Your brain is biased by default. Here’s how to reset it. | David Eagleman

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Big Think

Big Think

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 593
@kiminthemix4251
@kiminthemix4251 4 ай бұрын
Why does this sort of content not go viral? Clearly, we prioritize bias
@郝宝妍
@郝宝妍 4 ай бұрын
Agreed. This is an amazing channel.
@SlickSkuddy
@SlickSkuddy 4 ай бұрын
It’s easy to be biased for so many people and unfortunately there’s not enough people who know how to circumvent it in themselves
@n4837z
@n4837z 4 ай бұрын
We are COMFORTABLE as we are.
@pallidustigris
@pallidustigris 4 ай бұрын
Many are afraid to learn what contradicts lifelong closely held beliefs.
@RichardHarlos
@RichardHarlos 4 ай бұрын
In my view, cntent like this doesn't go viral because most people, most of the time, have little or no interest in exploring the many ways in which their views would reveal their biases and failings as moral creatures. Most everyone would prefer to 'maintain the veil' than to rend it, because 'ego' just can't stand to admit when it's wrong... about anything.
@MRIKARUsss89
@MRIKARUsss89 4 ай бұрын
2:05 - "I needed this reminder - happiness is something we create, not find. 🧘‍♀"
@MindBitX
@MindBitX 2 ай бұрын
yes!
@mrslcom
@mrslcom 4 ай бұрын
This ought to be taught in every school in every country.
@kusheran
@kusheran 4 ай бұрын
It (critical thinking and critical race theory) is being banned instead.
@FernandaRLima-op2iq
@FernandaRLima-op2iq 3 ай бұрын
I saw in my english course although.
@nunyabusy
@nunyabusy 2 ай бұрын
Teaches teach the way they were taught. It’s a bias set early and extremely difficult to overcome.
@wanderlking8634
@wanderlking8634 4 ай бұрын
There are people I strongly disagree with politically but I always feel uncomfortable when they are dehumanized, even by people I am ideologically aligned with. Even if the political opposition is dehumanizing my side of the aisle, I don't think we should reflect that bad behavior.
@deelehey2827
@deelehey2827 4 ай бұрын
Morals are important
@R1chAsshole
@R1chAsshole 4 ай бұрын
Because your association with them goes deeper than politics, maybe you disagree with what they’re ultimately saying but how they go about doing so is similar to what you would do. Same with religion for me none of the labels fit, I empathize based on personality and personal circumstance
@sima.m07
@sima.m07 3 ай бұрын
You're probably like me-a 'creative personality.' It takes a unique kind of person to fully understand the other side of an argument, yet still disagree with it just as strongly, simply because that's what you truly feel.
@user-jy9rq8nj7q
@user-jy9rq8nj7q 2 ай бұрын
@@sima.m07 I think it's more simply emotional intelligence and maturity
@DSAK55
@DSAK55 2 ай бұрын
"They're eating the cats, They're eating the dogs"
@Daniel47yes
@Daniel47yes 4 ай бұрын
This is the most relevant video I have seen in regards to the international political issues we face today. By extension, this video explains why when I discuss views people don't agree with, they dismiss the argument because of how that person is or where they come from or who their parents are or what their religion is. Governments and companies use these techniques all the time, like propaganda against a minority, dehumanizing a group in order to continue to kill them and soldiers being ok with it. Examples of this are US making Japanese look like demons during WW2, dehumanizing Palestinians to get the West against them, or Hitler with the Jews.
@DrMikeE100
@DrMikeE100 4 ай бұрын
Good examples, and riding on your Palestinians example, I would tack on the DEHUMANIZATION of Israeli that is now so common in the "Progressive" portion of Western countries along with the excessive HUMANIZATION of Palestinians by the same leftists. As a result, the world holds Israel to a bizarrely and absurdly unfair double standard when it comes to how it conducts its war of self-defense. (Note: I consider myself strongly liberal but not part of the illiberal, woke, pronoun-obsessed, identity politics "progressives" - who are actually not progressive overall, and who play into the right's playbook criticizing all of us on the left.)
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 4 ай бұрын
@@DrMikeE100 I'm with ya on this one. And by the way, I have a feeling the entire point of this video (an ad brought me here) is to be a piece of some strand of propaganda, which I would guess leans on the 'P' side.
@Student-jd8vf
@Student-jd8vf 2 ай бұрын
I agree especially the dehumanization of Palestininans going on
@gribincealorelia848
@gribincealorelia848 4 ай бұрын
David Eagleman is the neuroscientist that best understands how wonderfully different are our brains and how unique are our internal models
@DavidElstob73
@DavidElstob73 4 ай бұрын
What I've discovered is that the scaffolding of human emotion is the same for people the world over.
