No Regrets, The Case Against Empathy, and Is AI Coming for Us All? - podcast episode cover

No Regrets, The Case Against Empathy, and Is AI Coming for Us All?

Dec 18, 202453 minEp. 59
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Episode description

This week, we dive headfirst into the messy, uncomfortable topic of regret. From the aches and grays that come with hitting a new decade to the deeper realizations about relationships, selfish mistakes, and missed opportunities, we unpack how regret shapes who we are. And there's a twist: what if regret isn’t something to fear or avoid? What if it’s a tool for growth? I share my own stories of taking people for granted, self-destructive habits, and the lessons I’ve learned about self-forgiveness and choosing your regrets wisely.


We also tackle some fascinating questions about whether empathy is actually good for society. Is it always a good thing, or can it sometimes lead us astray? To round things off, we share our thoughts on AI and its impact on creativity and human connection.


Enjoy.


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Chapters

01:14 The F*ck of the Week: No Regrets?

19:36 Brilliant or Bullsh*t: Is Empathy Always a Good Thing?

40:45 Q&A: Is AI coming for us all?


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Transcript

Mark I joined the club. Which one? I'm I just turned 40. Oh shit. And I'm not. This isn't fishing for some celebration here. I completely forgot you wish me on my birthday. No, no, I remembered on your birthday. I completely forgot. I was like, we're gonna use Drew's birthday as a cold over and then I. Forgot. Yeah. Yeah, I didn't forget. I've. I've actually been reminded that I'm 40 every day since I've been 40. So how, how is it? How, how have your 40s been?

It's been, what, a week? Now it's been a week. It's been a week the entire week leading up to my birthday. I'm not shitting you. My back hurt. Just just preparing you. It's just getting your body is getting you ready for what's ahead. So my my back hurt, my hair I'm sure got grayer. It just keeps getting grayer and grayer. As everybody is is pointing out, it does that. It also, though, too, I don't know about you, but I don't really do the whole I sit down at the first of the year and I

don't really do much of that. But birthdays, I kind of, I kind of sit back and look back at the year behind, the year ahead, where I've been, where I've come from. It's the subtle art of not giving a fuck podcast with your holes. Mark Manson. How would you rate 39? Was it? Was it an A year AB year? What was? It, it was, this was one of it was a mixed bag year for sure. We've done a lot of work, you know, professionally, we've done

doing a lot of work. We've had a lot of ups and downs with that, you know, and these personally things happen too. I felt like my, like my mid 30s were like, man, this is I'm like, I'm winning. And, you know, we talked previously on an episode about, like, I always got to keep in mind, like, there's something around the corner here. Life has a way whenever you just like, feel like you're winning for too long. Life has a way of reminding you

who's boss. It was not in like a fatalistic catastrophic way by any means, but I was just reminded of some things and and it kind of made me be grateful. Also, though, it started to make me think about like, maybe what I would have done differently up to this point, which is what I kind of want to. That's what I want to talk about today for the fuck of the week. Regrets, Regret. Are you a man of regret? I think the older I get, the less I am. Yeah, yeah.

I'm a man of very few regrets. You are. We've talked about this. You and I just personally talked about this before and you're fucking weird, man. I. Don't have like the regret bone, the shame bone very little of. It it's like you're like, oh, I would have done this differently, but then you just move on. Yeah, you move on. I was like can. You fuck that up, all right? I dwell on shit. One thing I've started to notice though, is that I'm I'm. I'm getting better at choosing

my regrets. I think. I think anyway. That's fair. I well, I do think it's probably not good to have zero regrets. But you know, my, my approach to it was always, and I remember I, I actually wrote about this years and years and years ago, like very early in my career, I wrote that part of who you are as a person, part of your identity is all of your past

experiences. So if there is any past experience that you wish never happened, you're essentially wishing for a part of yourself to not exist. And that just strikes me as incredibly like, why would I ever wish a part of myself to not exist? Yeah, that's just like a losing proposition. So to me it, it just from the get go, it just seems emotionally, mentally imperative to to find a justification or a silver lining for any and every experience I've had.

