Social animal David Brooks

and I got my current job I was given a

good piece of advice which was to

interview three politicians every day

and from that much contact with

politicians I can tell you they’re all

emotional freaks of one sort or another

they have what I call logorrhea dementia

which is they talk so much they drive

themselves insane

but what they do have is incredible

social skills when you meet them they

lock into you they look you in the eye

they invade your personal space they

massage the back of your head I had

dinner with a Republican senator several

months ago who kept his hand on my inner

thigh throughout the whole meal

squeezing it I once this was years ago I

saw a Ted Kennedy and Dan Quayle meet in

the well of the Senate and they were

friends and they hugged each other and

they were laughing and their faces were

like this far apart and they were moving

and grinding and moving their arms up

and down each other and I was like get a

room I don’t want to see this but they

have those social skills at another case

last election cycle I was following Mitt

Romney around New Hampshire and he was

campaigning with his five perfect sons

bit chip rip zip lip and dip and and

he’s going into a diner and he goes to

the diner introduce himself to a family

and says what village are you from in

New Hampshire and then he described the

home he owned in their village and then

he so he goes around the room and then

as he’s leaving the diner he first names

almost everybody he’s just met I was

like okay that’s social skill but the

paradox is when a lot of these people

slip into the policy-making mode that

social awareness vanishes and they tart

talking about like accountants so in the

course of my career I’ve covered a

series of failures we sent economists in

the Soviet Union with privatization

plans when it broke up and what they

really lacked was social trust we

invaded Iraq with the military oblivious

to the cultural and psychological

realities we had a financial regulatory

regime based on the assumptions that

traders were rational creatures who

wouldn’t do anything stupid for 30 years

I’ve been covering school reform and

we’ve basically reorganized the bureau

edek boxes charters private schools

vouchers but we’ve had disappointing

results year after year and the fact is

people learn from people they love and

if you’re not talking about the

individual relationship between a

teacher and a student you’re not talking

about that reality but that reality is

expunged from our policymaking process

and so that’s led to a question for me

why are the most socially attuned people

on earth completely dehumanized when

they think about policy and I came to

the conclusion this is a symptom of a

larger problem that for centuries we’ve

inherited a view of human nature based

on the notion that were divided selves

that reason is separated from the

emotions and that society progresses to

the extent that reason can suppress the

passions and it’s led to a view of human

nature that were rational individuals

who respond and straightforward ways to

incentives and it’s led to ways of

seeing the world where people try to use

the assumptions of physics to measure

how human behavior is and it’s produced

a great amputation a shallow view of

human nature we’re really good at

talking about material things but we’re