@MOHAMEDFAZILC.A
@MOHAMEDFAZILC.A 3 ай бұрын
00:03 Our brains construct reality based on limited experiences 00:59 Our brains are flexible and shaped by genetics and experiences. 02:06 Genes and life experiences shape our perception of reality 03:05 Human brains form groups based on similarity, leading to bias. 04:02 Brain is less responsive to pain in outgroup members 04:56 Recognize and overcome biases for mental reset 05:52 Strategies to reset biases 06:53 Understanding commonalities fosters stronger bonds
@4leafcloverist
@4leafcloverist 2 ай бұрын
this is genuinely so important. i feel like it's safe to say every war ever is based in this in-group vs. out-group mentality. you can keep your own moral standards will still recognizing that there will always be people who disagree with you (however baffling that may be). personally, i need to stop making so many quick assumptions about people based on their appearance and body language. i grew up shy and i still am shy, so i'd rather assume than ask sometimes. i can work on that! thank you for your profound words!!!!
@josepires3497
@josepires3497 4 ай бұрын
I've led collaborative innovations in 30+ countries and learned that we focus too much on our differences while nearly all of what makes us human is very much the same. ❤
@mikemo4252
@mikemo4252 4 ай бұрын
"Guarding against" seems to be consistently scaled up in our cognitive and behavioral systems (e.g. aversion to loss is 2x our desire for comparable gain....risk tolerances also reflect this) as compared to "seeking to gain"... We're built and wired for survival, and so we're designed to focus on what lets us survive: a given danger/source of loss is more impactful towards surviving than a given benefit/boon.... As I've looked at it, there's a certain Pascale's Wager to our existence: it's safer to be wrong about some things than others....and in life, negative outcomes/consequences can be total and absolute (say, unlimited bad). But the benefits (regarding survival in any given moment) are modest by comparison... extremely modest.....so we can, with our finite attention, emphasize being on the lookout for immediately catastrophic (fatal) hazards OR moreso for something potentially helpful in the longer term of things.... there's no question we survive by our bias towards recognizing dangers....and an extension of that wiring is to focus on differences between us ... Differences = Less familiar= less known = more unknown....and danger lurks in the unknown, which is why we fear it, necessarily and by default, and for all the above reasoning (and surely more)..... Emphasis placed on our differences is a consequence of our survival systems.... surmountable, but it won't happen unintentionally
@abhiroopmanana1035
@abhiroopmanana1035 4 ай бұрын
You summarised the video very well brutha.​@@mikemo4252
@lizielita
@lizielita 2 ай бұрын
We're different and that's beautiful. We should strive to accept our differences and learn from each other, not to try to be the same. Each color of the rainbow is beautiful and make the rainbow amazing. It's okay to see our differences but let's be curious instead of judging others because of their differences. It's not dangerous to be different, dangerous is a close mind or seeing differences as frightening. Let's share love, acceptance, openness, curiosity and compassion meanwhile we work on our confidence and self-love. Have a wonderful day. Sending you love and wishing you the best.
@unliving_ball_of_gas
@unliving_ball_of_gas 2 ай бұрын
​@@mikemo4252 woah, beautiful words
@twischannel
@twischannel 9 күн бұрын
David eagleman is the best brain researcher I have seen ever. Really thank I learned each time a read or see you something new
@Tubayuno
@Tubayuno 20 күн бұрын
Also another thing that I've observed for biases to break is in becoming excellent at things, by hardwork and success, when people see you doing better than them or being equally well off at things, they're able to connect with you on things at a level that equally matters to both parties so the empathy kicks in and the respect would come off automatically, ex Asians being good at education.
@KCM_KCM
@KCM_KCM 2 ай бұрын
Three strategies: understand your own biases, understand tactics used to dehumanize others, enhance complexifying allegiances with others
@MsScarletHeart4ever
@MsScarletHeart4ever 4 ай бұрын
I’ve always been intrigued by the: outside looking in theory. If there even is one. Perceiving myself how another person would perceive me inside their minds with their own biases.
@_Akhilleus_
@_Akhilleus_ 4 ай бұрын
I have my own set of steps too: 1) Understand and recognize that our ideas are subjected to change or reinterpreted and viewed from other points of view. 2) Like in the orchestra example, what matters in a discussion or in a society is the song we're playing, not the individuals appearances. 3) In the orchestra, we need to adapt our selves to keep the music coherent and harmonic
@johndenner
@johndenner 4 ай бұрын
‘Building a richer model of the other person” what a great place to start!
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 4 ай бұрын
That almost sounds like the Elite granting more tax cuts to the working class.
@krismatic_
@krismatic_ 4 ай бұрын
I love David Eagleman. His quote will forever stay with me "The brain's job is to create an internal model of the exterior world."
@catalinagomez924
@catalinagomez924 4 ай бұрын
What a great honor to be able to learn so much from Mr. Eagleman, even though I am miles away from him. Thank you for posting this video! I am a HUGE fan of Doctor David Eagleman. 😊
@angierox6964
@angierox6964 3 ай бұрын
I wish our brains would evolve a bit more quickly. Imagine a world where we all cared about each other.