That said, too, I've just, I've never been the sort of person that beats like, I don't know, like things roll off me pretty easily. If, if I have a superpower, it's probably that. It's crazy. Like I looked up some of the, you know, the surveys they've done on regret and people regret education with the things, you know, decisions they made around education, their careers, romance, parenting, self improvement, leisure activities. 00:04:03,880 I wish I would travel more, that

sort of thing. I don't some of none of those really land for me. And I don't know what do do any of those when I pop, when I read those off, do they pop up for you? Like oh, I wish I would have done that differently. No. No. For for those. But it is, you know, there is that cliche that that the most, most regrets are the things that you haven't done right. Yeah. And. Regrets of omission, not Commission, right?

Yes and I I definitely have always taken out the heart and been like I would rather regret doing something and falling on my face then regret not trying at all. So I try to keep that in mind, but I don't know, I, to me, it's, I feel like a lot of people's regret, Like there was a thing that went super, super viral 10 or 12 years ago. It was like a Hospice nurse wrote the five most common regrets of the dying. It turned into a book and a Ted

talk and all this stuff. But it was everything was, you know, I spent too much time at work. I didn't spend enough time with loved ones. I, I fought over stupid things, you know, got sucked up in the drama and things. So I mean, to, to me, they're all like pretty obvious. I'm not saying I don't struggle with those things. I mean, I do. But it, it, there's nothing like coming out of left field. There's nothing like, oh, wow. I never expected somebody to

regret that. It's like, yeah, we're we're we tend to take things like we're human. We take things for granted. We get upset over like petty, stupid things. We probably work too much and don't spend enough time with loved ones, you know, So I don't know if I regrets around that, but I it's like, I don't know, I definitely look at past behaviors and, and even current behaviors and I'm like, yeah, that could be, that could have been done better. So do you, do you have any

regrets at all then? I mean, every, everybody does. That's kind of my point here is much like the fucks we give, you have to give a fuck about something. You're you have to regret things in your life because everything you do has a cost to it, right? Yes, I struggle again, I struggle with this question a lot because of what I just said about the identity. Like it's like all the mistakes I've made I feel like have eventually made me who I am

today. So it's like the bar for me to actually genuinely regret something is extremely high. Because to me, what regret means is like, if you could go back and undo it, you would. So there's very, very, very few things in my life that if I could go back and undo it, I would. My biggest embarrassments, my biggest failures, the tragedies and traumas and stuff, I

wouldn't take those back. The only things that I can think of that if I could go back and undo them, I would tend to be times that I was really selfish or disrespectful to people I cared about. So there are, you know, I, I was kind of a, a drunk, narcissistic, selfish young man in my late teens and early 20s. And, and I, I was kind of a Dick to a number of people in my life and many of whom I care deeply about. So there's some experiences

around that. And I'm like, yeah, if I could go back and not say that thing or not do that thing, that would have been I, I would do that. Yeah, I think when I was thinking about this again, like looking back on my life on my birthday or whatever, I I was thinking of the embarrassment thing you brought up, right. And I used to that used to really eat at me. I like, oh, I did this stupid thing 1020 years ago that doesn't so much anymore.

I think what I found was a little bit more clarity around, like I said, choosing, choosing my regrets. And very similar to U2, it's usually around, it's been around relationships. What I found though, too, is that a lot of the regrets that I have have a common theme that kind of underlying underlie all of them. It's it's been a theme of taking people for granted in my life. That's probably that's the biggest regret I have around just about anything. I've lost big chunks of money

doing stupid things. I've done dumb, dumb things where I put myself in danger or other people, whatever. It's the relationships that I've taken for granted. It started like with grandparents when my grandparents started passing away. Like, that was kind of the first, like, oh shit, you know, my, my grandma's not my, my first grandparent died when I was 16. And until the funeral, I didn't even really realize that she was gone. You know what I mean? And I was like, God, I took her

for granted that whole time. But when you're that age too, it's like. You, I get that, but then I continue to do it away into my adult life, ex girlfriends, you know, other family members, my parents. It's funny because I'm the same. It's the it's the the taking for granted slash disrespect of other people. Like I'll give you an example. I cheated on my girlfriends when

