Books Brothers

Two brothers talk through the BEST non-fiction books about science, evolution, culture, history, complexity science, nature, cognitive neuroscience, artificial intelligence.

The Origins of Political Order by Francis Fukuyama

If you’ve ever wondered how humans went from chaotic tribes to building governments, empires, and messy modern democracies, this episode is for you. 🏛️ Join JD and Andrew as they break down Francis Fukuyama’s The Origins of Political Order, a sweeping journey through history that asks: Why do some societies build strong states while others crumble into corruption? What’s the link between religion, warfare, and political trust? And is democracy really the end of history… or just another experiment in the grand lab of human civilization? Expect detours into Chinese bureaucracy, medieval church drama, chimp politics, and why ancient kings were the original startup founders. It’s political philosophy meets anthropology meets “bro history,” and it’s surprisingly hilarious.  Stick around for the ending discussion, where the brothers wrestle with what “order” even means today.

11-03
01:37:50

The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People - Episode 7

In this episode of Books Brothers, JD and Andrew break down Stephen Covey's seminal work "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People." Published in over 50 languages and named the most influential business book of the 20th century, Covey's framework distills centuries of self-improvement literature into actionable habits for personal growth. The brothers discuss how Covey spent years studying success literature since 1776 to create principles for living your best life aligned with timeless values. From taking control of your life to building meaningful relationships, this episode unpacks how to move from dependence to independence to interdependence through Covey's transformative seven habits.   Chapter Markers 00:00:00 - Introduction to the book's influence and reach 00:02:00 - Covey's research process and the book's core message 00:04:20 - The Character Ethic vs. Personality Ethic 00:08:10 - Principle-Centered Paradigm and taking responsibility 00:10:57 - Habit 1: Be Proactive 00:13:25 - Viktor Frankl and choosing your response 00:17:15 - The mindset of reactive vs. proactive people 00:19:13 - Habit 2: Begin With the End in Mind 00:21:08 - Leadership vs. Management 00:22:00 - Creating a personal mission statement 00:24:03 - Center of your life: principles vs. other centers 00:26:56 - Habit 3: Put First Things First 00:28:34 - The Four Quadrants of Time Management 00:31:00 - Stewardship vs. Go-for Delegation 00:33:54 - Trust Banks and relationship building 00:36:10 - Habit 4: Think Win-Win 00:38:25 - Problems with competition in society 00:41:51 - Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood 00:43:35 - Empathic listening and its power 00:45:44 - Ethos, Pathos, Logos and communication 00:46:13 - Habit 6: Synergize 00:47:52 - Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw 00:49:02 - The Eighth Habit and final thoughts 00:52:09 - Summary of all seven habits   References Books: "The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People" by Stephen Covey (00:01:06) "The 8th Habit" by Stephen Covey (00:49:06) "The Speed of Trust" by Stephen M.R. Covey (00:50:18) "Man's Search for Meaning" by Viktor Frankl (00:13:44) "How to Win Friends and Influence People" by Dale Carnegie (mentioned at 00:06:38)   People: Viktor Frankl (00:13:44, "friend of the show") Benjamin Franklin (00:02:30) Dale Carnegie (00:02:30) Tony Robbins (00:02:30) Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (00:18:32) Warren Buffett (00:50:18) Peter Thiel (00:38:56, reference to "Zero to One") Jocko Willink (implied at 00:28:23 as "our guy Jocko, a friend of the program") Jonathan Haidt (00:42:50, reference to elephant and rider metaphor)   Concepts: Character Ethic vs. Personality Ethic (00:04:48) Principle-centered paradigm (00:08:11) Production vs. Production Capability (P/PC Balance) (00:10:25) Stimulus and Response model (00:14:29) Trust Banks (00:33:55) Four Quadrants of Time Management (00:28:34) Scarcity vs. Abundance Mentality (00:41:06) Ethos, Pathos, Logos (00:45:07)   Other Podcast References: "Righteous Mind" (00:51:40, reference to another Books Brothers episode) "General Theory of Love" (00:44:26, reference to another Books Brothers episode)