@FairnessIsTheAnswer
@FairnessIsTheAnswer 2 ай бұрын
Evolution is slow. Destruction is coming very fast. Self determination must override evolution
@BootyRealDreamMurMurs
@BootyRealDreamMurMurs 2 ай бұрын
allow the right neuroscientists access to human brains and live human experimentations within ethical standards and such a world will either come sooner or farther.
@AuthenticBranding
@AuthenticBranding 2 ай бұрын
Our brains evolve very very quickly. It's about how information is presented.
@FairnessIsTheAnswer
@FairnessIsTheAnswer 2 ай бұрын
@@AuthenticBranding How quickly are we changing how information is presented?
@AuthenticBranding
@AuthenticBranding 2 ай бұрын
@FairnessIsTheAnswer Using narratives: seconds for memes, half hour shows, 2 hour movies, still, less than a day even binging a show.
@hydra5758
@hydra5758 4 ай бұрын
I used to be involved in this map gaming community, where we would pick a point in history (Eg. The Cold War), and assume control of a nation and take actions to try and better our respective positions (which was realized through these game master authored 'news reports'). People got pretty invested into those games, and I had a few moments where my perspective on faraway peoples changed for the better because they had effectively become my 'in-group'. When they succeeded, I had succeeded, and when they suffered, I suffered.
@AcceptSurrenderLetGo
@AcceptSurrenderLetGo 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for your enlightening insights. The unfortunate reality is that the sense of in-group and out-group feelings extends far beyond religion, race, or national identity. These sentiments are often rooted in false identities that have been deeply ingrained in our brains. Countless individuals across the globe continue to cling to the misguided belief that their in-group is inherently superior to others. This toxic mindset has fueled countless wars and atrocities throughout history. Even within seemingly homogeneous religious groups, we have witnessed devastating fratricidal conflicts driven by the same in-group versus out-group mentality. To truly unite the world, we must shift our focus from superficial divisions like race, religion, and nationality to the common values that bind us together. Those who manipulate these false identities for personal gain and power are a constant threat to global harmony. By recognizing the dangers of these divisive ideologies and embracing our shared humanity, we can work towards a more just and peaceful future.
@rigelb9025
@rigelb9025 4 ай бұрын
'Global harmony'. I mean, good luck with that one.
@GrandmaRose9000
@GrandmaRose9000 4 ай бұрын
I wish this was the kind of thing that went viral.
@TheGreatShorts
@TheGreatShorts 4 ай бұрын
Kind of thing they should teach at schools
@SunnySTX
@SunnySTX 4 ай бұрын
10k views in 3 hours....does that not count?
@MrBrownpants-w3t
@MrBrownpants-w3t 4 ай бұрын
It's not new information. This information is used to control you everyday.
@Yuusou.
@Yuusou. 4 ай бұрын
@@SunnySTX with 7.2 million subscribers, it's nothing. Not even 1 percent is watching it after 3 hours.
@gummisnoodable
@gummisnoodable 4 ай бұрын
The many, free teachings of Michael Singer give practical ways to put the ideas mentioned in this video into practice. - A fan
@Torch4Life
@Torch4Life 4 ай бұрын
This one's easily in YT top10 videos of the year (imo). Thank you Mr. Eagleman & Big Think.
@pallidustigris
@pallidustigris 4 ай бұрын
Awesome explanation of the root cause of one or many human behaviors we encounter daily. It clearly explains an important point many are unaware of but yet ask themselves "why".
@temporaladvisor3958
@temporaladvisor3958 3 ай бұрын
As a former political junkie, I've had to severely reduce the amount of political news I take in after realizing what I'd become. Over the years, I have increasingly referred to Trump supporters as subhuman, dehumanizing them as people with lives consisting of pasts and futures. And even though I recognize how depraved this is, I honestly don't know if I can stop this behavior entirely if I'm provoked by some article or video. Makes me wonder how skewed my biases are in other areas of life. Definitely something to be aware of and change as it crops up.
@DSAK55
@DSAK55 2 ай бұрын
Sigmund Freud said, "Somethings a cigar is a cigar" Point being: Trumptards *are* stupid
@learningisfun2108
@learningisfun2108 Ай бұрын
Just that you are using self reflection (maybe meta cognition) makes me believe you are one of the good guys. Like you, I’ve had to step away from the political world as it was negatively affecting my life. I have a hopeful disposition and want to believe in the best of humanity, but that was changing. Also, I can’t change how people in another country vote, even if it can seriously affect my life in a neighbouring country. I never want to dehumanize people. That leads to the hell they have in Middle East (Israel/Palestine conflict). I like to ask people, when they are negative: how large is your circle of compassion? Just you? Your family? Your community? Those with different views? Your enemy? What about animals? Hopefully it gets people thinking.