I was young. And when I look back at that experience, on the one hand, if I'm only evaluating, you know, my life and my development and my growth and everything, I don't necessarily regret that because it's like I, I learned, I fucked up my relationships and I learned lessons from those things. And I, I had to learn how to be a better partner and more committed and more honest and, and I kind of had to go through some of those experiences to

figure my shit out. What kills me is when I think back to my girlfriends, how they didn't deserve that. How I, like, I really did care about them and I like, was so blatantly disrespectful towards them. You know, the the 40 year old mark is horrified by my behavior, whereas you know, the the 20 year old mark, you know, was just kind of doing his thing so. I think we found a little pocket of regret there for you then. Just a little smidge. Little smidgen.

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Definitely, yeah, the taking for granted and like the the bad behavior was part of it. The other kind of theme I saw running throughout all this though, too was I, I took them for granted because it in a way that I was like looking for something else, something quote UN quote better, you know, whether whether it was a family member or, you know, ex girlfriends or whatever it was. It was like, oh, I was behaving poorly because I was looking for

something else. And not like the biggest thing I actually do regret was not like appreciating what I had right in front of me, which was so much now that I realized that as I get older, I had so much that was just like right in front. Of me but isn't some of this just being hawaii's old man and looking back at that was a. Question I was going to have for you too. Yeah, like how much of this is 'cause I think some of this is just being young.

Like when you, when you're young, you do take everything you grew up with for granted and you do just kind of assume it's always going to be there. And you do assume that there's something better out in the world than whatever you got stuck with, you know, growing up with. And I, I certainly relate to that and that it's taken me a long time to come around and really appreciate a lot of the, the people and things that I grew up with. So I hear you. I hear you.

It's a we we now we sound like 2 old men sitting on a porch back in my day, I mean. Yeah, yeah, yes, that's true. And there is just some of it. I mean, that that's another lesson I've just learned about being a human being, is that there's just some shit you just have to learn on your own and there's no way of getting around that.

Yeah, I mean, I don't. Again, to me regret is like a very strong word for, for example, I probably the closest thing that doesn't involve other people that I would potentially regret is it took me, I think way too long to get on the the health bandwagon. I had a lot of very self-destructive habits when I was young and that persisted well into my 30s. And I was very cavalier about them. My brain is just very good at

justifying whatever I want. And, and that worked against me with a lot of these self-destructive behaviors. I always found ways to, to justify them. And, and so my health got a little bit out of control in my 30s. And now that I have gotten my shit together and I do have healthy habits and I, I, I'm sober and I'm eating well and sleeping well and exercising and everything, I'm like, oh, why the fuck did I wait so long? Like, I'm definitely having an experience of like, what, what

if I did this 10 years ago? What if I like went to half as many parties and drank half as much booze and instead spent that time in the gym? And it's, I try not to dwell on that too much because it just, I don't know. I don't think it's very productive, but that pains me a little bit to think about for sure. But, but do I regret it? I don't know, man. I have a lot of great fucking times. And yeah, you do learn some. Yeah.

And you've talked before too about like, you know, people say, I wish I wouldn't have spent so much time at work. And you're like, well, I went, you went all in when you're in your 20s for years and you were not balanced and you don't regret that, you know, that, that sort of thing. So I think there's pockets of that where if you apply it in, in certain cases, you're OK. The the health thing though, that's a very, very common one that older people cite too.

