EVERY SPOKEN WORD
120 min read · 24,045 words- 0:00 – 0:31
Intro
- DMDavid McRaney
It's when, uh, you have a group of people, and most of the people in the group believe that most of the people in the group believe something that, in fact, very few of the people in the group believe. But since most of the people in the group believe that everybody else in the group believes this, everyone acts as if everybody believes it, and you end up following a norm that nobody likes. (wind blows)
- CWChris Williamson
David McRaney, welcome to the show.
- DMDavid McRaney
Thank you so much. I am very honored to be here in company that shares a lot of my obsessions. I feel there's a Venn diagram with a lot of overlap here right now and that- that's always cool.
- 0:31 – 8:55
What is a Belief?
- DMDavid McRaney
- CWChris Williamson
When you say that someone holds a belief, like the belief that our interests heavily overlap in a Venn diagram, what does that mean? What- what- what is a belief?
- DMDavid McRaney
(laughs) This is the best opening question I've received so far, I want you to know. Uh, why would a c- I'll- I'll say the same thing back to you that was said to me when I first asked a researcher this, someone who had 45 years of research into just beliefs. Uh, which, and they said, "Hoo, that is a tough one." Um, that was Jim Alcock who I asked. Uh, I thought he'd be the f- greatest person to go to at first with these questions. It's one of the reasons why the book takes such a long arc getting to a authoritative voice is that I thought it would be a book where I just went and asked experts- experts those questions. They tell me the answers, I'd find the relevant literature, I'd translate it in a fun, uh, approachable voice, and boom, you have a book. Uh, that is not how it turned out, because it turned out I was asking questions that have either ins- incredibly complex answers or no answers yet. When it comes to that, in particular, this thing I told you where I feel that I- we have a strong overlap, uh, I could say that there's a belief there. There certainly are some fact-based information encoded things in my brain that have emotional qualities of certainty attached to them involved in that proposition, but also, I'm also expressing an attitude. I'm also expressing how I feel strongly in one direction or another, that I have these positive and negative, uh, evaluations of what I'm presenting to you. I'm also expressing a little bit of things in there about values. I'm expressing some- some notions of what is and isn't so in- in every direction. So, when it comes to just the raw fact-based thing, it's a huge assumption I'm making based off of information I've received so far in this conversation, and also from knowing a little bit about you and sharing some of our shared interests beforehand, and also, we've developed a little bit of trust and a little bit of rapport, so that I have all these cues that are translating into a sub-emotional f- state of certainty about all these bullet points that pile up into something we would call in common parlance the belief that we have an overlapping (laughs) Venn diagram of b- of obsessions. That's the complicated answer.
- CWChris Williamson
What's the breakdown that you went through there? It seems like there's component parts that are making this up.
- DMDavid McRaney
Yeah, like, I think it- the reason I like to talk about it like this is, uh, though this book is about how minds change, and I was very adamant that that would be the c- the- the cover and the title, that it would be How Minds Change, not How To Change People's Minds. I did not want to write a book that was the modern version of How To Win Friends And Influence People. I didn't wanna do a retread of the, uh, Cialdini influence type stuff. I was actually interested in how do minds change, whether or not that's through persuasion, whether or not that's through propaganda, whether or not that's through activism. And despite that, that tends to be what people are- are- are r- that would- tends to be the entry point that a lot of people are coming to the book, and I get that. We're in a very contentious, polarized time, and that's something people wanna think about and learn more about. But when you use the phrase how minds change, that becomes a, just like the previous answer, becomes a very nuanced and complicated, uh, concept, because some cultures don't really, uh, frame it that way, and when I think about the idea that I've either changed my mind, or I want to change someone's mind, or I have changed someone's mind, or I- or anything in the- using that phrase, I found that when people were getting most frustrated with other people, when they were attempting to change their mind in some way, that frustration often came from assuming they were trying to change their- a belief, when really they were trying to change an attitude. Or, there was an assumption in that conversation that we were taking our- our fact-based conclusions and having them do battle with one another, the way, like, maybe a scientist would. The, maybe a, uh, a prosecutor and- and a defense lawyer would. When really, what's often taking place is, well, we're having a battle of justifications. We're having a battle of- of reasoned justifications for why we think, feel, and believe something, and if you keep going backwards through the processing chain, you'll find oftentimes that what's motivating that, uh, is some sort of attitude or value set or some sort of experience, some sort of thing that you can't help but feel, and that has led you to cherry pick evidence over time until you have some things that seem like justifications, and when you approach another person, that's where the, uh, the contentious battle takes place. I'm gonna throw these links at you. You're gonna throw those links at me. I'm gonna say, "Watch this YouTube video." You're gonna say, "Watch this one." But the reason those things resonate for us are because something within us, under- and- you know, there's- it's in the book, it's- it's- we used a- a model called the SERV-PAD to describe this, something within us led us to those things, and if that's not part of the conversation, what is probably gonna take place is nothing useful. Uh, the debate will end up being both parties feel more right than wrong than they did before they started, and neither person moves any direction at all. They just become more entrenched in whatever they had coming into the conversation.
- CWChris Williamson
What's an example of how somebody could be... Let's say they were having a discussion about any topic you want. What's an example of how I could be speaking from a- an attitude and you could be speaking from a belief or from whatever else?
- DMDavid McRaney
Sure. Like, uh, I mean it's something that we all experienced here recently was, were vaccines, right? Um, and COVID, and I spent time with people who were anti-vaxxers before, uh, it was COVID anti-vaxxer stuff, it was MMR stuff, and I spent time with researchers who studied the impact of different, uh, messaging and all that. Oftentimes what will happen is someone you'll... This is just sort of a, a broad generalization here, but you might, and approach someone who is an anti-vaxxer who, and you say, "Well, why are you an anti-vaxxer?" And they'll say, "Because vaccines cause autism," or something to that effect, and then you'll say, "Well, why, why is this?" And then they'll start laying out where they heard it or all the evidence they feel that supports that proposition, and they present it to you as if that's how, that's why they feel the way they feel. But probably, but usually what's happened is somewhere along the line, it, they've... And there are a million different psychological processes that, that lead up to this consistency bias and the, uh, introspection illusion, and, uh, all sorts of memory things that, that fall into place. There's the, uh, belief change blindness is an actual term, where it feels like, yeah, you were like Gandalf or something, and you went to the bottom of your vast library and you read a bunch of scrolls and you, th- and you wrote out this thesis and went, "Aha, this is what I believe about vaccines." But what probably is going on is that you, you had a strong feeling and a strong negative affect, a strong negative attitude that then, uh, which could be in- uh, influenced by experiences you've had, but it could also just be influenced by elites and your, or, or cultural norms or, or social costs and rewards, or just raw fears that you may have about, um, authority, uh, uh, and some sort of raw fear you have about medical practices. The idea of losing agency, the idea of, of all these things being combined into something you don't quite understand that's going to be in a needle that's going to puncture the flesh of your child against your will. These things led you to look for justifications for that anxiety, justifications, reasonable justifications that you could argue in front of your trusted peers, and then you find this thing, you say, "Ah, that really justifies what I think about this." And then when someone asks you, "Why do you feel this way?" that's what you present. "This is the thing that led me to the feeling," when really it was the feeling that led you to the thing. And we do that too when we think we're being reasonable, and when two people disagree on something, that's often where the, the sparks fly is that these, uh, we have the process backwards and then we argue backwards in a way that doesn't really solve much.
