Whenever I find myself coming back to my notes again and again on a recent read, I think that means I should tell people they might want to check it out. Here's the book:
👉🏻 Most psychological studies many of us are familiar with and cite comes from "Massively biased samples: Most of what was known experimentally about human psychology and behavior was based on studies with undergraduates from Western societies"
3/ This is underlined by the fact that works out to a 96% concentration on 12% of the world’s population!
It highlights that "When cross-cultural data were
available from multiple populations, Western samples typically anchored the extreme end of the distribution.
4/ They were psychologically weird."
Thus, the acronym title: W.E.I.R.D. stands for "Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic." The author offers a plethora of examples for how this biases the studies if you are attempting to make broad generalizations about
5/ universal human nature. The studies find that we weirdos have very different dispositions regarding many aspects of life than people living in different cultures and even from our own ancestors in that we are
6/ ““highly individualistic, self-obsessed, control-oriented, nonconformist, and analytical.”
👉🏻Culture, independent of the biological evolutionary process, does "alter our brains, hormones, and anatomy, along with our perceptions, motivations, personalities, emotions, and many
7/ other aspects of our minds."
He persuasively argues that the proof of this can be found by examining the physical effects that literacy has on our “biology and psychology without altering the underlying genetic code.”
8/ Adults, on average, in highly literate society have “thicker corpus callosa and worse facial recognition” than a society where literacy was low.
The book than takes you through all of the reasons why understanding these differences is crucial to understanding
9/ why some societies advance more quickly economically and socially than others. The list of major differences between WEIRD cultures and others is extensive: “Individualism and Personal Motivation ■ Self - focus, self-esteem, and self-enhancement ■ Guilt over shame
10/ ■ Dispositional thinking (personality) : Attribution Errors and Cognitive Dissonance ■ Low conformity and deference to tradition / elders ■ Patience , self - regulation, and self -control ■ Time thrift and hard work (value of labor)
11/ ■ Desire for control and love of choice Impersonal Prosociality (and Related Worldviews) ■ Impartial principles over contextual particularism ■ Trust, fairness, honesty, and cooperation with anonymous others, strangers, and impersonal institutions ( e.g ., government )
12/ ■ An emphasis on mental states, especially in moral judgment ■ Muted concerns for revenge but willingness to punish third parties ■ Reduced in-group favoritism ■ Free will:
13/ notion that individuals make their own choices and those choices matter” are just the tip of the iceberg."
The author also makes a persuasive case for “aggregate social evolution” such that there is a mismatch between cumulative cultural evolution and the (hopefully)
14/ continuing evolution of we humans as a species. Here's a pull quote on why that's important:
15/ There's so much more to the book, but I think this gives potential readers some good reasons why they might be interested in reading it--I've read it twice and think I'll end up reading it again, as there are huge implications for how we think about human nature and potential
16/ In the meantime, here's a brief interview the author did on @PBS:
18/ But, more than anything, it reminds us that universal human nature may be very different than we weirdos in the West think it is--lots to chew on, enjoy.
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1/ A fascinating look at how our human foibles effect even the most theoretical parts of science. Because of "the Red Scare," Bohm was frozen out of the orthodox world of physics. Bohm had advanced a bold--for the time--theory called "hidden variables"
2/ which, absent politics, would have added a huge new idea to theoretical quantum physics.
Instead, J. Robert Oppenheimer, who had been Bohm's mentor, said "If we cannot disprove Bohm, then we must agree to ignore him." 🤦🏻♂️
3/ In the film, Oppenheimer's edict is followed by quotes from some of the most brilliant scientists to have ever lived, absolutely savaging Bohm and his Hidden Variables theory. As the film makes clear, this wasn't due to an objective evaluation of his paper, but rather to the
2/ We've been busy building it with an original group of 9 RIAs partners whose advice and feedback were invaluable in helping us make the platform more responsive to the tools advisors actually want and need to help them do more for their clients.
1/ Quintus Horatius Flaccus, known to English-speakers as Horace, was the leading Roman lyric poet during the time of Augustus, Rome's first, and in the eyes of many historians best, Emperor.
2/ Many of Horace's maxims survive to this day and are seen as excellent life advice.
I was drawn into reading Horace by this quote, which I thought was an excellent lens to view the ups and downs of life:
3/
“Many shall be restored that now are fallen and many shall fall that now are in honor.”
~Horace, "Ars Poetica"
I started back through my notes on him, and found several others that I thought others would enjoy, Here are some of the best of them:
2/ The author, Paul Kalanithi, was a neurosurgeon and writer who got a stage IV lung cancer diagnosis when only in his mid-30s. He died at age 37 in 2015, but not before writing "When Breath Becomes Air."
It's filled with insights that perhaps only a dying man could see clearly
3/ “There is a moment, a cusp, when the sum of gathered experience is worn down by the details of living. We are never so wise as when we live in this moment.”
And
“If the unexamined life was not worth living, was the unlived life worth examining?”
"Hey you, out there in the cold
Getting lonely, getting old
Can you feel me?
Hey you, don't help them to bury the light
Don't give in without a fight...
Hey you, don't tell me there's no hope at all
Together we stand, divided we fall"
~@pinkfloyd
I've often thought in an earlier era, they would have been poets or in the philosophy department of Oxbridge. This, for example, reminds me of T.S. Eliot:
"Far away
Across the field
Tolling on the iron bell
Calls the faithful to their knees
To hear the softly spoken magic spell"
And it's not just Pink Floyd, obviously.
I think you can find brilliant insights in many forms of music today, for example, the song "Patience" by Nas and Damian Marley is bursting with incredible ideas that really fit into an quest for a better understand of the 'truth'
1/ Our 5 most popular podcasts by downloads for 2020 plus the 2 fastest growing in downloads, thanks to my co-host @InvestorAmnesia and producer @MathewPassy for providing this list: