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The Psychology Podcast

Andrew Yang || Humanizing Education

The Psychology Podcast

iHeartPodcasts

Science, Social Sciences

4.4 • 2K Ratings

🗓️ 11 March 2021

⏱️ 48 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Today the tables are turned on The Psychology Podcast as Andrew Yang interviews Scott Barry Kaufman! This is a really meaningful episode for Scott, as he was a big supporter of Andrew's presidential campaign, and is now a big supporter of his Mayoral NYC campaign. Andrew and Scott share a humanistic viewpoint, and it was great to finally get them together in a discussion.


Andrew is the founder of Venture for America, a non-profit organization aiming to create economic opportunities in American cities. He is a former 2020 Democratic presidential candidate and is currently running for mayor of New York City on a Democrat ticket. In 2012, the Obama administration selected Andrew as a "Champion for Change" and later as a "Presidential Ambassador for Global Entrepreneurship" in 2015. This episode originally appeared on Andrew's podcast, Yang Speaks.

In this eagerly anticipated episode, Andrew and Scott discuss:

[02:48] Scott’s journey into and out of special-education

[05:45] Why Scott signed up for dance classes in college

[06:30] How Scott accidentally discovered his singing talents

[08:10] Why Scott decided to pursue psychology

[15:30] The worrying trend of schools rewarding behavioral conformity and performance on thinly disguised intelligence tests

[17:29] Scott’s "Dual-Process Theory of Human Intelligence"

[20:23] Why academic psychologists are under pressure to come up with novel ideas

[21:02] Scott’s encounter with creativity research

[24:39] How Scott’s research on human intelligence opened doors for studying other research topics

[26:31] Examples of human-centered schools

[30:41] Andrew Yang’s take on humanistic and positive education

[33:20] Why Americans need to incorporate humanity into their everyday lives

[36:04] The difference between narcissism and healthy self-esteem

[39:20] Scott’s revised hierarchy of needs

[42:17] The distinction between deficiency motivation and growth motivation

[48:04] The reception of Scott’s latest book Transcend: The New Science of Self-Actualization among psychologist

My friend Andrew Yang is running for New York City Mayor, and he needs our help! Andrew maintains a huge lead in the polls and is dominating press coverage, and together, we can push him into first place in the fundraising race, too. This week, let's make sure Andrew receives more contributions than any other candidate. What's more: any New York City resident who contributes will get their contribution matched 8 to 1 by the City! To contribute, please go to y4ny.com/scott.

Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-psychology-podcast/support

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey everyone, today the tables are turned on the psychology podcast as Andrew Yang interviews

0:23.2

me. This conversation, which originally appeared on Andrew's podcast, Yang Speaks, is a really

0:28.7

meaningful one for me, as I was a big supporter of Andrew's presidential campaign, and now I'm a

0:33.4

big supporter of his mayoral NYC campaign. Andrew and I share a very similar humanistic viewpoint,

0:38.8

and it was great to finally get together in a discussion with him about the need to reimagine

0:43.2

education and my revised hierarchy of needs. Without further ado, I bring you my discussion

0:49.1

with Andrew Yang. It is my pleasure and privilege. I've been looking forward to this ever since

0:56.6

he and I connected. To welcome to Yang Speaks, psychologists, author, actualizer of human potential,

1:05.7

pretty much everyone who wants good things in their lives should be listening to this man. Scott

1:11.0

Barry Kaufman, Scott, welcome to the podcast. What a dream come true. This is for me. I've wanted to

1:18.5

talk to you for a long time. It's such a pleasure to be here. Well, I felt the same way. You're such

1:23.8

an incredible thinker, and your work is so up my alley. It's pretty wild. Likewise, it's

1:31.3

bi-directional. Yeah, I agree. I feel like both of us have been approaching some of the same

1:35.7

problems from kind of different angles, but would love for you to introduce yourself so that people

1:40.2

can get a sense of your background. You have a PhD in cognitive psychology from Yale. You studied

1:47.0

in the UK. I think you have like a BS and also cognitive science from Carnegie Mellon or one of

1:52.5

these other very, very frankly, like esteemed institutions. Tell us a little bit more about yourself,

1:58.8

like how you arrived at that point and how you became passionate about studying how people,

2:03.6

frankly, can be happier, healthier, stronger. Sure. Yeah. I'm a humanistic psychologist,

2:09.2

and I have a training in cognitive science, but I'm really interested in understanding

2:14.0

what it means to be human, what it means to be a vital human to live a life of meaning and

2:18.4

purpose and creativity. I really got interested in this topic as a young kid when I was put in

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