At a glance
WHAT IT’S REALLY ABOUT
From Bedridden Atheist to Cosmic Theorist: Howard Bloom Unleashed
- Joe Rogan interviews author and thinker Howard Bloom, who recounts his 15-year battle with severe ME/CFS that left him unable to talk or tolerate human presence, and how he rebuilt his life, work, and personality entirely from bed via the early internet.
- Bloom details the experimental drug, supplement, sleep, and lifestyle protocol that pulled him out of illness and now lets him do 400–700 pushups a day in his mid-70s while writing books and working on space projects.
- The conversation ranges from ecstatic states, Hitler’s mass psychology, rock stars as secular shamans, global brain and bacterial intelligence, to his heretical views on entropy, quantum physics, extraterrestrials, and climate change as an end-times-style belief system.
- Throughout, Bloom frames himself as an “eagle” synthesizing many fields at once, arguing that humans are tools-using, meaning-seeking animals who must own their technological role in shaping both civilization and the planet’s future.
IDEAS WORTH REMEMBERING
5 ideasSevere chronic illness can force a total reinvention of identity and work.
Bedridden for 15 years with ME/CFS, Bloom lost his ability to talk or be around people and had to rebuild a new ‘self’ online, working horizontally from bed with jury‑rigged computers, ultimately founding scientific groups and writing multiple books.
Recovery from complex conditions may depend on individualized, iterative protocols.
With doctors largely at a loss, Bloom self‑experimented with a CFS specialist, ending up on a tailored regimen (oxytocin, magnesium, B12 injections, gabapentin, amitriptyline, strict sleep and walking routines) that worked for him but that he stresses is not a universal cure.
Ecstasy and transcendence are powerful social forces that can be used for good or evil.
Bloom argues Hitler deliberately engineered mass ecstasies similar in structure to religious revivals and rock concerts, and that artists and performers tap the same circuitry—his job in music PR was to find the ‘soul that dances you’ and make it accessible on and off stage.
Human intelligence is deeply collective, extending beyond individual brains.
He describes a ‘global brain’ in which humans, microbes, animals (like bees and baboons), and technologies co‑evolve, exchanging information and shaping each other’s behavior—down to gut bacteria influencing cravings and mood.
Some scientific “laws” may be closer to cultural metaphors than eternal truths.
Bloom contests the standard view of entropy and aspects of quantum theory that rely on isolated particles, arguing the universe is fundamentally social and anti‑entropic—constantly building larger, more complex structures instead of inexorably sliding into disorder.
WORDS WORTH SAVING
5 quotesThe first rule of science is the truth at any price, including the price of your life.
— Howard Bloom
You have no idea how much of your personality is your body and your vocal cords until they’re gone.
— Howard Bloom
My job in rock and roll was secular shamanism: find that soul inside you that dances you.
— Howard Bloom
This universe doesn’t run on entropy; it takes every form of waste and turns it into an opportunity.
— Howard Bloom
A country that dreams big goes big. A country that looks up goes up. A country that looks down goes down.
— Howard Bloom
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