04-15
53:51

A General Theory of Love - Episode 6

Join the Dennison Brothers as they dive into "A General Theory of Love," a fascinating scientific exploration of what makes us connect on a deeper level. What exactly is love from a neurological perspective? Three psychiatrists from UCSF propose that it's "limbic resonance" - the way our emotional brains synchronize with others. In this episode, we break down how the limbic system (the emotional part of our brain) creates connections that literally help regulate our emotions and physical well-being. From how mothers shape their children's emotional patterns to why isolation is so damaging to humans, this book offers a scientific framework for understanding our deepest relationships. Discover why humans are "open loops" that require others to function properly, how childhood experiences encode our emotional responses, and the scientific evidence showing that connection isn't just nice - it's necessary for survival. Whether you're building personal relationships or professional networks, understanding the biology behind human connection gives you powerful insights into yourself and others. Shownotes: Book Information Title: A General Theory of Love Authors: Thomas Lewis, Fari Amini, and Richard Lannon (all professors of psychiatry from UCSF School of Medicine) [00:03:13]     Studies & Researchers Mentioned Conrad Lorenz: Study on imprinting in ducklings [00:24:31] Frederick the Second: 13th century experiment on language development [00:25:47] Rene Spitz: Studies on orphaned children in the 1940s [00:26:04] Mary Ainsworth: Research on mother-baby attachments and parenting styles [00:26:45] Paul Ekman and Carol Izzard: Research confirming universal facial expressions [00:17:36] Paul Broca: Identified the "great limbic lobe" [00:11:23] Charles Darwin: "The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals" [00:16:36]   Other Books & Authors Referenced Robert Sapolsky's "Behave": Referenced when discussing the triune brain [00:09:37] Jonathan Haidt's "The Righteous Mind": Referenced for the elephant and rider metaphor [00:10:01] Judith Rich Harris's "The Nurture Assumption": Referenced in discussing genetic vs. environmental factors [00:28:27] Yuval Noah Harari's "Sapiens": Referenced multiple times [00:14:07, 00:29:18] Sam Harris: Mentioned regarding free will and parenting [00:27:59] Ralph Waldo Emerson: Quote about temperament [00:19:46] Blaise Pascal: Quote at the end [00:44:32] Media & Pop Culture References Joe Rogan & Elon Musk podcast: Where the hosts first heard about "limbic resonance" [00:24:04] Into the Wild (Alexander Supertramp): "Happiness is only real when shared" [00:31:00] Haddaway's "What is Love": Referenced as the episode's theme song [00:01:48] Notable Quotes "The mammalian nervous system cannot self-assemble" [00:33:40] "For a mute mammal, play is physical poetry" [00:13:36] "Freud's logic was a veritable Mobius strip of circularity and belongs to a priest. Scientific era" [00:05:09]   #BrainScience #EmotionalIntelligence #RelationshipScience #PsychologyBooks #PersonalDevelopment #BookReview #LimbicResonance #NeuroscienceOfLove #MensHealth #SelfImprovement #BookSummary #MindsetMastery #MentalModels #ProfessionalGrowth #BrotherBooks

04-03
44:56

Behave: the Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst - Episode 5

In this epic deep-dive episode, brothers JD and Andrew Dennison tackle Robert Sapolsky's masterwork "Behave: The Biology of Humans at Our Best and Worst." We explore how our brains, hormones, genes, and environment shape human behavior from seconds to millions of years before an action occurs. From the neuroscience of decision-making to the evolutionary roots of tribalism, they break down Sapolsky's fascinating insights into why we do what we do. Key topics include:   How different brain regions like the amygdala, prefrontal cortex, and dopamine systems influence our choices Why testosterone isn't just about aggression The surprising truth about oxytocin (it's not all free love!) What adolescent brain development reveals about human nature How cultural evolution and biology intertwine to shape societies   00:07:42 Chapter 2: 1 second before: Neuroscience 00:44:46 Chapter 4 Hours to Days Before: Hormones 1:04:51 Chapter 5: Days to Months Before: Neuroplasticity 01:09:59 Chapter 6 Adolescence or Dude Where’s my Cortex 1:20:21 Chapter 7 Years Before Back to the Crib Back to the Womb 1:29:28 Chapter 8 Fertilized egg or how our genetic affect our behavior 1:38:21 Chapter 9 Centuries to Millennia : cultures 1:47:13 Chapter 11 Us Vs. Them 2:03:06 Chapter 12 Hierarchy, obedience and resistance 2:17:16 Chapter 13 Morality doing the right thing 2:17:22 Chapter 14: feeling someone’s pain as your own 2:23:57 Chapter 15: Metaphors we kill by 2:33:02 Chapter 16: Biology The criminal justice system and oh why not free will 2:45:17 Chapter 17: war and Peace   The brothers share their enthusiasm for Sapolsky's brilliant writing style and humor while navigating complex topics like free will, human nature, and the biology behind both our best and worst behaviors. This comprehensive look at "Behave" showcases why it's a defining book in understanding human behavior through multiple scientific lenses. Note: This is episode 5 of the "Human Evolution” season, where JD and Andrew explore groundbreaking books about what makes us human, from evolutionary biology to neuroscience and beyond.

