{"version":"https://jsonfeed.org/version/1","title":"On Wisdom","home_page_url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm","feed_url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/json","description":"On Wisdom features a social and cognitive scientist in Toronto and an educator in London discussing the latest empirical science regarding the nature of wisdom. Igor Grossmann runs the Wisdom & Culture Lab at the University of Waterloo in Canada. Charles Cassidy runs the Evidence-Based Wisdom project in London, UK. The podcast thrives on a diet of freewheeling conversation on wisdom, decision-making, wellbeing, and society and includes regular guests spots with leading behavioral scientists from the field of wisdom research and beyond. Welcome to The On Wisdom Podcast.","_fireside":{"subtitle":"What does science tell us about wisdom?","pubdate":"2023-11-01T21:00:00.000-04:00","explicit":false,"copyright":"2024 by Igor Grossmann & Charles Cassidy","owner":"Charles Cassidy and Igor Grossmann","image":"https://assets.fireside.fm/file/fireside-images/podcasts/images/6/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/cover.jpg?v=1"},"items":[{"id":"7a5cee1a-3976-409d-8a6a-b1d425245225","title":"58: The Social Robots are Coming! (with Kerstin Dautenhahn)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/58","content_text":"Can we create wise robots? Kerstin Dautenhahn joins Igor and Charles to dive into the intriguing world of social robots, the finer points of “Robotiquette,” and the potential role such robots can play in supporting therapeutic treatments. Igor reflects on the limits of robot-based wisdom, Kerstin reveals the potential of Generative AI like ChatGPT to generate false information about her own professional identity, and Charles considers the perils of socially awkward machines. Welcome to Episode 58.Special Guest: Kerstin Dautenhahn.Links:Kerstin Dautenhahn's page | University of WaterlooSocial and Intelligent Robotics Research Laboratory (SIRRL)Robots are not human, even if we want them to be | Kerstin Dautenhahn | TEDxEastEndSocially intelligent robots: dimensions of human–robot interaction - Dautenhahn (2007)Potential Applications of Social Robots in Robot-Assisted Interventions for Social Anxiety - S Rasouli, G Gupta, E Nilsen, K Dautenhahn (2022) User Evaluation of Social Robots as a Tool in One-to-One Instructional Settings for Students with Learning Disabilities - N Azizi , S Chandra, M Gray, J Fane, M Sager, K Dautenhahn (2023)Opportunities for social robots in the stuttering clinic: A review and proposed scenarios - S Chandra, G Gupta, T Loucks, K Dautenhahn (2022)","content_html":"

Can we create wise robots? Kerstin Dautenhahn joins Igor and Charles to dive into the intriguing world of social robots, the finer points of “Robotiquette,” and the potential role such robots can play in supporting therapeutic treatments. Igor reflects on the limits of robot-based wisdom, Kerstin reveals the potential of Generative AI like ChatGPT to generate false information about her own professional identity, and Charles considers the perils of socially awkward machines. Welcome to Episode 58.

Special Guest: Kerstin Dautenhahn.

Links:

","summary":"Can we create wise robots? Kerstin Dautenhahn joins Igor and Charles to dive into the intriguing world of social robots, the finer points of “Robotiquette,” and the potential role such robots can play in supporting therapeutic treatments. Igor reflects on the limits of robot-based wisdom, Kerstin reveals the potential of Generative AI like ChatGPT to generate false information about her own professional identity, and Charles considers the perils of socially awkward machines. Welcome to Episode 58.","date_published":"2023-11-01T21:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/7a5cee1a-3976-409d-8a6a-b1d425245225.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":29424765,"duration_in_seconds":2942}]},{"id":"662ec5c1-5851-43e9-b324-e91f1d70fdde","title":"57: The Epic Challenge of Knowing Thyself (with David Dunning)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/57","content_text":"Can we ever really know ourselves, or are we destined to always make overly optimistic self-assessments? David Dunning joins Igor and Charles to discuss the Dunning-Kruger effect, the importance of asking the right questions, why arriving at an accurate view of ourselves is so challenging, and the implications for teaching, medicine, and even scientific research. Igor explores the possible reemergence of group assessments in education as a result of advances in AI, David shares why conversations with smart people often end up as competitions to ask the most questions, and Charles reflects on the wisdom-enhancing experience of jury service. Welcome to Episode 57.Special Guest: David Dunning.Links:Unskilled and unaware of it: how difficulties in recognizing one's own incompetence lead to inflated self-assessments - J Kruger, D Dunning (1999)The association between objective and subjective financial literacy: Failure to observe the Dunning-Kruger effect - Gilles E. Gignac (2022)Flawed Self-Assessment: Implications for Health, Education, and the Workplace - David Dunning Chip Heath Jerry M. Suls (2004)Feeling \"Holier Than Thou\": Are Self-Serving Assessments Produced by Errors in Self- or Social Prediction? - Nicholas Epley, David Dunning (2000)Why People Fail to Recognize Their Own Incompetence - David Dunning1. Kerri Johnson Joyce Ehrlinger Justin Kruger (2003)The Dunning–Kruger Effect: On Being Ignorant of One's Own Ignorance | Book Chapter - David Dunning (2011)","content_html":"

Can we ever really know ourselves, or are we destined to always make overly optimistic self-assessments? David Dunning joins Igor and Charles to discuss the Dunning-Kruger effect, the importance of asking the right questions, why arriving at an accurate view of ourselves is so challenging, and the implications for teaching, medicine, and even scientific research. Igor explores the possible reemergence of group assessments in education as a result of advances in AI, David shares why conversations with smart people often end up as competitions to ask the most questions, and Charles reflects on the wisdom-enhancing experience of jury service. Welcome to Episode 57.

Special Guest: David Dunning.

Links:

","summary":"Can we ever really know ourselves, or are we destined to always make overly optimistic self-assessments? David Dunning joins Igor and Charles to discuss the Dunning-Kruger effect, the importance of asking the right questions, why arriving at an accurate view of ourselves is so challenging, and the implications for teaching, medicine, and even scientific research. Igor explores the possible reemergence of group assessments in education as a result of advances in AI, David shares why conversations with smart people often end up as competitions to ask the most questions, and Charles reflects on the wisdom-enhancing experience of jury service. Welcome to Episode 57.","date_published":"2023-10-07T18:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/662ec5c1-5851-43e9-b324-e91f1d70fdde.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":37824699,"duration_in_seconds":3782}]},{"id":"d2db09b3-b7c2-46bf-bf61-dd14e8b19fff","title":"56: Awe Reloaded (with Dacher Keltner)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/56","content_text":"Have we overlooked a major source of awe, right under our collective noses? Dacher Keltner returns to the On Wisdom studio to discuss his new book \"Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life\", the power of moral beauty, the desire for connection, and the importance of wandering. Igor suggest that awe can also entail feelings of terror, Dacher reflects on the perils of awe being used against us, and Charles shares his experience of an awe walk-around-the-bloc. Welcome to Episode 56.Special Guest: Dacher Keltner.Links:Dacher Keltner | UC PsychAwe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your LifeGreater Good: The Science of a Meaningful LifeBerkeley Social Interaction LaboratoryDacher Keltner: Why Awe Is Such an Important Emotion - YouTubeThe Science of Happiness Podcast | Greater GoodAwe as a scientific emotion - Gottlieb, Keltner, Lombrozo (2018)Self-Transcendent Awe as a Moral Grounding of Wisdom - Dacher Keltner, Paul K. Piff (2020)Awe and humility. - PubMed - NCBI - Stellar, gordon, Anderson, Piff, McNeil, Keltner (2018)Why Do We Feel Awe? | Greater GoodWhy Does Awe Have Prosocial Effects? New Perspectives on Awe and the Small Self - Joshua D. Perlin, Leon Li (2020)Awe Motivates Authentic-Self Pursuit via Self-Transcendence: Implications for Prosociality - Tonglin Jiang, Constantine Sedikides (2021)","content_html":"

Have we overlooked a major source of awe, right under our collective noses? Dacher Keltner returns to the On Wisdom studio to discuss his new book "Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life", the power of moral beauty, the desire for connection, and the importance of wandering. Igor suggest that awe can also entail feelings of terror, Dacher reflects on the perils of awe being used against us, and Charles shares his experience of an awe walk-around-the-bloc. Welcome to Episode 56.

Special Guest: Dacher Keltner.

Links:

","summary":"Have we overlooked a major source of awe, right under our collective noses? Dacher Keltner returns to the On Wisdom studio to discuss his new book \"Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life\", the power of moral beauty, the desire for connection, and the importance of wandering. Igor suggest that awe can also entail feelings of terror, Dacher reflects on the perils of awe being used against us, and Charles shares his experience of an awe walk-around-the-bloc. Welcome to Episode 56.","date_published":"2023-08-29T19:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/d2db09b3-b7c2-46bf-bf61-dd14e8b19fff.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":30084618,"duration_in_seconds":3008}]},{"id":"fdc73ee1-e7d8-47ad-9d27-9ff1aadc7f2e","title":"55: Wise of the Machines (with Sina Fazelpour)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/55","content_text":"How can we make AI wiser? And could AI make us wiser in return? Sina Fazelpour joins Igor and Charles to discuss the problem of bias in algorithms, how we might make machine learning systems more diverse, and the thorny challenge of alignment. Igor considers whether interacting with AIs might help us achieve higher levels of understanding, Sina suggests that setting up AIs to promote certain values may be problematic in a pluralistic society, and Charles is intrigued to learn about the opportunities offered by teaming up with our machine friends. Welcome to Episode 55.Special Guest: Sina Fazelpour.Links:Sina Fazelpour's WebsiteAI and the transformation of social science research | Science - Igor Grossmann, Matthew Feinberg, Dawn C. Parker, Nicholas A. Christakis, Philip E. Tetlock, Willian A. Cunningham (2023)Algorithmic Fairness from a Non-ideal Perspective - Sina Fazelpour, ZacharyC.Lipton (2020Diversity in sociotechnical machine learning systems - Sina Fazelpour, Maria De-Arteaga (2022)Picking on the Same Person: Does Algorithmic Monoculture lead to Outcome Homogenization? - Rishi Bommasani, Kathleen A. Creel, Ananya Kumar, Dan Jurafsky, Percy Liang (2022)Algorithmic bias: Senses, sources, solutions - Sina Fazelpour, David Danks (2021)Constitutional AI: Harmlessness from AI Feedback - Yuntao Bai et al (2022)Taxonomy of Risks posed by Language Models - Laura Weidinger at Al (2022)Large pre-trained language models contain human-like biases of what is right and wrong to do - Patrick Schramowski, Cigdem Turan, Nico Andersen, Constantin A. Rothkopf & Kristian Kersting (2022)On the Dangers of Stochastic Parrots: Can Language Models Be Too Big? - Emily M. Bender , Timnit Gebru , Angelina McMillan-Major , Shmargaret Shmitchell (2021) In Two Moves, AlphaGo and Lee Sedol Redefined the Future | Wired Magazine (2016)","content_html":"

How can we make AI wiser? And could AI make us wiser in return? Sina Fazelpour joins Igor and Charles to discuss the problem of bias in algorithms, how we might make machine learning systems more diverse, and the thorny challenge of alignment. Igor considers whether interacting with AIs might help us achieve higher levels of understanding, Sina suggests that setting up AIs to promote certain values may be problematic in a pluralistic society, and Charles is intrigued to learn about the opportunities offered by teaming up with our machine friends. Welcome to Episode 55.

Special Guest: Sina Fazelpour.

Links:

","summary":"How can we make AI wiser? And could AI make us wiser in return? Sina Fazelpour joins Igor and Charles to discuss the problem of bias in algorithms, how we might make machine learning systems more diverse, and the thorny challenge of alignment. Igor considers whether interacting with AIs might help us achieve higher levels of understanding, Sina suggests that setting up AIs to promote certain values may be problematic in a pluralistic society, and Charles is intrigued to learn about the opportunities offered by teaming up with our machine friends. Welcome to Episode 55.","date_published":"2023-08-05T12:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/fdc73ee1-e7d8-47ad-9d27-9ff1aadc7f2e.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":38604716,"duration_in_seconds":3860}]},{"id":"db966a60-5a59-4db5-a163-0a05a6ebc466","title":"54: Emotions Are Not What You Think (with Lisa Feldman Barrett )","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/54","content_text":"What actually are “emotions” and how are they made? Lisa Feldman Barrett joins Igor and Charles to discuss what we’ve got right and what we’ve got completely wrong about the nature of our emotional lives. Igor grapples with the idea that red apples aren’t necessarily red, Lisa shares that anger doesn’t always look like anger, and Charles learns that a racing heartbeat can be interpreted in fundamentally different ways. Welcome to Episode 54.Special Guest: Lisa Feldman Barrett.Links:Lisa Feldman Barrett's Website (Public)Interdisciplinary Affective Science LaboratoryYou Aren't at The Mercy of Your Emotions - Your Brain Creates Them | TED Talk (Jan 2018)Cultivating Wisdom: The Power Of Mood | TED Talk (May 2018)The theory of constructed emotion: An active inference account of interoception and categorization - Barrett, L. F. (2017)How Emotions Are Made: The Secret Life of the Brain | Book (2017)Seven and a Half Lessons About the Brain | Book (2020)Context Reconsidered: Complex Signal Ensembles, Relational Meaning, and Population Thinking in Psychological Science - Lisa Feldman Barrett (2022)","content_html":"

What actually are “emotions” and how are they made? Lisa Feldman Barrett joins Igor and Charles to discuss what we’ve got right and what we’ve got completely wrong about the nature of our emotional lives. Igor grapples with the idea that red apples aren’t necessarily red, Lisa shares that anger doesn’t always look like anger, and Charles learns that a racing heartbeat can be interpreted in fundamentally different ways. Welcome to Episode 54.

Special Guest: Lisa Feldman Barrett.

Links:

","summary":"What actually are “emotions” and how are they made? Lisa Feldman Barrett joins Igor and Charles to discuss what we’ve got right and what we’ve got completely wrong about the nature of our emotional lives. Igor grapples with the idea that red apples aren’t necessarily red, Lisa shares that anger doesn’t always look like anger, and Charles learns that a racing heartbeat can be interpreted in fundamentally different ways. Welcome to Episode 54.","date_published":"2023-05-30T14:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/db966a60-5a59-4db5-a163-0a05a6ebc466.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":29444618,"duration_in_seconds":2944}]},{"id":"435c053a-f174-4753-a26e-a193572e9cf2","title":"53: Moral Reframing and The Science of Political Persuasion (with Robb Willer)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/53","content_text":"How can you persuade someone who disagrees with you on everything? In this episode, we discover the secrets of political persuasion with Robb Willer, a leading expert on political persuasion and moral reframing. Igor grills Robb on the ethics of activism in social science, Robb defends his mission to make a difference in the world, and Charles is amazed to find out that he can fix his misperceptions with a few simple tricks. Don’t miss this inspiring and ground-breaking conversation that will transform how you communicate with others. Tune in to Episode 53 now!Special Guest: Robb Willer.Links:Robb Willer's WebsiteHow to Have Better Political Conversations | Ted Talk (2017)The Key to Political Persuasion | New York TimesFrom Gulf to Bridge: When Do Moral Arguments Facilitate Political Influence? - Matthew Feinberg, Robb Willer (2015)Correcting inaccurate metaperceptions reduces Americans’ support for partisan violence - Joseph S. Mernyk, Sophia L. Pink, James N. Druckman, Robb Willer (2022)Interventions to reduce partisan animosity - Rachel Hartman, Will Blakey, Jake Womick, Chris Bail, Eli J. Finkel, Hahrie Han, John Sarrouf, Juliana Schroeder, Paschal Sheeran, Jay J. Van Bavel, Robb Willer & Kurt Gray (2022)The activist’s dilemma: Extreme protest actions reduce popular support for social movements - Matthew Feinberg, Robb Willer, Chloe Kovacheff (2020)","content_html":"

How can you persuade someone who disagrees with you on everything? In this episode, we discover the secrets of political persuasion with Robb Willer, a leading expert on political persuasion and moral reframing. Igor grills Robb on the ethics of activism in social science, Robb defends his mission to make a difference in the world, and Charles is amazed to find out that he can fix his misperceptions with a few simple tricks. Don’t miss this inspiring and ground-breaking conversation that will transform how you communicate with others. Tune in to Episode 53 now!

Special Guest: Robb Willer.

Links:

","summary":"How can you persuade someone who disagrees with you on everything? In this episode, we discover the secrets of political persuasion with Robb Willer, a leading expert on political persuasion and moral reframing. Igor grills Robb on the ethics of activism in social science, Robb defends his mission to make a difference in the world, and Charles is amazed to find out that he can fix his misperceptions with a few simple tricks. Don’t miss this inspiring and ground-breaking conversation that will transform how you communicate with others. Tune in to Episode 53 now!","date_published":"2023-04-10T17:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/435c053a-f174-4753-a26e-a193572e9cf2.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":35764683,"duration_in_seconds":3576}]},{"id":"c35798e1-190e-4323-80d0-fda6337d2c42","title":"52: World Wide Wisdom (with Deepak Ramola)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/52","content_text":"Imagine gathering hard-earned lessons from survivors of human trafficking in Nepal, middle school children in Afghanistan, refugees in Europe, and even a man who has witnessed over 12,000 deaths. Deepak Ramola has been on such a lesson-gathering mission for a while, and he joins Igor and Charles to discuss the life lessons he has collected, who gets to define moral behaviour, and how we might change our culture to encourage more perspective-taking. Igor highlights the challenge of stepping outside ourselves in the heat of the moment, Deepak asks some challenging questions about love, and Charles learns the surprising value of proverbs as tools of reflection. Special Guest: Deepak Ramola.Links:Deepak Ramola's SiteProject FuelWorld Wisdom MapDeepak Ramola | Ted Talk50 Toughest Questions of Life | Deepak Ramola","content_html":"

Imagine gathering hard-earned lessons from survivors of human trafficking in Nepal, middle school children in Afghanistan, refugees in Europe, and even a man who has witnessed over 12,000 deaths. Deepak Ramola has been on such a lesson-gathering mission for a while, and he joins Igor and Charles to discuss the life lessons he has collected, who gets to define moral behaviour, and how we might change our culture to encourage more perspective-taking. Igor highlights the challenge of stepping outside ourselves in the heat of the moment, Deepak asks some challenging questions about love, and Charles learns the surprising value of proverbs as tools of reflection.

Special Guest: Deepak Ramola.

Links:

","summary":"Imagine gathering hard-earned lessons from survivors of human trafficking in Nepal, middle school children in Afghanistan, refugees in Europe, and even a man who has witnessed over 12,000 deaths. Deepak Ramola has been on such a lesson-gathering mission for a while, and he joins Igor and Charles to discuss the life lessons he has collected, who gets to define moral behaviour, and how we might change our culture to encourage more perspective-taking. Igor highlights the challenge of stepping outside ourselves in the heat of the moment, Deepak asks some challenging questions about love, and Charles learns the surprising value of proverbs as tools of reflection. ","date_published":"2023-01-05T17:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/c35798e1-190e-4323-80d0-fda6337d2c42.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":33124748,"duration_in_seconds":3312}]},{"id":"f674873f-f015-4380-94ee-aa91eb70c582","title":"51: Tricky Colleagues and Contagious Emotions (with Tessa West)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/51","content_text":"How do we respond wisely to foolish behaviour in the workplace? Tessa West joins Igor and Charles to talk about the most common types of ‘jerks at work’ - including the bulldozer, the credit stealer, and the gaslighter, discussing what drives such unhelpful behaviour, and how best to deal with it. Igor explores the different ways we can respond to uncertainty in the workplace, Tessa suggests that we’re surprisingly nice to moral violators, and Charles learns the importance of building ‘affect contagion buffers’ into his day! Welcome to Episode 51.Special Guest: Tessa West.Links:Tessa West's homepageTessa West's NYU pageJerks at Work: Toxic Coworkers and What to Do About Them - Tessa West (2022) | BookStress Contagion: Physiological Covariation Between Mothers and Infants - Waters, West, Mendes (2014)5 Signs You're The Jerk At Work | Huffington Post","content_html":"

How do we respond wisely to foolish behaviour in the workplace? Tessa West joins Igor and Charles to talk about the most common types of ‘jerks at work’ - including the bulldozer, the credit stealer, and the gaslighter, discussing what drives such unhelpful behaviour, and how best to deal with it. Igor explores the different ways we can respond to uncertainty in the workplace, Tessa suggests that we’re surprisingly nice to moral violators, and Charles learns the importance of building ‘affect contagion buffers’ into his day! Welcome to Episode 51.

Special Guest: Tessa West.

Links:

","summary":"How do we respond wisely to foolish behaviour in the workplace? Tessa West joins Igor and Charles to talk about the most common types of ‘jerks at work’ - including the bulldozer, the credit stealer, and the gaslighter, discussing what drives such unhelpful behaviour, and how best to deal with it. Igor explores the different ways we can respond to uncertainty in the workplace, Tessa suggests that we’re surprisingly nice to moral violators, and Charles learns the importance of building in ‘affect contagion buffers’ into his day! Welcome to Episode 51.","date_published":"2022-11-15T19:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/f674873f-f015-4380-94ee-aa91eb70c582.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":34684781,"duration_in_seconds":3468}]},{"id":"b087afce-0cdf-45d0-a8ef-2bdb4108801e","title":"50: Morality Meets World (with Joshua Greene)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/50","content_text":"To give to both your favourite charity and a super-effective charity recommended by experts, visit Giving Multiplier:\nhttps://givingmultiplier.org/invite/ONWISDOM\n\nCan insights from moral psychology increase donations to more effective charities? Joshua Greene joins Igor and Charles to discuss ventilator allocation and other pandemic-related trolley problems, deep pragmatism, the dual process theory of moral judgement, and the power of the veil of ignorance. Igor gets excited about the role of metacognition for wisdom, Joshua reveals in what contexts we feel more comfortable pushing a fat man off a bridge, and Charles learns that when it comes to unfamiliar moral problems, we should not expect cognitive miracles! Welcome to Episode 50.Special Guest: Joshua Greene.Links:Giving Multiplier — Give to both your favourite charity and a super-effective charity recommended by experts.Joshua Greene's HomepageMoral Tribes: Emotion, Reason, and the Gap Between Us and Them - Joshua Greene (2014) | BookVeil-of-ignorance reasoning favors the greater good - Karen Huang, Joshua D. Greene, Max Bazerman (2019)The Psychology of (In)Effective Altruism - Lucius Caviola, Stefan Schubert, Joshua D. Greene (2021)Talks at Google | Joshua Greene - Moral Tribes: Emotion, Reason, and the Gap Between Us and Them | Joshua Green | Talks at GoogleVeil of Ignorance | Ethicsunwrapped","content_html":"

To give to both your favourite charity and a super-effective charity recommended by experts, visit Giving Multiplier:
\nhttps://givingmultiplier.org/invite/ONWISDOM

\n\n

Can insights from moral psychology increase donations to more effective charities? Joshua Greene joins Igor and Charles to discuss ventilator allocation and other pandemic-related trolley problems, deep pragmatism, the dual process theory of moral judgement, and the power of the veil of ignorance. Igor gets excited about the role of metacognition for wisdom, Joshua reveals in what contexts we feel more comfortable pushing a fat man off a bridge, and Charles learns that when it comes to unfamiliar moral problems, we should not expect cognitive miracles! Welcome to Episode 50.

Special Guest: Joshua Greene.

Links:

","summary":"To give to both your favourite charity and a super-effective charity recommended by experts, visit Giving Multiplier:\r\nhttps://givingmultiplier.org/invite/ONWISDOM\r\n\r\nCan insights from moral psychology increase donations to more effective charities? Joshua Greene joins Igor and Charles to discuss ventilator allocation and other pandemic-related trolley problems, deep pragmatism, the dual process theory of moral judgement, and the power of the veil of ignorance. Igor gets excited about the role of metacognition for wisdom, Joshua reveals in what contexts we feel more comfortable pushing a fat man off a bridge, and Charles learns that when it comes to unfamiliar moral problems, we should not expect cognitive miracles! Welcome to Episode 50.\r\n\r\nTo give to both your favourite charity and a super-effective charity recommended by experts, visit Giving Multiplier:\r\nhttps://givingmultiplier.org/invite/ONWISDOM","date_published":"2022-10-09T21:45:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/b087afce-0cdf-45d0-a8ef-2bdb4108801e.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":34484683,"duration_in_seconds":3448}]},{"id":"794ca209-bc84-4868-b01b-3bff13ea6287","title":"49: Wise Goals (with Ayelet Fishbach)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/49","content_text":"What does goal-setting have to do with wisdom and how do we pick wise goals? Ayelet Fishbach joins Igor and Charles to discuss the dangers of moving too swiftly from planning-mode to action-mode, how to compromise across multiple goals, and why we need to rethink our relationships with vegetables! Igor underscores the importance of thinking of wisdom as a process rather than an outcome, Ayelet encourages us to change our situation rather than ourselves, and Charles learns the benefits of approaching a choice as if you’d make it 100 times. Welcome to Episode 49.Special Guest: Ayelet Fishback.Links:Ayelet Fishbach's Personal WebsiteGet It Done: Surprising Lessons from the Science of Motivation - by Ayelet FishbachBehavioral Science Authors Series - Ayelet FishbachWe’re Good at Motivating Others, but What About Ourselves? | Knowledge at WhartonGood Habits, Bad Habits: A Conversation with Wendy Wood | Behavioral ScientistWisdom is a social-ecological rather than person-centric phenomenon | Science Direct - Grossmann, Dorfman, Oakes (2020) ","content_html":"

What does goal-setting have to do with wisdom and how do we pick wise goals? Ayelet Fishbach joins Igor and Charles to discuss the dangers of moving too swiftly from planning-mode to action-mode, how to compromise across multiple goals, and why we need to rethink our relationships with vegetables! Igor underscores the importance of thinking of wisdom as a process rather than an outcome, Ayelet encourages us to change our situation rather than ourselves, and Charles learns the benefits of approaching a choice as if you’d make it 100 times. Welcome to Episode 49.

Special Guest: Ayelet Fishback.

Links:

","summary":"What does goal-setting have to do with wisdom and how do we pick wise goals? Ayelet Fishbach joins Igor and Charles to discuss the dangers of moving too swiftly from planning-mode to action-mode, how to compromise across multiple goals, and why we need to rethink our relationships with vegetables! Igor underscores the importance of thinking of wisdom as a process rather than an outcome, Ayelet encourages us to change our situation rather than ourselves, and Charles learns the benefits of approaching a choice as if you’d make it 100 times. Welcome to Episode 49.","date_published":"2022-08-31T19:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/794ca209-bc84-4868-b01b-3bff13ea6287.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":28644749,"duration_in_seconds":2864}]},{"id":"fdeef702-7ba2-4305-a4e2-64f5255038d0","title":"48: A Joyous Journey from Black-and-White to Grey (with Tom Gilovich)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/48","content_text":"Is \"the spectrum\" a more helpful way to think about the world than \"categories\"? Tom Gilovich joins Igor and Charles to discuss the perils of black-and-white thinking, the evolving data on the hot hand phenomenon, the science of regret, why foxes are wiser than hedgehogs, and the freedom that comes from learning that we are of less interest to other people than we think. Igor considers the limits of psychological nudging in tackling society’s structural problems, Tom shares the perspective that leads him to be so unrelentingly joyful, and Charles learns that even scientists have to work hard to avoid being typecast. Welcome to Episode 48.Special Guest: Tom Gilovich.Links:Tom Gilovich's Page | Cornell UniversityGilovich Judgment and Belief LabThe Wisest One in the Room: How You Can Benefit from Social Psychology's Most Powerful Insights (Tom Gilovich and Lee Ross)How We Know What Isn't So: The Fallibility of Human Reason in Everyday Life - Gilovich The i-Frame and the s-Frame: How Focusing on Individual-Level Solutions Has Led Behavioral Public Policy Astray - Chater, Loewenstein (2022)","content_html":"

Is "the spectrum" a more helpful way to think about the world than "categories"? Tom Gilovich joins Igor and Charles to discuss the perils of black-and-white thinking, the evolving data on the hot hand phenomenon, the science of regret, why foxes are wiser than hedgehogs, and the freedom that comes from learning that we are of less interest to other people than we think. Igor considers the limits of psychological nudging in tackling society’s structural problems, Tom shares the perspective that leads him to be so unrelentingly joyful, and Charles learns that even scientists have to work hard to avoid being typecast. Welcome to Episode 48.

Special Guest: Tom Gilovich.

Links:

","summary":"Is \"the spectrum\" a more helpful way to think about the world than \"categories\"? Tom Gilovich joins Igor and Charles to discuss the perils of black-and-white thinking, the evolving data on the hot hand phenomenon, the science of regret, why foxes are wiser than hedgehogs, and the freedom that comes from learning that we are of less interest to other people than we think. Igor considers the limits of psychological nudging in tackling society’s structural problems, Tom shares the perspective that leads him to be so unrelentingly joyful, and Charles learns that even scientists have to work hard to avoid being typecast. Welcome to Episode 48.","date_published":"2022-08-01T12:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/fdeef702-7ba2-4305-a4e2-64f5255038d0.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":29064797,"duration_in_seconds":2906}]},{"id":"c6066877-c59c-401d-9833-66b59aaa6102","title":"47: Charting Pandemic Waters: A Common Wisdom Model for Uncertain Times (with Howard Nusbaum) - Rebroadcast","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/47","content_text":"(First Broadcast - 21st June 2020)\n\nWhat is the value of wisdom in the time of the global pandemic? Does the community of behavioural scientists studying wisdom agree on anything about the nature of wisdom? Can we say what we now know about wisdom and, conversely, what do we know we don’t yet know? Howard Nusbaum joins Igor and Charles to discuss the recently assembled Toronto Wisdom Task Force and the resulting Common Wisdom Model, meta-cognition, the thorny issue of moral-grounding, and sage advice regarding how to measure wisdom in the lab. Igor stresses the importance of building solid theoretical foundations for the field in the context of the pandemic, Howard reflects on the viability of evil wisdom, and Charles learns that we had better pay close attention today to the values we program into the decision-making robots of tomorrow. Special Guest: Howard Nusbaum.Links:Original Broadcast: Episode 29 - Charting Pandemic Waters: A Common Wisdom Model for Uncertain Times (with Howard Nusbaum)The Science of Wisdom (AEON)The Science of Wisdom in a Polarized World: Knowns and Unknowns: Psychological Inquiry: Vol 31, No 2A Common Model Is Essential for a Cumulative Science of Wisdom: Psychological Inquiry: Vol 31, No 2University of Chicago Center for Practical Wisdom | Center for Practical Wisdom | The University of ChicagoWisdom in Context - Igor Grossmann, 2017Toronto Wisdom Task Force Meeting 2019 (edited) - YouTubeAI Open Letter - Future of Life Institute","content_html":"

(First Broadcast - 21st June 2020)

\n\n

What is the value of wisdom in the time of the global pandemic? Does the community of behavioural scientists studying wisdom agree on anything about the nature of wisdom? Can we say what we now know about wisdom and, conversely, what do we know we don’t yet know? Howard Nusbaum joins Igor and Charles to discuss the recently assembled Toronto Wisdom Task Force and the resulting Common Wisdom Model, meta-cognition, the thorny issue of moral-grounding, and sage advice regarding how to measure wisdom in the lab. Igor stresses the importance of building solid theoretical foundations for the field in the context of the pandemic, Howard reflects on the viability of evil wisdom, and Charles learns that we had better pay close attention today to the values we program into the decision-making robots of tomorrow.

Special Guest: Howard Nusbaum.

Links:

","summary":"(First Broadcast - 21st June 2020)\r\n\r\nWhat is the value of wisdom in the time of the global pandemic? Does the community of behavioural scientists studying wisdom agree on anything about the nature of wisdom? Can we say what we now know about wisdom and, conversely, what do we know we don’t yet know? Howard Nusbaum joins Igor and Charles to discuss the recently assembled Toronto Wisdom Task Force and the resulting Common Wisdom Model, meta-cognition, the thorny issue of moral-grounding, and sage advice regarding how to measure wisdom in the lab. Igor stresses the importance of building solid theoretical foundations for the field in the context of the pandemic, Howard reflects on the viability of evil wisdom, and Charles learns that we had better pay close attention today to the values we program into the decision-making robots of tomorrow. ","date_published":"2022-07-20T17:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/c6066877-c59c-401d-9833-66b59aaa6102.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":37224144,"duration_in_seconds":3722}]},{"id":"0230e119-5b34-4d66-ae85-aafc96b0ebd1","title":"46: Antifragility, Gut Feelings, and the Myth of Pure Evil (with Jonathan Haidt) - Rebroadcast","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/46","content_text":"(First Broadcast - 4th November 2019)\n\nDoes that which doesn’t kill you make you weaker? Should we always follow our emotions? Is life a battle between good people and bad people? And critically, what might the adoption of these three popular, but unwise, ideas be doing to a rising generation of young adults? Jonathan Haidt joins Igor and Charles to discuss the three great untruths of modern life, the nature of antifragility, the 'great awokening,' rising violence on US university campuses, and the origin story of the Heterodox Academy. Igor suggests that diversity can help some projects while hindering others, Jon shares his ultimate conflict-resolving ninja skill, and Charles learns that conservative voters come in radically different shapes and sizes. Special Guest: Jonathan Haidt.Links:Original Broadcast: Episode 23 - Antifragility, Gut Feelings, and the Myth of Pure Evil (with Jonathan Haidt)Jon Haidt's Home PageWhy the Past 10 Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid - The AtlanticHaidt's writings and materials on the effects of social media on teens and democraciesReparations, systemic racism, and white Democrats’ new racial liberalism (On the Great Awokening) - VoxHeterodox AcademyThe Coddling of the American MindPredictors and consequences of intellectual humility - T. Porter, A. Elnakouri, E. Meyers, T. Shibayama, E Jayawickreme, I. Grossmann (2022) - Nature ReviewsJonathan Haidt: Can a divided America heal? | TED TalkA Conflict of Visions - Thomas SowellHow to Win Friends and Influence People - Dale CarnegieMore in Common - Publications - The Perception Gap / Hidden TribesThe Authoritarian Dynamic - Karen StennerE Pluribus Unum: Diversity and Community in the Twenty-first Century - Robert D. PutnamThe emotional dog and its rational tail: a social intuitionist approach to moral judgment - Haidt (2001)The Coddling of the American Mind - International CoddlingWorld Happiness Report 2019 - Chapter 5: The Sad State of Happiness in the United States and the Role of Digital Media - Jean M. TwengeThe Happiness Hypothesis: Putting Ancient Wisdom to the Test of Modern Science: Amazon.co.uk: Jonathan Haidt: 8601300074849: BooksThe Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion: Amazon.co.uk: Jonathan Haidt: 0884607571077: Books","content_html":"

(First Broadcast - 4th November 2019)

\n\n

Does that which doesn’t kill you make you weaker? Should we always follow our emotions? Is life a battle between good people and bad people? And critically, what might the adoption of these three popular, but unwise, ideas be doing to a rising generation of young adults? Jonathan Haidt joins Igor and Charles to discuss the three great untruths of modern life, the nature of antifragility, the 'great awokening,' rising violence on US university campuses, and the origin story of the Heterodox Academy. Igor suggests that diversity can help some projects while hindering others, Jon shares his ultimate conflict-resolving ninja skill, and Charles learns that conservative voters come in radically different shapes and sizes.

Special Guest: Jonathan Haidt.

Links:

","summary":"(First Broadcast - 4th November 2019)\r\n\r\nDoes that which doesn’t kill you make you weaker? Should we always follow our emotions? Is life a battle between good people and bad people? And critically, what might the adoption of these three popular, but unwise, ideas be doing to a rising generation of young adults? Jonathan Haidt joins Igor and Charles to discuss the three great untruths of modern life, the nature of antifragility, the 'great awokening,' rising violence on US university campuses, and the origin story of the Heterodox Academy. Igor suggests that diversity can help some projects while hindering others, Jon shares his ultimate conflict-resolving ninja skill, and Charles learns that conservative voters come in radically different shapes and sizes. ","date_published":"2022-06-27T17:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/0230e119-5b34-4d66-ae85-aafc96b0ebd1.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":35004781,"duration_in_seconds":3500}]},{"id":"a21c6afb-110a-49fd-8139-99818ab01b4b","title":"45: Wisdom at Work (with Barry Schwartz) - Rebroadcast","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/45","content_text":"(First Broadcast - 28th December 2018)\n\nCan we design our workplaces to generate wiser behaviour? Why do we work anyway, and would we still work if we didn’t get paid? Do employers even want their employees to develop wisdom? Barry Schwartz joins Igor and Charles to discuss how Aristotle’s Practical Wisdom applies in the 21st Century, the reasons why we work, idea technology, the unintended consequences of rules-based systems, and the moral dangers and limits of incentives. Igor proposes the idea of algorithm-based wise machines, Barry suggests companies hire for character rather than skill, and Charles learns why, in wiser work places, the cost of free-riders may well be a price worth paying. Special Guest: Barry Schwartz.Links:Original Broadcast: Episode 11 - Wisdom at Work (with Barry Schwartz)Our Loss of Wisdom - Barry Schwartz (TED talk)Using Our Practical Wisdom - Barry Schwartz (TED talk)The Paradox of Choice - Barry Schwartz (TED Talk)Practical Wisdom (Book) - Barry Schwartz & Kenneth SharpeWhy We Work - Barry Schwartz (Book)The Paradox of Choice - Barry Schwartz (Book)Rethinking Work - Barry Schwartz (New York Times)","content_html":"

(First Broadcast - 28th December 2018)

\n\n

Can we design our workplaces to generate wiser behaviour? Why do we work anyway, and would we still work if we didn’t get paid? Do employers even want their employees to develop wisdom? Barry Schwartz joins Igor and Charles to discuss how Aristotle’s Practical Wisdom applies in the 21st Century, the reasons why we work, idea technology, the unintended consequences of rules-based systems, and the moral dangers and limits of incentives. Igor proposes the idea of algorithm-based wise machines, Barry suggests companies hire for character rather than skill, and Charles learns why, in wiser work places, the cost of free-riders may well be a price worth paying.

Special Guest: Barry Schwartz.

Links:

","summary":"(First Broadcast - 28th December 2018)\r\n\r\nCan we design our workplaces to generate wiser behaviour? Why do we work anyway, and would we still work if we didn’t get paid? Do employers even want their employees to develop wisdom? Barry Schwartz joins Igor and Charles to discuss how Aristotle’s Practical Wisdom applies in the 21st Century, the reasons why we work, idea technology, the unintended consequences of rules-based systems, and the moral dangers and limits of incentives. Igor proposes the idea of algorithm-based wise machines, Barry suggests companies hire for character rather than skill, and Charles learns why, in wiser work places, the cost of free-riders may well be a price worth paying. ","date_published":"2022-06-07T15:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/a21c6afb-110a-49fd-8139-99818ab01b4b.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":35612128,"duration_in_seconds":3560}]},{"id":"1958c244-3cb9-4aa4-ad7b-d537f916133f","title":"44: A Special Announcement","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/44","content_text":"Igor and Charles return with a special announcement for On Wisdom listeners ... ","content_html":"

Igor and Charles return with a special announcement for On Wisdom listeners ...

","summary":"Igor and Charles return with a special announcement for On Wisdom listeners ... ","date_published":"2022-05-24T19:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/1958c244-3cb9-4aa4-ad7b-d537f916133f.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":1084781,"duration_in_seconds":108}]},{"id":"53da820d-ff29-4d87-9607-adb8dc265dfc","title":"43: Invisible to Ourselves: A Life of a Psychological Scientist (with Richard Nisbett)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/43","content_text":"A disturbing thought - might it be impossible for us to directly observe the workings of our minds? Richard Nisbett joins Igor and Charles to discuss a life lived on the cutting edge of behavioral sciences in the second part of the 20th Century. He shares tales from his groundbreaking research into our faulty mindware, discussing various biases, cultural differences in cognitive processes, our inability to directly observe our mental processes, and why job interviews are not only unhelpful but potentially harmful to our ability to hire the best person for the job. Igor is keen to learn about the human beings behind some of the 20th Century’s academic idols in social psychology like Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky and Lee Ross, Richard explains why important work and interesting work are not necessarily the same thing, and Charles struggles to make sense of when we do and don’t intervene to help strangers in peril. Welcome to Episode 43.Special Guest: Richard Nisbett.Links:Richard Nisbett's HomepageWorld After Covid - Richard Nisbett InterviewThinking: A MemoirThe Psychology of Thinking - with Richard Nisbett - Royal Institution Lecture (2016)Telling more than we can know: Verbal reports on mental processes - Nisbett & Wilson (1977)The influence of culture: holistic versus analytic perception - Nisbett & Miyamoto (2005)Intelligence: New findings and theoretical developments - Nisbett, Aronson, Blair, Dickens, Flynn, Halpern, Turkheimer (2012). ","content_html":"

A disturbing thought - might it be impossible for us to directly observe the workings of our minds? Richard Nisbett joins Igor and Charles to discuss a life lived on the cutting edge of behavioral sciences in the second part of the 20th Century. He shares tales from his groundbreaking research into our faulty mindware, discussing various biases, cultural differences in cognitive processes, our inability to directly observe our mental processes, and why job interviews are not only unhelpful but potentially harmful to our ability to hire the best person for the job. Igor is keen to learn about the human beings behind some of the 20th Century’s academic idols in social psychology like Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky and Lee Ross, Richard explains why important work and interesting work are not necessarily the same thing, and Charles struggles to make sense of when we do and don’t intervene to help strangers in peril. Welcome to Episode 43.

Special Guest: Richard Nisbett.

Links:

","summary":"A disturbing thought - might it be impossible for us to directly observe the workings of our minds? Richard Nisbett joins Igor and Charles to discuss a life lived on the cutting edge of behavioral sciences in the second part of the 20th Century. He shares tales from his groundbreaking research into our faulty mindware, discussing various biases, cultural differences in cognitive processes, our inability to directly observe our mental processes, and why job interviews are not only unhelpful but potentially harmful to our ability to hire the best person for the job. Igor is keen to learn about the human beings behind some of the 20th Century’s academic idols in social psychology like Daniel Kahneman, Amos Tversky and Lee Ross, Richard explains why important work and interesting work are not necessarily the same thing, and Charles struggles to make sense of when we do and don’t intervene to help strangers in peril. Welcome to Episode 43.\r\n\r\n","date_published":"2021-12-04T18:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/53da820d-ff29-4d87-9607-adb8dc265dfc.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":42764716,"duration_in_seconds":4276}]},{"id":"e1e37f20-98a3-4606-87aa-b2d4185a9189","title":"42: Reflections on Wisdom in the World after Covid","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/42","content_text":"Which kind of wisdom will people need to master to overcome major negative societal and/or psychological changes after the pandemic?\n\nIn the last episode of the World After Covid miniseries, Igor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Four final responses are selected, covering themes of big picture focus on what's important, shared humanity, long-term orientation, and political structural change in the midst of the pandemic. Igor reflects on how the immediate context can dramatically influence even experts' forecasts, and Charles is forced to question his cherished belief that people are ultimately good.\n\nFeaturing:\nBarry Schwartz, Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Swarthmore College and a visiting Professor at the Haas School of Business at Berkeley\nNicholas Christakis, Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University\nAnand Menon, Professor of European Politics and Foreign Affairs at King’s College London\nMichael Bond, Cross-cultural social psychologist with focus on locating Chinese interpersonal processes in a multi-cultural spaceLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)Everyone Was Wrong on the Pandemic’s Societal Impact: Foreign Policy - Varnum, Hutcherson, Grossmann (2021)Estimating societal effects of COVID-19 - Hutcherson, Sharpinsky, Varnum, Rotella, Wormley, Tay, Grossmann (2021, preprint)How Life Could Get Better (or Worse) After COVID (berkeley.edu)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Barry Schwartz Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteNicholas Christakis Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteAnand Menon Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteMichael Bond Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid site","content_html":"

Which kind of wisdom will people need to master to overcome major negative societal and/or psychological changes after the pandemic?

\n\n

In the last episode of the World After Covid miniseries, Igor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Four final responses are selected, covering themes of big picture focus on what's important, shared humanity, long-term orientation, and political structural change in the midst of the pandemic. Igor reflects on how the immediate context can dramatically influence even experts' forecasts, and Charles is forced to question his cherished belief that people are ultimately good.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nBarry Schwartz, Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Swarthmore College and a visiting Professor at the Haas School of Business at Berkeley
\nNicholas Christakis, Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University
\nAnand Menon, Professor of European Politics and Foreign Affairs at King’s College London
\nMichael Bond, Cross-cultural social psychologist with focus on locating Chinese interpersonal processes in a multi-cultural space

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-10-23T20:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/e1e37f20-98a3-4606-87aa-b2d4185a9189.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":22564749,"duration_in_seconds":2256}]},{"id":"9789cf12-1d64-49a7-85fa-bfebe2dc0497","title":"41: Wisdom for Negative Consequences (Pt. I) - Social Support, Sympathy & Compassion, Acknowledging Uncertainty, and Balancing Diverse Interests","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/41","content_text":"Which kind of wisdom will people need to master to overcome major negative societal and/or psychological changes after the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of social support, sympathy & compassion, acknowledging uncertainty, and balancing diverse interests in the midst of the pandemic. Igor points out that humanity has a greater capacity for accepting and managing uncertainty than we might realize, and Charles is intrigued by the often-overlooked benefits of interactions with strangers.\n\nFeaturing:\nKatie McLaughlin, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences at Harvard University\nBarbara Fredrickson, Kenan Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill\nDilip Jeste, Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and Neurosciences at University of California, San Diego\nValerie Tiberius, Paul W. Frenzel Chair in Liberal Arts and Professor of Philosophy at the University of MinnesotaLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)Everyone Was Wrong on the Pandemic’s Societal Impact: Foreign Policy - Varnum, Hutcherson, Grossmann (2021)Estimating societal effects of COVID-19 - Hutcherson, Sharpinsky, Varnum, Rotella, Wormley, Tay, Grossmann (2021, preprint)How Life Could Get Better (or Worse) After COVID (berkeley.edu)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Katie McLaughlin Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteBarbara Fredrickson Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteDilip Jeste Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteValerie Tiberius Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid site","content_html":"

Which kind of wisdom will people need to master to overcome major negative societal and/or psychological changes after the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of social support, sympathy & compassion, acknowledging uncertainty, and balancing diverse interests in the midst of the pandemic. Igor points out that humanity has a greater capacity for accepting and managing uncertainty than we might realize, and Charles is intrigued by the often-overlooked benefits of interactions with strangers.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nKatie McLaughlin, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences at Harvard University
\nBarbara Fredrickson, Kenan Distinguished Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
\nDilip Jeste, Distinguished Professor of Psychiatry and Neurosciences at University of California, San Diego
\nValerie Tiberius, Paul W. Frenzel Chair in Liberal Arts and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Minnesota

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-10-04T21:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/9789cf12-1d64-49a7-85fa-bfebe2dc0497.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":21144732,"duration_in_seconds":2114}]},{"id":"69b6b70c-88f5-467a-a928-98b16381e8f3","title":"40: World After Covid series: Negative Consequences (Part II) - Autobiographical Memory, Estrangement, Political Conflict, and Prejudice","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/40","content_text":"Which domain or aspect of social life will show the most significant negative societal and/or psychological change in response to the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of autobiographical memory, estrangement, political conflict, and prejudice in the midst of the pandemic. Igor wonders how losing track of distinct day-to-day memories might distort our sense of who we are, and Charles considers the odd influence that a year of mask-wearing may have on how we'll interact with strangers in the post-pandemic future.\n\nFeaturing:\nJeffrey Zacks, Professor and Associate Chair of Psychological & Brain Sciences at Washington University\nPaula Niedenthal, Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison\nDavid Rooney, Honorary Professor of Management and Organisation Studies at Macquarie Business School, Macquarie University\nDouglas Kenrick, President’s Professor of Psychology at Arizona State UniversityLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepageExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)Everyone Was Wrong on the Pandemic’s Societal Impact: Foreign Policy - Varnum, Hutcherson, Grossmann (2021)Estimating societal effects of COVID-19 - Hutcherson, Sharpinsky, Varnum, Rotella, Wormley, Tay, Grossmann (2021, preprint)How Life Could Get Better (or Worse) After COVID (berkeley.edu)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Jeffrey Zacks InterviewPaula Niedenthal InterviewDavid Rooney InterviewDouglas Kenrick Interview","content_html":"

Which domain or aspect of social life will show the most significant negative societal and/or psychological change in response to the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of autobiographical memory, estrangement, political conflict, and prejudice in the midst of the pandemic. Igor wonders how losing track of distinct day-to-day memories might distort our sense of who we are, and Charles considers the odd influence that a year of mask-wearing may have on how we'll interact with strangers in the post-pandemic future.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nJeffrey Zacks, Professor and Associate Chair of Psychological & Brain Sciences at Washington University
\nPaula Niedenthal, Professor at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
\nDavid Rooney, Honorary Professor of Management and Organisation Studies at Macquarie Business School, Macquarie University
\nDouglas Kenrick, President’s Professor of Psychology at Arizona State University

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-08-04T14:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/69b6b70c-88f5-467a-a928-98b16381e8f3.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":22944830,"duration_in_seconds":2294}]},{"id":"8727f922-a8c2-44fd-85b7-1a98cb2be53e","title":"39: World After Covid series: Negative Consequences (Part I) - Social Inequality, Loneliness, Economic Hardships, and Despair","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/39","content_text":"Which domain or aspect of social life will show the most significant negative societal and/or psychological change in response to the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of social inequality, loneliness, economic hardships, and despair in the midst of the pandemic. Igor assesses 3 sharply contrasting visions of the future, and Charles reflects on the idea of pandemics as the downside of something mostly very beneficial - the highly social nature of our species.\n\nFeaturing:\nAzim Shariff, Associate Professor and  Canada Research Chair of Moral  Psychology at the University of British Columbia, and director of the Center for Applied Moral Psychology\nNicholas Christakis, Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University\nRoy Baumeister, Professor of Psychology at the University of Queensland\nVeronica Benet Martinez, Endowed position as an ICREA Professor at Pompeu Fabra University, where she is head of the Behavioral and Experimental Social Sciences research groupLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)Everyone Was Wrong on the Pandemic’s Societal Impact: Foreign Policy - Varnum, Hutcherson, Grossmann (2021)Estimating societal effects of COVID-19 - Hutcherson, Sharpinsky, Varnum, Rotella, Wormley, Tay, Grossmann (2021, preprint)How Life Could Get Better (or Worse) After COVID (berkeley.edu)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Apollo's Arrow: The Profound and Enduring Impact of Coronavirus on the Way We Live By Nicholas A. Christakis · 2020Azim Shariff Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteNicholas Christakis Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteRoy Baumeister Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteVeronica Benet Martinez Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid site","content_html":"

Which domain or aspect of social life will show the most significant negative societal and/or psychological change in response to the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of social inequality, loneliness, economic hardships, and despair in the midst of the pandemic. Igor assesses 3 sharply contrasting visions of the future, and Charles reflects on the idea of pandemics as the downside of something mostly very beneficial - the highly social nature of our species.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nAzim Shariff, Associate Professor and  Canada Research Chair of Moral  Psychology at the University of British Columbia, and director of the Center for Applied Moral Psychology
\nNicholas Christakis, Sterling Professor of Social and Natural Science at Yale University
\nRoy Baumeister, Professor of Psychology at the University of Queensland
\nVeronica Benet Martinez, Endowed position as an ICREA Professor at Pompeu Fabra University, where she is head of the Behavioral and Experimental Social Sciences research group

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-07-11T08:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/8727f922-a8c2-44fd-85b7-1a98cb2be53e.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":18304700,"duration_in_seconds":1830}]},{"id":"86c8e844-ddba-4b59-81ee-3b9cd5151ab6","title":"38: World After Covid series: Wisdom for Positive Consequences (Pt. II) - Critical Thinking, Intellectual Humility, Political Cooperation, and Solidarity","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/38","content_text":"What kind of wisdom will people need to capitalize on the positive societal and/or psychological change after the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of critical thinking, intellectual humility, political cooperation, and solidarity in the midst of the pandemic. Igor wrestles with the challenge of identifying experts while lacking expertise ourselves, and Charles considers the potential downsides of clamouring for resignations when our leaders make mistakes.\n\nFeaturing:\nDavid Dunning, Social Psychologist and recipient of the Distinguished Lifetime Career Award from the International Society for Self and Identity.\nMark Schaller, Professor of Psychology at the University of British Columbia\nDavid Passig, Futurist, lecturer, consultant and best–selling author\nJennifer Lerner, Thornton Bradshaw Professor of Public Policy, Decision Science, and Management at the Harvard Kennedy SchoolLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)Everyone Was Wrong on the Pandemic’s Societal Impact: Foreign Policy - Varnum, Hutcherson, Grossmann (2021)Estimating societal effects of COVID-19 - Hutcherson, Sharpinsky, Varnum, Rotella, Wormley, Tay, Grossmann (2021, preprint)How Life Could Get Better (or Worse) After COVID (berkeley.edu)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)The Dunning-Kruger effect: Misunderstood, misrepresented, overused and … non-existent? - Skepchick (2020)Dunning-Kruger Isn't Real - Psychology Today (2020)David Dunning Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteMark Schaller Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteDavid Passig Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteJennifer Lerner Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid site","content_html":"

What kind of wisdom will people need to capitalize on the positive societal and/or psychological change after the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of critical thinking, intellectual humility, political cooperation, and solidarity in the midst of the pandemic. Igor wrestles with the challenge of identifying experts while lacking expertise ourselves, and Charles considers the potential downsides of clamouring for resignations when our leaders make mistakes.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nDavid Dunning, Social Psychologist and recipient of the Distinguished Lifetime Career Award from the International Society for Self and Identity.
\nMark Schaller, Professor of Psychology at the University of British Columbia
\nDavid Passig, Futurist, lecturer, consultant and best–selling author
\nJennifer Lerner, Thornton Bradshaw Professor of Public Policy, Decision Science, and Management at the Harvard Kennedy School

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-06-30T15:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/86c8e844-ddba-4b59-81ee-3b9cd5151ab6.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":25929320,"duration_in_seconds":2592}]},{"id":"47d02109-f627-48c2-ab2a-901fbc9c4992","title":"37: World After Covid series: Wisdom for Positive Consequences (Pt. I) - Sympathy and Compassion, Self-distancing, Perspective-taking, and Learning from pandemics","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/37","content_text":"What kind of wisdom will people need to capitalize on the positive societal and/or psychological change after the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of sympathy and compassion, self-distancing, perspective-taking, and learning from pandemics in the midst of the pandemic. Igor wonders what being empathetic and compassionate even looks like online, and Charles ponders lessons not learned from past global catastrophes.\n\nFeaturing:\nRoxane Cohen Silver, Social-Personality Psychologist and Adversity Research Trailblazer \nLaura Carstensen, Fairleigh S. Dickinson Jr. Professor in Public Policy and Founding Director of the Stanford Center on Longevity\nEdouard Machery, Distinguished Professor in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science and the Director of the Center for Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh\nAnand Menon, Professor of European Politics and Foreign Affairs at King’s College LondonLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectHow Life Could Get Better (or Worse) After COVID (berkeley.edu)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Roxane Cohen Silver Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteLaura Carstensen Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteEdouard Machery Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteAnand Menon Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)","content_html":"

What kind of wisdom will people need to capitalize on the positive societal and/or psychological change after the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses from 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of sympathy and compassion, self-distancing, perspective-taking, and learning from pandemics in the midst of the pandemic. Igor wonders what being empathetic and compassionate even looks like online, and Charles ponders lessons not learned from past global catastrophes.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nRoxane Cohen Silver, Social-Personality Psychologist and Adversity Research Trailblazer
\nLaura Carstensen, Fairleigh S. Dickinson Jr. Professor in Public Policy and Founding Director of the Stanford Center on Longevity
\nEdouard Machery, Distinguished Professor in the Department of History and Philosophy of Science and the Director of the Center for Philosophy of Science at the University of Pittsburgh
\nAnand Menon, Professor of European Politics and Foreign Affairs at King’s College London

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-06-03T14:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/47d02109-f627-48c2-ab2a-901fbc9c4992.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":17764749,"duration_in_seconds":1776}]},{"id":"3a90d78f-5c17-4772-baac-e56404614891","title":"36: World After Covid series: Positive Consequences (Part II) - Political cooperation, Nature, Solidarity, and Prosocial behaviours","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/36","content_text":"Which domain or aspect of social life will show the most significant positive societal and/or psychological change in response to the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses given to the question about positive change in response to the pandemic by 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of political cooperation, nature, solidarity, and prosocial behaviour in the midst of the pandemic.\n\nFeaturing:\nDagomar Degroot, Associate Professor of Environmental History at Georgetown University\nShinobu Kitayama, Robert B. Zajonc Collegiate Professor of Psychology at the University of Michigan\nKatie McLaughlin, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences at Harvard University\nBarry Schwartz, Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Swarthmore CollegeLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)How Life Could Get Better (or Worse) After COVID (berkeley.edu)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Dagomar Degroot Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteShinobu Kitayama Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteKatie McLaughlin Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteBarry Schwartz Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid site","content_html":"

Which domain or aspect of social life will show the most significant positive societal and/or psychological change in response to the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses given to the question about positive change in response to the pandemic by 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of political cooperation, nature, solidarity, and prosocial behaviour in the midst of the pandemic.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nDagomar Degroot, Associate Professor of Environmental History at Georgetown University
\nShinobu Kitayama, Robert B. Zajonc Collegiate Professor of Psychology at the University of Michigan
\nKatie McLaughlin, John L. Loeb Associate Professor of the Social Sciences at Harvard University
\nBarry Schwartz, Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Swarthmore College

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-04-13T16:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/3a90d78f-5c17-4772-baac-e56404614891.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":26404749,"duration_in_seconds":2640}]},{"id":"82f23237-c92d-4c46-bbb3-6da6573888ed","title":"35: World After Covid series: Positive Consequences (Part I) - Political and structural change, Care for elders, Social connectedness, and Reconsidering habits","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/35","content_text":"Which domain or aspect of social life will show the most significant positive societal and/or psychological change in response to the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses given to the question about positive change in response to the pandemic by 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of political and structural change, care for elders, social connectedness, and reconsidering habits in the midst of the pandemic.\n\nFeaturing:\nAyse K. Uskul, Professor of Social Psychology at the University of Kent\nMichael Ross, Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Waterloo\nHarry Reis, Professor of Psychology at the University of Rochester\nJames Gross, Professor of Psychology and Director of the Psychophysiology Laboratory at Stanford UniversityLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Ayse Uskul Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteMichael Ross Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteHarry Reis Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteJames Gross Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid site","content_html":"

Which domain or aspect of social life will show the most significant positive societal and/or psychological change in response to the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses given to the question about positive change in response to the pandemic by 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of political and structural change, care for elders, social connectedness, and reconsidering habits in the midst of the pandemic.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nAyse K. Uskul, Professor of Social Psychology at the University of Kent
\nMichael Ross, Distinguished Professor Emeritus at the University of Waterloo
\nHarry Reis, Professor of Psychology at the University of Rochester
\nJames Gross, Professor of Psychology and Director of the Psychophysiology Laboratory at Stanford University

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-02-09T00:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/82f23237-c92d-4c46-bbb3-6da6573888ed.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":17044814,"duration_in_seconds":1704}]},{"id":"1ed861de-5fe4-463f-9e88-b08ee29614e5","title":"34: World After Covid series: Wisdom for Now (Part II) - What's important, Living in the moment, Social connectedness, and Shared humanity","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/34","content_text":"What one piece of wisdom is important to give to people now to help them make it through the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses given to this critical question by 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of what's important, living in the moment, social connectedness, and shared humanity in the midst of the pandemic.\n\nFeaturing:\nYukiko Ushida, Professor of Social and Cultural Psychology at the Kokoro Research Center, Kyoto University\nDacher Keltner, Professor of Psychology and Director of the Greater Good Science Center\nWendy Mendes, Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at UC San Francisco\nMichael Bond, Cross-cultural Social PsychologistLinks:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Yukiko Ushida Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteDacher Keltner Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteWendy Mendes Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteMichael Bond Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid site","content_html":"

What one piece of wisdom is important to give to people now to help them make it through the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses given to this critical question by 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of what's important, living in the moment, social connectedness, and shared humanity in the midst of the pandemic.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nYukiko Ushida, Professor of Social and Cultural Psychology at the Kokoro Research Center, Kyoto University
\nDacher Keltner, Professor of Psychology and Director of the Greater Good Science Center
\nWendy Mendes, Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at UC San Francisco
\nMichael Bond, Cross-cultural Social Psychologist

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom dissects the latest research emerging from the field of wisdom research and discusses what it might mean for each of us and for society in terms of reasoning and living more wisely in the 21st Century.\r\n","date_published":"2021-01-18T19:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/1ed861de-5fe4-463f-9e88-b08ee29614e5.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":13537875,"duration_in_seconds":1353}]},{"id":"71320fe2-03ea-494d-9e77-caa12189c23d","title":"33: World After Covid series: Wisdom for Now (Part I)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/33","content_text":"What one piece of wisdom is important to give to people now to help them make it through the pandemic?\n\nIgor and Charles share and discuss responses given to this critical question by 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of agency and control, long-term orientation, social connectedness, solidarity, and perspective-taking in the midst of the pandemic.\n\nFeaturing:\nMichael Norton, Social Psychologist from Harvard Business School\nRobert Sternberg, Psychologist and Wisdom Research Pioneer\nRoxane Cohen Silver, Social - Personality Psychologist and Adversity Research Trailblazer \nValerie Tiberius, Philosopher and Author Links:World After Covid siteIgor Grossmann's homepage — interactive visualizations and analysis on the World After Covid projectExpert Predictions of Societal Change: Insights from the World after COVID Project - Grossmann, Twardus, Varnum, Jayawickreme, McLevey (2021, in press)Words of wisdom: 4 tips from experts on how to endure until the COVID-19 pandemic ends (The Conversation)Michael Norton Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteRobert Sternberg Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteRoxane Cohen Silver Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid siteValerie Tiberius Interview — full interview and transcript on the World After Covid site","content_html":"

What one piece of wisdom is important to give to people now to help them make it through the pandemic?

\n\n

Igor and Charles share and discuss responses given to this critical question by 57 of the world's leading behavioral and social scientists, collected as part of the World After Covid project. Each episode, four responses are selected. This time, the conversation covers themes of agency and control, long-term orientation, social connectedness, solidarity, and perspective-taking in the midst of the pandemic.

\n\n

Featuring:
\nMichael Norton, Social Psychologist from Harvard Business School
\nRobert Sternberg, Psychologist and Wisdom Research Pioneer
\nRoxane Cohen Silver, Social - Personality Psychologist and Adversity Research Trailblazer
\nValerie Tiberius, Philosopher and Author

Links:

","summary":"On Wisdom features a social and cognitive scientist in Toronto and an educator in London discussing the latest empirical science regarding the nature of wisdom. Igor Grossmann runs the Wisdom & Culture Lab at the University of Waterloo in Canada. Charles Cassidy runs the Evidence-Based Wisdom project in London, UK. The podcast thrives on a diet of freewheeling conversation on wisdom, decision-making, wellbeing, and society and includes regular guests spots with leading behavioral scientists from the field of wisdom research and beyond. Welcome to The On Wisdom Podcast.\r\n","date_published":"2021-01-06T23:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/71320fe2-03ea-494d-9e77-caa12189c23d.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":16384700,"duration_in_seconds":1638}]},{"id":"8ada3886-c214-4c70-a424-c08eb5fa3b47","title":"32: Shifting Gears: Wisdom in the 'World After Covid'","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/32","content_text":"After 2 and a half years of podcasting, 30+ episodes, 50,000+ downloads, and one global pandemic, it's time for an exciting announcement from the On Wisdom team...Links:World After Covid site","content_html":"

After 2 and a half years of podcasting, 30+ episodes, 50,000+ downloads, and one global pandemic, it's time for an exciting announcement from the On Wisdom team...