Like I regret taking care of my health. Absolutely. And so I think there are just a handful of those, like if you if you ever get on a plane and there's somebody who looks like Yoda, like switch seats with with whoever, sit next to them and talk to them about this kind of thing, you will be blown away at what they come up with. Well, you know what's funny about that one too? As you probably remember, when I turned 30, we crowd sourced an

article from the audience. I basically asked everybody in the audience, I said, if you're over 40, what do you wish somebody told you at your 30th birth? Like, what's your best piece of advice for somebody turning 30? And the number one piece of advice was don't wait to get your health in order. Because when it by by the time you're in your 40s and 50s, in some cases it's too late or it's going to be too hard or, or, or it's, you know, whatever.

And I fucking just completely disregarded that, Right? Yeah. It's like literally like 98% of my audience told me the same thing. And I was like, yeah, I'm good, Yeah. Yeah. And it goes back to it. It goes back to we've talked about this before about taking care of your health has all these little tiny things and those that takes a very, very long time to build that that bank up that Bank of health, if you will. It does, and it I think the in my case the the issue was a lack

of clear measurement. You know, so it's, I fell victim to my own ability to delude myself and convince myself that I was being healthy when I, I know today I was not being healthy at all. So it's it's, you know, living under a little bit of delusion for a while. But then again, it's like I don't know how I would have snapped out of that any other way, right? So it's hard to regret something that I don't know how I would

have changed. Like, it's not like, it's not like I had a realization when I was 30 of like, dude, you're fucking up your health and you're lying to yourself and you're doing all these wrong things and you drink way too much. And then I kept doing it. It's like, no, I just never had that realization. I just, yeah, I was out to lunch, so to speak. Well, OK, if, if somebody is out there just wallowing in regret,

yeah, I don't know, reframe. I don't even know what the language around this would be. In my experience, the people who are like really hung up on regrets, it's one of two things. 00:15:43,320 Either it's a very traumatic or tragic experience that they just are really having a hard time letting go of. And to me that's that's like a more of a grieving issue or their actual issue is just a very deep self loathing and lack of self worth.

And that it manifests through constantly being preoccupied by all the things that they did wrong or they could have done better or that they fucked up or missed opportunities or whatever. Like so, the symptom is the is the regret, but the real issue is just like this general loathing of oneself. Yeah, yeah. I think like you said, just having a bias towards doing things and just going for it, that'll go a long ways. And this is going to sound really cheesy, so get get your

your cheese hats ready. Self forgiveness goes a long way. I know that that just like sounds so banal and but it really is true. Like you just everybody fucks up. Everybody misses opportunities. Everybody takes people and things for granted. Everybody has parts of themselves that they're not satisfied with or that they don't love or that they wish was different.

I think where we really get into trouble is when we start telling ourselves that we shouldn't feel that way, that we're like, well, Drew's completely happy with himself and didn't fuck up his opportunities. You know, it's like, no, we all have stuff that we feel like we missed out on or that we didn't do right. And so there's no reason to judge yourself for it. It's just like a normal part of

the human condition. And much in the same way, like we fuck anything up and we have to, you know, people in our lives mess things up and we forgive them. Like if your best friend screws up and, you know, you, you don't, you probably don't have that hard of a time for giving them or letting them, like letting it go with them. Yet so many of us struggle to do that with ourselves. Yeah. But that's definitely getting

older. That was, it was one of the lessons I've learned as well too, is that like self compassion, self love, self forgiveness is a a skill you have to develop because you can't always get that from outside. And I think I regret is a big part of that. People are looking for some sort of outside solution and it's just not there.

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Sign up for a $1.00 per month trial at shopify.com/I DGA [email protected]/I DGAF. All lowercase stands for I don't give a fuck, so go now or whatever. I don't give a fuck. All right, we're back. Some brilliant and bullshit. Brilliant or bullshit, Mark, this is going to sound. This is going to make me sound like a real asshole. Oh, I'm here for it. I'm here for it. Mark is is empathy brilliant or bullshit? Is empathy bullshit?