- 8:55 – 16:27
Finding Truth in the Information Era
- CWChris Williamson
Do you think that because the modern world has more information than we've ever had before and there are more things that can justify our feelings, is that one of the reason why we have such a multiplicity of viewpoints and also people feeling really ingrained in their beliefs and, and feeling super sort of fractured and fragmented and unable to work out what the truth is?
- DMDavid McRaney
A little. I mean, yes, yes and no. I mean, it's, it's, it's just different, right, than, than it used to be. And-
- CWChris Williamson
How's it different?
- DMDavid McRaney
... I'm, um, I'm, um, I'm weirdly optimistic in that I think that this is a phase that we'll get through because we've had things that have disrupted the information ecosystem before. Um, the way it's different, one of the big things that makes it different is we can form groups around anxieties much more quickly than we ever could before, and then, uh, tribal psychology, group psychology, in-group out-group psychology will then take precedence. It'll become the more motivating factor than the thing that led us into the group in the first place. That's something that is really hyper-present in the current information ecosystem and the social media ecosystem that we're in, and the, the fact that we've... that misinformation has always been an issue or that, uh, truth has very been di- that the truth has been difficult to figure out has always been part of the human experience. But it was Tom Stafford who, uh, told me, and it's a great quote. I'll, I'll, I'm not doing it verbatim because I'm trying to remember it, but he said something to the effect of, um, it's like germs before cities, in hi- in his mind. Like, germs were always a problem, sanitation was always a problem, but when we had cities and we started living in, in large groups and we were interacting in a new way, that's when that became a, uh, a real public health issue that had to be addressed. And not only did the cities have to address it at the level of cities, but so did the citizens have to address it at the level of washing your hands and being good citizens who were clean. Well, he said he feels that it's almost... it- it's very similar as what's happening with mi- misinformation, that misinformation has always been a problem in human groups, in one-to-one interactions, and thanks to this new way of interacting with each other that is at scale where we have more contact with people who see the world differently than us or ha- we have more information outlets than ever before, lots of the information gatekeepers have collapsed, then we will have to learn the informational equivalent of washing our hands and also the contexts, the places in which we meet will have to do a better job of sanitation. So I think in that regard, that's a big deal. The other side of that, a- and I know that's a long-winded answer, but there's another element of all this which is, um, when we feel a strong anxiety, uh, like, I li- I liking it, I liken it to, like, if you're in a tent and, um, you hear a strange sound in the woods, you get this visceral negative feeling and you're like, "Mm, what is that i-" And you feel anxious, you feel, uh, negative emotions. And because we're a social primate, one of the things you want to do is you want to go searching for justification f- for that feeling, th- th- that, that your reaction to it is reasonable, that your heightened state of alarm is reasonable. And reasonable means...... literally coming up with reasons for why you are responding in that way. So you might go out with a flashlight or if it's a different era, you know, a torch, or if it's a different era than nothing at all, and you will try to find some sort of something to... some sort of evidence that backs up your, your reasoning. You do that in the modern information environment and anything that causes great anxiety, for some people, w- s- people, some people who a- are very prejudiced, and they have anxieties about things that are, uh, seem heinous and strange. Some people are just simply fearful or hesitant about certain things that it seems like, of course you would be. You go online looking for other... for, for... first of all, you look for reasons why... the things that would justify that feeling, and you'll find it, of course you will, but more so than that, you will find other people doing the same search and you'll join their search parties, and then now you have a community and the communities are something that's pretty new. Like, there's always been, like, conspiracy theories back and forth all over the place, but you know, you had to go to the library and f- find somebody in your hometown, something. The idea that you can very quickly form a... jump into a group of a million people having conversations about it, where you can deeply radicalize each other is something pretty new.
- CWChris Williamson
What do you mean when you talk about a post-truth world?
- DMDavid McRaney
I actually am one of those people who... I don't like post-truth as a term. I, I think, uh... I don't think we're in a post-truth world any more than we have ever been. I think we're in a post-trust world, uh, which in some ways ends up being the same thing, I guess. The... there's a great researcher, uh, named Kate Starbird who talked to me about how, um, well, a lot of what we see in online behavior is similar to what happens after, um, a crisis situation, uh, uh, a natural disaster or a ship sinking or a building burning, like we enter into a, a... we become g- aware that there are information voids as she puts it, and we sort of recalibrate our epistemological approach to figuring out what's going on to being okay with rumors, and... 'cause there's, 'cause there's... the information is hard to co- the, the actual accurate information is kind of hard to come by and you need to respond quickly and you're really motivated to lower your anxiety. So you, um, you start modulating what you're d- what you're going to do based off of trust more than base... well, more than truth. So like you, someone tells you, "Hey, uh, I heard you can get water here," or, "I heard that you should go, uh, down these steps over this way," or, "I heard that what happened was this," and you, you... if this person seems like... if they're somebody you've known for a long time, you'll know what kind of expertise they have and you'll modulate your behavior based off what trust you have in that information. If it's somebody who's telling you they heard it from somewhere else, you'll very quickly say like, "Where did you hear that?" Because you want to know if you can trust the source, and... whereas if it's like a firefighter or a policeman or a soldier or something in a situation like that, you'd be much more likely to just go with it. And that's something that's similar now, but in the... in that we have a lot of anxieties, a lot of... w- we're on edge in a lot of ways, and the information gatekeepers, like I said before, have, have sort of collapsed. It's a very fragmented information environment. So we're modulating a lot of what we plan to do and also what we believe on trust, and the bandying trust back and forth has become very valuable in that space. So it's not so much post-trust as... uh, post-truth as... it's, uh, post-trust. It's very... we're all trying to figure out who can we trust and we're all very eager and sensitive to when people violate the trust that we put in them, and we're very quick to say, "Okay, well, I'm not trusting you anymore. I'm not taking any more information from that source." So that's my f- current, that's my current thinking on things. That's, that's one of the things I proselytize and talk about in the book.