Links:

","summary":"After 2 and a half years of podcasting, 30+ episodes, 50,000+ downloads, and one global pandemic, it's time for an exciting announcement from the On Wisdom team...","date_published":"2020-11-30T22:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/8ada3886-c214-4c70-a424-c08eb5fa3b47.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":1474790,"duration_in_seconds":147}]},{"id":"98efe670-8684-414a-9017-e25ed4465704","title":"31: The Meaning of Wisdom Before and During the Pandemic (with Ricca Edmondson)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/31","content_text":"Does wisdom reside in particular persons, or is wisdom more about what happens between people? And if wisdom does require a social context, what are the implications of our new social distancing habits since the rise of the pandemic? Ricca Edmondson joins Igor and Charles to discuss novel ethnographic approaches to the study of wisdom, the significance of Irish funeral rituals, new lessons from old Trojan horses, and the value of framing wisdom as a social construction. Originally recorded at the start of the pandemic, Ricca returned for a retrospective at the close of the episode, to share her opinions on the meaning of wisdom in these rapidly changing times, and in our future post-pandemic society. Igor muses about big and small wisdom, and Charles asks Ricca about the world after the pandemic. Welcome to the wisdom and pandemic episode!Special Guest: Ricca Edmondson.Links:Ricca Edmondson The Self, Motivation & Virtue Project: Motivating the Self to Virtue in Western and non-Western Countries: Does Nation or Faith Matter More?Motivating the Self to Virtue in Western and non-Western Countries (2015) - video A Social Interpretation of Personal Wisdom - Book Chapter in The Scientific Study of Personal Wisdom (2013)Wisdom in Context - Igor Grossmann (2017)Why the Irish get Death Right (2017) - The Guardian","content_html":"

Does wisdom reside in particular persons, or is wisdom more about what happens between people? And if wisdom does require a social context, what are the implications of our new social distancing habits since the rise of the pandemic? Ricca Edmondson joins Igor and Charles to discuss novel ethnographic approaches to the study of wisdom, the significance of Irish funeral rituals, new lessons from old Trojan horses, and the value of framing wisdom as a social construction. Originally recorded at the start of the pandemic, Ricca returned for a retrospective at the close of the episode, to share her opinions on the meaning of wisdom in these rapidly changing times, and in our future post-pandemic society. Igor muses about big and small wisdom, and Charles asks Ricca about the world after the pandemic. Welcome to the wisdom and pandemic episode!

Special Guest: Ricca Edmondson.

Links:

","summary":"Does wisdom reside in particular persons, or is wisdom more about what happens between people? And if wisdom does require a social context, what are the implications of our new social distancing habits since the rise of the pandemic? Ricca Edmondson joins Igor and Charles to discuss novel ethnographic approaches to the study of wisdom, the significance of Irish funeral rituals, new lessons from old Trojan horses, and the value of framing wisdom as a social construction. Originally recorded at the start of the pandemic, Ricca returned for a retrospective at the close of the episode, to share her opinions on the meaning of wisdom in these rapidly changing times, and in our future post-pandemic society. Igor muses about big and small wisdom, and Charles asks Ricca about the world after the pandemic. Welcome to the wisdom and pandemic episode!","date_published":"2020-11-10T23:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/98efe670-8684-414a-9017-e25ed4465704.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":21533593,"duration_in_seconds":2691}]},{"id":"f10fc630-0e3d-4e61-ab6a-372c04d0600a","title":"30: Emotions, Attention, and Decision Making in the Aging Brain (with Mara Mather)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/30","content_text":"Despite the common stereotype of ‘older and crankier,’ psychologists suggest we become more positive as we age. Why? Do our aging brains become worse at detecting threats in the environment? Do we choose to focus on more positive aspects of our experience as we age? And what does the latest scientific research say about one of the major dangers of older age — Alzheimer’s disease? Mara Mather joins Igor and Charles to discuss the neuroscience of emotional aging, the role of the locus coeruleus in memory and attention, emotion-induced blindness, and the parallels between Cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer’s disease. Igor digs into the different roles of culture and the lack of good longitudinal studies of aging, Mara reveals how intense emotions can sharpen some aspects of our memories of an event while blunting others, and Charles learns that he and many others may be on the Alzheimer’s spectrum. Welcome to Episode 30.Special Guest: Mara Mather.Links:Emotion & Cognition Lab - Emotion & Cognition LabPoint-and-Shoot Memories: The Influence of Taking Photos on Memory for a Museum Tour - L. Henkel (2013)Preferences for emotional information in older and younger adults: A meta-analysis of memory and attention tasks. - PsycNETMeta-Analysis of the Age-Related Positivity Effect: Age Differences in Preferences for Positive Over Negative InformationOptimism for the Future in Younger and Older Adults - K Durbin, S Barber, M Brown, M Mather (2017)A Cultural Perspective on Emotional Experiences Across the Life Span - Grossmann, Karasawa, Kitayama (2014)The Locus Coeruleus: Essential for Maintaining Cognitive Function and the Aging Brain - M Mather, C Harley (2017)Rostral locus coeruleus integrity is associated with better memory performance in older adults - M Dahl, M Mather, S Düzel, N Bodammer, U Lindenberger, S Kühn, M Werkle-Bergner (2019)Arousal increases neural gain via the locus coeruleus–noradrenaline system in younger adults but not in older adults - T Lee, S Greening, T Ueno, D Clewett, A Ponzio, M Sakaki, M Mather (2018)\r\nIowa Gambling TaskBalloon Analog Risk Task - Conduct Science","content_html":"

Despite the common stereotype of ‘older and crankier,’ psychologists suggest we become more positive as we age. Why? Do our aging brains become worse at detecting threats in the environment? Do we choose to focus on more positive aspects of our experience as we age? And what does the latest scientific research say about one of the major dangers of older age — Alzheimer’s disease? Mara Mather joins Igor and Charles to discuss the neuroscience of emotional aging, the role of the locus coeruleus in memory and attention, emotion-induced blindness, and the parallels between Cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer’s disease. Igor digs into the different roles of culture and the lack of good longitudinal studies of aging, Mara reveals how intense emotions can sharpen some aspects of our memories of an event while blunting others, and Charles learns that he and many others may be on the Alzheimer’s spectrum. Welcome to Episode 30.

Special Guest: Mara Mather.

Links:

","summary":"Despite the common stereotype of ‘older and crankier,’ psychologists suggest we become more positive as we age. Why? Do our aging brains become worse at detecting threats in the environment? Do we choose to focus on more positive aspects of our experience as we age? And what does the latest scientific research say about one of the major dangers of older age — Alzheimer’s disease? Mara Mather joins Igor and Charles to discuss the neuroscience of emotional aging, the role of the locus coeruleus in memory and attention, emotion-induced blindness, and the parallels between Cardiovascular disease and Alzheimer’s disease. Igor digs into the different roles of culture and the lack of good longitudinal studies of aging, Mara reveals how intense emotions can sharpen some aspects of our memories of an event while blunting others, and Charles learns that he and many others may be on the Alzheimer’s spectrum. Welcome to Episode 30.","date_published":"2020-08-16T18:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/f10fc630-0e3d-4e61-ab6a-372c04d0600a.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":21456270,"duration_in_seconds":2681}]},{"id":"d7ca46f8-22e1-417d-9ab2-8565fbd42c48","title":"29: Charting Pandemic Waters: A Common Wisdom Model for Uncertain Times (with Howard Nusbaum)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/29","content_text":"What is the value of wisdom in the time of the global pandemic? Does the community of behavioural scientists studying wisdom agree on anything about the nature of wisdom? Can we say what we now know about wisdom and, conversely, what do we know we don’t yet know? Howard Nusbaum joins Igor and Charles to discuss the recently assembled Toronto Wisdom Task Force and the resulting Common Wisdom Model, meta-cognition, the thorny issue of moral-grounding, and sage advice regarding how to measure wisdom in the lab. Igor stresses the importance of building solid theoretical foundations for the field in the context of the pandemic, Howard reflects on the viability of evil wisdom, and Charles learns that we had better pay close attention today to the values we program into the decision-making robots of tomorrow. Welcome to Episode 29.Special Guest: Howard Nusbaum.Links:The Science of Wisdom in a Polarized World: Knowns and Unknowns: Psychological Inquiry: Vol 31, No 2A Common Model Is Essential for a Cumulative Science of Wisdom: Psychological Inquiry: Vol 31, No 2University of Chicago Center for Practical Wisdom | Center for Practical Wisdom | The University of ChicagoWisdom in Context - Igor Grossmann, 2017Toronto Wisdom Task Force Meeting 2019 (edited) - YouTubeAI Open Letter - Future of Life Institute","content_html":"

What is the value of wisdom in the time of the global pandemic? Does the community of behavioural scientists studying wisdom agree on anything about the nature of wisdom? Can we say what we now know about wisdom and, conversely, what do we know we don’t yet know? Howard Nusbaum joins Igor and Charles to discuss the recently assembled Toronto Wisdom Task Force and the resulting Common Wisdom Model, meta-cognition, the thorny issue of moral-grounding, and sage advice regarding how to measure wisdom in the lab. Igor stresses the importance of building solid theoretical foundations for the field in the context of the pandemic, Howard reflects on the viability of evil wisdom, and Charles learns that we had better pay close attention today to the values we program into the decision-making robots of tomorrow. Welcome to Episode 29.

Special Guest: Howard Nusbaum.

Links:

","summary":"What is the value of wisdom in the time of the global pandemic? Does the community of behavioural scientists studying wisdom agree on anything about the nature of wisdom? Can we say what we now know about wisdom and, conversely, what do we know we don’t yet know? Howard Nusbaum joins Igor and Charles to discuss the recently assembled Toronto Wisdom Task Force and the resulting Common Wisdom Model, meta-cognition, the thorny issue of moral-grounding, and sage advice regarding how to measure wisdom in the lab. Igor stresses the importance of building solid theoretical foundations for the field in the context of the pandemic, Howard reflects on the viability of evil wisdom, and Charles learns that we had better pay close attention today to the values we program into the decision-making robots of tomorrow. Welcome to Episode 29.","date_published":"2020-06-21T14:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/d7ca46f8-22e1-417d-9ab2-8565fbd42c48.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":32644620,"duration_in_seconds":4080}]},{"id":"1bb181b3-8ee9-470c-b0c5-06315e0eede7","title":"28: Pandemic Happiness (with Sonja Lyubomirsky)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/28","content_text":"Is happiness research even relevant in such times of crisis, or is focusing on our happiness simply a luxury we can no longer afford? And, while effective for many people, why does the cultivation of gratitude sometimes result in unexpectedly negative consequences? Sonja Lyubomirsky joins Igor and Charles to discuss the key components of happiness, lessons from 9-11, ‘happiness-intervention fit’, Mother Teresa’s dark side, and the unexpected psychological impact of the global pandemic to date. Igor reflects on life-under-lockdown vs life in the downfall of the Soviet Union, Sonja discusses the subtle art of balancing optimism with positive action, and Charles learns that when it comes to counting one’s blessings, it pays not to count too high.Special Guest: Sonja Lyubomirsky.Links:Sonja LyubomirskyHappiness-Enhancing StrategiesHow Do Simple Positive Activities Increase Well-Being? - Sonja Lyubomirsky, Kristin Layous, 2013The How of Happiness with Sonja Lyubomirsky, PhD, at Happiness and Its Causes 2016 - YouTubeHow to Hold on to Happiness When Your World Collapses | Psychology TodayPerforming random acts of kindness can make you happier | The Renewal Project | The Renewal ProjectThe Benefits of Frequent Positive Affect: Does Happiness Lead to Success? - Lyubomirsky, King, Diener (2005)What Good Are Positive Emotions in Crises? A Prospective Study of Resilience and Emotions Following the Terrorist Attacks on the United States on September 11th, 2001The How of Happiness: A New Approach to Getting the Life You Want: Lyubomirsky, Sonja: 8601406516991: Amazon.com: BooksThe Myths of Happiness: What Should Make You Happy, but Doesn't, What Shouldn't Make You Happy, but Does: Lyubomirsky, Sonja: 9781594204371: Amazon.com: Books","content_html":"

Is happiness research even relevant in such times of crisis, or is focusing on our happiness simply a luxury we can no longer afford? And, while effective for many people, why does the cultivation of gratitude sometimes result in unexpectedly negative consequences? Sonja Lyubomirsky joins Igor and Charles to discuss the key components of happiness, lessons from 9-11, ‘happiness-intervention fit’, Mother Teresa’s dark side, and the unexpected psychological impact of the global pandemic to date. Igor reflects on life-under-lockdown vs life in the downfall of the Soviet Union, Sonja discusses the subtle art of balancing optimism with positive action, and Charles learns that when it comes to counting one’s blessings, it pays not to count too high.

Special Guest: Sonja Lyubomirsky.

Links:

","summary":"Is happiness research even relevant in such times of crisis, or is focusing on our happiness simply a luxury we can no longer afford? And, while effective for many people, why does the cultivation of gratitude sometimes result in unexpectedly negative consequences? Sonja Lyubomirsky joins Igor and Charles to discuss the key components of happiness, lessons from 9-11, ‘happiness-intervention fit’, Mother Teresa’s dark side, and the unexpected psychological impact of the global pandemic to date. Igor reflects on life-under-lockdown vs life in the downfall of the Soviet Union, Sonja discusses the subtle art of balancing optimism with positive action, and Charles learns that when it comes to counting one’s blessings, it pays not to count too high.","date_published":"2020-04-23T20:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/1bb181b3-8ee9-470c-b0c5-06315e0eede7.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mpeg","size_in_bytes":15328570,"duration_in_seconds":1915}]},{"id":"f73af252-3e48-4840-9262-e2ec435ee04c","title":"27: The Wisdom of a Modern Elder (with Chip Conley)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/27","content_text":"Though there is a lot of talk about diversity in the workplace, “age diversity” is often overlooked. Might there even be an emerging mission-critical role for wise elders in the world’s most cutting-edge tech companies? Hospitality maverick and Airbnb Strategic Advisor Chip Conley joins Igor and Charles to discuss the U-Curve of happiness, the surprises and challenges of mentoring billionaire CEOs and State Governors, the potential of intergenerational housing, the emergence of a new generation of wisdom workers, and his new project to build the world’s first midlife wisdom school - The Modern Elder Academy. Igor seeks new solutions for the stressed 'sandwich generation', Chip highlights the importance of curiosity at work and how mentoring and interning often go hand-in-hand, and Charles picks Chip’s brain on how to make wisdom more hip and sexy. Welcome to Episode 27.Special Guest: Chip Conley.Links:Chip Conley: Becoming a Modern Elder | TED TalkWisdom at Work: The Making of a Modern Elder: Conley, Chip: 9780525572909: Amazon.com: BooksThe Real Roots of Midlife Crisis - The AtlanticThe Sandwich Generation | Pew Research CenterMind Matters: Cognitive and Physical Effects of Aging Self-Stereotypes | The Journals of Gerontology: Series B | Oxford AcademicSuccessful Aging at Work and Beyond: A Review and Critical Perspective | Emerald InsightStanford Center on Longevity – Redesigning Long LifeModern Elder Academy","content_html":"

Though there is a lot of talk about diversity in the workplace, “age diversity” is often overlooked. Might there even be an emerging mission-critical role for wise elders in the world’s most cutting-edge tech companies? Hospitality maverick and Airbnb Strategic Advisor Chip Conley joins Igor and Charles to discuss the U-Curve of happiness, the surprises and challenges of mentoring billionaire CEOs and State Governors, the potential of intergenerational housing, the emergence of a new generation of wisdom workers, and his new project to build the world’s first midlife wisdom school - The Modern Elder Academy. Igor seeks new solutions for the stressed 'sandwich generation', Chip highlights the importance of curiosity at work and how mentoring and interning often go hand-in-hand, and Charles picks Chip’s brain on how to make wisdom more hip and sexy. Welcome to Episode 27.

Special Guest: Chip Conley.

Links:

","summary":"Though there is a lot of talk about diversity in the workplace, “age diversity” is often overlooked. Might there even be an emerging mission-critical role for wise elders in the world’s most cutting-edge tech companies? Hospitality maverick and Airbnb Strategic Advisor Chip Conley joins Igor and Charles to discuss the U-Curve of happiness, the surprises and challenges of mentoring billionaire CEOs and State Governors, the potential of intergenerational housing, the emergence of a new generation of wisdom workers, and his new project to build the world’s first midlife wisdom school - The Modern Elder Academy. Igor seeks new solutions for the stressed 'sandwich generation', Chip highlights the importance of curiosity at work and how mentoring and interning often go hand-in-hand, and Charles picks Chip’s brain on how to make wisdom more hip and sexy. Welcome to Episode 27.","date_published":"2020-04-06T19:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/f73af252-3e48-4840-9262-e2ec435ee04c.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":25780685,"duration_in_seconds":3222}]},{"id":"0c4e1900-b9a0-43a9-b716-230f61915564","title":"26: Wicked Problems (with Judith Glück)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/26","content_text":"Bad things happen to all of us. But why do some people grow wiser, while others simply grow bitter? What do scientists do to reliably measure wisdom in the laboratory? And might this research suggest solutions to some of the most pressing problems of our time? Igor and Charles welcome one of today's leading wisdom scientists - Judith Glück, who discusses the MORE Model of Life Experience, different ways of reflecting on personal experiences, collaborative doctors, compassionate teachers, and pervasive foolishness across the entire political spectrum. Igor ponders potential paths to wiser politics in the face of the world's uncertainties, Judith reminds us that our choice of confidants is critical if we are to extract wisdom from challenging experiences, and Charles is surprised to learn that neither the left nor the right has a monopoly on championing unwise leaders. Welcome to Episode 26.Special Guest: Judith Glück.Links:Judith Glück - University of KlagenfurtVideo - Wisdom Research Forum 2015: \"MORE life experience\" by Judith Glück Max Planck Institute for Human DevelopmentWisdom: The 5 principles of a successful life - Judith GlückThe Cambridge Handbook of Wisdom edited by Robert J. Sternberg, Judith Glück - 2019The MORE Life Experience Model: A Theory of the Development of Personal Wisdom - Glück, Bluck (2014)\r\nMore on the MORE Life Experience Model: What We Have Learned (So Far) - Glück, Bluck, Weststrate (2019)Hard-Earned Wisdom: Exploratory Processing of Difficult Life Experience is Positively Associated with Wisdom - Glück, Weststrate (2017)\r\nMeasuring Wisdom: Existing Approaches, Continuing Challenges, and New Developments - Glück (2017)Wisdom and Value Orientations: Just a Projection of Our Own Beliefs? - Glück, Schrottenbacher (2019)Applying Wisdom to Contemporary World Problems - Sternberg, Nusbaum, Glück (2019)University of Klagenfurt Blog - “We live in a world that needs considerably more wisdom than it currently exhibits.”Project.life","content_html":"

Bad things happen to all of us. But why do some people grow wiser, while others simply grow bitter? What do scientists do to reliably measure wisdom in the laboratory? And might this research suggest solutions to some of the most pressing problems of our time? Igor and Charles welcome one of today's leading wisdom scientists - Judith Glück, who discusses the MORE Model of Life Experience, different ways of reflecting on personal experiences, collaborative doctors, compassionate teachers, and pervasive foolishness across the entire political spectrum. Igor ponders potential paths to wiser politics in the face of the world's uncertainties, Judith reminds us that our choice of confidants is critical if we are to extract wisdom from challenging experiences, and Charles is surprised to learn that neither the left nor the right has a monopoly on championing unwise leaders. Welcome to Episode 26.

Special Guest: Judith Glück.

Links:

","summary":"Bad things happen to all of us. But why do some people grow wiser, while others simply grow bitter? What do scientists do to reliably measure wisdom in the laboratory? And might this research suggest solutions to some of the most pressing problems of our time? Igor and Charles welcome one of today's leading wisdom scientists - Judith Glück, who discusses the MORE Model of Life Experience, different ways of reflecting on personal experiences, collaborative doctors, compassionate teachers, and pervasive foolishness across the entire political spectrum. Igor ponders potential paths to wiser politics in the face of the world's uncertainties, Judith reminds us that our choice of confidants is critical if we are to extract wisdom from challenging experiences, and Charles is surprised to learn that neither the left nor the right has a monopoly on championing unwise leaders. Welcome to Episode 26.\r\n\r\n","date_published":"2020-03-05T03:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/0c4e1900-b9a0-43a9-b716-230f61915564.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":28676515,"duration_in_seconds":3584}]},{"id":"b7f5de07-3b98-4e7b-8034-eb06aee84baf","title":"25: 'This is Basically a Revolution': Self-Knowledge and The Battle for Better Science (with Simine Vazire)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/25","content_text":"Is the “business-as-usual” approach to science in crisis? Does the public have a good grasp of how scientific knowledge is really generated? And might scientists be as much prey to self-serving biases as the rest of us mortals? Simine Vazire joins Igor and Charles to discuss the thorny complexity of seeking reliable knowledge about the world and about ourselves, the perils of being a whistleblower in the competitive world of modern science, and the on-going scientific credibility revolution. We discuss meta-scientists, the Open Science movement, and the power of preprints to bust open the black box of peer review. Igor tries to unpack the dialectic of motives among the ‘data policemen,’ Simine issues a call-to-arms for a grassroots-powered future for the scientific community, and Charles learns that the planet of self-knowledge is in a galaxy still far, far away. Welcome to Episode 25.Special Guest: Simine Vazire.Links:Simine VazireIntellectual humility: the importance of knowing you might be wrong - VoxFalse-Positive Psychology: Undisclosed Flexibility in Data Collection and Analysis Allows Presenting Anything as Significant - Joseph P. Simmons, Leif D. Nelson, Uri Simonsohn, 2011Let’s Add Kindness to Science - Shira Gabriel - MediumThe Society for the Improvement of Psychological SciencePsychology's Replication Crisis Is Real, Many Labs 2 Says - The AtlanticDaryl Bem proved ESP is real. Which means science is broken - SlateFeeling the future: experimental evidence for anomalous retroactive influences on cognition and affect. - PubMed - NCBIMost Americans trust military, scientists to act in public interest | Pew Research CenterThe association between exaggeration in health related science news and academic press releases: retrospective observational study | The BMJFrom Protoscience to Proper Science: The Path ahead for Psychology | Science | The GuardianSometimes I'm Wrong: Flip Yourself - Part I - Simine Vazire BlogThe Black Goat – A podcast about doing scienceWisdom and Value Orientations: Just a Projection of Our Own Beliefs? - Glück, Schrottenbacher (2019)","content_html":"

Is the “business-as-usual” approach to science in crisis? Does the public have a good grasp of how scientific knowledge is really generated? And might scientists be as much prey to self-serving biases as the rest of us mortals? Simine Vazire joins Igor and Charles to discuss the thorny complexity of seeking reliable knowledge about the world and about ourselves, the perils of being a whistleblower in the competitive world of modern science, and the on-going scientific credibility revolution. We discuss meta-scientists, the Open Science movement, and the power of preprints to bust open the black box of peer review. Igor tries to unpack the dialectic of motives among the ‘data policemen,’ Simine issues a call-to-arms for a grassroots-powered future for the scientific community, and Charles learns that the planet of self-knowledge is in a galaxy still far, far away. Welcome to Episode 25.

