
things that we need to worry about.
So how do we take this information and then apply it to the real world, knowing all these things? How do you suggest that we improve our lives in the real
world? Well, I recognize once again out of the lunatic fringe that if this is really taken to
its logical extreme, criminal justice has to be totally completely trashed and replaced with a quarantine model.
You protect people from dangerous people, you can strain them, but you don't do it
once smidging more than the minimum needed, and you don't lecture them afterward
about how they have a bad soul, and you put a lot of effort into understanding
how they turned out that way. And also from the lunatic fringe,
meritocracy makes no sense whatsoever. That doesn't mean you pick a
random person to take out your brain tumor tomorrow morning. You want the person to be skilled. You want
to protect people from incompetent people and difficult jobs. But sure don't make sure you teach that
person that they feel more deserving that you that they're a better person because they've got a good memory and they've got good spatial, you know, physical,
digital control or whatever, taking out your tumor. That stuff needs to go down the
tube. None of us can feel entitled to anything whatsoever. And thus there's nobody on earth
who is less entitled to things than you are.
And finally, like hating somebody, makes his little senses,
hating a virus or hating an earthquake or something.
And all that said, that's unbelievably difficult to do.
And I've been thinking this way since I'm 14 and I can pull this off
about once every three weeks for a minute, because most of the time I'm
falling back into the time and place I was trained in.
And if it's really, really hard to do this, which it sure is, what you're left with is
save the energy to do that for when it really matters, for when you're just about to judge
somebody, for when you're just about to jump to the front
of a literal or metaphorical line, because you feel as if somehow you've earned better
consideration than anybody. Save it for when it really matters. If you want to believe
it was free will, whether you've lost the top of your teeth before the bottom this morning
or the other way around, you know, go for it.
Don't work hard at that point to figure out how you turned out to be an upper tooth flosser
instead of a lower one, but save it for when it matters. And like all we've learned is for centuries
every time we figure out a new domain where aha, there actually wasn't responsibility. That person had no control
over what happened. The world becomes better. It's a really good thing that society figured
out that disastrous thunderstorms are not caused by old women with old teeth, which is
can't cause thunderstorms. And the appropriate societal response isn't to burn them at the stake and
Like kids you aren't learning to read very well. They aren't lazy and motivated
They've got something screwy with like layer six of this part of their cortex
So they reverse looped letters and they have dyslexia
It's not their fault and not only does it become a better world
because you figure out how to teach kids with dyslexia to read and it becomes, you know,
more interpretively effective. But it's a much more human world because you're not burning old
women at the stakes and you're not telling kids who can't keep letters from flipping that they're
lazy and unmotivated and that's who they should grow
up thinking of themselves as. And at every one of these steps, if you save the effort
to do this hard work where it really matters, the roof isn't going to cave in. All this
going to happen is it's going to become like a nicer world to be in.
So I mentioned this earlier, I'm 100% Palestinian and I said I would bring up the Palestine,
Israeli conflict and I feel like this is an appropriate time. So right now, Israel, in my opinion,
is committing an ethnic cleansing and genocide against the people and Gaza. And I can't help but
always, whenever I do these interviews, it's November 7th, the day that we're recording today. So
this has been going on for about a month. And I think everybody in the world by now
knows about the Hamas attacks on October 7th.
And the fact that now Israel has been retaliating
carpet bombing Gaza for about 30 days straight now.
So let's talk about this
because it seems pretty relevant
to what you're talking about in terms of like
the Hamas attack,
they even have control over what they were going to do.
There's so many circumstances that obviously led up to that.
And then now with what Israel is doing now in terms of the bombing, and then even before
that with the apartheid and the entitlement of having a state only for, Jewish supremacy. Well, I am going to, I would guess, get literal death threats rather than just metaphorical
ones and saying what I think here, I was raised as an Orthodox Jew, a very observant one
until I became an atheist that night at age 14 and I am a vehement, stridentident anti-Zionist. I think the founding of Israel
was one of the last great crimes of European colonialism.
Like Europe finally figured out after shitting on the Jews
for 2000 years, Hitler finally pushed it over the top
and made that seem a little bit embarrassing.
So for the first time, European Christianity decided
it's time to like be nice to the Jews and try to make up for the death camps.
And what does Britain do? And it's the last gasp of empire. It decides to make up for those 2000 years of European brutality by giving away the Palestinians homeland.
What a cool idea. How just is that? I know.
Ridiculous.
And what that did,
admit that creating the Palestinian catastrophe of that,
what that did is make both sides victims of this.
Because the Palestinians have been robbed of their homeland
and their rights and their safety and their security
and their dignity and all of
that for 75 years now, whatever it is. And all of these the dragles survivors of the concentration camps
were dumped into the middle of a place where everyone surrounding them hated their guts because
it was much easier to hate them than to hate the bridge colonial who engineered behind the scenes.
And all we've done is spent 75 years guaranteeing that these people were going to spend this
time tearing in each other's throats like savages.