- CWChris Williamson
I like that framing. I think that in... what I, what I see online is a lot of people who are s-... their grift radar or their, their shill alarm is hyper-attuned, you know. As soon as they see that somebody might have perverse incentives or that they think that they're doing something for the wrong reasons, they're very, very quick to get rid of them. And I... once you sell your integrity on the internet, it's very difficult to buy it back, at least with people that have good memories. Now, that's not to say that you can't capture an audience and then continue to push a, a narrative to them which is untrue,
- 16:27 – 21:48
Is More Information Actually Beneficial?
- CWChris Williamson
um, but does more information help then? 'Cause we have access to more information than ever before. Surely people's minds should be more accurate than they've ever been.
- DMDavid McRaney
(laughs) Yeah, you would think. Uh, that was the dream for, for, uh, many generations. Uh, I talk about that in the book. The, um, the 19th century rationalist philosophers, the founding fathers of the United States, um, the cyberpunk, uh, champions of the 1990s and beyond, they all had this sort of similar dream. The, like the, the founders, they w- they were like, "If we have public libraries, then everybody will be able to have, have the same amount of information that you'd ha- used to have to be, uh, a fancy pants elite person who went to a school." But now everyone has it. Th- those... or you had to be rich and have a library at home and th- so their dream was like, "Everybody has a library in their hometown now. Everybody will have access to all the same information and democracy will finally flourish and blossom." The 19th century philosophers, they were very into the idea of public education. "If we just make it so that you... everybody gets some basic schooling, then everybody will have access to all the facts and the facts will, will... everybody will agree on what those facts mean and, uh, enlightenment for all." Then, uh, and th- then the cyberpunks, they were like, "Okay, when we get the internet, we will no longer have these three p- three news stations that tell you what's going on. People will go... will have all the information available, all the, uh, the w- the world's... the Library of Alexandria of a new age will be upon us and it... we'll all have all the same facts. We'll all agree on what those facts mean and then we will enter into a cyber enlightenment and we'll go to the moons of Jupiter together." The idea... the... this r- this, this is something that I... it's called the information deficit hypothesis.... and it's the idea that the reason people are wrong is because they don't have the facts yet. You give them all the facts, and then they'll change their minds and be right. Um, but the problem here is that we're motivated reasoners, and we don't just accept evidence because it's evidence. We accept evidence based off of all the motivations we bring to the table when we come looking to justify something or create... cons- consider what's rational. We worry about the social groups we're part of. We worry about our standing within those social groups. We are approaching it from all the experiences we've had so far, and all the ignorances we have inside of us. So, we will either assimilate or accommodate based off all those things, and the facts by themselves j- th- well, the facts just don't speak for themselves. That's all that it comes down to it. Somebody always speaks for them, and, um, the same evidence in front of two different sets of eyeballs may be interpreted completely differently. We know this just from what... From like, there are a thousand studies where they show people a video of something, and, uh, the video, like, the, uh, uh, some of my favorite research, they show people protesting. But the protestors, you can't tell what the protestors are protesting exactly. It just looks like some people protesting, and then they will prime the groups. They'll a- they'll get people who are strongly left or strongly right on the political spectrum, and then they'll d- subdivide that to say, to some of them they'll say, "These people are protesting against something you are a big believer in," or you'll say, "They're protesting, protesting for it." And you can imagine what happens there. Depending on how you tell people what the people are doing in the video, they see the video as, as evidence of something completely different compared to the other person. You prime a person to think that these are people protesting against something you believe in, and you will have all these negative emotions, and you'll, you'll find that, that what's going on in the video is heinous and terrible. And th- then all th- and you'll see things the other people don't see. It all goes back to that old research about they saw a game, where they had people, uh, watch a football game, and, uh, they had to count how many times the ho- the home team or the away team, uh, uh, did naughty things. And depending on which one you're, uh, a member of, the, the, the support for one team or the other, you saw a different game. And that was actually, that was the title of the paper. They Saw a Game, but they di- they... The same video, different game. Even though it's right there. And we saw this all throughout politics in the, especially in the, um, all the, the trials and things that took place during the Trump era. All the, uh, the, the hearings. Like, you would, you would... There was all this... I remember on social media, there was all this, uh, excitement on the left for like, "Finally, the, like, this, this will... Finally, this video will come out. We will all watch it, and, and they'll all see the truth." But, of course, like, it comes out, we all watch the same video, and everybody sees something else in it. Some people see it as, "Oh, see? I told you. Trump's great." And other people watch it and go, "Oh, see? I told you. Trump's terrible." Same video, same evidence, different interpretations. And I get it. For... I understand that for a long time, it felt like all we needed was more facts, but that's why facts are not the way to get into these things if you have no concern, no cognitive empathy for the fact that people will interpret things through a lens of their priors, through a lens of their motivations and drives.
- CWChris Williamson
I heard someone reverse Shapiro's famous quote the other day that says, "Facts don't care about your feelings." It's that, "Feelings don't care about the facts." It's like-
- DMDavid McRaney
(laughs)
- CWChris Williamson
... "Look, I've got, I've got my position, and fuck you. I don't care. (laughs) I don't care about what you want to do." So, uh,
- 21:48 – 29:34
People are Biased & Lazy
- CWChris Williamson
w- who was the guy that said, um, "People aren't flawed and irrational, they're biased and lazy"?
