4.4 • 921 Ratings
🗓️ 3 September 2019
⏱️ 100 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
You may not believe it, but there is a link between our current political instability and your childhood attachment to teddy bears. There’s also a reason why children in Asia are more likely to share than their western counterparts and why the poor spend more of their income on luxury goods than the rich. Or why your mother is more likely to leave her money to you than your father. What connects these things?
The answer is our need for ownership. Award-winning University of Bristol psychologist Bruce Hood draws on research from his own lab and others around the world to explain why this uniquely human preoccupation governs our behavior from the cradle to the grave, even when it is often irrational, and destructive. What motivates us to buy more than we need? Is it innate, or cultural? How does our urge to acquire control our behaviour, even the way we vote? And what can we do about it? Possessed is the first book to explore how ownership has us enthralled in relentless pursuit of a false happiness, with damaging consequences for society and the planet — and how we can stop buying into it.
Dr. Hood and Dr. Shermer also discuss:
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0:00.0 | Today's guest is Dr. Bruce Hood. |
0:04.0 | Bruce is the director of the Bristol Cognitive Development Center |
0:08.0 | in Experimental Psychology Department |
0:10.0 | at the University of Bristol. |
0:12.0 | He undertook his PhD at Cambridge University, |
0:14.0 | followed by appointments at University College London, |
0:17.0 | MIT, and Harvard. |
0:20.0 | He's been awarded an Alfred Sloane Fellowship in Neuroscience, the Young Investigator Award from the International |
0:26.0 | Society of Infancy Researchers, and the Franz Robert Franz Memorial Award and 2014 Award for Media and Public Engagement by the British Psychological |
0:36.7 | Society. |
0:37.7 | He did the Christmas lectures in England, which is very prestigious. |
0:41.4 | Richard Dawkins did those. |
0:43.5 | He's written several books, all of which I've read and enjoyed. |
0:46.8 | The domesticated brain, the self-illusion, |
0:49.7 | why there is no you inside your head. |
0:53.0 | So as I pointed out, it's a great allusion to have. |
0:56.0 | He's a co-author of a popular introductory psychology book called Psychology |
1:01.0 | with Dan Schachter and Dan Gilbert and Dan Wagner, the three Dan's. |
1:07.7 | His book, Super Sense, Why We Believe The Unbelievable was my first intersection with Bruce given that he deals with |
1:14.8 | supernatural and superstition overlapping interests there that we have and he's |
1:19.2 | done a lot on that particularly essentialism how we impugn essence into physical objects, which |
1:26.2 | leads to his latest book that we talk about here today called Possessed, why we |
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