Jonathan Haidt – After Babel
The Glenn Show
Glenn Loury
4.8 • 2.3K Ratings
🗓️ 17 June 2022
⏱️ 60 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
For this week’s episode, I’m joined by NYU psychologist Jonathan Haidt, author of several books, including (with Greg Lukianoff) The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation for Failure and The Righteous Mind: Why Good People Are Divided by Politics and Religion. Jonathan is also the co-founder of Heterodox Academy, where I serve on the advisory council. Despite that connection, this is our first extended public conversation.
This is not, however, the first time I’ve engaged with Jon. After a talk some years ago, I asked Jon a question during the Q&A session, which I reintroduce here. Heterodox Academy’s mission is very important, but does focusing exclusively on viewpoint diversity prevent us from acknowledging that some viewpoints are more cogent than others? Jon’s recent Atlantic article “Why the Past 10 Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid” generated a lot of discussion, and he elaborates on his theory of “structural stupidity” here. He claims that, at the national level, the Republican Party’s hostility to moderation has made it structurally stupid and unable to examine its own premises, while left-dominated “epistemic institutions,” like journalism and academia, are mired in their own kind of structural stupidity. I find the structural analysis compelling, but I think it elides the fact that some of the Republicans’ policy position are not, in themselves, stupid at all. Jon is concerned that increasing intolerance on the left, especially on college campuses, may be caused by generational changes in child development. Gen Z is the first generation to have had access to social media as children, and they also had far less unsupervised free play than previous generations. I ask Jon whether this shift can account for groupthink around COVID-induced school shutdowns and drastic changes in attitudes toward trans and racial issues in the US. While the academy no doubt leans left, there is much more viewpoint diversity in economics departments than other areas. Jon has some interesting ideas about why. And finally, I ask Jon whether religion could play a role in increasing viewpoint diversity.
It was great to finally connect with Jon. I hope and suspect it won’t be the last time we sit down for one of these conversations.
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0:00 Glenn asks: Is Jon’s heterodoxy insufficiently pugilistic?
5:23 Jon’s theory of social media-driven “structural stupidity”
16:18 Do the Republican Party’s structural flaws negate its policies?
26:53 The rise of social media and the disappearance of free play for kids
35:42 Race, trans issues, and the future of the country
45:34 Why are economists uniquely heterodox thinkers in the academy?
48:08 What fills the “God-shaped hole” in the hearts of putatively secular Americans?
Links and Readings
Jon’s Atlantic article, “Why the Past 10 Years of American Life Have Been Uniquely Stupid”
Jon’s book, with Greg Lukianoff, The Coddling of the American Mind: How Good Intentions and Bad Ideas Are Setting Up a Generation for Failure
Elizabeth Noelle-Neumann’s book, The Spiral of Silence: Public Opinion—Our Social Skin
Brown University President Christina Paxson’s letter about racial justice
Glenn’s rebuttal to Paxson in City Journal
Jon’s childhood independence advocacy organization, Let Grow
James A. Morone’s book, Hellfire Nation: The Politics of Sin in American History
John Tierney and Roy F. Baumeister’s book, The Power of Bad: How the Negativity Effect Rules Us and How We Can Rule It
John McWhorter’s book, Woke Racism: How a New Religion Has Betrayed Black America
This is a public episode. If you’d like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit glennloury.substack.com/subscribe
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hi, this is Glenn Lauri, the Glenn Show at substag.com and at my YouTube channel. |
| 0:15.4 | Every other week I talk with John McWhorter and we kick it around. |
| 0:17.8 | But this week I'm with Jonathan Hyte, who is the, who is professor of ethical leadership |
| 0:25.6 | at the Stern University of New York University and he's a very prolific author and widely |
| 0:32.1 | known one of the most influential social, political, psychologists around today. |
| 0:37.9 | Author of, let me see if we can get this, the righteous mind author also of |
| 0:44.6 | the cobbling of the American mind with Greg Lukyanov and our principal in the founding of |
| 0:51.6 | Heterodox Academy, which is a group of reflective and concerned academics who are promoting the |
| 0:59.4 | diversity of thought within the American University institutional complex. And John is also the |
| 1:04.7 | author of an article recently published in the Atlantic magazine called Why I Have The Last |
| 1:09.8 | 10 Years of American Life and Uniquely Stupid. Wherein, he finds the answer to be somehow |
| 1:16.9 | social media and that's the tale within itself. So we're talking with John about |
| 1:21.7 | American intellectual life at this, at this date in our politics, in our culture and in our |
| 1:28.2 | institutions. So welcome, John. Thank you, Glenn. What a pleasure to be talking with you. |
| 1:33.6 | Yeah, we've been circling around each other for a long time. I ran into you at a seminar that you |
| 1:38.5 | did. John Tomassi's invitation up here at Brown a couple of years ago and we exchanged some |
| 1:44.6 | words very briefly. I am going to participate in Heterodox's annual Confab and Denver with |
| 1:54.1 | John McWhorter in a keynote conversation that's being staged by that. But yeah, it's good to be |
| 2:00.7 | talking with you. Yeah, great to be talking to you. You might not remember, but I actually invite |
| 2:04.8 | our first contact was I was involved. It's putting together a group of policy experts left and |
| 2:10.3 | under AEI and Brookings and I invited you and you said you're going to come to one of our meetings, |
| 2:15.3 | but you just got overwhelmed. You couldn't make it. So that was our first meeting, was you blew me |
... |
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