- DMDavid McRaney
Oh, man. That's Hugo Mercier. Uh, I, I keep promoting my own book, but at the same time, I'm asking people, if you've never read The Enigma of Reason, this is a book you should... If you're, like, a super nerd about all this, like I am, like y- you are, like, you got to get The Enigma of Reason in your brain. Uh, he's also written another book since then called, um, uh, Not Born Yesterday, about, uh, trust in elites and things like that, uh, about, uh, mob behavior and, and the things that... He basically makes a case against it. But the... It was one of the first things that I, that, that... Well, hon- honestly, in How Minds Change, there's a comeuppance. I mean, the book is also a, a, uh, a story about how I had to change my own mind about some things that I was suggesting, that I was putting out there into the world, that I no longer f- feel that way about. Um, and there's a, there's two comeuppances. I, I've, I... (laughs) There's a peanut butter and chocolate of comeuppets in the book. Um, one is, uh, Tom Stafford's work into the truth wins scenario, and the other is Hugo Mercier and Dan Sperber's work in the, into the interactionist model. And the simplest way to, to, to put that out there is, their work puts forth evidence, and they have studies, and they have a whole giant structure, and so it's a great, big, beefy model at this point, that human cognition, um, when it comes to group based reasoning, and the, you know, we, we put our minds together toward common goals, we try to figure out a worldview that we can all agree upon, it's a great, powerful tool that ultra social primates with the gift of language can employ in all sorts of situations. That the selective pressures put on us as we were trying to get better, as we were working to get better and better at that, led to biological structures that lead to cognitive mechanisms that have two broad functions. One is to produce arguments, and the other is to evaluate them. And when we produce arguments, we produce them in a very biased and lazy way, which is not the same as flawed and irrational, which is... I was part of that whole pop psychology, uh, wave, uh, 10, 12 years ago, of books about... That were all like, "Hey, do you... Can you believe how flawed we are? Can you believe how silly we are? Uh, can you believe we lock our keys in the car and we send emails to people we shouldn't have? And then we also cause climate change." So (laughs) that was like the, the big push of like, "Be careful, we're very irrational creatures." But as they put it, like, it- it's actually quite rational, and it's working exactly as it evolved to work.... to, when you are faced with the possibility of disagreement, or you're trying to, to deliberate and come to consensus, that each individual would put forth a very biased argument, which means it's very strongly from their perspective, very strongly from their experiences and their concerns. And it would be very lazy, in that it's going to be the easiest thing that they put forth, the thing they can justify the easiest in the moment. That takes very little cognitive labor, and then you dump that into an, a argument pool, and then the other mechanisms work inside that pool, where you, everybody evaluates things very carefully. And in that situation, you offload all the cognitive labor to the group-based process. The, uh, they, they have great studies where, uh, they're mentioned in the book, like, where you have people, uh, they will have them produce arguments and then (laughs) they will trick them into thinking the arguments are someone else's arguments. And if they think it's their argument, they will, almost 100% of the time, um, say, "Yeah, this is great. I don't see anything wrong with this." If they're tricked into thinking somebody else, uh, produced that argument, somewhere in the 70% range, they'll find all the, all of the flaws and, uh, and illogical things, and, uh, and fallacies and everything, and then, and say, "See? What are you thinking here?" Ba, ba, ba, ba, ba, ba. What matter- why that matters in a modern discourse is that many of the platforms in which we engage with one another in these ways, they're just built to incentivize argument production, but not really argument evaluation. The, there are, the, and the re- and it's for the same reason that I was wrong about this for so long. Most of the studies that I, uh, wrote about in blog posts and, and were in books, just like every other, everybody else writing at the time, this, the literature we were pulling from, those studies were done on large groups of people, but each person was being studied in isolation. Like, you'd give them a problem from the cognitive reflection task, or you would present them with something like the Wason, you know, task, or some- one of these things that are very popular in psychology, and you would demonstrate it as, alone, an, uh, an individual reasoner would very often, the majority of the time, get these things incorrect. But as, uh, that's the other side of the peanut butter and chocolate of my comeuppance, is that Tom Stafford has demonstrated, which is, this plays with Hugo Mercier's research, that if you take those exact same studies and you give them to groups, then the group, what usually will happen to... Uh, like, if you, if you study a large group of people and most of them get the thing wrong, or they, they commit some sort of cognitive bias reasoning thing, that small, there is a sm- a percentage of them that don't do that. And in isolation, that doesn't really help anybody, but if you have a group of people, and I've done this. I've done lectures with, uh, y- I've used this as a gr- it's really fun. I'll take, uh, like, the widget problem, uh, or just something simple like-
- CWChris Williamson
What's the widget problem?
- DMDavid McRaney
Uh, if it takes five machines five minutes to make, uh, five widgets, how long would it take 100 machines to make 100 widgets? Uh, and if you ask that to people individually, about 70% of people will get it incorrect. If you w- uh, 'cause you tr- start trying to do math when it's, when really you, it's just the same thing repeated, so it's just five minutes, so there's all, it's, it's, but, and what I'll do is I'll ask a group of people this question, and then I'll say, "Alone, come up with an answer," and sometimes I'll put them into smaller groups, but, uh, it's, uh, it works even better when you do the entire audience. And then I'll ask, "Is there anyone here who feels like they have the right answer? And I mean they really feel it." And then when that person raises their hand, I'll bring a microphone out to them and say, "Tell me what the answer is." They'll say, "Five minutes." And then you'll hear the whole audience go, "Uh, uh, uh, uh, uh, uh." And then (laughs) I'll say, uh, "Please explain your reasoning," and then they all explain it in detail, and then the whole audience goes, "Ah, uh, uh." And then I can say to them, "Yes, research, the latest research shows that what just happened here was most of us were wrong, and because we were able to reason as a group in a, in a way that was, uh, we created this good faith, trusting rapport, strong rapport environment, now we're all right. We went from all, almost all wrong to almost all right." And this is just something that has been difficult to reproduce in online contexts, and there's, there are many organizations working on it, but the current version of, like, Twitter and the Facebook, and, and all the others, it's just more, it's very similar to the isolated thing, where we're, it's a bunch of individual people who feel like we're talking to each other, but we're really just kind of argu- taking our bias and lazy arguments and throwing them on a big pile and seeing what happens next. And the evaluation is rarely about the logic or the reasoning process. It's more about, like, "Are you saying that you're in this group or that group right now? I'm trying to figure out if, if, if we're, it, it, that's where it's all... Uh, it's not that, that we couldn't do it otherwise, it's just that's what's incentivized right now. That's what creates engagement and that's what sells advertisements, and that's sort of where it's at. It can change, and I think that hopefully we will change it, but that's where I'm at with it.
- 29:34 – 36:05
Studying the Westboro Baptist Church
- DMDavid McRaney
- CWChris Williamson
Well, think about what a lot of tribal beliefs actually are. They're shows of fealty to your own side. It's proof to your compatriots that you value the group consensus over rationality or truth itself, saying, "Look, there may be some counter-evidence against this particular thing, but I am such a loyal, uh, disciple of this, that I'm going to do it." And it's a threat display to your enemies as well. It's saying, "Look."
- DMDavid McRaney
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
"This is me. My beliefs and I are one."
- DMDavid McRaney
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
And to your own side, any deviation from that looks like a lack of commitment, and to the other side it looks like weakness and, um, a lack of understanding of your own argument. So...