Special Guest: Simine Vazire.

Links:

","summary":"Is the “business-as-usual” approach to science in crisis? Does the public have a good grasp of how scientific knowledge is really generated? And might scientists be as much prey to self-serving biases as the rest of us mortals? Simine Vazire joins Igor and Charles to discuss the thorny complexity of seeking reliable knowledge about the world and about ourselves, the perils of being a whistleblower in the competitive world of modern science, and the on-going scientific credibility revolution. We discuss meta-scientists, the Open Science movement, and the power of preprints to bust open the black box of peer review. Igor tries to unpack the dialectic of motives among the ‘data policemen,’ Simine issues a call-to-arms for a grassroots-powered future for the scientific community, and Charles learns that the planet of self-knowledge is in a galaxy still far, far away. Welcome to Episode 25.","date_published":"2020-02-12T11:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/b7f5de07-3b98-4e7b-8034-eb06aee84baf.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":28332535,"duration_in_seconds":3541}]},{"id":"82ffab99-f600-4281-b44e-5a1d20b79485","title":"24: Misbehavioral Economics: Choosing irrationality","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/24","content_text":"Are people being reasonable when they act irrationally? Doesn’t rationality and reasonableness mean the same thing? Charles and Igor kick of the new decade by diving into a messy mix of behavioral economics, nudges, moral philosophy and legal studies, to examine what standards guide people’s decisions. Charles asks Igor about core standards that guide people when they try to make a good decision. Igor unpacks how the standard of a rational agent evolved in the 20th century and what implications it has had for modern economics and politics. Charles wonders if there are any reasonable people left on the Clapham omnibus in London. Igor discusses his new work assessing how most people define rationality and reasonableness, showing that irrational behavior may be a consequence of focusing on reasonableness instead. Welcome to Episode 24.Links:Folk standards of sound judgment: Rationality Versus Reasonableness | Science AdvancesPublic Reason (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)Neoliberalism - WikipediaThe Hedgehog and the Fox | Princeton University PressNudge : Richard H. Thaler & Cass SunsteinSelf-Interest, Sacrifice, and Climate Change: (Re-)Framing the British Columbia Carbon Tax - MIT Press Scholarship","content_html":"

Are people being reasonable when they act irrationally? Doesn’t rationality and reasonableness mean the same thing? Charles and Igor kick of the new decade by diving into a messy mix of behavioral economics, nudges, moral philosophy and legal studies, to examine what standards guide people’s decisions. Charles asks Igor about core standards that guide people when they try to make a good decision. Igor unpacks how the standard of a rational agent evolved in the 20th century and what implications it has had for modern economics and politics. Charles wonders if there are any reasonable people left on the Clapham omnibus in London. Igor discusses his new work assessing how most people define rationality and reasonableness, showing that irrational behavior may be a consequence of focusing on reasonableness instead. Welcome to Episode 24.

Links:

","summary":"Are people being reasonable when they act irrationally? Doesn’t rationality and reasonableness mean the same thing? Charles and Igor kick of the new decade by diving into a messy mix of behavioral economics, nudges, moral philosophy and legal studies, to examine what standards guide people’s decisions. Charles asks Igor about core standards that guide people when they try to make a good decision. Igor unpacks how the standard of a rational agent evolved in the 20th century and what implications it has had for modern economics and politics. Charles wonders if there are any reasonable people left on the Clapham omnibus in London. Igor discusses his new work assessing how most people define rationality and reasonableness, showing that irrational behavior may be a consequence of focusing on reasonableness instead. Welcome to Episode 24.","date_published":"2020-01-14T02:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/82ffab99-f600-4281-b44e-5a1d20b79485.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":18724698,"duration_in_seconds":2340}]},{"id":"27709925-40ac-4da9-a5b3-6e3c248cc5ab","title":"23: Antifragility, Gut Feelings, and the Myth of Pure Evil (with Jonathan Haidt)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/23","content_text":"Does that which doesn’t kill you make you weaker? Should we always follow our emotions? Is life a battle between good people and bad people? And critically, what might the adoption of these three popular, but unwise, ideas be doing to a rising generation of young adults? Jonathan Haidt joins Igor and Charles to discuss the three great untruths of modern life, the nature of antifragility, the 'great awokening,' rising violence on US university campuses, and the origin story of the Heterodox Academy. Igor suggests that diversity can help some projects while hindering others, Jon shares his ultimate conflict-resolving ninja skill, and Charles learns that conservative voters come in radically different shapes and sizes. Welcome to Episode 23.Special Guest: Jonathan Haidt.Links:Jon Haidt's Home PageHeterodox AcademyThe Coddling of the American MindJonathan Haidt: Can a divided America heal? | TED TalkA Conflict of Visions - Thomas SowellHow to Win Friends and Influence People - Dale CarnegieMore in Common - Publications - The Perception Gap / Hidden TribesReparations, systemic racism, and white Democrats’ new racial liberalism (On the Great Awokening) - VoxThe Authoritarian Dynamic - Karen StennerE Pluribus Unum: Diversity and Community in the Twenty-first Century - Robert D. PutnamThe emotional dog and its rational tail: a social intuitionist approach to moral judgment - Haidt (2001)The Coddling of the American Mind - International CoddlingWorld Happiness Report 2019 - Chapter 5: The Sad State of Happiness in the United States and the Role of Digital Media - Jean M. Twenge The Happiness Hypothesis: Putting Ancient Wisdom to the Test of Modern Science: Amazon.co.uk: Jonathan Haidt: 8601300074849: BooksThe Righteous Mind: Why Good People are Divided by Politics and Religion: Amazon.co.uk: Jonathan Haidt: 0884607571077: Books","content_html":"

Does that which doesn’t kill you make you weaker? Should we always follow our emotions? Is life a battle between good people and bad people? And critically, what might the adoption of these three popular, but unwise, ideas be doing to a rising generation of young adults? Jonathan Haidt joins Igor and Charles to discuss the three great untruths of modern life, the nature of antifragility, the 'great awokening,' rising violence on US university campuses, and the origin story of the Heterodox Academy. Igor suggests that diversity can help some projects while hindering others, Jon shares his ultimate conflict-resolving ninja skill, and Charles learns that conservative voters come in radically different shapes and sizes. Welcome to Episode 23.

Special Guest: Jonathan Haidt.

Links:

","summary":"Does that which doesn’t kill you make you weaker? Should we always follow our emotions? Is life a battle between good people and bad people? And critically, what might the adoption of these three popular, but unwise, ideas be doing to a rising generation of young adults? Jonathan Haidt joins Igor and Charles to discuss the three great untruths of modern life, the nature of antifragility, the 'great awokening,' rising violence on US university campuses, and the origin story of the Heterodox Academy. Igor suggests that diversity can help some projects while hindering others, Jon shares his ultimate conflict-resolving ninja skill, and Charles learns that conservative voters come in radically different shapes and sizes. Welcome to Episode 23.","date_published":"2019-11-04T05:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/27709925-40ac-4da9-a5b3-6e3c248cc5ab.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":27668607,"duration_in_seconds":3458}]},{"id":"445f0829-600b-421b-a989-8ede6f337388","title":"22: The Epistemic Tightrope: Walking The Line of Doubt (with Scott Lilienfeld)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/22","content_text":"Patients always receive treatment in agreement with the best scientific evidence available, right? Well, no. Not really. Clinical practitioners seem to suffer from many of the cognitive biases that affect the rest of us, and treatment decisions are often much less science-based that we might like to think. Scott Lilienfeld joins Igor and Charles to discuss evidence-based practice in psychotherapy, the importance of doubting, clinical psychology’s dirty little secret, Scarlett Johansson’s brain, confirmation bias, how science really works, and why people just can’t let go of the idea that a full moon triggers werewolf-style behaviour. Igor reveals he learnt his English from TV detective ‘Columbo’, Scott discusses the fine art of planting seeds of doubt in conversations, and Charles learns from Abraham Lincoln that intellectual humility can ultimately be a path to earned intellectual confidence. Welcome to Episode 22.Special Guest: Scott Lilienfeld.Links:The Bias Blind Spot: Perceptions of Bias in Self Versus Others - Emily Pronin, Daniel Y. Lin, Lee Ross, 2002The Psychology of Intellectual Humility - LearyAre Self-Report Cognitive Empathy Ratings Valid Proxies for Cognitive Empathy Ability? Negligible Meta-Analytic Relations With Behavioral Task Performance - Murphy & Lilienfeld (2019) Evidence-Based Practice: The Misunderstandings Continue | Psychology TodayEpistemic Humility: An Overarching Educational Philosophy for Clinical Psychology Programs - Lilienfeld, Lynn, O'Donohue, Latzman (2017) Intellectual humility: the importance of knowing you might be wrong - Vox50 Great Myths of Popular Psychology: Shattering Widespread Misconceptions about Human Behavior | Introduction to Psychology | Psychology | Subjects | WileyFrontiers | Fifty psychological and psychiatric terms to avoid: a list of inaccurate, misleading, misused, ambiguous, and logically confused words and phrases | PsychologyLucy TRAILER 1 (2014) - Luc Besson, Scarlett Johansson Movie HD - YouTubeElizabeth F. Loftus – UCI School of Social EcologyScott Lilienfeld: The Search for Successful Psychopathy - YouTubeEvidence at Emory - Psychology - YouTubeBright Scientists, Dim Notions - The New York Times (2007)","content_html":"

Patients always receive treatment in agreement with the best scientific evidence available, right? Well, no. Not really. Clinical practitioners seem to suffer from many of the cognitive biases that affect the rest of us, and treatment decisions are often much less science-based that we might like to think. Scott Lilienfeld joins Igor and Charles to discuss evidence-based practice in psychotherapy, the importance of doubting, clinical psychology’s dirty little secret, Scarlett Johansson’s brain, confirmation bias, how science really works, and why people just can’t let go of the idea that a full moon triggers werewolf-style behaviour. Igor reveals he learnt his English from TV detective ‘Columbo’, Scott discusses the fine art of planting seeds of doubt in conversations, and Charles learns from Abraham Lincoln that intellectual humility can ultimately be a path to earned intellectual confidence. Welcome to Episode 22.

Special Guest: Scott Lilienfeld.

Links:

","summary":"Patients always receive treatment in agreement with the best scientific evidence available, right? Well, no. Not really. Clinical practitioners seem to suffer from many of the cognitive biases that affect the rest of us, and treatment decisions are often much less science-based that we might like to think. Scott Lilienfeld joins Igor and Charles to discuss evidence-based practice in psychotherapy, the importance of doubting, clinical psychology’s dirty little secret, Scarlett Johansson’s brain, confirmation bias, how science really works, and why people just can’t let go of the idea that a full moon triggers werewolf-style behaviour. Igor reveals he learnt his English from TV detective ‘Columbo’, Scott discusses the fine art of planting seeds of doubt in conversations, and Charles learn from Abraham Lincoln that intellectual humility can ultimately be a path to earned intellectual confidence. Welcome to Episode 22.","date_published":"2019-10-07T04:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/445f0829-600b-421b-a989-8ede6f337388.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":24859294,"duration_in_seconds":3106}]},{"id":"918ca8ac-ae21-4ccf-bc07-c12f7ca319c7","title":"21: The Art and Science of Knowing You Don't Know (with Mark Alfano)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/21","content_text":"We live in confusing times. Politics is polarizing. Opinions clash on many topics leading to heated discussions. Take environmental change and what to do about it, the best ways to achieve prosperity, or the threats and opportunities of our globalized economy. Are we ready to admit that we often actually don’t understand what’s going on? Mark Alfano joins Igor and Charles to discuss the importance of ‘intellectual humility’ when seeking a more accurate grasp of reality, the perils of poorly designed virtue education programmes, Nietzsche and his take on the intellectual virtues, and the training of machine-learning algorithms to mine our digital footprints for signs of virtuous behaviour. Igor raises concerns that embracing uncertainty may hobble vital action, Mark talks of the dangers of creaking open your social media newsfeed too wide, and Charles learns that fostering contempt for oneself and one’s group may be essential on the path to truth. Welcome to Episode 21.Special Guest: Mark Alfano.Links:Mark Alfano's WebsiteI Know You Are, But What Am I?: Anti-Individualism in the Development of Intellectual Humility and Wu-Wei - Robinson & Alfano (2016)Nietzsche's Moral Psychology : Mark Alfano (author) : 9781107074156 : Blackwell'sDevelopment and validation of a multidimensional measure of intellectual humility - Alfano et al (2017)A cross-cultural assessment of the semantic dimensions of intellectual humility - Christen, Alfano, Robinson (2017)How ‘Intellectual Humility’ Can Make You a Better Person -- Science of UsWisdom in Context - Igor Grossmann (2017)The Strengths of Wisdom Provide Unique Contributions to Improved Leadership, Sustainability, Inequality, Gross National Happiness, and Civic Discourse in the Face of Contemporary World Problems - Grossmann & Brienza (2018)Wisdom, bias, and balance: Toward a process-sensitive measurement of wisdom-related cognition - Brienza, Kung, Santos, Bobocel, Grossmann (2018) — Preprint available at https://psyarxiv.com/p25c2Situation-Based Contingencies Underlying Wisdom-Content Manifestations: Examining Intellectual Humility in Daily Life | The Journals of Gerontology: Series B | Oxford Academic - Zachry, Phan, Blackie, Jayawickreme (2018)Constructing and Validating a Scale of Intellectual Humility @ The Intellectual Humility Capstone Conference (2015) - YouTubeOnline Personalization Creates Echo Chamber to Affirm Biases - The New York TimesAlessandra Tanesini – Philosopher, Sailor, Wine buffThe Puzzle of Humility and Disparity (2020) | Daniel Howard-Snyder, Dennis Whitcomb, and Heather Battaly - (2020)","content_html":"

We live in confusing times. Politics is polarizing. Opinions clash on many topics leading to heated discussions. Take environmental change and what to do about it, the best ways to achieve prosperity, or the threats and opportunities of our globalized economy. Are we ready to admit that we often actually don’t understand what’s going on? Mark Alfano joins Igor and Charles to discuss the importance of ‘intellectual humility’ when seeking a more accurate grasp of reality, the perils of poorly designed virtue education programmes, Nietzsche and his take on the intellectual virtues, and the training of machine-learning algorithms to mine our digital footprints for signs of virtuous behaviour. Igor raises concerns that embracing uncertainty may hobble vital action, Mark talks of the dangers of creaking open your social media newsfeed too wide, and Charles learns that fostering contempt for oneself and one’s group may be essential on the path to truth. Welcome to Episode 21.

Special Guest: Mark Alfano.

Links:

","summary":"We live in confusing times. Politics is polarizing. Opinions clash on many topics leading to heated discussions. Take environmental change and what to do about it, the best ways to achieve prosperity, or the threats and opportunities of our globalized economy. Are we ready to admit that we often actually don’t understand what’s going on? Mark Alfano joins Igor and Charles to discuss the importance of ‘intellectual humility’ when seeking a more accurate grasp of reality, the perils of poorly designed virtue education programmes, Nietzsche and his take on the intellectual virtues, and the training of machine-learning algorithms to mine our digital footprints for signs of virtuous behaviour. Igor raises concerns that embracing uncertainty may hobble vital action, Mark talks of the dangers of creaking open your social media newsfeed too wide, and Charles learns that fostering contempt for oneself and one’s group may be essential on the path to truth. Welcome to Episode 21.","date_published":"2019-09-13T05:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/918ca8ac-ae21-4ccf-bc07-c12f7ca319c7.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":25700646,"duration_in_seconds":3212}]},{"id":"fdffd362-4e1d-4ac6-875a-5676d715c25b","title":"Episode 20: The Science of Awe (with Dacher Keltner)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/20","content_text":"What exactly is ‘awe’ and does it bring us, as individuals or as a society, any benefit? Dacher Keltner joins Igor and Charles to discuss why Canadians feel differently about awe than the Chinese, how to take an ‘awe walk’, why emotions vary across historical time, and the importance of experiencing diverse emotions and how to balance them, while the 'Dacher-Guesses-Emotions' game reveals the alarmingly fine line between disgust and desire. Igor digs into controversies over different theories of emotion, Dacher talks of inequality and elation as the new frontiers of social psychology, and Charles learns that awe may play a key role in the very process of scientific discovery itself. Welcome to Episode 20.Special Guest: Dacher Keltner.Links:Dacher Keltner | UC PsychGreater Good: The Science of a Meaningful LifeBerkeley Social Interaction LaboratoryMapping Emotion - Alan CowenDacher Keltner: Why Awe Is Such an Important Emotion - YouTubeThe Science of Happiness Podcast | Greater GoodApproaching awe, a moral, spiritual, and aesthetic emotion - Keltner & Haidt (2003)Awe and Scientific Explanation - Valdesolo, Park & Gottlieb (2016)Awe as a scientific emotion - Gottlieb, Keltner, Lombrozo (2018)Awe, the Small Self, and Prosocial Behavior - PIff, Dietze, Feinberg, Stancato, Keltner (2015)Awe and humility. - PubMed - NCBI - Stellar, gordon, Anderson, Piff, McNeil, Keltner (2018)Awe in nature heals: Evidence from military veterans, at-risk youth, and college students. - PsycNET - Anderson, Monroy, Keltner (2018)Emotional complexity: Clarifying definitions and cultural correlates. - PsycNET - Grossmann, Huynh, Ellsworth (2016)Wise reasoning benefits from emodiversity, irrespective of emotional intensity. - PsycNET - Grossmann, Oakes, Santos (2019)TEDxBerkeley (On Compassion) - Dacher Keltner An Awe Walk in Muir Woods - MindfulWhy Do We Feel Awe? | Greater GoodExploring the powerful emotion of awe: How it can be awe-some and aw-ful | CBC RadioJennifer Stellar: How Culture Shapes the Experience of Awe - YouTubeLani Shiota: How Awe Transforms the Body and Mind - YouTubePatterns of Cognitive Appraisal in Emotion - Smith & EllsworthThe Power Paradox: How We Gain and Lose Influence: Dacher Keltner: 9781594205248: Amazon.com: BooksBorn to Be Good: The Science of a Meaningful Life: Dacher Keltner: 8601401183044: Amazon.com: BooksThe Compassionate Instinct: The Science of Human Goodness: Dacher Keltner, Jason Marsh, Jeremy Adam Smith: 9780393337280: Amazon.com: Books","content_html":"

What exactly is ‘awe’ and does it bring us, as individuals or as a society, any benefit? Dacher Keltner joins Igor and Charles to discuss why Canadians feel differently about awe than the Chinese, how to take an ‘awe walk’, why emotions vary across historical time, and the importance of experiencing diverse emotions and how to balance them, while the 'Dacher-Guesses-Emotions' game reveals the alarmingly fine line between disgust and desire. Igor digs into controversies over different theories of emotion, Dacher talks of inequality and elation as the new frontiers of social psychology, and Charles learns that awe may play a key role in the very process of scientific discovery itself. Welcome to Episode 20.

Special Guest: Dacher Keltner.

Links:

","summary":"What exactly is ‘awe’ and does it bring us, as individuals or as a society, any benefit? Dacher Keltner joins Igor and Charles to discuss why Canadians feel differently about awe than the Chinese, how to take an ‘awe walk’, why emotions vary across historical time, and the importance of experiencing diverse emotions and how to balance them, while the 'Dacher-Guesses-Emotions' game reveals the alarmingly fine line between disgust and desire. Igor digs into controversies over different theories of emotion, Dacher talks of inequality and elation as the new frontiers of social psychology, and Charles learns that awe may play a key role in the very process of scientific discovery itself. Welcome to Episode 20.","date_published":"2019-08-20T05:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/fdffd362-4e1d-4ac6-875a-5676d715c25b.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":27908515,"duration_in_seconds":3488}]},{"id":"c1f9cf8d-39e8-40e4-a87c-4ba7abe8d97a","title":"Episode 19: The Individual and The Culture (with Adam Grant)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/19","content_text":"Can an individual really change a culture? Adam Grant joins Igor and Charles to discuss cultures of non-conformity and giving in the workplace, the perils of cognitive entrenchment, the critical role of culture carriers, and why we should be managing our attention rather than our time. Igor delights in learning of the astoundingly high frequency of dancers among Nobel prize winners, Adam suggests that moral arguments still trump bottom-line arguments in the boardroom, and Charles learns that the secret route to culture-change might be found in asking your boss for advice. Welcome to Episode 19.Special Guest: Adam Grant.Links:Adam Grant | Books, Podcast, TED Talks, Newsletter, ArticlesAre you a giver or a taker? | Adam Grant - TED TalkThe surprising habits of original thinkers | Adam Grant - TED TalkAdam Grant - The New York Times ColumnIn the Company of Givers and Takers - Harvard Business ReviewWorkLife with Adam Grant, a TED podcast","content_html":"

Can an individual really change a culture? Adam Grant joins Igor and Charles to discuss cultures of non-conformity and giving in the workplace, the perils of cognitive entrenchment, the critical role of culture carriers, and why we should be managing our attention rather than our time. Igor delights in learning of the astoundingly high frequency of dancers among Nobel prize winners, Adam suggests that moral arguments still trump bottom-line arguments in the boardroom, and Charles learns that the secret route to culture-change might be found in asking your boss for advice. Welcome to Episode 19.

Special Guest: Adam Grant.