@temporaladvisor3958
@temporaladvisor3958 Ай бұрын
@@learningisfun2108 I suppose people like us, people who don't like the ugliness emerging from within, have to take the step to find some level of connection. It will be a challenge. So here's to finding something good or at least similar in people before it's too late for all of us.
@learningisfun2108
@learningisfun2108 Ай бұрын
@ Great post. Thx. I’m thinking of volunteering. That always brings a good vibe. I hope you stay positive during these trying times. 🤠
@temporaladvisor3958
@temporaladvisor3958 Ай бұрын
@@learningisfun2108 Volunteering? Absolutely. It's self-healing since it gets you out of your head, which can be a scary place, and it gives people/animals hope they can eventually meet life's challenges. Highly recommend volunteering.
@girlofanimation
@girlofanimation 2 ай бұрын
"The interesting thing about being a human is that we're stuck inside our internal model. It's all we ever see..." has been part of my existential crisis since I was a little kid.
@micahhight
@micahhight 4 ай бұрын
Love his "The Brain with Brian Eagleman" series, absolutely fascinating
@tellyfields2939
@tellyfields2939 4 ай бұрын
This is so well articulated! I thought this was probably the case (or something like it) but could figure out how to say it. Thank you!!!
@LazerCanno
@LazerCanno 4 ай бұрын
A lot of anthropology shows this as well. Very cool to hear from neuroscience about this.
@abody499
@abody499 4 ай бұрын
It's not possible to "unbias". It certainly is possible to acknowledge and attempt to account for those biases though.
@OneMoreRep199
@OneMoreRep199 4 ай бұрын
@@abody499 Embrace Buddha's teaching 😄
@mikemo4252
@mikemo4252 4 ай бұрын
Unbiasing, like any "un-" process may aim towards an absolute erasure, conceptually, but can also indicate a lessening or diminishing or reduction of.... Think of this as a "lessening of" rather than a delete button 👍
@abody499
@abody499 4 ай бұрын
​@@OneMoreRep199 how would that make a difference?
@OneMoreRep199
@OneMoreRep199 4 ай бұрын
@@abody499 first of all don't go to Buddha. Listen to OSHO first.
@OneMoreRep199
@OneMoreRep199 4 ай бұрын
@@abody499 read Murakami, Kafka, Dostoevsky and then turn to Buddha.
@WilliamJonesChess
@WilliamJonesChess 4 ай бұрын
Key points for me Perceptual genomics- how genes affect the way we view our world When you deal with people in your outgroup, you have less empathy You bond over something, many things, later there may be discords, you learn their viewpoints
@TheBoyjah
@TheBoyjah 4 ай бұрын
I so much want the ability to perceive the world from the brains/minds/hearts of other human beings. It would be amazing (and probably often saddening) as a way to view the world in multiple ways. Like when I lived in other countries, I was able to see the world in a different way than only living in the USA
@vwsadventures3039
@vwsadventures3039 3 ай бұрын
How interesting. I can't help but think that there are those of us who are wired genetically to be insatiably curious and those who are not. The price we pay is never quite fit anywhere. It has taken me decades to realize that it is a blessing, a gift, and not a curse
@dennistucker1153
@dennistucker1153 4 ай бұрын
I really like David Eagleman's view points.
@-AkhilTej-
@-AkhilTej- 8 күн бұрын
🎯💎🏆 Great insightful & fruitful video 🏆💎🎯 लोकः समस्ताः सुखिनो भवन्तु ( May all beings lead prosperous life across Globe 🌍 )
@eliasath
@eliasath 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing. Well said.
@MarkChucks
@MarkChucks 3 ай бұрын
*Thank you😊 for this video, do you offer account management or have any recommendations?*
@LuxeAsthetics-s2b
@LuxeAsthetics-s2b 3 ай бұрын
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@JenniferLynd
@JenniferLynd 3 ай бұрын
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@NickGabriel-o1t
@NickGabriel-o1t 3 ай бұрын
@RobertHughes-r6pThere seems to be constant mention of "Victoria Walters Hayward" everywhere I turn. Are the accolades and reviews truly worth her?
@PhillipeMattews
@PhillipeMattews 3 ай бұрын
Her platform is user friendly, transparent and secure with no restrictions
@SophiaMartins-x1g
@SophiaMartins-x1g 3 ай бұрын
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@lindabell6293
@lindabell6293 4 ай бұрын
Thank you - make it easier for us to get a hold of you. Our genes adapt to our experiences - predisposition is based on early imprints which are adjustable.
@willmpet
@willmpet 3 ай бұрын
Blind those biases and you realize what they are when you see the reality and make better decisions!
@aderrick94
@aderrick94 4 ай бұрын
My strategy: There's no ingroup or outgroup. The only one I am responsible to is myself and my conscience. All divisions like religion, nation, race, food, etc., are like clothing. They are not what we Are but they are merely what we wear.
