"Humankind - Uncover a radical new perspective on human nature that prioritises generosity, cooperation and trust" @LukeRobertMason interviewing author Rutger Bregman on #FUTURESPodcast. Streaming live in 5 minutes, from the top of the hour
I've been listening to the audiobook of "Humankind" over the last few days. It's audacious, provocative, and challenges lots of received wisdom about human nature. And it's inspiring. It's likely to be mentioned countless times in the months and years ahead #FUTURESPodcast
So much of society is designed around the assumption that human civilisation is only a thin veneer over a basic nature that is selfish. But @rcbregman sees lots of evidence that human nature has many tendencies to friendliness, altruism, and cooperation #FUTURESPodcast
A major issue with a view that highlights the selfish tendencies in human nature is that it can become a self-fulfilling prophecy. If our theories emphasise dark hidden motives, that is what we will tend to notice, and tend to expect, with bad consequences #FUTURESPodcast
It was human friendliness that allowed human innovations to spread more widely. New methods of fishing, boat-designing, etc, once invented, could be passed to wider groups. Therefore Homo Sapiens fared better than the larger-brained Neanderthals - @rcbregman at #FUTURESPodcast
What was the evolutionary advantage to humans of being (probably) the only animal that blushes? @rcbregman suggests it aided the development of trust between humans. Likewise for the whites in our eyes, and our expressive brow and eyebrows. #FUTURESPodcast
With the growth of civilisation, with cities and states, humanity moved from "the survival of the friendliest" to "the survival of the most shameless" - @rcbregman in #FUTURESPodcast
The famous Hobbesian description of life as "solitary, poor, nasty, brutish, and short" was apt once agriculture and cities started, but isn't accurate for life in the earlier phase of human/gatherer societies, which were primarily egalitarian - @rcbregman at #FUTURESPodcast
We are all aware these days of the need to think about what we put into our mouths when we eat. We need to think just as hard about what news sources we spend time listening to. Otherwise we'll end up with a "mean world syndrome" - @rcbregman in #FUTURESPodcast
Some practical advice from @rcbregman: rather than assuming other people are just like you, and applying the golden rule, instead ask them questions, and apply the platinum rule: “Treat others the way they would like to be treated” #FUTURESPodcastgoodreads.com/book/show/1219…
Do we need a new enlightenment, but based on empathy rather than rationality, asks @LukeRobertMason. We need both, replies @rcbregman, and we actually need to be able to counteract some of our intuitions about other people #FUTURESPodcast
In campaigning for a better world, we need each other, across a wide coalition. But the people who hate @rcbregman the most, he says, are often the people who agree with him almost the most as well, but who fall foul of "the narcissism of minor differences" #FUTURESPodcast
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
"Viral: The Search for the Origin of COVID-19" by Alina Chan and Matt Ridley was a book that changed my mind. It marshals lots of evidence that significantly raises the probability that the global pandemic resulted from a laboratory incident (1/6) goodreads.com/book/show/5864…
The book highlights many heroic, admirable actions, of Internet sleuths and self-taught researchers around the world, who uncovered evidence which cast new light on the background to the outbreak of the pandemic (2/6)
But it also highlights many examples of actions that were much less admirable: people in both media and academia, as well as in the medical establishment, who sought to turn attention away from facts that were uncomfortable or inconvenient (3/6)
Whilst waiting for the #CogX2021 sessions to start streaming, why not quickly check out the open preview of my forthcoming new book, which places the future of AI as central to the future of humanity. "Vital Foresight" dw2blog.com/2021/05/26/a-p…
CEO of @RollsRoyce, Warren East, looks forward to the company "smashing" the air speed record for an electrically powered craft. As part of exploring possibilities for greener air travel #CogX2021
... though it looks like this record-breaking @RollsRoyce effort has been delayed from the schedule originally announced (back in December 2019). Given the uncertainties involved in such innovative engineering, that's not too unexpected #CogX2021rolls-royce.com/media/press-re…
Live now: "AI, Data & Ethics with Prof. Joanna Bryson" @j2bryson "Joanna will join us at this edition of the London Ethics Meetup to share her insights on AI, Data & Ethics in 2020" meetup.com/Tech-Ethics-Lo…
Good definitions from @j2bryson at the start of her talk on "AI, Data & Ethics"
People who say they are "against regulation" benefit from huge amounts of regulation inside their own bodies, that is biological regulation, points out @j2bryson
I'm watching the live stream from #OneSharedWorld#RiseOrFallTogether, "The OneShared World Interdependence Summit 2020". Lots of speakers, artists, and activists are lined up
"The world today faces a wake-up call. The question is: will we wake up?" Opening provocation at #OneSharedWorld by @JamieMetzl
"Because the core problem we face is systemic, our response needs to be systemic too. To safeguard our future, we need to build a new global operating system" - @JamieMetzl at #OneSharedWorld
Starting in just under 2 hours, at 12.00 UK time: the 1st of the 9 sessions of #WeNeedAChange: "Accelerating a new Kind of Thinking & Science for a Sustainable Future". I'll be offering six theses about the kind of change needed. Video will be streamed at leanbase.de/streamaroundth…
The #CogXtra panel "What's Needed Now" has just started streaming: "In considering how we rebuild, ideas once-considered radical have been up for discussion. But how radical do we need to go? Can we rebuild along the same lines as before?" cogx.co/event/what-is-…
"As the storms of the global pandemic continue to buffet businesses and individuals, we are all in need of a double dose of resilience. If only there were a precise recipe for it, we would all be racing towards a brighter future." This can be viewed on
The pandemic has exposed the extent of the digital divide. The number one infrastructure priority for the country is to fix this divide - former UK Chancellor George Osborne at #CogXtra