Links:

","summary":"Can an individual really change a culture? Adam Grant joins Igor and Charles to discuss cultures of non-conformity and giving in the workplace, the perils of cognitive entrenchment, the critical role of culture carriers, and why we should be managing our attention rather than our time. Igor delights in learning of the astoundingly high frequency of dancers among Nobel prize winners, Adam suggests that moral arguments still trump bottom-line arguments in the boardroom, and Charles learns that the secret route to culture-change might be found in asking your boss for advice. Welcome to Episode 19.\r\n\r\n","date_published":"2019-07-30T07:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/c1f9cf8d-39e8-40e4-a87c-4ba7abe8d97a.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":14740711,"duration_in_seconds":1842}]},{"id":"7704fc91-c204-4189-81fe-8f135ddfc9d2","title":"Episode 18: The End of the World is Nigh: Polarised Tribes, Passionate Words, and the Partisan Brain (with Jay Van Bavel)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/18","content_text":"How did politics get so damn polarised? Jay Van Bavel joins Igor and Charles to discuss political polarisation, the partisan brain, the inexorable rise of superheroes in dark times, the misperceptions of polarisation levels, and how to reach out to other tribes. Igor highlights the partisanship-transcending benefits of a Watchmen-style alien invasion, Jay proposes the judicious use of ‘off-ramps’ when engaging with loved-ones from across the political divide, and Charles learns that even the abstract purity of Mathematics is not immune from the tentacles of partisanship when guns are involved. Welcome to Episode 18.Special Guest: Jay Van Bavel.Links:Social Perception and Evaluation LabThe dangers of the partisan brain | Jay Van Bavel | TEDxSkoll - YouTubeThe Partisan Brain: An Identity-Based Model of Political Belief - ScienceDirectEmotion shapes the diffusion of moralized content in social networks - Brady, Wills, Jost, Tucker and Van Bavel (2016)An Ideological Asymmetry in the Diffusion of Moralized Content on Social Media Among Political Leaders - Brady, Wills, Burkart, Jost, Van Bavel (2018)How to go viral: stick to your morals but add a hint of emotion | WIRED UKWhat Brexit can teach us about the psychology of fear - VoxLetters to Young Scientists | Science | AAAS","content_html":"

How did politics get so damn polarised? Jay Van Bavel joins Igor and Charles to discuss political polarisation, the partisan brain, the inexorable rise of superheroes in dark times, the misperceptions of polarisation levels, and how to reach out to other tribes. Igor highlights the partisanship-transcending benefits of a Watchmen-style alien invasion, Jay proposes the judicious use of ‘off-ramps’ when engaging with loved-ones from across the political divide, and Charles learns that even the abstract purity of Mathematics is not immune from the tentacles of partisanship when guns are involved. Welcome to Episode 18.

Special Guest: Jay Van Bavel.

Links:

","summary":"How did politics get so damn polarised? Jay Van Bavel joins Igor and Charles to discuss political polarisation, the partisan brain, the inexorable rise of superheroes in dark times, the misperceptions of polarisation levels, and how to reach out to other tribes. Igor highlights the partisanship-transcending benefits of a Watchmen-style alien invasion, Jay proposes the judicious use of ‘off-ramps’ when engaging with loved-ones from across the political divide, and Charles learns that even the abstract purity of Mathematics is not immune from the tentacles of partisanship when guns are involved. Welcome to Episode 18.","date_published":"2019-06-29T06:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/7704fc91-c204-4189-81fe-8f135ddfc9d2.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":30708633,"duration_in_seconds":3838}]},{"id":"bb34e102-2948-4749-bbfa-5f347d17d17d","title":"Episode 17: The Metaphysics of Email and The Perils of Productivity (with Oliver Burkeman)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/17","content_text":"Our current productivity culture appears to peddle a false promise: If we can just get better organised, we really can do everything - no tough life choices or trade-offs need to be made! Guardian journalist and author Oliver Burkeman joins Igor and Charles to discuss the ironic effects of the pursuit of productivity, the inbox zero phenomenon, the futile denial of limitations, the Jevons paradox, Keynes’ concerns about a future society drowning in leisure time, Nietzsche’s suspicions regarding our beloved busyness, the social complexities of sending back a poorly made coffee, and the importance of living a life that is larger than politics. Igor wonders if the ‘slow-food’ philosophy can be extended to start a ‘slow-work’ movement in social and medical sciences to help address replication concerns, Oliver explains why he sat on the London underground loudly calling out the names of approaching stations to a carriage full of strangers, and Charles reveals how a ‘free-coffees-for-nice-customers’ policy can badly backfire, particularly if your customers are British. Welcome to Episode 17.Special Guest: Oliver Burkeman.Links:Oliver Burkeman | The GuardianOliver Burkeman | The AntidoteOliver Burkeman: The Negative Path to Happiness and Success - YouTubeSupressing the 'white bears' (American Psychological Association) - Daniel Wegner's Theory of 'Ironic Processes'Why time management is ruining our lives | Oliver Burkeman | Technology | The GuardianHow to stop fighting against time. | Oliver Burkeman | TEDxUniversityofNicosia - YouTubeInbox Zero: What is Inbox Zero and is Zero Inbox Possible in 2019?The Efficiency Dilemma | The New Yorker (The Jevons Paradox)How the news took over reality | News | The GuardianRobert B. Talisse | Philosophy Department | Vanderbilt University","content_html":"

Our current productivity culture appears to peddle a false promise: If we can just get better organised, we really can do everything - no tough life choices or trade-offs need to be made! Guardian journalist and author Oliver Burkeman joins Igor and Charles to discuss the ironic effects of the pursuit of productivity, the inbox zero phenomenon, the futile denial of limitations, the Jevons paradox, Keynes’ concerns about a future society drowning in leisure time, Nietzsche’s suspicions regarding our beloved busyness, the social complexities of sending back a poorly made coffee, and the importance of living a life that is larger than politics. Igor wonders if the ‘slow-food’ philosophy can be extended to start a ‘slow-work’ movement in social and medical sciences to help address replication concerns, Oliver explains why he sat on the London underground loudly calling out the names of approaching stations to a carriage full of strangers, and Charles reveals how a ‘free-coffees-for-nice-customers’ policy can badly backfire, particularly if your customers are British. Welcome to Episode 17.

Special Guest: Oliver Burkeman.

Links:

","summary":"Our current productivity culture appears to peddle a false promise: If we can just get better organised, we really can do everything - no tough life choices or trade-offs need to be made! Guardian journalist and author Oliver Burkeman joins Igor and Charles to discuss the ironic effects of the pursuit of productivity, the inbox zero phenomenon, the futile denial of limitations, the Jevons paradox, Keynes’ concerns about a future society drowning in leisure time, Nietzsche’s suspicions regarding our beloved busyness, the social complexities of sending back a poorly made coffee, and the importance of living a life that is larger than politics. Igor wonders if the ‘slow-food’ philosophy can be extended to start a ‘slow-work’ movement in social and medical sciences to help address replication concerns, Oliver explains why he sat on the London underground loudly calling out the names of approaching stations to a carriage full of strangers, and Charles reveals how a ‘free-coffees-for-nice-customers’ policy can badly backfire, particularly if your customers are British. Welcome to Episode 17.","date_published":"2019-05-28T07:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/bb34e102-2948-4749-bbfa-5f347d17d17d.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":30039271,"duration_in_seconds":3754}]},{"id":"26b2056a-0a3a-494c-af2f-d9a4a1317346","title":"Episode 16: Beware the Intelligence Trap! (with David Robson)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/16","content_text":"Do highly intelligent people actually take better decisions in their daily lives than everyone else? And if not, what’s missing from our picture of what it means to be ‘smart’? Can you be highly intelligent, yet flunk a rationality test? And rather than noise to be ignored, might our emotions help us make decisions that are actually more rational? David Robson joins Igor and Charles to discuss intelligence traps, Terman’s Termites, the Monte Carlo fallacy, Damasio’s Somatic Marker hypothesis, the competitive humility of the start-up culture, and the ‘brutal pessimism’ baked in to the dark history of the Intelligence test. Igor wrangles with the challenge of convincing leaders of the merits of intellectual humility in a culture obsessed with certainty, David advocates for widespread cognitive inoculations, and Charles learns that butterflies in the stomach after a date may mean love, but also may mean gastric flu. Welcome to Episode 16.Special Guest: David Robson.Links:David Robson – Exploring the human brain, body and behaviour.The Intelligence Trap – David RobsonIntelligence — Robert J. SternbergAlfred Binet and the History of IQ TestingThe Vexing Legacy of Lewis Terman | STANFORD magazineFive Minutes with Keith E. Stanovich, Richard F. West, and Maggie E. Toplak | The MIT PressRational and Irrational Thought: The Thinking That IQ Tests Miss - Scientific AmericanThe Somatic Marker Hypothesis and the Possible Functions of the Prefrontal Cortex: Damasio, Everitt and Bishop (1996)Emotional intelligence and how emotions are 'made' | WIRED UKCan We Improve Predictions? Q&A with Philip \"Superforecasting\" Tetlock - Scientific American Blog NetworkThe Debunking Handbook: now freely available for downloadThe Fine Art of Baloney Detection: Carl Sagan Exploring Solomon’s Paradox: Self-Distancing Eliminates the Self-Other Asymmetry in Wise Reasoning About Close Relationships in Younger and Older Adults - Igor Grossmann, Ethan Kross, 2014","content_html":"

Do highly intelligent people actually take better decisions in their daily lives than everyone else? And if not, what’s missing from our picture of what it means to be ‘smart’? Can you be highly intelligent, yet flunk a rationality test? And rather than noise to be ignored, might our emotions help us make decisions that are actually more rational? David Robson joins Igor and Charles to discuss intelligence traps, Terman’s Termites, the Monte Carlo fallacy, Damasio’s Somatic Marker hypothesis, the competitive humility of the start-up culture, and the ‘brutal pessimism’ baked in to the dark history of the Intelligence test. Igor wrangles with the challenge of convincing leaders of the merits of intellectual humility in a culture obsessed with certainty, David advocates for widespread cognitive inoculations, and Charles learns that butterflies in the stomach after a date may mean love, but also may mean gastric flu. Welcome to Episode 16.

Special Guest: David Robson.

Links:

","summary":"Do highly intelligent people actually take better decisions in their daily lives than everyone else? And if not, what’s missing from our picture of what it means to be ‘smart’? Can you be highly intelligent, yet flunk a rationality test? And rather than noise to be ignored, might our emotions help us make decisions that are actually more rational? David Robson joins Igor and Charles to discuss intelligence traps, Terman’s Termites, the Monte Carlo fallacy, Damasio’s Somatic Marker hypothesis, the competitive humility of the start-up culture, and the ‘brutal pessimism’ baked in to the dark history of the Intelligence test. Igor wrangles with the challenge of convincing leaders of the merits of intellectual humility in a culture obsessed with certainty, David advocates for widespread cognitive inoculations, and Charles learns that butterflies in the stomach after a date may mean love, but also may mean gastric flu. Welcome to Episode 16.","date_published":"2019-04-28T03:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/26b2056a-0a3a-494c-af2f-d9a4a1317346.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":28532528,"duration_in_seconds":3566}]},{"id":"16d6c0e1-8d2e-4a99-8234-c622d99fdcac","title":"Episode 15: Wisdom, Bullshit & Beliefs (with Gordon Pennycook)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/15","content_text":"‘Wholeness quiets infinite phenomena?’ Does it, really?! Why do some people fall for pseudo-profound bullshit and others don’t? When we share fake news stories, is this because we're motivated to think they're real, or because we don't bother to think at all? And why do scientists fight tooth-and-nail over the mechanisms involved, such as “System I vs. System II”, “Fast vs. Slow” and other frameworks? Gordon Pennycook joins Igor and Charles to discuss the critical distinction between a liar and a bullshitter, the cognitive reflection test, the random Deepak Chopra quote generator, the Ig Nobel prize, motivated reasoning, climate change beliefs, academic turf wars among dual process theorists, and how to stop yourself from compulsively retweeting fake news. Igor suggests that Gord only thought of studying bullshit after disbelief at one of Igor’s early talks, Gord reminds us that even the most enlightened social media platforms are in no hurry to help people STOP sharing news, and Charles unexpectedly finds common ground with the Chinese government. Welcome to Episode 15.Special Guest: Gordon Pennycook.Links:Gordon Pennycook's SiteOn Bullshit - Harry G. Frankfurt (2005)On the Reception and Detection of Pseudoprofound Bullshit - Pennycook, Cheyne, Barr, Koehler, Fugelsang (2015)Random Deepak Chopra Quote Generator - Wisdom of ChopraIg Nobel Prize Ceremony 2016 - VideoOpinion | Why Do People Fall for Fake News? - The New York TimesPeople Furthest Apart on Climate Views Are Often the Most Educated - Scientific American (2017)Lazy, not biased: Susceptibility to partisan fake news is better explained by lack of reasoning than by motivated reasoning - Pennycook & Rand (2018) Everyday Consequences of Analytic Thinking - Pennycook, Fugelsang, Koehler (2015)The Mythical Number Two - Melnikoff & Bargh (2018)The Mythical DualProcess Typology Gordon Pennycook, De Neys, Evans, Stanovich, Thompson (2018)","content_html":"

‘Wholeness quiets infinite phenomena?’ Does it, really?! Why do some people fall for pseudo-profound bullshit and others don’t? When we share fake news stories, is this because we're motivated to think they're real, or because we don't bother to think at all? And why do scientists fight tooth-and-nail over the mechanisms involved, such as “System I vs. System II”, “Fast vs. Slow” and other frameworks? Gordon Pennycook joins Igor and Charles to discuss the critical distinction between a liar and a bullshitter, the cognitive reflection test, the random Deepak Chopra quote generator, the Ig Nobel prize, motivated reasoning, climate change beliefs, academic turf wars among dual process theorists, and how to stop yourself from compulsively retweeting fake news. Igor suggests that Gord only thought of studying bullshit after disbelief at one of Igor’s early talks, Gord reminds us that even the most enlightened social media platforms are in no hurry to help people STOP sharing news, and Charles unexpectedly finds common ground with the Chinese government. Welcome to Episode 15.

Special Guest: Gordon Pennycook.

Links:

","summary":"‘Wholeness quiets infinite phenomena?’ Does it, really?! Why do some people fall for pseudo-profound bullshit and others don’t? When we share fake news stories, is this because we're motivated to think they're real, or because we don't bother to think at all? And why do scientists fight tooth-and-nail over the mechanisms involved, such as “System I vs. System II”, “Fast vs. Slow” and other frameworks? Gordon Pennycook joins Igor and Charles to discuss the critical distinction between a liar and a bullshitter, the cognitive reflection test, the random Deepak Chopra quote generator, the Ig Nobel prize, motivated reasoning, climate change beliefs, academic turf wars among dual process theorists, and how to stop yourself from compulsively retweeting fake news. Igor suggests that Gord only thought of studying bullshit after disbelief at one of Igor’s early talks, Gord reminds us that even the most enlightened social media platforms are in no hurry to help people STOP sharing news, and Charles unexpectedly finds common ground with the Chinese government. Welcome to Episode 15.","date_published":"2019-04-07T06:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/16d6c0e1-8d2e-4a99-8234-c622d99fdcac.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":21663160,"duration_in_seconds":2707}]},{"id":"a4a974ed-031e-4c3e-bb17-99664b223337","title":"Episode 14: Wisdom & Social Norms (with Michele Gelfand)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/14","content_text":"Is it wiser for a society to be ‘tight’ – strictly enforcing social rules, or ‘loose’ – in which social rule-breaking barely raise an eyebrow? What do social norms have to do with a sense of threat? And might wise leaders have worked out how to dynamically calibrate the tightness or looseness of their organisations as the situation demands? Michele Gelfand joins Igor and Charles to discuss the role of threat in ‘tight vs loose’ societies, the goldilocks principle, ‘real vs perceived’ threat’s in Trump’s America, autocratic recidivism, rum-fuelled meetings, transgressive hand puppets, and the case for recalibrating the internet. Igor reflects on the tight-loose contradictions at the beating heart of the Disney Corporation, Michele cautions against ‘flipping-off’ drivers in the honour culture of the southern states, and Charles makes peace with his inner spirit muppet, Kermit the frog. Welcome to Episode 14.Special Guest: Michele Gelfand.Links:Michele Gelfand HomepageThe Tight-Loose Quiz - Mindset Quiz: How Tight or Loose Are You? (michelegelfand.com)Rule Makers, Rule Breakers: How Tight and Loose Cultures Wire Our World - Michele Gelfand (Book)Differences Between Tight and Loose Cultures: A 33-Nation Study - Gelfand et al (2011)The Secret Life of Social Norms - Michele Gelfand (TEDxPaloAltoSalon talk)Culture as the menacing force behind today’s crazy politics - Michele Gelfand (The Economist, 2019)Here’s the science behind the Brexit vote and Trump’s rise - Michele Gelfand (The Guardian, 2018)An upper-class mindset doesn’t make you classy - Michele Gelfand & Jesse Harrington (Boston Globe, 2018)The Self and Social Behavior in Differing Cultural Contexts - Triandis (1989)Horizontal and Vertical Dimensions of Individualism and Collectivism: A Theoretical and Measurement Refinement - Singelis, Triandis, Bhawuk, Gelfand (1995)A theory of individualism and collectivism - Triandis & Gelfand (2012)Dimensionalizing Cultures: The Hofstede Model in Context - Hofstede (2011)A Theory of Cultural Value Orientations: Explication and Applications - Schwartz (2006)Effects of Cultural Tightness and Collectivism on Self-Concept and Causal Attributions - Carpenter (2000)Misperceptions about immigration and support for redistribution - Alesina, Miano, Stantcheva (2018)We Need a High Wall With a Big Gate - Friedman (New York Times, 2018)","content_html":"

Is it wiser for a society to be ‘tight’ – strictly enforcing social rules, or ‘loose’ – in which social rule-breaking barely raise an eyebrow? What do social norms have to do with a sense of threat? And might wise leaders have worked out how to dynamically calibrate the tightness or looseness of their organisations as the situation demands? Michele Gelfand joins Igor and Charles to discuss the role of threat in ‘tight vs loose’ societies, the goldilocks principle, ‘real vs perceived’ threat’s in Trump’s America, autocratic recidivism, rum-fuelled meetings, transgressive hand puppets, and the case for recalibrating the internet. Igor reflects on the tight-loose contradictions at the beating heart of the Disney Corporation, Michele cautions against ‘flipping-off’ drivers in the honour culture of the southern states, and Charles makes peace with his inner spirit muppet, Kermit the frog. Welcome to Episode 14.

Special Guest: Michele Gelfand.

Links:

","summary":"Is it wiser for a society to be ‘tight’ – strictly enforcing social rules, or ‘loose’ – in which social rule-breaking barely raise an eyebrow? What do social norms have to do with a sense of threat? And might wise leaders have worked out how to dynamically calibrate the tightness or looseness of their organisations as the situation demands? Michele Gelfand joins Igor and Charles to discuss the role of threat in ‘tight vs loose’ societies, the goldilocks principle, ‘real vs perceived’ threat’s in Trump’s America, autocratic recidivism, rum-fuelled meetings, transgressive hand puppets, and the case for recalibrating the internet. Igor reflects on the tight-loose contradictions at the beating heart of the Disney Corporation, Michele cautions against ‘flipping-off’ drivers in the honour culture of the southern states, and Charles makes peace with his inner spirit muppet, Kermit the frog. Welcome to Episode 14.","date_published":"2019-03-13T10:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/a4a974ed-031e-4c3e-bb17-99664b223337.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":28342775,"duration_in_seconds":3542}]},{"id":"51acbb7d-aac3-4f64-b6d7-8590fafe4225","title":"Episode 13: Can Wisdom be Taught?","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/13","content_text":"Can, or even should wisdom be taught at school? Would teaching about wisdom in the classroom even translate into wiser behaviour? And might learning about wise historical figures in school actually decrease the likelihood of students behaving more wisely? Igor and Charles tinker with the nuts and bolts of a speculative wisdom curriculum, discussing the stark limits of formal ethics classes, future technological tools to help identify when wise reasoning is necessary, and the counterproductive impact of presenting wise figures out of context. Igor commends Yoda for wisely encouraging Luke to share his failures, and alerts us to the dangers of turning sages into saints, while Charles struggles to acquire the wisdom necessary to know when wisdom is necessary. Welcome to Episode 13.Links:A pathway for wisdom-focused education - Huynh, Grossmann (2018)Wisdom and how to cultivate it: Review of emerging evidence for a constructivist model of wise thinking - Grossmann (2018)Teaching for Wisdom: Cross-cultural Perspectives on Fostering Wisdom - Ferrari, Potworowski (2008)Why Schools Should Teach for Wisdom: The Balance Theory of Wisdom in Educational Settings - Sternberg (2001)'From Jerusalem to Jericho': A Study of Situational and Dispositional Variables in Helping Behavior - Darley, Batson (1973)Construal-Level Theory of Psychological Distance - Trope, Liberman (2010)Yoda & Luke - The Last Jedi (2017)The Jigsaw Classroom","content_html":"

Can, or even should wisdom be taught at school? Would teaching about wisdom in the classroom even translate into wiser behaviour? And might learning about wise historical figures in school actually decrease the likelihood of students behaving more wisely? Igor and Charles tinker with the nuts and bolts of a speculative wisdom curriculum, discussing the stark limits of formal ethics classes, future technological tools to help identify when wise reasoning is necessary, and the counterproductive impact of presenting wise figures out of context. Igor commends Yoda for wisely encouraging Luke to share his failures, and alerts us to the dangers of turning sages into saints, while Charles struggles to acquire the wisdom necessary to know when wisdom is necessary. Welcome to Episode 13.