- DMDavid McRaney
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
It doesn't surprise me that people become entrenched in things like this. Speaking of which, you did some research about the Westboro Baptist, Baptist Church, didn't you?
- DMDavid McRaney
Oh, um, I, in the book I went to several orga- There's even, there's a chapter that we took out where I went even...... went into several conspira- c- conspiracy theory communities, and, and cults and pseudo-cults. It used to be a strong portion of the book, but that, I was like, "Uh, I'm, I'm, I'm gonna have to write three books to put all this into one thing." So, I, we pared it down to... I spent time with 9/11 conspiracy communities and I spent time with Westboro Baptist Church, and a little bit of that-
- CWChris Williamson
Who are the, who are the Westboro Baptist Church, for the people that don't know?
- DMDavid McRaney
So, um, Westboro Baptist Church is considered the, um, probably the most reviled hate group in America. Um, they are a Baptist church, like any other Baptist church. There's, there's thousands of them all across the United States. But this one in particular, uh, decades ago, began... At first, they were protesting, uh, they, they, they claimed that there were men who were hooking up in their, um, in a park in, uh, out in, in Kansas, in Kansas City. In Topeka, Kansas, I mean. Uh, and they protested it, they, they sent stuff on fax machines to, like, senators and things, and they just got some media attention from that. And that led to them seeking media attention and becoming really good at it, and that escalated to the point where they started protesting everything they could find. They eventually protested the funerals of soldiers coming back from war, and, with signs that would say, "Thank God for dead soldiers," 'cause they were saying America is, is corrupt and polluted, and it all goes back to, uh, LGBTQ issues, which they're very opposed to, the very idea that someone would find someone of the same sex attractive or pursue a romantic relationship with them, and they, they became incredibly vocal, uh, uh, protestors of that, and they're pretty really, really mean about it. Um, they entered America... Most of Americans discovered them when they protested the funeral of Matthew Shepard, who was brutally beaten, uh, and, and killed, uh, just for simply being a gay, a young gay man, and they just protested his funeral, and they were saying, like, "Yay, I'm glad he's in Hell." And that has... Clearly, that made a lot of people go, "Oh, wow, you are some awful human beings."
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs) .
- DMDavid McRaney
But they're so adamant in their protesting and, and they started going online and doing, protesting, like, one-on-one with, on Twitter and Facebook and stuff. Um, it became, uh... It was, it was... Uh, a few of the people in the organization started to leave, and one of them in particular, Megan Phelps-Roper, she left after someone on Twitter extended their hand to her and carefully, empathetically, compassionately guided her out of the organization. And I wanted to talk to her and to scientists who study what happened there because I, I just feel, I felt like... I can under- like, I, I've been frustrated with family members who want to change their minds about all sorts of things. The idea that somebody could leave an organization like that after spending most of their life defending what they feel and believe, I wanted to know what it took, and if that was something that, there were insights there for, for applying it to all sorts of things that we are frustrated with. And, what, what I discovered there was something that... It was the same thing I found in every other, every other person who had left a, a community of that nature, whether it was conspiratorial, cult, religious or whatever. I had this misconception that there must have been something that, that caused them to leave, and then, uh, that they had changed their mind about the group and then they left. But most often what happened was they left the group and then they changed their mind. The influence of the group was less potent on them, and it changed... The goggles they were wearing were replaced by different ones. But the way out of that almost always was so- someone... First of all, didn't approach them with hate and vitriol, and I totally would understand, of course, you'd want to confront somebody that way. They instead confronted them with w- compassionate, empathetic, non-judgmental listening. They would ask them questions. They would not react poorly. They would joke around with them. They would encourage them to deeply introspect as to why they feel the way they feel, and then l- allow that person that they, who, who they're treating that way to discover the inconsistencies on their own, and more, more than anything, discover there were values they held that they could satisfy and affirm outside of the group that they had grown up within or the one they had fell- fallen into. And once a person got on that path, it becomes an off-ramp to get out of something that was making them uncomfortable. There usually was an inciting moment. With, uh, with Megan it was, uh, and many of the people that left Westboro, it was they had made these changes within the organization where they were being, um, oppressed in a way they hadn't been before. Like, they had made changes where women couldn't have certain rights and women couldn't behave in a certain way, um, had to wear certain clothes, the, they had to take on certain jobs, they had to go to school for certain things. Those things were sort of the crack that let in the light, and then... But there still had to be light. There had, still had to be someone who was willing to be empathetic and compassionate and listen to them, that gave them opportunity to entertain a possibility that maybe my values could be better served outside of this group. And once, once you get a taste of that and you actually do attempt to get outside the group for a second and you get validation for it, there's a real strong off-ramp to get out of those groups.
- 36:05 – 47:16
Lessons from The Jim Jones Massacre
- DMDavid McRaney
- CWChris Williamson
Didn't you look at the Jim Jones massacre as well?
- DMDavid McRaney
I did that for the podcast. Man, I, I really wish I could've put it in the book. I, I, it... That deserves its own book, and maybe one day I'll do something like that. Pluralistic ignorance, my favorite term in all of psychology.
- CWChris Williamson
Uh-huh.