03-06
02:57:17

Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers Strategies - Episode 4

Many smart people out there say AI is an existential risk. AI Armageddon is certainly is a top-5 concern of  enough people that we feel it warrants a deeper understanding. And in Superintelligence, Bostrom is the perfect robot-impersonating-author to teach us AI 101 while simultaneously capturing AI’s full scale and magnitude. He talked to everybody and covers the biggest questions: what are all the potential outcomes? How likely is AI? When might it happen? What’s the history of AI technology and are we excited about nothing? If an artificial intelligence does take over what would it do? High-probability take-over-the-world is on the early menu.  Plus, what’s the world’s current #robotpopulation? Could #serversruntheworld?  This book will make you think differently about the way your BRAIN and your SOCIETY operate. This Books Brothers summary will do ALL that and make you laugh.

04-05
01:05:16

The Selfish Gene - Richard Dawkins - Episode 3

Selfish Gene answers a deep and fundamental question: How does evolution work? We start our story in the Primordial Soup served hot at the Big Bang’s favorite diner, the single-cell-stew that brewed in Earth’s original oceans (after millions of years cooled the atmosphere obviously). The effect those little replicating cells, containing the world’s first DNA structures, have on our behavior today is 😳🤯🤔.  Plus, Dawkins colorfully illustrates why #NatureIsMetal and what really goes on #WhenaManLovesaWoman  This book will make you think differently about the way your BRAIN and your SOCIETY operate. This Books Brothers summary will do ALL that and make you laugh. With Books Brothers podcasts, we do our best to share the author’s perspective. If you’ve read it before, you’ll know the book better. If you haven’t read it yet, you’ll learn what it contains and we hope you read it soon. Andrew and JD

04-05
05:31:34

The Righteous Mind - Jonathan Haidt - Episode 2

The Righteous Mind answers a deep and fundamental question: why can’t we all just get along? Why can’t Democrats and Republicans understand each other better? Haidt answers these better than anyone (ever) by breaking down the social psychology and brain science of why our species is so apt to join groups, take sides and fight. The Righteous Mind covers 17 years of Haidt’s research into moral psychology and human behavior, and he uses it to explain our divided world today.  Plus, Hadit drops some bombs on our next book, Selfish Gene. #EmotionsFirstReasoningSecond #10%bee #BelongingNotBelieving This book will make you think differently about the way your BRAIN and your SOCIETY operate. This Books Brothers summary will do ALL that and make you laugh. With Book Brothers we do our best to share the author’s perspective. If you’ve read it before, you’ll know the book better. If you haven’t read it yet, you'll love it so much you'll go out an buy it Enjoy! -Andrew and JD

04-05
01:41:50

Sapiens - Yuval Noah Harari - Episode 1

Sapiens is a 416-page story of humankind from 6M years ago to today. Harari wraps it all up: our psychology, technology, religion, economy, politics… Nobody puts things quite the way Yuval does - he’s got some weird/deep thoughts and spits some fire trash talk at basically everything. We guarantee this book will make you stop and think about who we are and where we come from.  Plus it’s got plenty of #CavemanTalk and #YuvalSlamPoetry This book will make you think differently about the way your BRAIN and your SOCIETY operate. This Books Brothers summary will do ALL that and make you laugh. We do our best to share the author’s perspective. If you’ve read it before, you’ll know the book better. If you haven’t read it yet, you’ll love it so much you'll buy the book Enjoy! -Andrew and JD

04-05
01:39:25

Guns Germs & Steel - Episode 14

Why did Europeans conquer the Americas instead of the other way around? In this episode, we dig into Jared Diamond’s Pulitzer Prize–winning classic Guns, Germs, and Steel. Diamond sets out to answer Yali’s famous question: why do some societies have so much “cargo” while others don’t? His answer boils down to one word: geography. We trace the story from the collision at Cajamarca, 168 Spaniards defeating tens of thousands of Inca warriors — back through the domestication of wheat, barley, and horses, the east–west axis of Eurasia, and the germs bred in crowded farming societies. Along the way, we wrestle with Diamond’s strengths, poke holes in some of his oversimplifications, and connect the dots to later works like Sapiens, Against the Grain, and The Secret of Our Success. If you’ve ever wanted the big-picture story of how environment, food, animals, and disease shaped human history — this is it.