Is empathy bullshit? Yeah. Let's do we'll put that a giant full screen quote. Empathy is bullshit, Drew Bernie. Yeah. 2024. 2024 The man turns 40 and he's just He's decided that he is not empathy. Full on get off my lawn, crabby old man. At this point, There's there's okay. This is a serious question, people. Seriously, people who I think people who are not psychology nerds don't realize that this is actually a very legit question. Actually, like he goes back to

pre psychology event. I mean, so there's a deep philosophical argument behind a lot of this and we we found this article recently. It's it was from we found this on CNN. The title of the article is empathy is on the rise in young people. Here's how to build yours. So there's an assumption right there or obviously that, you know, empathy is good. And we do take that for granted these days. We, we, we take it as a given that empathy is a, is a good thing. Just some quick stats on this

though. From 1979 to about 2009, they've monitored, they've, they've measured this in, in different surveys and it seems that empathy has gone down from 1979 to 2009 in younger people, OK teens, adolescents, early 20s, that sort of thing. This includes both cognitive empathy, which is being able to understand someone else's perspective, and also emotional empathy, which is feeling concerned for others and feeling it like you can feel how they feel. That's what we think of as

empathy about anyway. So from 2009 to 2018, though, they measured a measurable increase in empathy among this this population. Same population or a young population A. Young population, yeah, there's they haven't so. Gen. Z, basically. Yeah, yes. So what you're telling me is our generation is the least empathetic generation well population. So if. You look back at the data, it kind of waxes and wanes a little bit, but there has been a noticeable increase in in the last 15 years or so.

Yeah, yeah. Got you. Yeah, how's that? How's that working out? Well, that's what I that's what I want to talk about, right? So. Where? Where is that getting us? You know, they, they, I, I looked at the paper here too, the, the actual paper. And you know, they, they, they posit there's a few different causes for this, you know, increased social connectivity through social media or, or all these different communication

technologies. We have now collective responses to economic hardship was one of those two like a 2008, 2009 like I'm not sure about that one. These are speculative from. From the paper. Changes in the social norms that probably goes back also to just cultural connectivity. Increased awareness of social issues again through news media, social media, communication technology. One I found pretty interesting too was loneliness and social isolation. They found a correlation between

respondents who are more lonely. We're also more empathetic. So I wonder if it just, you know, they have a lot of time to sit around and think about, oh God, I'm lonely. This other person must be lonely and that must suck, or it must suck to be ostracized or. Or maybe highly empathic people have a higher need for social interaction that can be very well. Too. And so even though they are interacting with lots of people,

they feel lonely, right? Yeah. But the, the, the, the argument that's kind of implied in this is, you know, empathy is a good thing. And the title of this article is that here's how to build yours. Here's how to have more empathy. What do you think? Is empathy always a good thing, Mark? Ten years ago I would have said yes. There's a great book by Paul Bloom called Against Empathy which I was triggered when I saw that title, but it came out probably 20/16/2017. Or something.

I think they're right in there. 20, 2018, 2016 or 18, yeah. And I, I remember being like, what the fuck? And, and actually, it's a great book. It's really fascinating. And he, he basically convinced me with, with, with the book, like he won me over. And I do think that the key distinction is what you made it was cognitive empathy versus emotional empathy. You know, I, I do think it's important to be able to cognitively or rationally put yourself in the other person's

shoes, so to speak. Like imagine what life would be like if you were a Ukrainian refugee or whatever. That's very useful. I think the emotional empathy, to me, it's, it's like what I took away from it is that it can cut both ways because depending on who you were empathizing with and why you're empathizing with them, like any other emotion, empathy can blind you or bias you. And so the results can be very mixed.

The same way people justify awful things with love or care or compassion, you can justify a lot of awful things with empathy. And so it, it's, it's, it seems to me that it's like it just empathizing with a person or population is not sufficient on its own. There needs to be like some sort of like rational placement or contextualization to have around it, right? That makes sense. Yeah, and that's that Paul Bloom, I that's one of his the big arguments throughout the book. It's it's narrow.