- DMDavid McRaney
That's what the Jim Jones thing was about. So pluralistic ignorance in, uh... First of all, hard thing to say, hard words to say, and, uh, and even more difficult, in the podcast I let, like, 20 people give me their definition of this thing because it's... Every definition's different, but it's all the same idea. It's just a hard thing to put into words without having to, like, come up with a million metaphors.... what it comes down to is, it's when the majority of- uh, uh, it's when you have a group of people and most of the people in the group believe that most other people in the group believe something that, in fact, very few of the people in the group believe. But since everyo- most of the people in the group believe that most of everybody else in the group believes this, everyone acts as if everybody believes it, and you end up following a norm that nobody likes. And this is very common, we are all- you and I are both doing it for something right now. Everyone is experiencing this at all times in some way, and it comes down to we hold- we don't always explicitly state how we feel about things, and so we have to make an assumption based off of the cues that people present, and the cues that people present may indicate, "Well, they must believe it. If everybody's doing it, they must actually want to be doing it, right?" So, the- the foundational research in this was about, uh, drinking norms on campuses. Most freshmen can- do not like go- starting, uh, a new college career and then immediately having to get blackout drunk every weekend. Most people do not want to do that, but most people do that and most people do that for a couple years. So, why is everybody doing something that nobody wants to do? Because everybody thinks that everybody else wants to do it except them. Everybody thinks they're the only person that doesn't want to do it, and this is rife all throughout politics. It's rife through everything. And so it's a very fundamental thing that human beings do, and in- on the- on the podcast, um, on You're Not So Smart, I, um, I did a show about this and I wanted to show there was fresh research into this about there's an assumption that The Emperor's New Clothes scenario is how you bust this up. But there's- there's really good research from Rob Willer that shows, uh, it doesn't really do a- like, you can't count on the emperor's new clothes. Sometimes it works, but in the Jim Jones example, there was one woman who stood up. Usually what- like, often what happens is it takes one person, like a stand-up comedian or something to just say out loud, "Hey, are we all really doing this?" And then that- that creates change. The- or it catalyzes change. In the Jim Jones, uh, it was the hardest episode I've ever done because I had to listen to that tape, uh, that you can- I got it through, uh, I got it through legitimate sources, but you can just find it online if you want to get it. Uh, I have links to it on my website too if anybody wants to hear it. It's hard to listen to. One of the reasons it's hard to listen to is because the, uh, they cut- they- they copied over their tapes all the time, so there's this haunting, um, like hymnal spiritual music taking place underneath everything as if it's a music bed but it's just because they- they taped over it so often. And it's hard to listen to because you- you hear everyone arguing about whether or not they're going to commit mass suicide, and then slowly over time everyone gets quieter and quieter until they're- it's silent because they are all dead. And it's not just adults, it's- it was like, uh, like 700 people and 300 children. It was awful, right? Um, and they did it by taking cyanide inside of, uh, Flavor Aid, um, not Kool-Aid as we often say. The reason I did-
- CWChris Williamson
Is that right?
- DMDavid McRaney
That's right, it's flavor- it was Flavor Aid, yeah. Uh, I guess Flavord Ade will forever be thankful that we- that Kool-Aid's a more popular drink because of that, but that's what- that's what they did. And they got-
- CWChris Williamson
Drinking the Flavor Aid, yeah.
- DMDavid McRaney
Drinking the Flavor Aid. Um, what... The reason I did a show about it was the- one woman stood up and said, "Hey, let's not do this. There's only one Jim Jones and there's a thousand of us. Why would we kill ourselves and our children? I think this is crazy, let's not do it." And she was shouted down by the rest of the group, and she also died. They all... And the- in the episode we go into detail about why you would be willing to die for a norm you don't believe in for... And it clearly demonstrates that our belonging goals trump all other goals in certain situations. So we are- we are social primates and that can be, um, whether or not it's intentional, it can... Uh, there's a confluence of psychological, uh, phenomena that can- that can become a perfect storm of- of, uh, mega influence upon us that can lead us to do things like mass suicides.
- CWChris Williamson
I mean, doesn't that show perfectly that social pain or social death is literally scarier than physical death to people?
- DMDavid McRaney
It really is. That's, uh... I'm so glad you said that. Uh, (laughs) uh, Brooke Harrington gave- told me that, and I can't forget it. She said, "If there was an E=MC² of social science, it'd be, uh, the fear of social death is greater than the fear of physical death." And, uh, we are- we are willing to sacrifice ourselves or kill, uh, we're willing to put ourselves in physical harm- uh, put ourselves at risk of physical harm if it means that our reputation will survive beyond us, and we see that in- even when stakes are low, we see that when people are arguing anything from gun control to climate change to fracking, people will do that. But even when the stakes are really high, of course we see it. We see it with the Jim Jones massacre, we see it in all sorts of situations. The... We see it in war, I mean, that's where it comes out the most, right? The... I asked her about that and I said it- it... My metaphor, just to see if I could make sense of it, was I was imagining like if the ship is sinking, like who am I gonna put on the lifeboat? I was like, "I'll put my social self in the lifeboat and then I'll go down with the ship." And- and she's like, "Yeah, that's- that's what we usually pick if we're- if we're given that proposition."
- CWChris Williamson
Well, you can see how, I guess in some situations, this could cause people tribally to do something noble, you know?
- DMDavid McRaney
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
You might save the tribe by stopping some predator that was coming toward it because... Even though you know that you're going to suffer physical pain or potentially death-
- DMDavid McRaney
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
... you know, you're going to do it and-... apart from the drive that you might have family, and you've got sort of this reciprocal altruism thing going on. But on top of that, you know that socially, it's gonna do you pretty well. People are gonna be happy with you when you're- at your funeral.
- DMDavid McRaney
Yeah, uh, the- everything that I've ever written about, uh... I'm taking a note because that was really well put. Uh, uh, the- everything I've ever had written about, these things that we point out as like, "I can't believe people do this," we're pointing out when these things go wrong-
- CWChris Williamson
Yes. Yes.
- DMDavid McRaney
... or when they lead to bad outcomes. But over long timescales, over the entire evolu- evolutionary history of our species, these must have led to... either they were neutral or they led to positive outcomes, because they- they are adaptive in some way.
- CWChris Williamson
Precisely. You had to- you had to not be in a deficit with these things, or else they would have been competed out of the gene pool. The people that did the actions that weren't effective at survival or reproduction are long gone. And maybe- maybe some of those... I often think about this. I often think, "What traits have arisen and then been competed out that in 2022 would be amazing for people to have?"
- DMDavid McRaney
Yeah.
- CWChris Williamson
You know? Like- like, the...
- DMDavid McRaney
(laughs) I've never heard that framing. That's really interesting. I like that.
- CWChris Williamson
Well, think about, you know, like, differences in risk aversion or differences in tribalism or different thresholds for making decisions or-
- DMDavid McRaney
Yeah.
- CWChris Williamson
... changing your mind or holding onto b- p- whatever. All of that stuff. Um, there's been tons, tons, millions of different quirks and changes in our psychological makeup, and our physical makeup as well. You know, there'll have been somebody born at some point in history who probably had 14 fingers.
- DMDavid McRaney
(laughs)
- CWChris Williamson
And you go, well, I mean, wha- you know, wha- what if 14 fi- you'd be able to type really fast on a keyboard.
- DMDavid McRaney
Yeah.
- CWChris Williamson
That'd be pretty useful. But all of these things weren't useful at the time, but I- I often think about, uh, what would have happened if one particular strand had managed to sustain and then it would have become adaptive in the modern era?
- 47:16 – 53:32
The Dynamics of Change & Adaptation
- DMDavid McRaney
adaptive.
- CWChris Williamson
Is there a, um... how would you say? A set point or a current view bias that people hold? I was at this, uh, Heterodox Academy conference this weekend.