@DanFedMusic
@DanFedMusic 14 күн бұрын
One of the most beneficial videos on the Internet
@858frank
@858frank 4 ай бұрын
This is great, but as listening, I could only think of the work of Ken Wilber. There's another important factor involved----that of psychological growth, a kind of individual evolution. As individuals evolve and grow, and this within the evolution of the society around them, their in group grows. For example, a baby sees only itself. A toddler sees his mother and then immediate family. Then the person sees school chums, church groups, political groups, etc. But people get stuck, for example same are stuck at an emotional toddler state, a narcissist or sociopath. The higher evolved a person becomes, the larger they see their people, their in group. This video provides great suggestions on how an individual can expand their membership in humanity. The people who will take this video to heart, think about it, maybe move on it, are people who are more evolved that that narcissist.
@RichardHarlos
@RichardHarlos 4 ай бұрын
Dehumanization has become such a normal 'way of being' for so many people, and for so much of the time, that it's mostly invisible to them. I don't state this to excuse such practices, rather, to call attention to the massive indictment against a large swatch of humanity: when one cares more about one's ego, and about protecting one's biases, than one cares about being fair-minded... it's a recipe for contention and an ever-present 'us-vs-them' way of being. In the US, this is most prevalent in the political sphere, but it also finds a significant presence in matters of racism, sexism, and religious affiliation (or the lack thereof). We see this very clearly in the online comment space, where people seem not only vulnerable to mindlessly engage in 'us-vs-them' rhetoric, but also appear proud of themselves for doing so. People are the problem. Not political affiliation, or sex, or race, or religion... **people** are the problem.
@Ivar-V
@Ivar-V 4 ай бұрын
That was a really convoluted way of explaining finding common ground at the end. Summary: we protect what we perceive as self or an extension of self and not what is seen as other. Might be the preclude to the “all is one mantra”. It’s so simple it’s probably true. Love thy neighbor as thy self.
@JensenPike-i5q
@JensenPike-i5q 4 ай бұрын
He focused on solutions as well as the issues.
@JaySmith-pv2mw
@JaySmith-pv2mw 4 ай бұрын
How is one supposed to respond to an outgroup that sees me and my ingroup as enemies that need to be vanquished? It's not a lack of understanding on my part about the outgroup's worldview, it's that I understand ALL TOO WELL. Finding some small thing we have in common isn't going to be enough.
@BohemianWonderluster
@BohemianWonderluster 4 ай бұрын
That is true, however, do you know what prisoners’ dilemma is? If my group attacks preventively the group over the hill we both are going to suffer casualties, and the other group would think the same. Now if there is trade of good and intermarriages both groups survive and prosper. That I believe is how humanity got where it is now and not with fear and distrust.
@jamiedorsey4167
@jamiedorsey4167 4 ай бұрын
Most of the time it isn't about swaying the hardcore, devoted. Its about moving enough of those who have some flexibility away from the extreme. With your words and actions do you move the moderate toward you or away from you?
@yisroelpink3831
@yisroelpink3831 4 ай бұрын
Great video ❤️
@Dopeher
@Dopeher 2 ай бұрын
More people need to see this
@eujin9709
@eujin9709 2 ай бұрын
David shares almost everything as teaser where i studied from his book named " the brain the story of you" became a fan
@harshithpraveen7049
@harshithpraveen7049 4 ай бұрын
This is the real good stuff out there
@soniyasinha3496
@soniyasinha3496 3 ай бұрын
if someone rejects your thoughts and feelings outright and tries to force their version of ideas on you, that is bias.. can be fixed by exchange of knowledge and not force superiority on you
@jcoop3660
@jcoop3660 Ай бұрын
You never step outside yourself, you gain understanding.
@YoungerFuthark
@YoungerFuthark 4 ай бұрын
Nicely stated. Not very revelatory for some people. On a side note, the beeping background music was distracting for me. It sounded like the beeping was in my environment and I paused the video to verify, but it still distracted me for the rest of the video.
@Aroma-i
@Aroma-i 2 ай бұрын
Woah ! What a concept to rewire mind in a good and unbiased way.
@chaoticlue
@chaoticlue 4 ай бұрын
I have started to think only in terms of neural networks now. Hence we have a bias and proportional weight that keeps changing with our experiences i.e., back propagation.
@wvvwwvwvv
@wvvwwvwvv 4 ай бұрын
Hows that work out when you wanna get laid?
@Arshvii
@Arshvii 2 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video
@Dopeher
@Dopeher 2 ай бұрын
This is gold❤
@mblair5327
@mblair5327 2 ай бұрын
I always noticed that when I hear about a tragedy it always affects me more if it happened in North America than other parts of the world.
@JensenPike-i5q
@JensenPike-i5q 4 ай бұрын
Love the commonality part!
@JensenPike-i5q
@JensenPike-i5q 4 ай бұрын
He focused on solutions as well as problems.