It narrows your focus. He calls it the spotlight effect. And so your empathy is kind of like a a spotlight going around like what should I, who or what should I empathize? That's. Confusing, because there's another spotlight effect in psychology, which is that when you assume that people are paying more attention to you than they actually are. So the empathy highlighter. Yeah, it's a pink highlighter that you just colored people with. Yeah. So, so, yeah, you can.

It can blind you to you can get what you see this all the time now. People glom on one single issue or one group of people and they say why aren't you caring? Why aren't you as empathetic and caring about this? And it's like, why aren't you as empathetic and caring about this to all these other things going on? Yes. Not that we should be like, not that we should not that we can, not that we have the capacity. The issue is, is that it's not sufficient, right?

So yes, we're starting to get into the we're, we're, we're starting to approach a lot of social issues that have been going on lately. Because I think part of the problem is that a lot of people who empathize deeply with people like victims or populations, they seem to feel that that is sufficient. It's like, OK, well, this bad thing happened to this person. So I'm really upset. And you should be really upset too. And, and it's like, it kind of ends there, right?

Right. Feels like you've done something. Whereas like, well, what actually happened and and I think that this can backfire in a lot of cases. So perfect example is the George Floyd protest in the fallout from that from 2020, right? So for people who are not familiar, George Floyd was a African American man was murdered by a police officer, was caught on camera. There were massive protests against police brutality in 2020, a huge firestorm of racial

debate and arguments. And there were calls to defund police and put body cameras on every cop in the country. And all the, all, all these things. And that outrage is understandable. The empathy that came, I mean, I saw the video. I thought it was horrifying. The empathy is completely understandable. But it's interesting that, you know, we're about 4 1/2 years removed from that.

And there's actually a thing now that some researchers are calling the George Floyd effect, which is since the George Floyd protests and all the outrage towards police, police are much less likely to to arrest or subdue people out in public. And as a result, the murder rates and the the violent crime rates have gone up in certain communities, predominantly

African American communities. And so the people who have actually suffered the most from the George Floyd effect are the very people that everybody had empathy for, their targets of the empathy. Exactly right. And so it, it's, it's, again, it's like the emotion. The emotion's valuable, right? Like it's, it's especially when you have this like outpouring of outrage and, and this sense of injustice and everybody's upset and they want to make things better. Like that is valuable.

It just needs to be channeled in the right direction. And when you don't channel in the right direction, it can actually unwittingly make things. Worse right, right. OK. So you, you are kind of getting at the emotional empathy versus cognitive and then see then there where right and and Paul Bloom makes the argument he's not the the title is against empathy, but he's not like I, I don't hate empathy. He's like. I just think it's overrated. Paul Bloom hates you. Right.

Yeah, right. Like Paul Bloom is a is a psycho. That was actually, that was probably the first title he wanted. He submitted that first. And yeah, and the publisher was like, you know, yeah, maybe we changed that. Let's let's. Redirect but but he he does make a a case that cognitive empathy where you can understand somebody but you don't necessarily have to put yourself in their shoes or feel a certain way. You just need to be able to understand them.

Now I should say there's some psychologists who think can you really cognitively understand somebody without having some emotional component to it too? I kind of maybe not, I don't know, but the the the point still remains that if this whole cognitive empathy is kind of the basis for what we now call effective altruism made famous by Peter Singer, made infamous

by Sam Bigman for you too. But there there's this rational side to our brain that he, he thinks we need to use alongside our empathy to make sure that we're effectively channeling all of these emotions, all of this empathy into the right direction and making sure that we're using our our higher reasoning powers to make sure that the good we want to come can actually come. What do you think of that? I mean, that's, that's a, that's a big thing to bite off and chew.