really bad at talking about emotions

we’re really good at talking about

skills and safety and health were really

bad at talking about character Allister

McIntyre the famous philosopher said

that we have the concepts of the ancient

morality of virtue on or goodness but we

no longer have a system by which to

connect them and so this has led to a

shallow path and politics but also in a

whole range of human endeavors you can

see it in the way we raise our young

kids you go to an elementary school at

3:00 in the afternoon and you watch the

kids come out and they’re wearing these

eighty pound backpacks that if the wind

blows them over they’re like beetles

stuck there on the ground you see these

cars that drive up usually it’s sobs and

Audi’s in Volvo’s because in certain

neighborhoods it’s socially acceptable

to have a luxury car so long as it comes

from a country hostile to US foreign

policy that’s fine

they get picked up by these creatures

I’ve called uber moms who are highly

successful career women who’ve taken

time off to make sure all their kids get

into Harvard and you can usually tell

the uber moms because they actually

weigh less than their own children so at

the moment of conception they’re doing

little butt exercises the babies plop

out they’re flashing Mandarin flashcards

with the things driving them home and

they wanted to be enlightened so they

take them to Ben & Jerry’s ice cream

company with its own foreign policy and

one of my books I joke that Ben and

Jerry’s should make a passive his

toothpaste doesn’t kill germs just ask

them to leave be a big seller and then

they go to Whole Foods to get their baby

formula and you know Whole Foods is one

of those progressive grocery stores

where all the cashiers look like they’re

on loan from Amnesty International they

buy we buy these seaweed based snacks

they’re called veggie booty with kale

which is their kids at home home and say

mom mom I want to snack that a whole

prevent colon rectal cancer and so the

kids are raised in a certain way jumping

through achievement hopes are the things

we can measure SAT prep OBO soccer

practice they get into competitive

colleges they get good jobs and

sometimes they make a success of

themselves in a superficial manner and

they make a ton of money and sometimes

you can see them at vacation places like

Jackson Hole or Aspen and they’re

they’ve become

elegant and slender they don’t really

have thighs they just have one elegant

calf on top of another they have kids of

their own and they’ve sort of achieved a

genetic miracle by marrying beautiful

people so their grand moms look like

Gertrude Stein their daughters look like

Halle Berry

I don’t know how they’ve done that they

get there and they realize that they

it’s fashionable now to have dogs 1/3 as

tall as your ceiling heights so they’ve

got these furries 160 pound dogs look

like velociraptors all named after Jane

Austen characters and then when they get

old they haven’t really developed a

philosophy of life but they’ve decided

that I’ve been successful at everything

I’m just not going to die and so they

hire personal trainers they’re popping

cialis like breath mints you see them on

the mountains up there they’re

cross-country ski

up the mountain with these grim

expressions that make Dick Cheney look

