4.6 • 7.3K Ratings
🗓️ 14 March 2019
⏱️ 56 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this episode of Bulletproof Radio, one of my favorite authors is back on the show.
Robert Greene has written five New York Times bestsellers. One in particular, The 48 Laws of Power, changed the course of my professional life. His other books, including: The Art of Seduction, The 33 Strategies of War, The 50th Law, and Mastery, have gained a gained a broad following from war historians to hip-hop industry musicians.
Robert takes a deep and searing look at the inner workings of human behavior based on social and biological science, as well as many of the most powerful people throughout history. In his sixth and most recent book, The Laws of Human Nature, he focuses on people’s drives and motivations, even when they are unconscious of them. “Basically, we’re a social animal,” Robert says. “It’s deeply ingrained in our nature. When we’re not being the social animal that we were born to be, we pay a terrible price.”
This is a must-listen episode full of evocative human insights—you’ll learn the basis of envy and why it persists in social hierarchy. “Envy is complicated and it's slippery and it's hard to put your finger on it,” Robert says.
We also discuss early childhood as an underestimated developmental force; how gender rigidity limits your full potential; and the ways in which mortality awareness can be both comforting and freeing.
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0:00.0 | You're listening to Bulletproof Radio with Dave Asbury. |
0:16.2 | Today's cool fact of the day is that genes might explain why dogs can't sniff out |
0:21.3 | some people when they're stressed. |
0:24.1 | And this is one of those curiosities in that trained police dogs who can recognize a |
0:28.8 | smell and track you on things like that. |
0:31.8 | Can't recognize some people when they're stressed, but they can with other people. |
0:36.4 | And this is because fear sets off a flood of stress hormones that makes some people |
0:40.4 | freeze and some other people might want to fight or run away. |
0:44.8 | And that hormone can alter your scent. |
0:47.7 | And researchers at the University of Fogia in Italy wondered whether fear could change |
0:53.2 | that scent. |
0:54.5 | And they thought this might be why police dogs can't really pick people out of a lineup. |
1:00.6 | And they explained it with genetics. |
1:03.4 | So there you go. |
1:04.4 | How you smell is based on your genetics and how your fear response works is also in some |
1:09.0 | extent based on genetics. |
1:11.1 | And if you're ever running away from police dogs, maybe you should not be afraid or be |
1:14.5 | afraid. |
1:18.5 | If you like Bulletproof Radio, you might know about my new book Game Changers, which just |
1:24.2 | came out. |
1:25.2 | This episode is going to be an epic episode because I have the most amazing guest line |
1:29.6 | up for you today. |
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