10-06
34:11

Against the Grain: How States Went Wrong | Ep. 13

Yo! Let’s go. JD and Andrew are back in the Fertile Crescent, baby—where civilization supposedly “leveled up” but maybe just took a massive L. In this episode, the bros break down James C. Scott’s Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States, a book that argues farming, governments, and the rise of states weren’t exactly the glow-up history books made them out to be. We’re talking fire hacks, Homo erectus barbecue parties, stationary bandits (aka ancient mob bosses), marshland living, and why grain might be the world’s first “Big Tech monopoly.” JD digs into archaeology and science, Andrew keeps us grounded with the big cultural picture, and together they wrestle with whether civilization was really worth all the taxes, laws, and SWAT teams. As always, it’s educational, a little ridiculous, and super accessible. Hit play, grab a snack (non-taxable please), and find out what life was really like before the IRS showed up. Timestamps (Chapters): 00:00:00 – Intro hype + “barbecued cat bones & Homo erectus poop” 00:01:00 – What is this book? Scott vs. the State 00:03:10 – Bandit theory vs. coordination theory (why states even exist) 00:04:50 – Stationary bandits = ancient mob bosses 00:07:00 – Domestication of fire (and how it domesticated us) 00:10:30 – Fire as predator deterrent + the ultimate gang hangout tool 00:13:00 – Niche construction: ancient humans as ecosystem engineers 00:17:30 – Marshlands, mobility, and why early states hated swamps 00:22:00 – Grain: the world’s first surveillance + tax technology 00:28:40 – Bureaucracy, walls, and why early states kinda sucked 00:35:00 – Rebellion, resistance, and the “dark side” of civilization 00:42:00 – Closing thoughts: was the state really progress… or a trap? Listen if you’ve ever wondered: Was grain basically the original Facebook? Why did marshes make governments sweat harder than the IRS in April? Would you rather hang with Homo erectus around a fire… or Mesopotamian tax collectors? Stay tuned, stay curious, and remember—sometimes going “against the grain” is the smartest move.

09-01
57:49

The Secret of Our Success - Episode 12

In this episode, we dive deep into Joseph Henrich's groundbreaking book "The Secret of Our Success: How Culture is Driving Human Evolution, Domesticating Our Species and Making Us Smarter." Discover why humans are the only species to dominate every continent with just ONE species (while ants needed 10,000+ species to do the same). We explore how cultural evolution became the primary driver of our genetic evolution, making us the ultimate "copycats" of the animal kingdom.   Key Topics Covered: Why toddlers crush chimps and orangutans at social learning How lost European explorers with 5 years of food died while locals thrived The shocking study comparing human children, chimps, and orangutans Why we evolved menopause (spoiler: it's about preserving cultural knowledge) How cooking food literally changed our biology The incredible story of persistence hunting and why we're the sweatiest species Why blue eyes evolved in the Baltic Sea region Cultural customs that save lives (even when people don't know why) How arrow-making requires 14 steps, 7 tools, and 6 materials   From cassava processing in the Amazon to elephant grandmas remembering 60-year-old water sources, this episode reveals how culture - not individual intelligence - made humans masters of Earth. Subscribe for more deep dives into the books that explain our world! 📚 Other Books in Our Series: Sapiens, Behave, The Righteous Mind, Guns Germs & Steel, The WEIRDest People in the World, and many more!

