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OutsideVoices with Mark Bidwell

In OutsideVoices Mark Bidwell talks to remarkable and compelling leaders from the worlds of business, exploration, arts, sports, and academia. In these conversations he explores topics of fundamental importance to many of us today, both in work and in life, topics ranging from leadership and performance to creativity and growth. OutsideVoices has a clear purpose: to bring fresh and diverse perspectives that help listeners navigate the world we live in.
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OutsideVoices with Mark Bidwell
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Now displaying: May, 2023
May 16, 2023

Charles Foster is an English writer, a traveler, a veterinarian, a taxidermist, a barrister, and a philosopher. Like my previous guest Steven Kotler, he believes in getting deep into subjects in a very immersive and experiential way. In his earlier book called Being a Beast, Charles shares his experiences of trying to live as an otter, a badger, a stagg, a fox and other animals and birds, all in order to better understand what being a wild animal is really like. His latest book is called Being a Human, where he and his 13-year-old son live in the wilderness as Paleolithic hunter gatherers to really understand what it means to be human.
 
Charles rolls up his sleeves and puts himself into the shoes of our ancestors going back many thousands of years. And when asked why he bothers to drag himself and his children off into caves, he answers as follows: because I don't trust books, and you get a wholly different kind of knowledge by doing and feeling things. So this is a man trying to be a better human, a better father, a better son, a better husband, a man who dives deep into a subject in order to enhance his understanding of arguably the most important topic that faces us all. He's a traveler through time and space. Being a Human is a travel book, essentially, about traveling across generations, and Charles’s curiosity is infectious.
 
What We Cover:

  • 5:09 - How Charles landed on such a diverse range of professional activities
  • 10:00 - Why writing Being a Human was much harder than writing Being a Beast
  • 19:06 - What Charles learned by experiencing the hunter-gatherers’ way of life
  • 25:00 - Desouling and the big changes humanity experienced in the Neolithic period
  • 38:23 - Shamanism and why we lost the ability to perceive the world in a “mystical” way
  • 45:13 - What it means to be a proper father and a proper son

Key Takeaways and Quotes: 

  • Trying to get into the heads of ancient humans is very difficult. Even ancient humans can lie to us, it’s part of their complexity. The cave paintings are not always telling a straightforward story.
  • It’s a shame that an almost mystical way of looking at the world, given to us by physics, is not imported into the biological world which we inhabit.
  • The desperate quest for a right story is behind all this political, economical, and ecological mess we live in today. 

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May 2, 2023

Kevin Kelly first appeared on this show back in 2016 to talk about his bestselling book, “The Inevitable”, which was a review of the key tech trends that were shaping our lives. Today, almost seven years later, I’ve been struck by how prescient a number of his predictions turned out to be back then, in particular around artificial intelligence, which we talk about in this episode.

 

Kevin’s latest book is called Excellent Advice for Living: Wisdom I Wish I'd Known Earlier. This is a curated selection of aphorisms, which guide how Kevin lives his life, and which he was encouraged by his family to put together several years ago. It's a mixture of very practical, as well as quite counterintuitive, but nevertheless fascinating advice for parents, for children, and for grandparents. There are echoes of Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett, in emphasizing the importance of thinking long term, of deferred gratification, or of compounding, but there are also different ways of looking at the world, drawing from the work from James P. Carse and his “Finite and Infinite Games,” that guide Kevin and how he approaches things.

 

Kevin has done a huge amount of travel and he shares with us how he thinks about traveling, and why he sees traveling as such an important activity for the youth to pursue. Towards the end, we talked about what his current projects and his future projects are, and he's embarking on a 100-year project, being enormously optimistic and positive about the future.

 

What We Cover:

  • 08:26 - Three types of travel and Kevin’s approach to traveling
  • 19:49 - The idea of finite and infinite games and the parts of our society and systems that can be perceived as infinite games

  • 23:24 - The paradox of generosity and why it works even if it seems counterintuitive in today’s world

  • 30:19 - The value of rites of passage for the youth and how to recreate them in the modern Western society

  • 34:03 - Where we are going next with the advancement of artificial intelligence

  • 45:43 - Kevin’s 100-year project and why he is optimistic about the future

Key Learnings and Takeaways:

  • Travel is essential for growth - encountering the other and learning is one of the most powerful and transformative experiences for the youth that should be facilitated and subsidized on a national level
  • The foundational paradox of our human societal collective existence is that the more you give, the more you get, that you cannot deplete your generosity and kindness.

  • The thrilling adventure that the society is headed into right now is trying to elevate the AI's so that they're better than humans, even though we currently don't have a consensus on what ethics and morality mean that we could program into AI.

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