like Jerry Lewis and sort of as they

whizzed by you it’s like being passed by

a little iron raisinet going up the hill

and so this is part of what life is but

it’s not all of what life is and over

the past few years I think we’ve been

given a deeper view of human nature and

a deeper view of who we are and it’s not

based on theology or philosophy it’s in

the study of the mind across all these

spheres of research from neuroscience

the cognitive science behavioral

economists psychologists sociology we’re

developing a revolution in consciousness

and when you synthesize it all it’s

giving us a new view of human nature and

far from being a coldly materialistic

view of nature it’s a new humanism it’s

a new enchantment and I think when you

synthesize this research you start with

three key insights the first insight is

that while the conscious mind writes the

autobiography of our species the

unconscious mind does most of the work

and so one way to formulate that assists

the human mind can take in millions of

pieces of information a minute of which

can be consciously aware of about 40 and

this leads to oddities one of my

favorite is that people named Dennis are

disproportionately likely to become

dentists people named Lawrence become

lawyers because unconsciously we

gravitate toward things that sound

familiar

which is why I’ve named my daughter

President of the United States Brooks

another finding is that the unconscious

far from being dumb and sexualized it’s

actually quite smart so one of the most

cognitively demanding things we do is

buy furniture it’s really hard to

imagine a sofa how it’s gonna look in

your house and the way you should do

that is sort of study the furniture let

it marinate in your mind distract

yourself and then a few days later go

with your gut because unconsciously

you’ve figured it out the second insight

is that emotions are at the center of

our thinking people with strokes and

lesions in the emotion processing parts

of the brain are not super smart they’re

actually quite sometimes quite helpless

and the giant in the field is in the

room tonight and is speaking tomorrow

morning Antonio Damasio

and one of the things he’s really shown

us is that emotions are not separate

from reason but they are the foundation

of reason because they tell us what to

value and so reading and educating your

emotions is one of the central

activities of wisdom now I’m a

middle-aged guy I’m not exactly

comfortable with emotions one of my

favorite brain stories described these

middle-aged guys they put him into a

brain scan machine this is apocryphal by

the way but I don’t care

and it and they have them watch a horror

movie and then they had some them

describe their feelings toward their

wives and the the brain scans were

identical in both activities it was just

sheer terror so me talking about emotion

is like Gandhi talking about gluttony

but it is the central organizing process

of the way we think it tells us what to

imprint a brain is the record of the

feelings of a life and the third insight

is that we’re not primarily

self-contained individuals we’re social

animals not rational animals we emerge

out of relationships and we are deeply

interpenetrated one with another and so

when we see another person we reenact on

our own minds what we see in their minds

when we watch a car chase in a movie we