@dodoraptor8387
@dodoraptor8387 2 ай бұрын
It is difficult to see the world or people as they really, or as they present themselves. We all have a cognitive bias and it was influenced particularly by environmental factors throughout our childhood experiences...The media, parents' upbringing, society, our peers and teachers all play a role in shaping our perception and reinforcing our biases. We typically either appreciate or depreciate a person or race based on our preconceived perceptions. It is a good thing to indeed remove those biases and assess the world through our observations...Like a scientist or a Buddhist, if we wish to unravel the truth, we must observe reality and draw conclusions that lead us to hows things really are.
@ianyork1759
@ianyork1759 2 ай бұрын
That was great❤ Thanks
@beastoftalvar
@beastoftalvar Ай бұрын
Thank you for making my day. I'm going to work with a much lighter attitude now.❤
@mxxgxx9756
@mxxgxx9756 4 ай бұрын
7:32 IN INDONESIAN WE HAVE ''BHINEKA TUNGGAL IKA'' DIFFERENT BUT STILL THE SAME
@heristyono4755
@heristyono4755 4 ай бұрын
🤮
@TheTravellingCritic-ke8kh
@TheTravellingCritic-ke8kh 4 ай бұрын
Bhineka tunggal ika? Apa ni?
@anjayaniu4921
@anjayaniu4921 3 ай бұрын
aowkkwkw
@paskariosiregar
@paskariosiregar 5 күн бұрын
Same.. i think not... tolong pisahkan sumatra dan Pulau batam dari jawa 🎉
@CD-wt3rc
@CD-wt3rc 2 ай бұрын
Hey. Thanks, millions. Solid presentation. Safe to suggest we are at fluid states in relation to self-awareness? I'm finding that people are busy with other shiny objects. I'm dealing with minor abuse from 4 to 9 by a toronto priest. That's not the story. I went for help. They didnt return my calls and then email. They apologized. Offered what we'd hope, counseling. After police investigating, a stranger came to my home. With all of that going on, I'm forced to greater awareness. We really are alone!
@ria-qt1vn
@ria-qt1vn 2 ай бұрын
probably the best thing ive seen today
@Isaac_blingz
@Isaac_blingz 4 ай бұрын
i really love the contents of this page
@eg1art4life
@eg1art4life 3 ай бұрын
Looks interesting but is the background music needed?
@yashwantkumarjoshi4174
@yashwantkumarjoshi4174 4 ай бұрын
Good analysis 👍
@IDMYM8
@IDMYM8 3 ай бұрын
From discussion point of view, I am thinking there are certain aspects of communal biases which stems from the virtue of righteousness. Like in certain cultures alcohol is looked as forbidden beverage. If socially, a group of people gives acceptability for consumption, then the group who were against consumption would consider the other as "wrong people" or not people at all, and vice versa. It's the point of "justification" that our mind perceive for acceptance or rejection. The problem occurs fighting biasness, when something does have a history of notcible problems, not as an actual history but what we experience, good or bad experience with something. Basically, what I'm tryna say is there is certain objectivity to consider that overlaps with our subjective experiences to form biase, which make sense. The question becomes complex when we are trying to answer, "Is it really important to fight our biases? If yes, then when is the time to accept biases?" Can having baises be important too? Answering this as yes itself will ascertain to be biased.
@mjdimayuga4299
@mjdimayuga4299 2 ай бұрын
Is just the start of the video but i feel attacked 😂😂😂. It really means this video of yours is very effective and impactful
@jalma_ngumbara
@jalma_ngumbara 3 ай бұрын
We are all human being and live on the same planet. Can't we make that fact a solid ground to make everybody our ingroup"?
@corncobjohnsonreal
@corncobjohnsonreal Ай бұрын
I know obviously none of this is true but it would make for a good Black mirror episode
@hikeskool
@hikeskool 4 ай бұрын
I’m good thanks 👌
@orangesite7625
@orangesite7625 2 ай бұрын
It is better to be biased that to be unbiased, as a person who became optimistic I agree bias is bad but is necessary so we move forward one who is truly unbiased will have to become biased for sure but we can limit the bias which we also call harmful prejudice and unbias it, that will help us to be more efficient, good and powerful.
@GhibliHeroine
@GhibliHeroine 4 ай бұрын
This notion that each individual experiences reality differently based on their mental conditions reminds me of Buddhism. For instance, what may be a traumatic experience for one person might not be for another. This is because people process and interpret events through the lens of their personal life stories, emotions, psychological resilience, and the context in which the experience takes place. But this idea of showing more empathy only towards one's own group doesn’t work for everyone (perhaps it works in individualistic cultures). For me, for instance, it doesn’t matter if a child or animal belongs to a specific group. Whether they come from a different religious culture or ideology, you’ll still want to protect them because they are vulnerable.
@jamiedorsey4167
@jamiedorsey4167 4 ай бұрын
What if it wasn't a vulnerable member of an out group, but a powerful member? Compassion lets us expand our circle of care. I'm just saying that I see people sometimes drawing a new in group/ out group circle between those with power and those without.