08-04
01:06:10

The Ancient City - Episode 11

🏛️ THE ANCIENT CITY: How Religion Built Civilization (Books Brothers Podcast) The oldest book we've ever covered reveals the SHOCKING truth about how cities actually formed! Forget everything you think you know about ancient Greece and Rome. French scholar Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges drops a bombshell in this 1854 masterpiece: RELIGION wasn't just important to ancient people—it WAS their reality. Every law, every custom, every political structure came from one source: worshipping your dead ancestors. From sacred fires that could NEVER go out to marriage ceremonies that were basically religious conversions, this book explains how ancestor worship created the foundation of Western civilization. Plus: Why exile was worse than death, how Rome's secret sauce conquered the world, and the moment Christianity changed everything forever. Books mentioned: Sapiens, Behave, Righteous Mind, Origins of Political Order, and more from our reading list!   📚 CHAPTER MARKERS 00:00 - Intro: The Oldest Book We've Done 02:42 - Ancient Beliefs: Souls, Death & the Afterlife 07:15 - Worship of the Dead: Pour One Out for Grandpa 13:00 - Sacred Fires: Rule #1 - Never Let It Die 17:00 - Marriage = Religious Conversion (Wild Ancient Wedding Rituals) 22:00 - Family Continuity: Why Having Sons Was EVERYTHING 25:00 - Property Rights: How Sacred Land Created Modern Law 29:00 - The Gens: When Families Become Tribes 37:00 - BOOK 3: THE CITY - How Cities Were Actually Born 42:00 - City Founding Rituals: The Badass Story of Rome's Birth 48:00 - Gods of the City: Stealing Enemy Bones for Power 52:00 - Religion = Government (No Separation of Church & State) 58:00 - Citizens vs. Strangers: You're In or You're Out 1:02:00 - THE REVOLUTIONS BEGIN - When the System Breaks Down 1:15:00 - Rise of the Plebs: The First Labor Strike in History 1:20:00 - Tribune of the Plebs: The Untouchable Power Move 1:25:00 - Laws Written in Bronze: The 12 Tables Revolution 1:30:00 - Solon vs. Draco: Democracy's Poet vs. The Harsh Tyrant 1:35:00 - Athenian Democracy: When 5,000 People Actually Talked 1:40:00 - Alexander's Death & Rome's Rise: "To the Strongest!" 1:45:00 - Christianity Changes Everything: The End of Ancient Society Subscribe for more mind-bending books that explain how the world really works! 🧠⚡ #BooksBrothers #AncientHistory #Rome #Greece #Christianity #Philosophy #History #Podcast

07-14
01:51:41

The Molecule of More - Episode 10

Join JD and Andrew as they dive deep into "The Molecule of More" by Daniel Lieberman and Michael Long - exploring how dopamine drives human behavior, relationships, creativity, and our never-ending pursuit of "more." 🧠 What You'll Learn: The difference between "wanting" and "liking" - and why dopamine controls wanting, not pleasure How dopamine creates two distinct brain circuits: desire vs. control Why the honeymoon phase in relationships only lasts about a year The surprising connection between dopamine and political ideology How immigrants and entrepreneurs share similar dopaminergic traits Why creative people are 25x more likely to have bipolar disorder The neuroscience behind addiction, love, and achievement 🎯 Key Takeaways: Dopamine is the "molecule of more" - it never says "enough" There are two types: desire dopamine (limbic) and control dopamine (prefrontal cortex) Balancing future-focused dopamine with "here and now" chemicals leads to greater happiness Mastery combines both systems for optimal satisfaction 📚 About Books Brothers: We read the big ideas books so you don't have to! Subscribe for summaries of books like Sapiens, Righteous Mind, Behave, and more. 🔔 Subscribe for more book breakdowns and hit the bell for notifications! 💭 What's your dopamine weakness? Let us know in the comments! Chapter Markers 0:00 - Introduction & Book Overview 1:30 - What is Dopamine? The Molecule of More 2:45 - Here and Now vs. Future Molecules 8:15 - Chapter 1: Love - Dopamine in Relationships 16:00 - From Passionate to Companionate Love 19:30 - Sex and the Dopamine Switch 23:00 - Chapter 2: Drugs - Desire vs. Control Circuits 28:45 - Why Adderall Helps ADHD vs. Cocaine Addiction 35:00 - Chapter 3: Domination - Control Dopamine in Action 42:00 - The Buzz Aldrin Effect: Achievement Addiction 45:30 - Willpower as a Limited Resource 48:00 - Chapter 4: Creativity and Madness 52:15 - Why Artists Are 25x More Likely to Have Bipolar 55:45 - John Nash and the Beautiful Mind Connection 58:30 - Isaac Newton: Genius and Virgin 60:00 - Chapter 5: Politics - Liberal vs. Conservative Brains 65:30 - Dopamine and Political Ideology 68:45 - Charitable Giving: Here and Now vs. Abstract Policy 72:00 - Chapter 6: Progress - How Dopamine Got Us Out of Africa 75:30 - The DRD4 Gene and Human Migration 78:15 - Polynesians and Extreme Exploration 80:45 - America as the "Dopamine Nation" 83:30 - Immigration and Entrepreneurship Statistics 86:00 - De Tocqueville's Observations on Restless Americans 88:30 - The Fertility Crisis and Safety Nets 90:45 - Final Thoughts: Balancing Dopamine and Here-and-Now 93:00 - The Avatar Metaphor for Perfect Balance 95:30 - Mastery: When Dopamine and Present Merge 98:15 - Construction Workers and Optimal Happiness 60:00 - Conclusion: A More Balanced Way of Being Human