I agree with the principle that the limiting factor is understanding the the 2nd and 3rd order effects, understanding the downstream effects of the empathy and making sure that you're not acting out in such a way that is is going to backfire

or or work against you. The problem is it and, and I like I, I never really got the effect of altruism thing just because it's, once you get past like the second order effects of anything, it's just the complexity becomes overwhelming and people's biases kick in that it, it's just like there's such a fog of war to understand what is actually going to have the biggest long term impact and what's not that I, I've just always been very skeptical that you could objectively measure

that sort of thing. And in my observation is that any like really serious attempts to quantify that sort of thing of like what's going to create the greatest good for the greatest amount of people leads you into a very absurd place

very quickly. You know, like like like from what what I understand, there's a whole subset of effective altruist who basically came to the conclusion that since there was like a point O 1% chance that super intelligent AI would just destroy humanity, that all of their efforts should be put into preventing super intelligent AI. Which like that just strikes me as completely nonsensical, right? Like. Or like like the the we all have two kidneys.

Like you shouldn't have one of your kidneys because you don't need it. And that the the the risk of dying from the kidney transplant surgery is so low, and yet the the outsize return you get for donating your kidney is so high. 00:32:03,760 Yeah. It goes to some ridiculous places. Pretty. Quickly. Yeah, it does. Like none of us should have both of our kidneys. Like it's just, it's amoral for us, we're. Going to put, we're going to put that quote under the first slide.

So Drew Bernie. None of us should have two. Empathy is bullshit, Drew Bernie. No one should have two kidneys. Well, let me. OK, OK, so I mean that is part of the argument. We're barely staying on the rails. Here, yeah, Let me see if I can get us back on. The train here, where are we going with this? So the, the, the case that Bloom makes against empathy, one of them we've we've covered a little bit of this. It narrows your focus a little too much on on single issues or

or a handful of issues. When there's all sorts of issues going on, it doesn't scale very well. Like empathy causes you again, narrows your focus, causes you to focus more on a single person rather than the thousands of people that are suffering. It's how our brains are wired because. It causes you to stereotype very plainly. That's another one. The that it that's it's kind of the basis for in Group out group thinking is empathy because you're going to empathize with

one group over the other. Just naturally you have a natural. Ankle and it is human nature that we naturally empathize with people who look and. Think and. Think and act like us and come from the same place we come from. So it's again, if you are, if you're against things like racism and prejudice and nationalism and all these things and then, you know, baseline empathy is actually potentially empathy is not only the solution of those problems, it is also

the cause of those problems. Yeah, another one too. Your empathy is easily manipulated. I thought that was an interesting one that he brings up in the book. Totally. Yeah, as a writer, 100%. Right, and responses depend on priorities. Give me two pages, I'll make you empathize with anybody. Yeah, yeah. And so it's it's very easily manipulated because it's an emotion that a deep emotion that we feel. Can I give you an example? OK this this pissed me off.

There is a new trend going on, particularly on Netflix, but I think it started with all the podcast like all the murder who. 00:34:16,760 So Netflix is getting in on it and now net Netflix is producing all these like murder mystery shows and and shows about serial killers and all this stuff.

And I've watched a few of them and it's really bugging me what they do. They, they, they did this with the recent Menendez brothers one and they did it with the Jeffrey Dahmer 1. And it, it like it makes me sick, which is that they show the murder like they show the the murderer and the murderer. And it's like horrendous and horrific. And you, you're just absolutely

disgusted. And then you get like episode 3, three or four and, and the next, like the next 50% of the show is completely written to make you empathize with the murderer. Yeah. So you start seeing how horrible their childhood was and how they he was bullied and his dad was this horrible person. And you know, and it's like it, they spend multiple episodes like getting you to feel so sorry for him and maybe he was actually the victim and all this

stuff. And to me, it's a really sick use of the audience's empathy because I think particularly in a case like of somebody like Jeffrey Dahmer, like, I actually don't think we should empathize with him. I think it's it is the ethics of getting people to empathize with Jeffrey Dahmer is a very questionable thing. I I don't think yeah. I can't believe you had to say that, but yeah, you're right. Yeah, like, I don't know how those writers and directors sleep at night like it's it's

sick. And there are, again, because empathy is a powerful tool and getting people to empathize with certain actions and behaviors and people and find in helping them find justifications or explanations for those heinous behaviors. I don't think that's necessarily a good thing that we should be like broadcasting the millions of people within society. So that's a perfect example where I think empathy is used terribly. And, and it also just makes the shows bad.

