Charles Duhigg: The Art and Science of Communication
The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss
Lawrence M. Krauss
4.4 • 592 Ratings
🗓️ 15 May 2024
⏱️ 66 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
I admit I was somewhat intimidated when the prospect of hosting Pulitzer-prizewinning journalist Charles Duhigg on the podcast was raised. What caused my angst was the subject matter we would discuss: Communication.
Hosting this podcast has been a learning experience, in so many ways. Since listeners are very free with advice, especially when they don’t like the conversational aspect of the dialogues, and would prefer an interview format, I have often had to come face to face with my own failures of communication. Charles had just completed a book, Supercommunicators, which has since become a New York Times bestseller about the tools that so-called ‘supercommunicators’ use to bring out the best in conversations. It includes interviews with, and stories about, people from a wide varieties of occupations and experiences, from a former FRB recruiter, to two people on opposite sides of the current gun-control debate, and even to the creators of Big Bang Theory, about how they achieved their goals of communication.
The techniques revealed in the book, and in our conversation, are remarkably illuminating. Perhaps the most important tool, which sounds remarkably simple, but nevertheless is often absent in conversations is to decide in advance what type of conversation one is about to be engaged in: practical, emotional, or social. Without this recognition, the ultimate success of any subsequent conversation is unlikely to be profound.
In our subsequent podcast discussion, I wanted to engage in all three types of conversations, with some clarity in advance about where we were going, beginning as always with what took Charles to the starting point of his writing, and concluding with what the impact on his own personal life had been by all he had learned when researching the book. Thinking about the skills he discussed certainly had an impact on my own efforts during the podcast, and I hope will improve discussions on all future podcasts. You, the listeners, will be the judges of course.
I hope you will enjoy and be enlightened by the ground we covered. As always, an ad-free video version of this podcast is also available to paid Critical Mass subscribers. Your subscriptions support the non-profit Origins Project Foundation, which produces the podcast. The audio version is available free on the Critical Mass site and on all podcast sites, and the video version will also be available on the Origins Project Youtube channel as well.
Get full access to Critical Mass at lawrencekrauss.substack.com/subscribe
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hi and welcome to The Origins Podcast. |
| 0:12.0 | I'm your host, Lawrence Krause. |
| 0:14.0 | I was extremely excited when the Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Charles |
| 0:18.8 | Duhigg agreed to be on the program to discuss his new |
| 0:21.1 | book, Super Communicators. It's an amazing book about how to communicate better and how to do so by |
| 0:29.0 | giving examples from people who are literally super communicators, people who can break through barriers, |
| 0:35.2 | achieve a level of communication, and often obtain results that are |
| 0:39.8 | impossible otherwise. It's a fascinating book with lots of great examples from former FBI |
| 0:45.7 | recruiters to heads of juries talking about difficult situations to communicate with others on a |
| 0:53.3 | variety of different levels. |
| 0:56.0 | It was somewhat intimidating for me as a podcaster in this regard to have this conversation |
| 1:02.0 | because I tried to actually utilize several of the skills that are discussed in Charles' book. |
| 1:08.0 | And they've been very useful to me, the idea of trying in a conversation |
| 1:11.6 | to know what the conversation's about for the first time, to reach out and get a level of |
| 1:16.7 | emotional connection with the person you're talking about, and to realize that all conversations, |
| 1:21.0 | regardless of whether negotiations between hostile parties or a dinner party with friends, |
| 1:27.1 | are really win-win circumstances. |
| 1:29.3 | It was a wonderful conversation. I talked to him about why he got interested in this whole subject |
| 1:35.3 | and how it had impacted on his own relationships to study how other people communicate. |
| 1:41.3 | And I talked to him also about how literally how it had affected me in the process of reading it. |
| 1:46.0 | It's a great conversation about a remarkable subject with a great author, and I hope you enjoy it as much as I did. |
| 1:52.7 | You can watch it ad-free on our Critical Mass Subtext site, or you can watch it on our YouTube channel or Orgeant's podcast YouTube channel or listen to it on any podcast listening site. |
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