it’s almost as if we are subtly having a

car chase when we watch pornography it’s

a little like having sex though probably

not as good and you see this in when

lovers walk down the street when a crowd

in Egypt or Tunisia gets caught up in an

emotional contagion the deep

interpenetrate

and this revolution and who we are

gives us a different way of seeing I

think politics a different way most

importantly of seeing human capital we

are now children of the French

enlightenment

we believe that reason is the highest of

the faculties but I think this research

shows that the British enlightenment of

the Scottish enlightenment with David

Hume Adam Smith actually had a better

handle on who we are that reason is

often weak our sentiments are strong and

our sentiments are often trustworthy and

this works corrects that bias in our

culture that dehumanizing bias it gives

us a deeper sense of what it actually

takes for us to thrive in this life when

we think about human capital we think

about the things we can measure easily

things like grades SATs degrees the

number of year and for schooling what it

really takes to do well to leave a

meaningful life are things that are

deeper things we don’t really even have

words for and so let me list just a

couple of things I think this research

points us toward trying to understand

the first gift our talent is mind-sight

the ability to enter into other people’s

minds and learn what they have to offer

babies come with this ability meltzoff

who’s at the University of Washington

leaned over a baby who was 43 minutes

old he wagged his tongue at the baby the

baby wagged her tongue back babies are

born two interpenetrating two moms minds

and to download what they find they’re

models of how to understand reality in

the United States fifty-five percent of

babies have a deep two-way conversation

with mom and they learn models to how to

relate to other people and those people

have models of how to relate have a huge

head start in life scientists at the

University of Minnesota did a study in

which they could predict was 77 percent

accuracy at age 18 months who was gonna

graduate from high school based on who

had good attachment with mom 20 percent

of kids do not have those relationships

they are what we call avoidant lis

attached they have trouble relating to

other people they go through life like

sailboats tacking into the wind wanting

to get close to people but not really

having

models of how to do that and so this is

one skill of how to Hoover up knowledge

one from another a second skill is

equipoise the ability to have the

serenity to read the biases and failures

in your own mind so for example we are

overconfidence machines 95% of our

professors report that they are above

average teachers 96% of college students

say they have above-average social

skills

Time magazine asked Americans are you in

the top 1% of earners 19% of Americans

are in the top 1% this is a gender

linked trait by the way men drown at

twice the rate as women because men

think they can swim across that lake but

some people have the ability and

awareness of their own biases their own

overconfidence they have a pistola

logical modesty

they are open-minded in the face of

ambiguity they are able to adjust

strength of the conclusions to the

strength of their evidence they are