@subhasissamanta2801
@subhasissamanta2801 3 ай бұрын
Reminds me of Amartya Sen's book 'Identity & Violence'...
@Shahasaad
@Shahasaad 4 ай бұрын
Great video
@tillp.374
@tillp.374 2 ай бұрын
0:51 Does anybody know the name of the camera? Thanks
@crazydov
@crazydov 2 ай бұрын
It's name is Jeremy. You're welcome
@learningisfun2108
@learningisfun2108 Ай бұрын
@@crazydov. That’s not Jeremy. I’m pretty sure that is his twin, Jessica.
@hikeskool
@hikeskool 4 ай бұрын
Popping in with the xylophone in less than 90 seconds not bad 👌
@whatitmeans
@whatitmeans 4 ай бұрын
Also they should study "Why those bias are there?", obviously not as justification of racism, but if evolution have selected those it should be some dynamics on the background who benefits those who have them, as example, you could find in Primer youtube channel a really good video about the "green beard problem", and just trying to neglect those biases without recognizing or resolving those dynamics on the background would left those individuals prone to be erased by those same persisting dynamics. Think as example you are a native american indian walking on the forest 500 yrs ago, and accidentally you found a group of men of your neighboring tribe, if you wouldn't handle that situation we care, you could die. Its an interesting, delicate, and relevant topic.
@arthogof
@arthogof 2 ай бұрын
I find it interesting that this runs directly contrary to a lot of the way modern DEI is set up. It shows the flaw in having segregated affinity groups, and why placing our differences formost is so damaging compared to finding our common ground.
@annehanni5055
@annehanni5055 Ай бұрын
Great video! I really do have a question. For someone with less than $10,000 to invest, how would you recommend we enter the crypto market? I am looking at studying some traders and copying their strategy rather than investing myself and losing money emotionally. What's your take on this approach?
@AndreaSilverman-l5t
@AndreaSilverman-l5t Ай бұрын
the first step to successful investing is figuring out your goals and risk tolerance either on your own or with the help of a financial professional but is very advisable you make use of a professional.
@MatthewRobinette-e3f
@MatthewRobinette-e3f Ай бұрын
She is my family's personal broker and also a personal broker in many families I'm United States, she's a licensed broker and a FINRA AGENT in United States.
@DallasReinketl
@DallasReinketl Ай бұрын
Please I’m new her how can I contact her please?
@WindydaisyLove
@WindydaisyLove Ай бұрын
I want to invest in one of the financial markets with her How do I reach out?
@LilyJenny-y4g
@LilyJenny-y4g Ай бұрын
Her platform is user friendly, transparent and secure with no restrictions
@JarkkoToivonen
@JarkkoToivonen 4 ай бұрын
Thanks for wise teachings !
@DonnieIp
@DonnieIp 4 ай бұрын
If reality will always be subjective then we will always have a bias towards things. I am okay with my biases. I believe the point of grouping and othering is based on how much energy a person has. We are only able to contribute our time and energy to a certain amount of people so it only makes sense that we contribute to our tribe and not a group that may not have our best interest.
@thinknews
@thinknews 4 ай бұрын
Just. Wow.
@igorchak48
@igorchak48 4 ай бұрын
It's interesting that emotional intelligence isn't mentioned anywhere in this video, even though these skills are crucial for recognizing personal biases. While I agree with all the suggested actions, the real challenge is self-awareness, which is where these educational videos fall short in making a lasting impact on individuals.
@joshuaohuka7719
@joshuaohuka7719 4 ай бұрын
That's rather one sided...
@joelharris4399
@joelharris4399 4 ай бұрын
In layman's terms: So Don Quixote's warped perception of reality was not just because of him gobbling up an overabundance of (outdated) chivalric romances in his extended spare time, but also as a consequence of possessing a set of unique genes, which influence the way he sees and interprets his external world, Baroque Spain. Miguel de Cervantes in his 419 year-old novel, partly influenced by Plato's Republic presented this as a fundamental problem of modernity: who gets to determine what is real, whose experiential reality holds more water in a world where the lines separating reality and fiction are blurred? In a sense, we are all Don Quixotes, indefinitely imprisoned by our brain's evolutionary internal programming in a post-Platonic world stripped for the most part of that abstract substance: transcendence
@OneMoreRep199
@OneMoreRep199 4 ай бұрын
@@joelharris4399 Good one✅
@joelharris4399
@joelharris4399 4 ай бұрын
@@OneMoreRep199 🙏 Thanks
@smellslikeproductions
@smellslikeproductions 4 ай бұрын
I can’t read f8ggot, can someone translate?
@docjaramillo
@docjaramillo 4 ай бұрын
Transcendence is an ongoing process… read Spinoza!
@joelharris4399
@joelharris4399 4 ай бұрын
@@docjaramillo Anything in particular you have in mind?