06-16
01:02:54

I Came to Cast Fire - Episode 9

In this episode, the hosts explore René Girard's mimetic theory through Friar Elias Carr's 2024 book "I Came to Cast Fire: An Introduction to René Girard." The conversation examines how human desires aren't entirely our own but are shaped by imitating others, creating cycles of rivalry and conflict that have defined human societies throughout history. The hosts discuss Girard's insight that humans are the "culture-making animal" whose social structures evolved from the "scapegoat mechanism" - a process where communities channel violence toward a single victim to restore peace. They look at how this pattern created religious rituals, myths, and prohibitions that formed the foundation of ancient civilizations. The discussion moves from ancient ancestor worship to biblical interpretations, examining how Jesus's crucifixion and resurrection uniquely exposed this scapegoat mechanism from the victim's perspective, offering humanity a path beyond mimetic violence. The hosts work through these dense philosophical concepts while questioning evidence for some of Girard's more controversial claims. Connecting cultural evolution, religious worship, and human conflict, this episode presents the hidden mimetic patterns Girard identified in human societies. The conversation covers anthropology, religious studies, and theories about how imitation shapes both our individual desires and our collective institutions.

06-02
01:25:19

Wanting - The Hidden Forces Behind Your Desires - Episode 8

In this mind-bending episode, Andrew and JD explore René Girard's revolutionary mimetic theory through Luke Burgis's accessible book "Wanting." Discover why your deepest desires might not actually be your own! We dive into: Why we mimic the desires of our "models" (from celebrities to rivals) How mimetic rivalries escalate into violence and conflict The surprising connection between scapegoating and civilization Why René Girard became Christian after developing his theory Practical ways to escape mimetic desire and find authentic purpose From Peter Thiel's investment philosophy to why hipsters all look alike while no one identifies as one, this episode will transform how you understand human motivation, marketing, social media, and even ancient religious practices. NEW: We're releasing TWO episodes monthly in April and May! Watch on YouTube! Our amazing video editor and graphics team illustrates all the key ideas and quotes throughout the episode, creating a visually stunning experience that brings these concepts to life. Trust us - this one is worth watching! #MimeticDesire #BooksBrothers #PersonalDevelopment

05-01
57:06

Superintelligence: Paths, Dangers, Strategies by Nick Bostrom

Some of the smartest people out there say a SUPERINTELLIGENT AI is an existential risk. Lets get some deeper understanding, and Bostrom is the perfect machine-impersonating author to give us the basics while capturing magnitude of the potential problem. How likely is a Superintelligence? When might it happen? What’s the history of AI technology and are we excited about nothing? Would a superintelligence try and make itself smarter?  It it tried to take over (whoa) what MIGHT it do? High-probability take-over-the-world is on the early menu. #robotpopulations #serversruntheworld

12-20
01:05:16

The Selfish Gene by Richard Dawkins

WHAT IS LIFE?  HOW DOES IT KEEP CREATING ITSELF?If you hatch out of your egg first, should you try and chuck your brothers and sisters out of the nest?Dawkins tells us a great story about these teeny little replicators inside everyone one of our trillion cells.  #NatureIsMetal #WhenaManLovesaWoman

12-20
01:18:38

Sapiens: A Brief History of Human Kind by Yuval Noah Harari

Aerial-flyover of the story and history of humankind from 6M years ago to today. Important and foundational themes for all of humanity: psychology, technology, religion, economy, politics… Cognitive Revolution 70,000 years agoAgricultural Revolution 12,000 years agoScientific Revolution 500 years agoIndustrial Revolution 250 years agoWhats next??

10-08
01:39:25

negar ahrari

Wonderful

05-29 Reply

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