- DMDavid McRaney
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
One of the guys said a quote that I absolutely loved that said, "There are many ways to change the world. Few will make it better, many will make it worse."
- DMDavid McRaney
(laughs)
- CWChris Williamson
And the point is that the behavior and the beliefs that you've had have led you up to this point. And no matter how miserable and melancholic your existence has been, you're still alive. So you have some degree of proof that the current way that you're behaving and programming is causing you to move forward in the world is effective, right? I'm not dead, because if I was dead, I couldn't be thinking about whether or not to make this decision.
- DMDavid McRaney
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
So, does that cause people to have, um, like a safety net, uh, uh, a degree of risk aversion for just thinking anything new simply because I know that what I do now has been effective so far?
- DMDavid McRaney
Yeah, definitely. Like, the short answer is yes. And the long- (laughs) and the long answer, minding how much time we have, I will... is that, uh, there is a point called the effect of tipping point, but the... it's- that is... and to make sense of that, we have to quickly talk about assimilation and accommodation. Piaget put this forth. This is- this is... these are... this is... if you ever... if you wanted to- if you wanted to answer how do minds change, this is a pretty straightforward answer. Through assimilation and accommodation. Assimilation is when you encounter something uncertain or novel or ambiguous.... you disambiguate it, you arrive at some level of certainty, and you make it, uh, make sense of it by assimilating it into your current model. And the way I describe it in the book is if a child sees a dog for the first time, uh, and you say, it's like, "What's that?" And you say, "It's a dog," something categorical happens in the mind. It's like four legs, furry, non-human, wagging tail, dog. Then they see a horse, and they've never seen one before, and they just point at it and go, "Dog." That's assimilation, 'cause categorically, it seems like it fits into my model, four legs, non-human, furry, tail. But if you say to the child, "No, that's a horse," now something has to happen which is g- there's a lot of cognitive load in this. There's a, it's a difficult process. You have to create levels of abstraction. There's neural networks have to do stuff. You have to literally expand your mind, 'cause you have to create a category in which both horse and dog can fit, which means you have to create a new perceptual category which expands the range of your understanding of the world. That's called accommodation. So now animals can be named two different things. That's a crazy... And we're doing this at all times. Both things are happening at all times. Some of our conversation makes sense to us because we're assimilating constantly to what we already understand about things. But at certain points, I, if I, especially if I feel challenged or I feel some dissonance, I'm gonna need to accommodate to make sense of what's going on. We typically resist the accommodation 'cause there's more risk in that. Just a- as j- e- exactly as you described. Assimilation is way less risky. Even if it leads me to be factually incorrect, it doesn't lead me to being, uh, dead. (laughs) So like, I can be wrong about stuff. It's better to think that rustling in the bushes is a tiger than to go looking to see if it's, uh, maybe it's a rabbit. I don't know. It's better to stay safe and err on the side of being wrong about that. The, but there is a point at which we can't do that. There's a breaking point called the effective tipping point. In the book, it's a, it's a long answer to what it is, but it comes down to there is a level beyond which, uh, counterfactual or counterattitudinal, uh, information will, will cause you to feel so strongly that you need to update that you will commit to an update. Um, and they call it the effective tipping point. It's, it's a lot. It can be above 30... It's r- a- for raw, neutral, politically neutral information, it's around 30% of the evidence coming in has to be, has to counter the evidence that you've already seen. But if you add social cost, if you add motivations, if it's like my job depends on it or something, that number can go way higher than that. But there is a place. It's just the number can go up depending on how many motivations you have to not change your mind about something.
- CWChris Williamson
So that's why people's minds change, that there is a degree of information coming in that is so overwhelming that they, they basically can no longer be unconvinced of that position. But the problem is that when you layer on top of it tribal bias, uh, uh, all of the other, um, reasons that people have to not change their mind, that that threshold can continue to go up, and up, and up, and up, and up. I remember Gad Saad was talking about... He, he does-
- DMDavid McRaney
Hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
... uh, marketing and consumer stuff, I think, at, uh, wherever he is, Concordia or something. Um, and he was talking about... He w- he wanted to know what caused people to decide when they were going to buy something, and I think that it was something, I think it was a, a similar sort of tipping point that people reach, some, like a threshold, right?
- DMDavid McRaney
Yeah. It's a, uh, and the... It's risk vers- r- it's risk versus reward, like you were saying, but it's like this meaty, giant algorithm of every risk, every reward combined, 'cause if I, if I change my mind about this, what's my, what are my f- friends and family going to say? That's part of it. Like, how is this going to affect my finances? That's part of it. Will I have to update everything I've ever thought about this thing? Like, one simple example is, uh, like, if I... If you have a friend who's really into Quentin Tarantino movies and they tell you, "Hey, Quentin Tarantino has a new movie coming out," then you'd be like, "Cool." And then, like, they might be wrong about it, but you just, like, say, "What's the risk? What's the harm? I believe you." Uh, however, if that same friend tells you, "Do you know that Quentin Tarantino, uh, isn't actually a real person, it's been Danny DeVito this entire time wearing a, a hyper-advanced mech suit?" Uh, you're going to be like, "Eh? Eh?" So, like, there's a higher threshold for believing that, even though you trust your friend and think they love Quentin Tarantino. But it's somewhere in that meaty algorithm you determine there's more risk than reward in accepting that information at face value. And you change that to a political concept or something that's deeply connected to your identity, and you could imagine that you might have a similarly high threshold for accepting that information into your model of reality.
- 53:32 – 1:00:02
Why Arguing Is Good
- DMDavid McRaney
- CWChris Williamson
What did you learn about arguing?
- DMDavid McRaney
Arguing. Arguing, you know, it's, it's good. (laughs) I like that we're arguing o- so much on the internet. Arguing is how we change minds, and we are set up, we are biologically set up to receive and deliver arguments in a way that gets, gets us ahead in the world, that g- that changes things, that progresses the human condition, that evolves our ideas, that layers on new abstractions for us to make sense of things, that articulates the ineffable, my friend. This is all good for us. It's just that, um, the way in which we're arguing isn't the way... We're not arguing in con- in the same sort of context in which we evolved to do so. And I think that we'll... The frustration we have when it comes to people who, who don't seem to see things our way, it's like the frustration you would get if you were trying to reach the moon with a ladder, is what I say in the book. (laughs) Like, and then you get, you're like, you say, "Well, the moon's unreachable." So what's the point in argu- so you, you, you tr- when you change that to people and you say, "Look, those people are unreachable. There's no point in arguing with them," the frustration shouldn't be in them. The frustration should be in the way in which you're trying to approach them. And if you are attempting to argue in a way where you're trying to show that I'm right and you're wrong, and you can assume that they're gonna be doing the same thing-... the, the debate is gonna end in, in noth- nothing useful for either party.