curious and these traits are often

unrelated and uncorrelated with IQ the

third trade is Metis what we might call

street smarts it’s a Greek word it’s a

sensitivity to the physical environment

the ability to pick out patterns in an

environment derive a gist one of my

colleagues at The Times did a great

story about soldiers in Iraq who could

look down the street and detect somehow

whether there was an ie D Al and mind in

the street they couldn’t tell you how

they did it but they could feel cold

they felt a coldness and they were more

often right than wrong the third is what

might call sympathy the ability to work

within groups and that comes in

tremendously handy because groups are

smarter than individuals and

face-to-face groups are much smarter

than groups that communicate

electronically because 90% of our

communication is nonverbal and the

effectiveness of a group is not

determined by the IQ of the group it’s

determined by how well they communicate

how often they take terms and

conversations then you could talk about

it Oh trait like blending any child can

say I’m a tiger pretend to be a tiger it

seems so Elementary but in fact it’s

phenomenally complicated to take a

concept I and a concept tiger and

them together but this is the source of

innovation what Picasso did for example

was take the concept western art and the

concept African masks and blend them

together not only the geometry but the

moral systems entailed in them and these

are skills again we can’t count and

measure and then the final thing I’ll

mention is something you might call

limerence and this is not an ability

it’s a drive and a motivation the

conscious mind hungers for success and

prestige the unconscious mind hungers

for those moments of transcendence when

the skull line disappears and we are

lost in a challenge or a task when a

craftsman feels lost in his craft when a

naturalist feels at one with nature when

a believer feels at one with God’s love

that is what the unconscious mind

hungers for and many of us feel it in

love when lovers feel fused and one of

the most beautiful description I’ve come

across in this research of how Minds

interpenetrate was written by a great

theorist and scientist named Douglas

Hofstadter’s at the University of

Indiana he was married to a woman named

Carol and made a wonderful relationship

when their kids were five and two Carol

had a stroke and a brain tumor and died

suddenly and Hofstadter wrote a book

called I am a strange loop in the course

of that book he describes a moment just

months after Carol has died he comes

across her picture on the mantle or on a

bureau in his bedroom and here’s what he

wrote I looked at her face and I looked

so deeply that I felt I was behind her

eyes and all at once I found myself

saying as tears flowed that’s me that’s

me and those simple words brought back

many thoughts that I had had before

about the fusion of our souls into one

higher-level entity about the fact that

the core of both our souls they are

identical hopes and dreams for our

children about the notion that those

hopes were not separate and distinct

hopes but were just one hope one clear

thing that defined us both that welded

us into a unit the kind of unit I had

but dimly imagined before being married

and having

children I realized that though Carol