Links:

","summary":"Can, or even should wisdom be taught at school? Would teaching about wisdom in the classroom even translate into wiser behaviour? And might learning about wise historical figures in school actually decrease the likelihood of students behaving more wisely? Igor and Charles tinker with the nuts and bolts of a speculative wisdom curriculum, discussing the stark limits of formal ethics classes, future technological tools to help identify when wise reasoning is necessary, and the counterproductive impact of presenting wise figures out of context. Igor commends Yoda for wisely encouraging Luke to share his failures, and alerts us to the dangers of turning sages into saints, while Charles struggles to acquire the wisdom necessary to know when wisdom is necessary. Welcome to Episode 13.\r\n","date_published":"2019-02-21T06:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/51acbb7d-aac3-4f64-b6d7-8590fafe4225.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":25284568,"duration_in_seconds":3160}]},{"id":"43c7791f-70a4-40fa-96c1-bd02f27a1fac","title":"Episode 12: Social and Emotional Aging (with Laura Carstensen)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/12","content_text":"Life expectancy increased more in the 20th century than in the entire prior history of humanity combined. With many more of us now getting the opportunity to live into old age, what do we have to look forward to? Do our social and emotional lives degrade in step with our physical bodies as we age, or do we in fact get much happier as we get older? How does the sense of ‘time-left’ impact our wisdom, behaviour and priorities? Laura Carstensen joins Igor and Charles to discuss individual and societal aspects of human aging. We focus on the implications and opportunities of recent extraordinary gains in life expectancy, the socio-emotional selectivity theory, the positivity effect, the thorny issue of increasing retirement age, and the surprising role of time-horizons in how we choose to spend our time. Igor alerts us to the cultural differences and the positive impact old people have on a work team’s productivity, Laura reassures us that no-one ever wants to repeat their twenties, and Charles learns of the dangers of young people trying to think like old people as a route to happiness. Welcome to Episode 12.Special Guest: Laura Carstensen.Links:Stanford Center on LongevityOlder People are Happier - Laura Carstensen (TED Talk)A Long Bright Future - Laura Carstensen (Book)Redesigning Long Life: Uncommon Approaches for Unprecedented Challenges - Laura Carstensen (Stanford Big Data talk) Socioemotional Selectivity Theory and the Regulation of Emotion in the Second Half of Life - Carstensen, Fung, Charles (2003)Integrating cognitive and emotion paradigms to address the paradox of aging - Carstensen (2018)Taking time seriously. A theory of socioemotional selectivity - Carstensen, Isaacowitz, Charles (1999)The influence of a sense of time on human development - Carstensen (2006)Emotional experience improves with age: evidence based on over 10 years of experience sampling - Carstensen, Turan, Scheibe, Ram, Ersner-Hershfield, Samanez-Larkin, Brooks, Nesselroade (2011)Psychological Perspectives on Successful Aging: The Model of Selective Optimization with Compensation - Baltes P, Baltes M (1990)A cultural perspective on emotional experiences across the life span - Grossmann, Karasawa, Kan, Kitayama (2014)","content_html":"

Life expectancy increased more in the 20th century than in the entire prior history of humanity combined. With many more of us now getting the opportunity to live into old age, what do we have to look forward to? Do our social and emotional lives degrade in step with our physical bodies as we age, or do we in fact get much happier as we get older? How does the sense of ‘time-left’ impact our wisdom, behaviour and priorities? Laura Carstensen joins Igor and Charles to discuss individual and societal aspects of human aging. We focus on the implications and opportunities of recent extraordinary gains in life expectancy, the socio-emotional selectivity theory, the positivity effect, the thorny issue of increasing retirement age, and the surprising role of time-horizons in how we choose to spend our time. Igor alerts us to the cultural differences and the positive impact old people have on a work team’s productivity, Laura reassures us that no-one ever wants to repeat their twenties, and Charles learns of the dangers of young people trying to think like old people as a route to happiness. Welcome to Episode 12.

Special Guest: Laura Carstensen.

Links:

","summary":"Life expectancy increased more in the 20th century than in the entire prior history of humanity combined. With many more of us now getting the opportunity to live into old age, what do we have to look forward to? Do our social and emotional lives degrade in step with our physical bodies as we age, or do we in fact get much happier as we get older? How does the sense of ‘time-left’ impact our wisdom, behaviour and priorities? Laura Carstensen joins Igor and Charles to discuss individual and societal aspects of human aging. We focus on the implications and opportunities of recent extraordinary gains in life expectancy, the socio-emotional selectivity theory, the positivity effect, the thorny issue of increasing retirement age, and the surprising role of time-horizons in how we choose to spend our time. Igor alerts us to the cultural differences and the positive impact old people have on a work team’s productivity, Laura reassures us that no-one ever wants to repeat their twenties, and Charles learns of the dangers of young people trying to think like old people as a route to happiness. Welcome to Episode 12.","date_published":"2019-01-23T09:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/43c7791f-70a4-40fa-96c1-bd02f27a1fac.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":29220698,"duration_in_seconds":3652}]},{"id":"eec4e311-a44a-4663-bc33-4b5ec241a271","title":"Episode 11: Wisdom at Work (with Barry Schwartz)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/11","content_text":"Can we design our workplaces to generate wiser behaviour? Why do we work anyway, and would we still work if we didn’t get paid? Do employers even want their employees to develop wisdom? Barry Schwartz joins Igor and Charles to discuss how Aristotle’s Practical Wisdom applies in the 21st Century, the reasons why we work, idea technology, the unintended consequences of rules-based systems, and the moral dangers and limits of incentives. Igor proposes the idea of algorithm-based wise machines, Barry suggests companies hire for character rather than skill, and Charles learns why, in wiser work places, the cost of free-riders may well be a price worth paying. Welcome to Episode 11.Special Guest: Barry Schwartz.Links:Our Loss of Wisdom - Barry Schwartz (TED talk)Using Our Practical Wisdom - Barry Schwartz (TED talk)The Paradox of Choice - Barry Schwartz (TED Talk)Practical Wisdom (Book) - Barry Schwartz & Kenneth SharpeWhy We Work - Barry Schwartz (Book)The Paradox of Choice - Barry Schwartz (Book)Rethinking Work - Barry Schwartz (New York Times)","content_html":"

Can we design our workplaces to generate wiser behaviour? Why do we work anyway, and would we still work if we didn’t get paid? Do employers even want their employees to develop wisdom? Barry Schwartz joins Igor and Charles to discuss how Aristotle’s Practical Wisdom applies in the 21st Century, the reasons why we work, idea technology, the unintended consequences of rules-based systems, and the moral dangers and limits of incentives. Igor proposes the idea of algorithm-based wise machines, Barry suggests companies hire for character rather than skill, and Charles learns why, in wiser work places, the cost of free-riders may well be a price worth paying. Welcome to Episode 11.

Special Guest: Barry Schwartz.

Links:

","summary":"Can we design our workplaces to generate wiser behaviour? Why do we work anyway, and would we still work if we didn’t get paid? Do employers even want their employees to develop wisdom? Barry Schwartz joins Igor and Charles to discuss how Aristotle’s Practical Wisdom applies in the 21st Century, the reasons why we work, idea technology, the unintended consequences of rules-based systems, and the moral dangers and limits of incentives. Igor proposes the idea of algorithm-based wise machines, Barry suggests companies hire for character rather than skill, and Charles learns why, in wiser work places, the cost of free-riders may well be a price worth paying. Welcome to Episode 11.","date_published":"2018-12-28T03:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/eec4e311-a44a-4663-bc33-4b5ec241a271.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":28164515,"duration_in_seconds":3520}]},{"id":"0c4e1d14-5dd7-464e-805c-4027d3ad3c0d","title":"Episode 10: Wise Bodies, Wise Brains (with Wendy Berry Mendes)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/10","content_text":"Is our capacity for wise behaviour determined not just by our psychology but also by our physiology? Is there such a thing as ‘good stress’, and how might our assessment of a situation reduce the chances of us 'choking'? And can our own bodies actually be physically affected by other people's emotions? Wendy Berry Mendes joins Igor and Charles to discuss the interaction between the psychological and physiological processes underpinning wise behaviour, exploring 'challenge vs threat' stress responses, vagal flexibility, affect contagion, and the physiology of social sensitivity and good judgement. Igor wants to know how to stay calm before dance competitions, Wendy shares tales of stressing out unsuspecting young mothers and their babies, and Charles learns of the hidden upsides to mind-body meltdowns. Welcome to Episode 10.Special Guest: Wendy Berry Mendes.Links:Emotion, Health, and Psychophysiology LabDecisions Under Distress : Stress Profiles Influence Anchoring and Adjustment - Kassam, Koslov, Mendes (2009)More than a feeling: A unified view of stress measurement for population science - Epel, Crosswell , Mayer, Prather, Slavich , Puterman, Mendes (2018)Vagal Flexibility: A Physiological Predictor of Social Sensitivity - Muhtadie, Koslov, Akinola, Mendes (2014)Cardiac vagal flexibility and accurate personality impressions: Examining a physiological correlate of the good judge - Human, Mendes (2018)A Heart and A Mind: Self-distancing Facilitates the Association Between Heart Rate Variability, and Wise Reasoning - Grossmann, Sahdra, Ciarrochi (2016) Affect Contagion Between Mothers and Infants: Examining Valence and Touch - Waters, West, Karnilowicz, Mendes (2017)Stress Contagion: Physiological Covariation Between Mothers and Infants - Waters, West, Mendes (2014)Contagious Anxiety: Anxious European Americans Can Transmit Their Physiological Reactivity to African Americans - West, Koslov, Page-Gould, Major, Mendes (2017)Sartorial symbols of social class elicit class-consistent behavioral and physiological responses: A dyadic approach - Kraus, Mendes (2014)Video - How Does Gratitude Affect Health and Aging? - Presentation at UC Berkeley's Greater Good Gratitude Summit 2014Video - Experts in Emotion: Wendy Berry Mendes on Psychophysiology Measurement and Health - Experts in Emotion Series; June Gruber, Yale UniversityMy BP Lab","content_html":"

Is our capacity for wise behaviour determined not just by our psychology but also by our physiology? Is there such a thing as ‘good stress’, and how might our assessment of a situation reduce the chances of us 'choking'? And can our own bodies actually be physically affected by other people's emotions? Wendy Berry Mendes joins Igor and Charles to discuss the interaction between the psychological and physiological processes underpinning wise behaviour, exploring 'challenge vs threat' stress responses, vagal flexibility, affect contagion, and the physiology of social sensitivity and good judgement. Igor wants to know how to stay calm before dance competitions, Wendy shares tales of stressing out unsuspecting young mothers and their babies, and Charles learns of the hidden upsides to mind-body meltdowns. Welcome to Episode 10.

Special Guest: Wendy Berry Mendes.

Links:

","summary":"Is our capacity for wise behaviour determined not just by our psychology but also by our physiology? Is there such a thing as ‘good stress’, and how might our assessment of a situation reduce the chances of us 'choking'? And can our own bodies actually be physically affected by other people's emotions? Wendy Berry Mendes joins Igor and Charles to discuss the interaction between the psychological and physiological processes underpinning wise behaviour, exploring 'challenge vs threat' stress responses, vagal flexibility, affect contagion, and the physiology of social sensitivity and good judgement. Igor wants to know how to stay calm before dance competitions, Wendy shares tales of stressing out unsuspecting young mothers and their babies, and Charles learns of the hidden upsides to mind-body meltdowns. Welcome to Episode 10.","date_published":"2018-11-22T11:00:00.000-05:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/0c4e1d14-5dd7-464e-805c-4027d3ad3c0d.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":23808127,"duration_in_seconds":2975}]},{"id":"8c80e1e3-e728-4086-972f-df4f74426f64","title":"Episode 9: Dangerous Reflections (with Valerie Tiberius)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/9","content_text":"Can philosophers and psychologists work together to guide us towards living wisely? In pursuing the good life, can too much reflection be dangerous? Might philosophers have downplayed the importance of getting lost in experience? Valerie Tiberius joins Igor and Charles to discuss positive illusions, values integration, bearing our own reflective survey, and the perils of excessive introspection. Igor has questions about the rise of the empirically-informed movement in philosophy, Valerie suggests humility is critical to friendship, and Charles wants to know how hit-moral-philosophy-comedy ‘The Good Life’ ever got commissioned. Welcome to Episode 9.Special Guest: Valerie Tiberius.Links:Valerie Tiberius's websiteThe Reflective Life: Living Wisely With Our LimitsWell-Being as Value Fulfillment How We Can Help Each Other to Live Well Valerie Tiberius (Oxford University Press)Wisdom Through Reflection - The New York Academy of Sciences, February 3, 2016 (Video) — An excerpt from \"Cultivating Character: The Art of Living\" featuring Steve Paulson, Valerie Tiberius, Philip Kitcher and Lisa Feldman Barrett. \r\nConversations on Wisdom: UnCut Interview with Valerie Tiberius - Centre for Practical Wisdom, University of Chicago (Video)The Good PlaceWhat We Owe to Each Other - T. M. ScanlonSchwartz theory of basic valuesToward a universal psychological structure of human values - Shalom Schwartz, Wolfgang Bilsky, (1987)BBC Tomorrow's World: Global Values - Where do you fit?DeYoung Personality Laboratory - Prof. Colin DeYoungThe Many Faces of Wisdom: An Investigation of Cultural-Historical Wisdom Exemplars Reveals Practical, Philosophical, and Benevolent Prototypes. Weststrate NM, Ferrari M, Ardelt M (2016)The Happiness Hypothesis: Finding Modern Truth in Ancient Wisdom - Jonathan HaidtStrangers to Ourselves: Discovering the Adaptive Unconscious - Timothy D. WilsonDavid Hume (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)Virtue Ethics (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)Exploring Solomon's paradox: self-distancing eliminates the self-other asymmetry in wise reasoning about close relationships in younger and older adults - Grossmann, Kross (2014)How Theories of Well-Being Can Help Us Help - Tiberius (2018) — Includes an outline of Tiberius' Value Fulfillment Theory","content_html":"

Can philosophers and psychologists work together to guide us towards living wisely? In pursuing the good life, can too much reflection be dangerous? Might philosophers have downplayed the importance of getting lost in experience? Valerie Tiberius joins Igor and Charles to discuss positive illusions, values integration, bearing our own reflective survey, and the perils of excessive introspection. Igor has questions about the rise of the empirically-informed movement in philosophy, Valerie suggests humility is critical to friendship, and Charles wants to know how hit-moral-philosophy-comedy ‘The Good Life’ ever got commissioned. Welcome to Episode 9.

Special Guest: Valerie Tiberius.

Links:

","summary":"Can philosophers and psychologists work together to guide us towards living wisely? In pursuing the good life, can too much reflection be dangerous? Might philosophers have downplayed the importance of getting lost in experience? Valerie Tiberius joins Igor and Charles to discuss positive illusions, values integration, bearing our own reflective survey, and the perils of excessive introspection. Igor has questions about the rise of the empirically-informed movement in philosophy, Valerie suggests humility is critical to friendship, and Charles wants to know how hit-moral-philosophy-comedy ‘The Good Life’ ever got commissioned. Welcome to Episode 9.","date_published":"2018-10-29T07:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/8c80e1e3-e728-4086-972f-df4f74426f64.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":24036541,"duration_in_seconds":3004}]},{"id":"66295d91-9dcb-48e8-9d84-ca2d3c3b4cd4","title":"Episode 8: The Dark Side (with Paul Bloom)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/8","content_text":"One thing we all seem to agree on is that empathy is an unmitigated good. But what if we are wrong? Might some forms of empathy actually be dangerous for society, biasing preferences towards those that look like us, or even those we find attractive? And even when our closest companions are in pain, is ‘feeling what they feel’ really the best way to help? Are horrific acts of cruelty made palatable by dehumanising the victims, or is the truth actually much worse? And how can social media turn do-gooders into deliverers of unlimited vengeance? Paul Bloom takes Igor and Charles for a walk on the dark side, exploring the treacherous hidden terrain of empathy, harmless torturers, aggregate cruelty and third-party punishment. Igor calls for tech companies to start hiring moral philosophers, Paul raises moral objections to loving your own children, and Charles has his mind blown and heart crushed by a revelatory, yet even darker, interpretation of human cruelty. Welcome to Episode 8.Special Guest: Paul Bloom.Links:Paul Bloom's SiteThe Case Against Empathy - VoxAgainst Empathy: Why Emotion-Based Politics Lead to Inaction - Big ThinkAn appraisal theory of empathy and other vicarious emotional experiences: Wondra & Ellsworth (2015)Effective AltruismThe Root of All Cruelty? - Paul BloomAre We All ‘Harmless Torturers’ Now? - Paul Bloom & Matthew JordanThird-party punishment as a costly signal of trustworthiness: Jordan, Hoffmann, Bloom, Rand (2016)Moral outrage in the digital age - Molly CrockettSo You've Been Publicly Shamed - Jon Ronson - Guardian reviewBarack Obama and the 'empathy deficit'","content_html":"

One thing we all seem to agree on is that empathy is an unmitigated good. But what if we are wrong? Might some forms of empathy actually be dangerous for society, biasing preferences towards those that look like us, or even those we find attractive? And even when our closest companions are in pain, is ‘feeling what they feel’ really the best way to help? Are horrific acts of cruelty made palatable by dehumanising the victims, or is the truth actually much worse? And how can social media turn do-gooders into deliverers of unlimited vengeance? Paul Bloom takes Igor and Charles for a walk on the dark side, exploring the treacherous hidden terrain of empathy, harmless torturers, aggregate cruelty and third-party punishment. Igor calls for tech companies to start hiring moral philosophers, Paul raises moral objections to loving your own children, and Charles has his mind blown and heart crushed by a revelatory, yet even darker, interpretation of human cruelty. Welcome to Episode 8.

Special Guest: Paul Bloom.

Links:

","summary":"One thing we all seem to agree on is that empathy is an unmitigated good. But what if we are wrong? Might some forms of empathy actually be dangerous for society, biasing preferences towards those that look like us, or even those we find attractive? And even when our closest companions are in pain, is ‘feeling what they feel’ really the best way to help? Are horrific acts of cruelty made palatable by dehumanising the victims, or is the truth actually much worse? And how can social media turn do-gooders into deliverers of unlimited vengeance? Paul Bloom takes Igor and Charles for a walk on the dark side, exploring the treacherous hidden terrain of empathy, harmless torturers, aggregate cruelty and third-party punishment. Igor calls for tech companies to start hiring moral philosophers, Paul raises moral objections to loving your own children, and Charles has his mind blown and heart crushed by a revelatory, yet even darker, interpretation of human cruelty. Welcome to Episode 8.","date_published":"2018-09-27T05:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/66295d91-9dcb-48e8-9d84-ca2d3c3b4cd4.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":28571523,"duration_in_seconds":3520}]},{"id":"a59d242f-a2ae-4a17-bd11-a640ed955673","title":"Episode 7: Why We Tell Stories (with Nic Weststrate)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/7","content_text":"Why do we spend so much time telling stories - about ourselves, about each other, even about fictional characters? If storytelling isn’t simply about information exchange, what role does it really play in our lives? Why do older people feel compelled to share their hard-earned wisdom with younger people? And do the younger people actually get anything from these exchanges? Nic Weststrate joins Igor and Charles to pull apart the real reasons we share stories. We discuss exploratory and redemptive processing of life-shattering events, the complex motivations behind Holocaust survivors recounting of the Jewish refugees on the St. Louis ship at the U.S. shore, and the Stonewall riots as the mythical origin story of the Gay Liberation movement. Igor questions the role of the omnipresent Netflix storytelling machine. Nic suggests that greater tolerance around sexuality can rob people of their once revolutionary identities. Charles learns that, when our lives are broken, we may have to choose between the path to wisdom and the path to happiness. Welcome to Episode 7.Special Guest: Nic Weststrate.Links:MS St. Louis - Voyage Of The Damned (Question Time Channel, YouTube)Collected Stories in the Life Narratives of Holocaust Survivors: Schiff, Noy, Cohler (2001)How the Stonewall Riots Sparked a Movement: The History ChannelMovements and Memory: The Making of the Stonewall Myth: Crage, Armstrong (2006)The rise and fall of gay: A cultural-historical approach to gay identity development: Weststrate, McClean (2010)Intergenerational narratives and identity across Development: Merrill, Fivush (2016)Center for Practical Wisdom Research Forum: Nic M. Weststrate 2017 (Video)\"It was the best worst day of my life\": Narrative Content, Structure, and Process in Wisdom-Fostering Life Event Memories: Weststrate NM, Ferrari M, Fournier M, McLean K (2018)Hard-Earned Wisdom: Exploratory Processing of Difficult Life Experience Is Positively Associated With Wisdom: Weststrate, Glück (2017)","content_html":"

Why do we spend so much time telling stories - about ourselves, about each other, even about fictional characters? If storytelling isn’t simply about information exchange, what role does it really play in our lives? Why do older people feel compelled to share their hard-earned wisdom with younger people? And do the younger people actually get anything from these exchanges? Nic Weststrate joins Igor and Charles to pull apart the real reasons we share stories. We discuss exploratory and redemptive processing of life-shattering events, the complex motivations behind Holocaust survivors recounting of the Jewish refugees on the St. Louis ship at the U.S. shore, and the Stonewall riots as the mythical origin story of the Gay Liberation movement. Igor questions the role of the omnipresent Netflix storytelling machine. Nic suggests that greater tolerance around sexuality can rob people of their once revolutionary identities. Charles learns that, when our lives are broken, we may have to choose between the path to wisdom and the path to happiness. Welcome to Episode 7.

Special Guest: Nic Weststrate.