- CWChris Williamson
But come on, I mean-
- DMDavid McRaney
If you-
- CWChris Williamson
... you know, people, people have conversations where they, they try the most gentle, subtle, most well-thought-out, softly introduction, and, and the person on the other side of the fence just impressively seems to be able to disregard-
- DMDavid McRaney
(laughs)
- CWChris Williamson
... with vitriol everything that they're saying.
- DMDavid McRaney
Sure. But that's your fault.
- CWChris Williamson
Frustrating.
- DMDavid McRaney
That's your fault. That's the person who's arguing with them's fault, because we are all open to changing our mind if it's presented to us... i- if the conversation is presented to us in a way in which we feel like we can trust the other person, the other person has empathy for us, that they are compassionate, they are transparent, they're not trying to affect our agency, they're not gonna shame us, we're not gonna get ostracized, then I might get something out of it.
- CWChris Williamson
Does that not-
- DMDavid McRaney
And if I'm given... Go ahead.
- CWChris Williamson
Does that, does that not suggest that not engaging is the best form a lot of the time? Let's say that, um, there are a large proportion of people on Twitter whom, for certain subjects, they will not change their mind. It is simply the medium that they are unprepared to change their mind over, given this topic or that, uh, topic or the other one. Like, the threshold that you need to breach with them, the bandwidth that Twitter allows you to get across simply isn't going to allow that to happen.
- DMDavid McRaney
You are absolutely correct. I love that you said that. This is, you're the first person to ever put it that way. And I, uh, in a conversa- with, uh, anybody I've talked to about this, and it's really well put and really... It's a, it's a great point. Yeah, we can't do this unless we're in a good faith environment, and sometimes we don't have a choice when it comes to creating that good faith environment. There are some environments that are, by default, bad places to have that kind of conversation, and acknowledging that upfront is great. And you could take that same person that you... beforehand would be a bad idea to engage with them, and say, "Maybe we should take this somewhere else or we should move this to a different context." And I'm not saying move it to one of those stupid debates that people have on stage between, like, an atheists and a creationist that helps no one. Everybody walks into that thinking the same thing that they do when they walk out. Don't do that. You need to sit... That needs to be in a place where there's not an audience, where the people are not concerned about what's going to happen when, when their friends and family or their peers see what they have to say about it, which is also what happens on Facebook. People on Facebook are arguing feeling like there's, they're on stage and there's a whole audience gonna go, "Boo," whenever they say the wrong thing. One-on-one in some way or another, whether that's email, old-fashioned missives, or at a bar or a pub or over dinner, that's where you actually could connect with someone using these old things. Until we create online environments that, that replicate that, you're right. The, the... It may be a bad idea to engage people in places that, by default, create a, a bad faith interaction between you and the other person.
- CWChris Williamson
From all of the research that you did, what is your favorite strategy to help people positively, uh, change others' minds?
- DMDavid McRaney
I, I found... It blew, it blew me away. Like, motivational interviewing is, is probably the most powerful thing there is, but... And it comes out of therapeutic models. But I was very, um... It blew my mind to find that there were all these organizations around the world who had stumbled into the same insights as that therapeutic model because they were just doing A/B testing at people's front steps or they were doing it on college campuses. Uh, in the book, I talk about deep canvassing and street epistemology, but also motivational interviewing, cognitive behavioral therapy, smart politics. All of them use pretty much the same technique in pretty much the same order, which is pretty much the Socratic method, but with a lot of added psychological insights put into it. Um, you open up by establishing rapport and trust and assuring the other person that we're going to just talk to each other and explore each other's reasoning in a way that helps both of us maybe figure out why we're... what we, why, why would we disagree about this? Where does it come from? And then you ask for specific claims. You ask for sort of a measurement or confidence in that claim. You ask for reasons why you hold that confidence. And then you ask, "Well, how did you arrive at this, uh, the belief that..." Or, "Well, how did you arr- how did you arrive at the conclusion that that was a good reason to hold this in such high confidence?" And then you just let the conversation spool out from there, and often all the work will be done on the other side, and they will come to a new way of, of seeing, seeing it. And seeing something in a new way, differently than you did before the conversation, is changing your mind.
- CWChris Williamson
That same conference, that same lecturer that I was at this weekend, he, uh, explained about how a lot of the students that he has are on the far left. And, uh, he puts this quote up on the board using the Socratic method to get them to, um, be aware that always pushing for, uh, social justice is, is not necessarily the best way to do things. And it's this big quote and it says, uh, "The, um, inner health, uh, of the individual can never be, um, justified until the external social, social justice health of the society has been something else." How many people agree with this? And it's like the sort of thing that everybody would agree with. Then he presses one button and it comes up below that, "Adolf Hitler, 1920."
- DMDavid McRaney
(laughs)
- CWChris Williamson
So funny.
- DMDavid McRaney
Wow.
- CWChris Williamson
Well, look,
- 1:00:02 – 1:01:14
Where to Find David
- CWChris Williamson
David McRaney, ladies and gentlemen, I really appreciate your time. Uh, if people want to keep up to date with what you're doing and get the book, where should they go?
- DMDavid McRaney
Uh, you can find me at davidmcraney.com or You Are Not So Smart. Of course, my podcast and all that stuff is under You Are Not So Smart. How Minds Change, the new book. Uh, How Minds Change: The Surprising Science of Belief, Opinion, and Persuasion. I had to actually look at the book just now to remember what, what the full title was. Uh, it's an actual real thing that I can hold. Um, the... That you can find at davidmcraney.com or just anywhere that books are at. Uh, I'm not gonna tell you where to get it. But if you pre-order it, I got all sorts of pre-order bonuses for you, including a workshop and a video of a bunch of persuasion experts talking to each other. So pre-ordering would be ideal since that's how the, the algorithms determine my destiny. But however you get it, the book is called How Minds Change.
- CWChris Williamson
David, I appreciate you. Thank you.
- DMDavid McRaney
Thank you so much, man.
- CWChris Williamson
What's happening, people? Thank you very much for tuning in. If you enjoyed that episode, then press here for a selection of the best clips from the podcast over the last few weeks. And don't forget to subscribe. Peace.
Episode duration: 1:01:14
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