And they're both victims and they both got screwed in this deal.
And Israel, it's there now.
I would not have voted for its founding, but if you do that, take it apart.
Now, there's a lot of other places you're going to have to take apart. It's there now, but
their sure as hell has to be a viable supported Palestinian state, and their sure as hell has to
be equal rights for Arab Israelis and Israel, and their sure as hell has to be all those things.
And those settlers sure as hell should be labeled as terrorists and
pulled out of there and
You know all that stuff. So you know those are the obvious solutions
But all of it is within this mindset that I think is totally an outcome of how I think which is they're both victims of
circumstance and
somehow which is they're both victims of circumstance. And somehow 2000 years of the dragled Jews
have become ethno-nationalists.
And somehow the Palestinians
who've been like beaten on for 75 years
have become angry enough to do things like what Hamas did
and everybody is a victim in this.
So that's my two cents.
Yeah, it was a good one.
Thank you for sharing.
I had no idea where you were gonna go with it,
but I do think it's relevant to everything
that you're saying that it,
this is the main thing that I wanted to get out
of what you just said.
None of this actually happened on October 7th.
This is years, thousands of years in the making.
It's not October.
It's in, all, everybody is looking at it in a bubble.
And really, there's so much context behind it,
environmental wise, and even biology wise,
like all the trauma from everyone's ancestors,
even is at play here.
I know that we are running out of time here.
So I end all my interviews with two last questions.
Thank you so much for your time.
Everything was really, really insightful.
The first question is, what is one actionable thing that our young and profitors can do today
to become more profitable tomorrow?
Since I am so ignorant about the world you're coming from, I can't even begin.
I don't know.
Anything that I can say is to be sound fatuous, stupid, like you're really not such a big deal. You're really not the
Christ child coming again, just because you pulled off a successful startup.
You really didn't do it on your own. You didn't do any of this on your own. So keep that in mind.
That's one of my biggest takeaways from this is that now I feel like I'm going to look at other
people who might not be as successful as me with a lot more empathy, honestly, and less judgment.
So that was my big takeaway from this conversation. And what would you say your secret to
profiting in life is, and this can go beyond financials, so profiting in your relationships and everything.
Oh, once again, like useless, useless, like window dressing.
Oh, I don't know, just remember you didn't get here by chance.
And if the outcome of that is you shouldn't beat on yourself as much or hate yourself as much, that's a good thing. And if the outcome of that is remembering you've got no damn grounds to congratulate yourself,
you know, those have to be good outcomes. That's got to make things a little bit better.
Awesome. Well, Robert, thank you so much for joining us on Young and Profiting Podcast.
I love the conversation.
Great.
Likewise, thanks for having me on.
Yeah, fam.
This was one of those interviews that truly blows your mind.
And I know I personally will be thinking about this for weeks.
Robert Sipolsky's view that we lack free will entirely is a radical one, and he admits
that, but he certainly made his case in a compelling way. We all like to think that we're agents of choice
and the architects of our own faiths, and that we're all leading our lives by making conscious,
moment-moment decisions. But so many recent findings in neuroscience and psychology suggest that
this is far from the truth. Like Professor Sapolsky put it, there are a billion threads leading to each moment,
and believing that it is just your conscious intent in any given moment that determines your
actions, is a lot like trying to review a movie based on only seeing the last three minutes of it.
Viewed like this, something like grit, which many of us entrepreneurs take great pride in, loses a bit of its bluster.
Your tenacity, like everything else, stems from some combination of your genes, hormones,
environment, ancestral heritage, and more.
The implications of having no free will are even bigger than that.
The moral principles that underlie our criminal justice system, our meritocracy, our ideas
of blame and praise start to crumble without the presence of free will.
But that can be a good thing too, says Sapolsky. It can actually lead us to having more empathy for others who are struggling with things like their weight, drug addiction, or something else that may not be their fault at all. So whatever your own view on free will, there's so much to take away from thinking about these issues.
And next time you're thinking about beating yourself up, or somebody else for that matter,
for a mistake, shortcoming, or bad outcome, perhaps try zooming back and taking in the really big picture.
Thanks for listening. And if some combination of your genes environment and chance brought you
to this fascinating discussion with Robert Sapolsky on Young & Profiting Podcasts, then why don't you exercise whatever counts as your
own free will to share this episode with your friends and family? And maybe it was predetermined
that you would also drop us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts. Perhaps your whole life has been
building up to this moment. We here at Young & Profiting would certainly appreciate if you did.
You can find me on Instagram at Yappwith Hala or on LinkedIn by searching my name, it's
Halataha. But keep in mind, I am the LinkedIn queen and my DMs get nuts. So if you want
to reach out to me and you want to make sure I see it, try me on Instagram. Before we wrap
up, I do have to shout out my amazing production team at Yat Media, thank you for all that you do.
This is your host, Halitaha, aka the podcast princess, signing off. There are lots of ways to potentially boost your investments these days and even more
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