Links:

","summary":"Why do we spend so much time telling stories - about ourselves, about each other, even about fictional characters? If storytelling isn’t simply about information exchange, what role does it really play in our lives? Why do older people feel compelled to share their hard-earned wisdom with younger people? And do the younger people actually get anything from these exchanges? Nic Weststrate joins Igor and Charles to pull apart the real reasons we share stories. We discuss exploratory and redemptive processing of life-shattering events, the complex motivations behind Holocaust survivors recounting of the Jewish refugees on the St. Louis ship at the U.S. shore, and the Stonewall riots as the mythical origin story of the Gay Liberation movement. Igor questions the role of the omnipresent Netflix storytelling machine. Nic suggests that greater tolerance around sexuality can rob people of their once revolutionary identities. Charles learns that, when our lives are broken, we may have to choose between the path to wisdom and the path to happiness. Welcome to Episode 7.","date_published":"2018-08-24T06:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/a59d242f-a2ae-4a17-bd11-a640ed955673.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":27147144,"duration_in_seconds":3342}]},{"id":"93635aff-17e7-4069-8eb4-e8ecafe05ca8","title":"Episode 6: Wisdom, Class & Inequality (with Michael Kraus)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/6","content_text":"If a typical white family in the US has 100 dollars, how many dollars does a typical black US family have? Wrong! Why are we so bad at guessing levels of inequality in society? How much of a role does your class play in preventing wise decision-making? Are upper and middle-class people especially bad at taking wise decisions? Why does more education equate to less wise reasoning in interpersonal affairs? And just how good are we at spotting someone’s class from their shoes or even eyes? Michael Kraus joins Igor and Charles to tease economic fact from fiction, discussing accuracy of class signalling, implications of new marshmallow-based research, woeful underestimations of inequality, and the roots of our convenient blindness. Igor breaks down surprising research suggesting that we should both pay more attention to how working class people approach interpersonal clashes and be wary of disruptive hipster beards, Michael forces us to look at the dark underbelly of the American dream, and Charles has questions about Jay-Z and the validity of cockney impersonations as a measurement tool. Welcome to Episode 6. Special Guest: Michael Kraus.Links:Michael Kraus, Yale School of ManagementAmericans misperceive racial economic equality: Kraus, Rucker, Richeson (2017)The Racial Wealth Gap - Explained - Vox/Netflix — The racial wealth gap is where yesterday’s injustice becomes today’s inequality. And it’s growing. Episode three of Vox’s new Netflix series explores why.Yale Insights - Michael Kraus: How Fair is American Society? (Youtube)Social affiliation in same-class and cross-class interactions: Côté, Kraus, Carpenter, Piff, Beermann, Keltner (2017)Signs of Social Class: The Experience of Economic Inequality in Everyday Life: Kraus, Won Park, Tan (2017)The Visibility of Social Class From Facial Cues: Bjornsdottir, Rule (2017)The Social Stratification of (R) in New York City Department Stores: Labov (1972)Pedigree: How Elite Students Get Elite Jobs by Lauren A. Rivera (review): Smith (2017)Social class and wise reasoning about interpersonal conflicts across regions, persons and situations: Brienza, Grossmann (2017)Cognition in harsh and unpredictable environments: Frankenhuis, Panchanathan, Nettle (2015)Social Class Culture Cycles: How Three Gateway Contexts Shape Selves and Fuel Inequality: Stephens, Markus, Phillips (2014)Predicting adolescent cognitive and self-regulatory competencies from preschool delay of gratification: Identifying diagnostic conditions: Shoda, Mischel, Peake (1990)Revisiting the Marshmallow Test: A Conceptual Replication Investigating Links Between Early Delay of Gratification and Later Outcomes: Watts, Duncan, Quan (2018)","content_html":"

If a typical white family in the US has 100 dollars, how many dollars does a typical black US family have? Wrong! Why are we so bad at guessing levels of inequality in society? How much of a role does your class play in preventing wise decision-making? Are upper and middle-class people especially bad at taking wise decisions? Why does more education equate to less wise reasoning in interpersonal affairs? And just how good are we at spotting someone’s class from their shoes or even eyes? Michael Kraus joins Igor and Charles to tease economic fact from fiction, discussing accuracy of class signalling, implications of new marshmallow-based research, woeful underestimations of inequality, and the roots of our convenient blindness. Igor breaks down surprising research suggesting that we should both pay more attention to how working class people approach interpersonal clashes and be wary of disruptive hipster beards, Michael forces us to look at the dark underbelly of the American dream, and Charles has questions about Jay-Z and the validity of cockney impersonations as a measurement tool. Welcome to Episode 6.

Special Guest: Michael Kraus.

Links:

","summary":"If a typical white family in the US has 100 dollars, how many dollars does a typical black US family have? Wrong! Why are we so bad at guessing levels of inequality in society? How much of a role does your class play in preventing wise decision-making? Are upper and middle-class people especially bad at taking wise decisions? Why does more education equate to less wise reasoning in interpersonal affairs? And just how good are we at spotting someone’s class from their shoes or even eyes? Michael Kraus joins Igor and Charles to tease economic fact from fiction, discussing accuracy of class signalling, implications of new marshmallow-based research, woeful underestimations of inequality, and the roots of our convenient blindness. Igor breaks down surprising research suggesting that we should both pay more attention to how working class people approach interpersonal clashes and be wary of disruptive hipster beards, Michael forces us to look at the dark underbelly of the American dream, and Charles has questions about Jay-Z and the validity of cockney impersonations as a measurement tool. Welcome to Episode 6. ","date_published":"2018-07-16T12:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/93635aff-17e7-4069-8eb4-e8ecafe05ca8.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":31017659,"duration_in_seconds":3825}]},{"id":"a4de66c6-ef38-4e3b-902d-674d7b9d7242","title":"Episode 5: The Foolish Sage (with Eranda Jayawickreme)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/5","content_text":"Do 'wise people' even exist? Do we have 'wise characters' or is our behaviour more influenced by 'wise situations'? And if so, what kinds of situations best support wise behaviour? Eranda Jayawickreme joins Igor and Charles to discuss the classic battle royale of the person-situation debate, whole trait theory and the ever-controversial Stanford Prison experiment. Igor outlines the actor-observer bias and suggests that westerners should be more sympathetic to grumpy waitstaff, Eranda considers the motivations behind blaming bad apples vs bad barrels and the implications for the justice system, and Charles learns that overestimating the robustness of his own virtue can lead to all manner of perilous situations. Welcome to Episode 5. Special Guest: Eranda Jayawickreme.Links:Eranda Jayawickreme - Growth Initiative Lab - Wake Forest UniversityAristotle & Virtue Theory: Crash Course Philosophy No.38Stanford Prison ExperimentThe Lifespan of a Lie - MediumThe Big Five Personality Traits: VeryWell MindSituational Salience and Cultural Differences in the Correspondence Bias and Actor-Observer BiasThe person–situation debate in historical and current perspective: Epstein, S., & O'Brien, E. J. (1985)Character: The Prospects for a Personality-Based Perspective on Morality: William Fleeson*, R. Michael Furr, Eranda Jayawickreme, Peter Meindl and Erik G. Helzer (2014)Situation‐Based Contingencies Underlying Trait‐Content Manifestation in Behavior: Fleeson (2007)Whole Trait Theory: Fleeson, Jayawickreme (2015)In favor of the synthetic resolution to the person–situation debate: WilliamFleeson, Noftle (2009)On the interface of cognition and personality: Beyond the person–situation debate: Mischel, W. (1979)Persons, Situations, and Virtue Ethics: John M. Doris (1998)No Character or Personality: Gilbert Harman (2015)Virtue Ethics and Social Psychology: Julia AnnasA cognitive-affective system theory of personality: Reconceptualizing situations, dispositions, dynamics, and invariance in personality structure: Mischel, Walter,Shoda, Yuichi (1995) Wisdom in Context: Igor Grossmann (2017)Moving Personality Beyond the Person-Situation Debate The Challenge and the Opportunity of Within-Person Variability: William Fleeson (2004) Prof. Dr. Wilhelm Hofmann","content_html":"

Do 'wise people' even exist? Do we have 'wise characters' or is our behaviour more influenced by 'wise situations'? And if so, what kinds of situations best support wise behaviour? Eranda Jayawickreme joins Igor and Charles to discuss the classic battle royale of the person-situation debate, whole trait theory and the ever-controversial Stanford Prison experiment. Igor outlines the actor-observer bias and suggests that westerners should be more sympathetic to grumpy waitstaff, Eranda considers the motivations behind blaming bad apples vs bad barrels and the implications for the justice system, and Charles learns that overestimating the robustness of his own virtue can lead to all manner of perilous situations. Welcome to Episode 5.

Special Guest: Eranda Jayawickreme.

Links:

","summary":"Do 'wise people' even exist? Do we have 'wise characters' or is our behaviour more influenced by 'wise situations'? And if so, what kinds of situations best support wise behaviour? Eranda Jayawickreme joins Igor and Charles to discuss the classic battle royale of the person-situation debate, whole trait theory and the ever-controversial Stanford Prison experiment. Igor outlines the actor-observer bias and suggests that westerners should be more sympathetic to grumpy waitstaff, Eranda considers the motivations behind blaming bad apples vs bad barrels and the implications for the justice system, and Charles learns that overestimating the robustness of his own virtue can lead to all manner of perilous situations. Welcome to Episode 5. \r\n","date_published":"2018-06-24T05:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/a4de66c6-ef38-4e3b-902d-674d7b9d7242.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":25770631,"duration_in_seconds":3170}]},{"id":"77d38047-529e-4da6-a5ae-a2f26dbdc70e","title":"Episode 4: Yoda vs Spock (with Stéphane Côté)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/4","content_text":"Are emotions simply bugs in the system that prevent us from taking wise decisions? Or do they play an essential role in guiding us towards the wisest path? In short, should we be like hyper-rational cool-headed Mr Spock, or more like the emotionally sensitive Master Yoda? How much can we even observe and guide our emotions as they unfold anyway? And are emotionally intelligent geniuses necessarily more moral than the rest of us? Stéphane Côté joins Igor and Charles to discuss the science of emotional intelligence, machiavellian deviants, emotional super-readers, deep-acting vs surface-acting emotional management, and why you can't hide your motivations from airport customs agents. Igor uncovers the mechanics of the jingle-jangle fallacy, Stéphane warns of the 'danger zones' highly empathic people enter when discussing the attractiveness of friends with their partners, and Charles finally understands why you shouldn’t sit opposite someone you don’t like in a team meeting. Welcome to Episode 4.Special Guest: Stéphane Côté.Links:Stéphane CôtéWhen Emotions Make Better Decisions - Antonio Damasio - YouTubeThe Happiness Curve: Why Life Gets Better After 50 (9781250078803): Jonathan Rauch: BooksSeeking wisdom in graying matter - Dilip JesteNeurobiology of Wisdom: A Literature Overview | Genetics and Genomics | JAMA Psychiatry | JAMA NetworkLisa Feldman Barrett: You aren't at the mercy of your emotions -- your brain creates them | TED TalkJames Gross on emotion regulation - YouTubeThe Jekyll and Hyde of emotional intelligence: emotion-regulation knowledge facilitates both prosocial and interpersonally deviant behavior. - PubMed - NCBIEmotional Intelligence - Daniel GolemanEmpathic Accuracy and Observed Demand Behavior in Couples — Ickes W., Simpson J. (1997). Managing empathic accuracy in close relationships, in Empathic Accuracy, ed Ickes W., editor. (New York, NY: Guilford; ), 218–250.Emotional Intelligence Quiz | Greater Good MagazineJingle-Jangle Fallacies for Non-Cognitive FactorsEmotional Intelligence in Organizations | Annual Review of Organizational Psychology and Organizational BehaviorThe Emotionally Intelligent Decision Maker: Emotion-Understanding Ability Reduces the Effect of Incidental Anxiety on Risk Taking - Jeremy A. Yip, Stéphane Côté, 2013Chapter 1 Emotional intelligence and wise emotion regulation in the workplace | Individual and Organizational Perspectives on Emotion Management and DisplayPaul Bloom - Against Empathy | Boston Review","content_html":"

Are emotions simply bugs in the system that prevent us from taking wise decisions? Or do they play an essential role in guiding us towards the wisest path? In short, should we be like hyper-rational cool-headed Mr Spock, or more like the emotionally sensitive Master Yoda? How much can we even observe and guide our emotions as they unfold anyway? And are emotionally intelligent geniuses necessarily more moral than the rest of us? Stéphane Côté joins Igor and Charles to discuss the science of emotional intelligence, machiavellian deviants, emotional super-readers, deep-acting vs surface-acting emotional management, and why you can't hide your motivations from airport customs agents. Igor uncovers the mechanics of the jingle-jangle fallacy, Stéphane warns of the 'danger zones' highly empathic people enter when discussing the attractiveness of friends with their partners, and Charles finally understands why you shouldn’t sit opposite someone you don’t like in a team meeting. Welcome to Episode 4.

Special Guest: Stéphane Côté.

Links:

","summary":"Are emotions simply bugs in the system that prevent us from taking wise decisions? Or do they play an essential role in guiding us towards the wisest path? In short, should we be like hyper-rational cool-headed Mr Spock, or more like the emotionally sensitive Master Yoda? How much can we even observe and guide our emotions as they unfold anyway? And are emotionally intelligent geniuses necessarily more moral than the rest of us? Stéphane Côté joins Igor and Charles to discuss the science of emotional intelligence, machiavellian deviants, emotional super-readers, deep-acting vs surface-acting emotional management, and why you can't hide your motivations from airport customs agents. Igor uncovers the mechanics of the jingle-jangle fallacy, Stéphane warns of the 'danger zones' highly empathic people enter when discussing the attractiveness of friends with their partners, and Charles finally understands why you shouldn’t sit opposite someone you don’t like in a team meeting. Welcome to Episode 4.","date_published":"2018-05-11T11:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/77d38047-529e-4da6-a5ae-a2f26dbdc70e.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":30726881,"duration_in_seconds":3789}]},{"id":"996f1303-07ff-4778-bf3a-69b273c1f8d3","title":"Episode 3: On Death (with Laura Blackie)","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/3","content_text":"Why do we avoid thinking about our own death? How does contemplating our own mortality change our day-to-day behaviour? Why do drivers, when reminded of the fact that they will die, actually drive even faster? Whilst society typically hides death from us, might certain death reflection scenarios actually lead to the development of wisdom? Laura Blackie has considered these and many related questions, and joins Igor and Charles to discuss Terror Management Theory, Death Reflection, and the potential upsides of contemplating our own demise. Igor dismisses a death clock which tells him he won't live as long as Charles, Laura outlines the possible prosocial benefits of imagining a painful and horrible death, and Charles admits to spending too much time thinking about whether his funeral will be well attended. Welcome to Episode 3.Special Guest: Laura Blackie.Links:Laura Blackie - The University of NottinghamThe Death Clock: Calculate your life expectancy todayThe Influence of a Sense of Time on Human Development | ScienceTerror Management Theory - Greenberg & ArndtSpecific and Individuated Death Reflection Fosters Identity IntegrationGreed, death, and values: from terror management to transcendence management theory. - PubMed - NCBISelf-affirmation and mortality salience: affirming values reduces worldview defense and death-thought accessibility. - PubMed - NCBI","content_html":"

Why do we avoid thinking about our own death? How does contemplating our own mortality change our day-to-day behaviour? Why do drivers, when reminded of the fact that they will die, actually drive even faster? Whilst society typically hides death from us, might certain death reflection scenarios actually lead to the development of wisdom? Laura Blackie has considered these and many related questions, and joins Igor and Charles to discuss Terror Management Theory, Death Reflection, and the potential upsides of contemplating our own demise. Igor dismisses a death clock which tells him he won't live as long as Charles, Laura outlines the possible prosocial benefits of imagining a painful and horrible death, and Charles admits to spending too much time thinking about whether his funeral will be well attended. Welcome to Episode 3.

Special Guest: Laura Blackie.

Links:

","summary":"Why do we avoid thinking about our own death? How does contemplating our own mortality change our day-to-day behaviour? Why do drivers, when reminded of the fact that they will die, actually drive even faster? Whilst society typically hides death from us, might certain death reflection scenarios actually lead to the development of wisdom? Laura Blackie has considered these and many related questions, and joins Igor and Charles to discuss Terror Management Theory, Death Reflection, and the potential upsides of contemplating our own demise. Igor dismisses a death clock which tells him he won't live as long as Charles, Laura outlines the possible prosocial benefits of imagining a painful and horrible death, and Charles admits to spending too much time thinking about whether his funeral will be well attended. Welcome to Episode 3.\r\n","date_published":"2018-04-25T11:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/996f1303-07ff-4778-bf3a-69b273c1f8d3.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":26170782,"duration_in_seconds":3220}]},{"id":"af1f6528-2862-4bc6-bd57-874324da26bf","title":"Episode 2: The Paradox of Ageing","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/2","content_text":"Does wisdom really come with age? Or is this an outdated myth from a bygone era? How might wisdom develop in a brain that's ageing? Or perhaps by 'age', are we really talking about 'experience'? If so, do all experiences lead to wisdom, or only bad ones? If old people can be foolish, can young people ever be wise? And how on earth do you even gather reliable evidence across generations? Igor brings sad news of declining brain function to anyone over 25 and cautions against seeking out traumatic experiences as a strategy for developing wisdom, whilst Charles is forced to rethink his whole position on Jude Law. Welcome to Episode 2.Links:The Science of Older and Wiser - The New York Times - Vivian ClaytonOlder and Wiser? Integrating Results on the Relationship between Age and Wisdom-related Performance: International Journal of Behavioral Development: Vol 23, No 3Erikson, in His Own Old Age, Expands His View of LifeThe Fascination of Wisdom: Its Nature, Ontogeny, and Function - Paul B. Baltes, Jacqui Smith, 2008Wisdom in Context - Igor Grossmann, 2017Perceived Control Over Aging-Related Declines: Adaptive Beliefs and Behaviors - Margie E. Lachman, 2006THE MYTH OF THE AGED SAGE: Does older really mean wiser? « evidence-based wisdomOlder & Wiser « evidence-based wisdom - Infographic","content_html":"

Does wisdom really come with age? Or is this an outdated myth from a bygone era? How might wisdom develop in a brain that's ageing? Or perhaps by 'age', are we really talking about 'experience'? If so, do all experiences lead to wisdom, or only bad ones? If old people can be foolish, can young people ever be wise? And how on earth do you even gather reliable evidence across generations? Igor brings sad news of declining brain function to anyone over 25 and cautions against seeking out traumatic experiences as a strategy for developing wisdom, whilst Charles is forced to rethink his whole position on Jude Law. Welcome to Episode 2.

Links:

","summary":"Does wisdom really come with age? Or is this an outdated myth from a bygone era? How might wisdom develop in a brain that's ageing? Or perhaps by 'age', are we really talking about 'experience'? If so, do all experiences lead to wisdom, or only bad ones? If old people can be foolish, can young people ever be wise? And how on earth do you even gather reliable evidence across generations? Igor brings sad news of declining brain function to anyone over 25 and cautions against seeking out traumatic experiences as a strategy for developing wisdom, whilst Charles is forced to rethink his whole position on Jude Law. Welcome to Episode 2.\r\n","date_published":"2018-04-22T10:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/af1f6528-2862-4bc6-bd57-874324da26bf.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":27453500,"duration_in_seconds":3380}]},{"id":"fc890906-11ac-4ed5-b767-64592cc972d7","title":"Episode 1: Wisdom vs Intelligence","url":"https://onwisdompodcast.fireside.fm/1","content_text":"What's the difference between someone who's smart and someone who's wise? If you can you be intelligent without being wise, can you be wise without also being intelligent? If wisdom's so essential for taking good decisions, what's driving our exclusive obsession with intelligence? And which is really more helpful in our daily lives? Igor describes some surprising fighter-plane-based scenarios when wisdom is as useless as intelligence and Charles explains how open-ended questioning in the classroom comes with its own unique set of risks. Welcome to Episode 1 of the On Wisdom podcast.Links:Wisdom and Intelligence: The Nature and Function of Knowledge in the Later Years - Vivian Clayton, 1983Herbert Simon | The EconomistGeorg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel - WikipediaJ. Intell. | Free Full-Text | The Strengths of Wisdom Provide Unique Contributions to Improved Leadership, Sustainability, Inequality, Gross National Happiness, and Civic Discourse in the Face of Contemporary World ProblemsA model of educational leadership: Wisdom, intelligence, and creativity, synthesized: International Journal of Leadership in Education: Vol 8, No 4A route to well-being: intelligence versus wise reasoning. - PubMed - NCBIg factor (psychometrics) - Wikipedia","content_html":"

What's the difference between someone who's smart and someone who's wise? If you can you be intelligent without being wise, can you be wise without also being intelligent? If wisdom's so essential for taking good decisions, what's driving our exclusive obsession with intelligence? And which is really more helpful in our daily lives? Igor describes some surprising fighter-plane-based scenarios when wisdom is as useless as intelligence and Charles explains how open-ended questioning in the classroom comes with its own unique set of risks. Welcome to Episode 1 of the On Wisdom podcast.

Links:

","summary":"What's the difference between someone who's smart and someone who's wise? If you can you be intelligent without being wise, can you be wise without also being intelligent? If wisdom's so essential for taking good decisions, what's driving our exclusive obsession with intelligence? And which is really more helpful in our daily lives? Igor describes some surprising fighter-plane-based scenarios when wisdom is as useless as intelligence and Charles explains how open-ended questioning in the classroom comes with its own unique set of risks. Welcome to Episode 1 of the On Wisdom podcast.","date_published":"2018-04-20T16:00:00.000-04:00","attachments":[{"url":"https://aphid.fireside.fm/d/1437767933/6e7bd116-2782-4422-a140-42f329164842/fc890906-11ac-4ed5-b767-64592cc972d7.mp3","mime_type":"audio/mp3","size_in_bytes":29818214,"duration_in_seconds":3676}]}]}