had died that core piece of her had not

died at all but had it lived on very

determinately in my brain the Greeks say

we suffer our way to wisdom through his

suffering Hofstetter understood how

deeply interpenetrated we are through

the policy failures of last 30 years we

have come to acknowledge I think how

shallow our view of human nature has

been and now as we confront that

challenge us and the failures that

derive from our inability to get the

depths of who we are comes this

revolution in consciousness these people

in so many fields exploring the depth of

our nature and coming away with this

enchanted this new humanism and when

Freud discovered his sense of the

unconscious it had a vast effect on the

climate of the times now we are

discovering a more accurate vision of

the unconscious of who we are deep

inside and it’s going to have a

wonderful and profound and humanizing

effect on our culture thank you

我得到了现在的工作,我得到了一个

很好的建议,那就是

每天采访三位

政客 痴呆症

,他们说得太多了,他们把

自己逼疯了,

但是当你遇到他们时,他们确实拥有令人难以置信的

社交技巧他们

锁定你他们看着你的眼睛

他们侵入你的私人空间他们

按摩你的后脑勺我

共进晚餐

几个月前的一位共和党参议员,他

在整个用餐过程中一直把手放在我的大腿内侧

挤压它我有一次这是几年前我

看到泰德肯尼迪和丹奎尔在

参议院的井里见面,他们是

朋友,他们互相拥抱

他们在笑,他们的脸

相距这么远,他们在移动

,磨擦,上下移动他们的手臂

,我就像得到一个

房间我不想看到这个,但他们

在上个选举周期的另一个案例中拥有这些社交技巧

在新罕布什尔州跟随米特罗姆尼他正在

与他的五个完美儿子

一起竞选 一个家庭

,说你来自

新罕布什尔州的哪个村庄,然后他描述

了他在他们村庄拥有的房子,然后

他在房间里转了一圈,然后

当他离开餐厅时,他

几乎说出了他刚遇到的每个人的名字我

就像 好吧,这是社交技巧,但

矛盾的是,当这些人中的许多人

陷入

社会意识消失的决策模式,他们开始

像会计师一样谈论,所以

在我的职业生涯中,我已经报道了

我们派经济学家的一系列失败

在苏联解体时有私有化

计划,他们

真正缺乏的是社会

信任 我们有一个金融监管

制度,基于这样的假设,即

交易员是理性的动物,

30 年来不会做任何愚蠢的事情

年复一年的结果令人失望,事实是

人们向他们所爱的人学习,

如果你不是在谈论老师和学生

之间的个人关系,

你就不是在

谈论那个现实,而是这个

现实从我们的政策制定过程中消失了

所以这给我带来了一个问题,

为什么地球上最善于社交的人

在考虑政策时完全没有人性

,我

得出的结论是,这是一个

更大问题的症状,几个世纪以来,我们

继承了人类的观点 自然

基于这样的观念,

即理性与

情感分离,社会进步

到理性可以支持的程度

消除激情,它导致了一种对人性的看法,

即理性的个体

对激励做出反应和直接的方式

,它导致了

看待世界的方式,人们试图使用

物理学的假设来

衡量人类行为的方式和产生方式

伟大的截肢术 对人性的肤浅看法

我们非常擅长

谈论物质事物,但我们

非常不擅长谈论情感

我们非常擅长谈论

技能、安全和健康 我们非常

不擅长谈论性格 Allister

著名哲学家麦金太尔说

,我们有古代

道德或善的概念,但我们

不再有一个系统

将它们联系起来,所以这导致了一条

浅薄的道路和政治,而且在

人类的整个范围内 努力你可以

从我们抚养年幼孩子的方式中看到

你下午 3:00 去小学

,你看着

孩子们出来,他们穿着这些

e 沉重的背包,如果风

把它们吹倒,它们就像甲虫一样

粘在地上

来自一个对美国外交政策怀有敌意的国家

,这很好,

她们被我称为超级妈妈的这些生物所吸引

,她们是非常

成功的职业女性,她们

抽出时间来确保他们所有的孩子都能

进入哈佛,你通常可以看出

超级妈妈,因为他们

实际上比自己的孩子还轻,所以

在受孕的那一刻,他们正在做

一些小屁股练习,婴儿扑通

一声,他们正在闪动普通话卡片

,上面写着开车回家的东西,

他们想要开悟,所以他们

采取 他们到 Ben & Jerry 的冰淇淋

公司有自己的外交政策

和我的一本书

让他们离开成为大卖家,然后

他们去 Whole Foods 买婴儿

配方奶粉,你知道 Whole Foods

是那些进步的杂货店之一

,所有的收银员看起来都像是

从国际特赦组织借来的,他们

买我们买 这些以海藻为基础的零食,

他们被称为 veggie booty with kale

,这是他们在家的孩子,

妈妈说我想吃零食,整体可以

预防结肠直肠癌,所以

孩子们以某种方式长大,

希望通过成就

我们可以衡量的东西 SAT 准备 OBO 足球

练习 他们进入有竞争力的

大学 他们得到好工作

有时

他们以肤浅的方式取得成功,

他们赚了很多钱,有时

你可以在

杰克逊霍尔或杰克逊霍尔等度假胜地看到他们 阿斯彭和

他们变得

优雅和苗条 他们没有真正

的大腿 他们只有一个优雅的

小腿在另一个上面 他们有

自己的孩子并且他们已经取得了一些成就

嫁给漂亮的人是一个遗传奇迹,

所以他们的祖母看起来像

格特鲁德斯坦,他们的女儿看起来像

哈莉贝瑞

我不知道他们是怎么做到的

,他们意识到他们

现在养狗很时髦 1/3

和你的天花板一样高,所以他们

有这些毛茸茸的 160 磅的狗看起来

像迅猛龙,都以简·

奥斯汀的角色命名,然后当它们变

老时,它们并没有真正发展出一种

生活哲学,但它们已经

决定我一直 在每件事上都取得成功

我只是不会死,所以他们

聘请了私人教练 他们

像薄荷糖一样弹出 cialis 你

在山上看到他们 他们在山上

越野

滑雪 这些严峻的

表情让迪克 切尼看起来

像杰里·刘易斯,有点像他们

在你身边呼啸而过,就像被

一个小铁葡萄干上山一样

,所以这是生活的一部分,

但并不是生活的全部,

在过去的几年里 我认为我们已经

对人性

有了更深入的了解,对我们是谁有了更深入的了解,它不是

基于神学或哲学,而是

来自神经科学

、认知科学、行为

经济学家等所有这些研究领域的心智研究 心理学家 社会学 我们正在

发展一场意识革命

当你把它综合起来时,它

给了我们一个关于人性的新观点,它

远不是一种冷酷的唯物主义

自然观,它是一种新的人文主义,它是

一种新的魅力,我认为当你

综合这一点时 研究你从

三个关键见解开始第一个见解是

,虽然有意识的头脑写

了我们物种的自传,但

无意识的头脑完成了大部分工作