@mrcsrkcrz
@mrcsrkcrz 4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for this video. There should be so much more good content and education on this. Such a major topic for peace, everybody should understand this. It's important to realize how media or people, maybe even friends are often manipulating people (often possibly unaware of doing it) with cheap tricks to trust/respect other cultures less, based on nothing more than ignorance. Mostly fed by wrong/made up information. I grew up German/Brazilian and traveled the world so it’s very hard to sometimes see how narrow minded others are and it doesn’t matter how much you try to explain, it seems easier and therefore more comfortable for many to stick to a negative and harmful perspective about others than learning that there is no good/better or bad/worse cultures. Just different perspectives depending where and how you grew up. I’d argue therefore the best cultures are the most welcoming of others. And that is my bias. Which would be bad for maintaining/preserving cultures but good for understanding and learning from each other to improve outdated world views and therefore help the world become a better place.
@pablopiquante3227
@pablopiquante3227 4 ай бұрын
The root of culture is cult; therefore is it not progressive and healthy for a culture to change and experience growth over time?
@RowdyRana-zc5gl
@RowdyRana-zc5gl 3 ай бұрын
Good 😊
@ghostderazgriz
@ghostderazgriz 2 ай бұрын
If the default is biased then resetting it only make it biased again :(
@shashank270502
@shashank270502 4 ай бұрын
Guys i think i might be an intellectual 😂, i was in really deep thought about this entire topic as to why people fight, why do they bomb,kill etc fellow human beings and are protective of thier own associates even when both are clearly on the "evil" side of things as categorised by other party. And can this ever be resolved like what if aliens are real and want to colonise our planet, will we then act as a individual unit when its everyone's problem... Really is just a chain of thoughts which make you think how majority of humanity is people selfishly living and dying. Great video thankyou for putting my thoughts into a scientifically validated phenomena, ill do what i can do and be the change I want to see. 🤝🏼
@suzannedickson5641
@suzannedickson5641 4 ай бұрын
Lol
@fallovercookie
@fallovercookie 2 ай бұрын
oh, just about ONE bias? pls more!
@setarehhasanabadi4994
@setarehhasanabadi4994 4 ай бұрын
The content on this page never cease to amaze me 🥺❤
@cobalius
@cobalius 2 ай бұрын
i perceive my imagination attempts as a cascade of images with a build-up time to them. Longer time there's literally nothing, then a flash and another, it's irregular. But eventually it will turn into short videos of great detail and become malleable like play-dough, which might also give me insigths about my subconciousness n stuff. First imagination starts with a bunch of "empty patterns" at certain locations, before the next images will become "executed patterns" (which will give me hints for their actual looks and behaviours). After that, the next few images will simultaniously fill out context, increase the details greatly and result into video sequences instead of fading images. Having come so far, it lets me then move my point of view and view angle freely. And in that stage, i usually also feel several of the predicted textures, temperatures, the heat conductivity and material strength of individual patterns at my tongue and fingers and can meassure their dimensions in fingernails, arms or other body parts. And ocassionally i might also see tensor fields of the imagined rain, wind, people and other movements, regardless of their level of coordination and orderliness. And no, i had not yet stable one's. Longest might have been like half a minute, during meditation, which is very rare. Normally they live mere seconds or fractions of that, with up to a minute of build-up time. Extreme stress and stuff like rollercoasters and a honeymoon phases are enhancing all aspects though.
@movewithmike
@movewithmike 2 ай бұрын
You have to read David Eagleman's books. He's a brilliant scientist who makes complex ideas really easy to understand... And these ideas, like this video, will improve your life
@mikg2618
@mikg2618 3 ай бұрын
NLP and epigenetic, what about the same consciousness of all living beings? One consciousness and many awarenesses. Direct path.
@niconico4114
@niconico4114 4 ай бұрын
the belief that mind arises from genes and brains is itself a bias. the second half of the video seemed more practical and applicable. my bias is that Love is the answer. ❤
@muhsinachipra
@muhsinachipra 3 ай бұрын
The divide between "us" and "them" becomes starkly visible in situations of conflict. For example, there's currently an ethnic conflict in Northeast India, and disturbing videos have surfaced showing people being tortured. Watching these videos, I couldn’t help but wonder what those inflicting the harm are thinking. Why don’t they seem to feel the pain that I do when I watch? They’re treating other human beings as if they aren’t human-as if they’re pests like cockroaches or rats that need to be destroyed. It’s deeply unsettling, and it made me question what’s going on in their minds. This whole situation has given me some insight into how such dehumanization happens.
@JasonKaler
@JasonKaler 2 ай бұрын
If you don't like someone, it means you do not know enough about them
@superabdo3
@superabdo3 4 ай бұрын
I happy with what I got thank you 😄
@kurtlindner
@kurtlindner 4 ай бұрын
Ooh, an especially good topic and video this morning. 👏🏻
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