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People I (Mostly) Admire

1. Steven Pinker: "I Manage My Controversy Portfolio Carefully”

People I (Mostly) Admire

Freakonomics Radio + Stitcher

Society & Culture

4.61.9K Ratings

🗓️ 22 August 2020

⏱️ 42 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

By cataloging the steady march of human progress, the Harvard psychologist and linguist has become a very public intellectual. But the self-declared “polite Canadian” has managed to enrage people on opposite ends of the political spectrum. Steve Levitt tries to understand why.

Transcript

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0:00.0

For most of human history, there are whole spheres where we just don't really insist on knowing

0:07.6

what's true or what's false. We want morally uplifting dramatically compelling narratives.

0:14.0

Given that our species has transformed the world and discovered the secrets of life in the universe, built amazing things,

0:21.0

how do we do it despite these cognitive infirmities and how can we make ourselves smarter? I first met Steve Pinker 15 years ago and I had one lunch with them and it was such a fabulous

0:38.9

conversation that I've been thinking about that lunch ever since.

0:43.0

Welcome to people I mostly admire, with Steve Levitt.

0:48.0

He's an amazing thinker.

0:50.0

He's a Harvard psychologist.

0:52.0

He's a kind of person who bring

0:53.3

insight to any subject that comes up. And I'd say my favorite research is the

0:57.5

work he's done just documenting the amazing progress that humankind has created over the last 200 years and I know it doesn't

1:05.6

feel like it right now we're in the middle of the COVID-doldrums but I think it's

1:09.2

important that we keep in mind that we are on a positive track even though right now it's not the best time.

1:17.0

While such a pleasure to get to talk today with Stephen Pinker, not only one of the most widely admired

1:25.3

public intellectuals, but also a path-breaking linguist and a brain scientist.

1:30.6

So I've met a lot of brilliant people, but what makes you seem really special to me is that it's

1:37.0

so over here I think in brilliant people to have any common sense.

1:40.1

Would you agree with me that common sense is one of your best attributes?

1:44.0

I'm probably not the person to judge.

1:46.6

I know from my own field of psychology that we are all apt to overestimate our talents. And so if I were to say I had a lot of common sense that would probably not be an exercise of common sense.

1:58.0

Here's what I mean by common sense. So you've had this academic career and you do like super complicated linguistic things and yet you've come to write these incredibly readable books that are loaded with really simple statistics and sensible logic that just it's really hard to disagree with your conclusion.

2:19.8

So let's just take example.

...

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