
Human Beings Are Primates, And Primates Are Political Animals. Our Brains, Therefore, Are Designed Not Just To Hunt And Gather, But Also To Help Us Get Ahead Socially, Often Via Deception And Self-deception. But While We May Be Self-interested Schemers, We Benefit By Pretending Otherwise. The Less We Know About Our Own Ugly Motives, The Better - And Thus We Don't Like To Talk Or Even Think About The Extent Of Our Selfishness. This Is The Elephant In The Brain. Such An Introspective Taboo Makes It Hard For Us To Think Clearly About Our Nature And The Explanations For Our Behavior. The Aim Of This Book, Then, Is To Confront Our Hidden Motives Directly - To Track Down The Darker, Unexamined Corners Of Our Psyches And Blast Them With Floodlights. Then, Once Everything Is Clearly Visible, We Can Work To Better Understand Ourselves: Why Do We Laugh? Why Are Artists Sexy? Why Do We Brag About Travel? Why Do We Prefer To Speak Rather Than Listen? Our Unconscious Motives Drive More Than Just Our Private Behavior; They Also Infect Our Venerated Social Institutions Such As Art, School, Charity, Medicine, Politics, And Religion. In Fact, These Institutions Are In Many Ways Designed To Accommodate Our Hidden Motives, To Serve Covert Agendas Alongside Their Official Ones. The Existence Of Big Hidden Motives Can Upend The Usual Political Debates, Leading One To Question The Legitimacy Of These Social Institutions, And Of Standard Policies Designed To Favor Or Discourage Them. You Won't See Yourself - Or The World - The Same After Confronting The Elephant In The Brain.
This book investigates the core question of why humans possess hidden, often selfish motives and how these unconscious drives shape our social behavior and institutions. Kevin Simler and Robin Hanson, drawing on backgrounds in software engineering and economics, synthesize evolutionary biology and social psychology to argue that humans are evolved to be political animals who utilize self-deception to maintain social standing. They propose that our brains are designed to hide our true intentions from ourselves to better deceive others, creating a systemic blind spot in our understanding of human nature.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Readers frequently note the provocative nature of the authors' arguments regarding the hidden utility of social institutions. Experts in behavioral science highlight this as a challenging text that forces a re-evaluation of common assumptions about human altruism and social cooperation.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190496002
ISBN-13:
9780190496005
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