,因此一种

帮助人类头脑的公式化方法可以吸收数百万

条信息 其中一分钟

可以有意识地意识到大约 40

这导致了我

最喜欢的怪事之一是名叫丹尼斯的人

不成比例 你可能会成为

牙医 名叫劳伦斯的人成为

律师是因为我们

无意识地被那些听起来

熟悉的事物所吸引

这就是为什么我将我的女儿命名

为美国总统布鲁克斯

另一个发现是无意识

远非愚蠢和性感它

实际上非常聪明 所以我们做的对

认知要求最高的事情之一就是

买家具很难

想象沙发在

你的房子里会是什么样子你应该这样做的

方式是研究家具

让它在你的脑海中浸泡分散

你的注意力然后 几天后,

跟着你的直觉走,因为

你在不知不觉中发现了第二个见解

是情绪是

我们思维的中心 大脑

的情绪处理部分有中风和损伤的

人不是超级聪明 他们

实际上是 有时很无助

,田野里的巨人

今晚在房间里,明天

早上讲安东尼奥·达马西奥

和其中一个 他真正向我们展示的

事情是,情绪

与理性是分不开的,但它们是理性的基础

,因为它们告诉我们应该

重视什么,所以阅读和教育你的

情绪是智慧的核心

活动之一现在我已经

中年了 伙计,我对

情绪不太满意 我

最喜欢的大脑故事之一描述了这些

中年人,他们把他放进了

脑部扫描机

,顺便说一句,这是杜撰的,但我不在乎

,他们让他们看恐怖片

电影,然后他们让一些人

描述了他们对妻子的感受,

并且脑部扫描

在两种活动中都是相同的,这只是

纯粹的恐惧,所以我谈论

情感就像甘地谈论暴食,

但这是我们方式的中心组织

过程 认为它告诉我们

大脑的印记

是生活感受的记录,第三个见解

是我们主要不是

自给自足的个体,我们是社会

动物而不是理性动物 如果我们

脱离了关系,并且我们彼此深深地

相互渗透,那么

当我们看到另一个人时,

我们会在自己的脑海中重演我们在看电影中的汽车追逐时在他们的脑海中看到的东西,

我们几乎就像是在巧妙地

当我们看色情片时追车,这

有点像做爱,虽然可能

没有那么好,当

爱人走在街上时,当

埃及或突尼斯的一群人陷入

情感传染时,你会看到这一点,深度

相互渗透

和这场革命 我们是谁

给了我们不同的看待方式 我

认为政治是

看待人力资本最重要的不同方式 我们

现在是法国

启蒙运动的孩子

我们相信理性是最高

的能力 但我认为这项研究

表明英国人

与大卫休谟的苏格兰启蒙运动

亚当斯密实际上

对我们是谁有更好的把握,原因

往往是薄弱的,我们的情绪是强烈的,

我们的感觉 时间往往是值得信赖的,

这项工作纠正了我们

文化中的偏见,即非人性化的偏见,它让

我们更深入地

了解我们在这一生中真正需要什么才能在这一生中茁壮成长当

我们考虑人力资本时,我们会

考虑我们可以轻松衡量的

事情 比如成绩 SAT 学位

年数和学校教育

真正需要做的事情才能离开

有意义的生活是

更深层次的事情,我们甚至都

无法形容,所以让我列出

我认为的几件事 这项研究

指出我们试图理解

我们的第一个天赋是

洞察力 能够进入他人的

思想并了解他们必须为

婴儿提供什么

43 分钟

大的时候,

他对着婴儿摇了摇头

如何理解

美国的现实 55% 的

婴儿与妈妈进行了深入的双向对话

,他们学习了如何

与他人

交往的模式,而这些人拥有如何交往的模式,

在生活中有一个巨大的开端

明尼苏达大学的科学家做了一项研究

,他们可以预测 77% 的

准确率在 18 个月大时

将从高中毕业,这取决于谁

与妈妈有良好的依恋关系 20%

的孩子没有这样的关系

他们就是我们 打电话给回避者 lis

依附他们在与

其他人交往时遇到困难 他们经历的生活就像

帆船迎风

想要接近人们但没有真正的

模型如何做到这一点所以这是

如何胡佛知识的一项技能

之一 从另一个角度来看,第二个技能是

平衡能力,能够

平静地阅读

自己心中的偏见和失败,例如,我们是

过度自信的机器,我们 95% 的

职业 ors 报告称他们的

教师水平高于平均水平 96% 的大学生

表示他们的社交能力高于平均

水平

时代杂志问美国人你是否

在收入最高的 1% 中 19% 的

美国人在收入最高的 1% 中 这是与性别

相关的特征 顺便说一下,男人溺水

的几率是女人的两倍,因为男人

认为他们可以游过那个湖,但

有些人有能力并

意识到自己的偏见他们自己的

过度自信他们有手枪式

逻辑上的谦虚

他们在面对

模棱两可 他们能够根据证据

的强度调整结论的

强度 他们很

好奇,这些特征通常

与智商无关且不相关

第三项交易是梅蒂斯,我们可以称之为

街头聪明 这是一个希腊词 它是

对身体的敏感性 环境

环境中识别模式的能力派生出一个要点 我

在《泰晤士报》的一位同事写了一个

关于伊拉克士兵的精彩故事,他们可以

俯视街道 并以某种方式检测

是否有一个 ie D Al 并且

在街上他们无法告诉你

他们是如何做到的,但他们会感到寒冷

他们感到寒冷并且他们

往往是对的而不是错的 第三个

可能被称为同情 团队内工作的能力

,这

非常方便,因为团队

比个人更聪明,

面对面的

团队比电子交流的团队聪明得多,

因为我们 90% 的

交流都是非语言的,而且

团队的有效性不是

由以下因素决定的 小组的智商 这

取决于他们的沟通能力

他们接受条件和

对话的频率然后你可以谈论

它 哦 像混合一样的特质 任何孩子都可以

说我是老虎 假装是老虎

看起来很初级但实际上

将一个

概念 I 和一个概念老虎以及

它们放在一起是非常复杂的,但这是毕加索所做的创新的源泉,

例如将西方艺术的概念和

非洲面具的概念,并将它们混合

在一起,不仅是几何形状,而且是其中所包含的

道德体系,这些

都是我们无法计算和

衡量的技能,然后我要提到的最后一

件事是你可能会称之为

limerence 的东西,这不是 一种能力

它是一种动力和动力 有

意识的头脑渴望成功和

声望 无意识的头脑

渴望那些超越的时刻

当头骨线消失,我们

迷失在挑战或任务中 当

工匠感到迷失在他的手艺中时

当信徒与上帝的爱合而为一时,自然主义者会与自然合一

印第安纳大学一位名叫 Douglas Hofstadter 的伟大理论家和科学家撰写了关于思想如何相互渗透的文章,

他与一位名叫 Carol 的女人结婚

并创造了奇迹

当他们的孩子 5

岁和 2 岁时 Carol 中风和脑瘤突然死亡

,Hofstadter 写了一本书

我是一个奇怪的循环,在

那本书的过程中他描述了

Carol 去世几个月后他遇到的一个时刻

她的照片挂在斗篷上或

他卧室的柜子上,这是他

写的我看着她的脸,我看着

如此深,以至于我觉得我在她的

眼睛后面,突然我发现自己

在流泪时说,那就是我,那是

我 这些简单的话让

我想起了我以前的许多想法,

关于我们的灵魂融合成一个

更高层次的实体,关于

我们两个灵魂的核心,它们

是我们孩子的相同希望和梦想,

关于那些希望的概念

不是分开和不同的

希望,而是一个

希望 ed虽然卡罗尔

已经死了,但她的核心部分并没有

死去,而是它

在我的大脑中非常确定地活着,希腊人说

我们通过他的痛苦经历了通往智慧的道路,

霍夫斯泰特明白

我们

在政策失败中的相互渗透有多么深刻 在过去的 30 年里,我们

已经开始承认,我认为

我们对人性的看法是多么肤浅,

而现在,当我们面对

这一挑战以及由于我们无法深入了解我们是谁而导致的失败时,

这些人的意识发生了革命

在如此多的领域中探索我们本性的深度,

并带着这种

迷人的新人文主义离开,当

弗洛伊德发现他对无意识的感觉时,

它对时代的气候产生了巨大的影响,

现在我们正在

发现对无意识的更准确的看法

关于我们

内心深处的人,它将对我们的文化

产生奇妙而深刻和人性化的

影响,谢谢