The best way to think about the future is not by extrapolating trends, but by asking what must be true about the future, and then working backward. Most people get this backwards—they assume the future will be like the past, just more so.
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anthropologist Joseph Henrich says the impact of culture goes even further, reaching into our bodies and our minds. He takes us on a journey through time to show how human cultures create a "collective brain," and how that shared knowledge profoundly shapes who we are and how we live.
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Because you have the option to bet on bombs being dropped, on people dying, events that will have huge impacts on real people's lives.
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If only we allowed it to. But what generally gets in the way is something called repugnance, which we'll get to. And um and that we that we should overcome our a priori ideas when they're wrong, which is what science is all about.
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