Like I, I, I don't buy it, you know, like I, I, I've watched a few of them now and every single time I get halfway through and I'm just like, I don't buy this. This just feels, it feels too contrived. It's like we're doing the like the both sides thing, You know, I'm not, I'm not here for that. Maybe I'm old, maybe I've aged out of this demographic.

But anyway, what you were saying made me think of that of just like how easy it is to manipulate what what the audience feels and what they care about and and by dictating the narrative around what happened. Right. Yeah. And what the justifications were for something.

Like something similar is happening and you have a connection with this as well in El Salvador through Kelly has had to come out, people are railing against he's he's thrown gangsters or suspected gangsters in jail in Mass, right, hundreds of thousands of them. And people are like, you're mistreating them. And he had to come out and say, look, most people in El Salvador eat beans and rice every day. I I'm not going to worry about what criminals are eating in

prison right now, OK? I have other things to think about. So it's like, that's a misdirection of empathy too, I think. As well. That's another great example. It's so for people who are unaware, we shot a YouTube video in El Salvador. It will be coming out by the end

of this year. And part of the reason was I, I actually wanted to go talk to the people in in the neighborhoods, the poor neighborhoods where the gangs controlled everything and where there was just that immense amounts of violence as recently as a few years ago.

And yeah, I mean, regardless of what you think about him or his politics, like he has a point, which is I think the outside world has been so focused on the potential human rights violations of the mass incarceration there that they're they're missing the forest for the trees. And and they don't realize, like I think Buchelli himself even said it. He he said some say I wrongly

imprisoned thousands. I think I freed millions, right? 00:38:13,720 Because it's like you have a country of 5 million who no longer lives in fear. They're not no longer afraid to go outside. They can take their kids to school, like do all the normal things. So anyway, that video is coming soon. Yeah, yeah, just a little teaser. Yeah, a little teaser. It'll be on the YouTube channel. What else? Anything else about empathy are we? I'm not as extreme as you, Drew. I'm not going to say it's

bullshit. Yeah. Yeah, I don't I'm not going to call it. I get we. OK, here's I'll offer some just. 00:38:40,880 Putting words in your mouth. No, no, no, no, no. The I I empathy has its place, absolutely. And I think it has its place in especially in your personal relationships with people, one-on-one situations or smaller groups. That's what we evolved the empathy for. That's where it's supposed to like, you know, that's our, our evolutionary past. Probably.

That's how empathy evolved. That's kind of been hijacked though lately I think. Yes, I think that's a really good point is that it's empathy is it's optimized for the small and local and and the people close to you and. It's best used there. And it's best used there. And I think maybe a side effect of our our technology is that it's, it's empathy has been inflated and amplified and and spread a little bit too much and too far. Yeah, I don't know. We definitely sound like 240

year olds. Yeah, we do. We do. Embracing it. That's the other thing about getting older. You're just like, Yep. Yeah, fuck them, fuck them. All right, We'll be right back. This episode is sponsored by Betterhelp. Most of us don't like to admit it, but we all struggle. Whether it's stress, relationship issues, or just a nagging feeling of nothing is worth it, it happens to everyone. Therapy can help with all of that, and deciding to start therapy is a huge step in the right direction.

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All right, we're back. What are the questions, Drew? What are the people want to know? The people want to know this one came in from YouTube. Mark, what are your thoughts on ChatGPT and AI in general and increasing commodification of the creative process, like using it to write essays, song lyrics, that sort of thing. What you take on AI in 2024? Mark this. Is a great question. So I use AI quite frequently. I believe you do as well. The team uses it quite a bit.

I think when anytime you look at like a major technological leap, something get something that used to be scarce gets commoditized, becomes abundant and then something new create it becomes scarce, right? Like I, I don't think any, any time people start freaking out about a new technology that they always freak out about the thing that used to be scarce, then it's going to become abundant. They never think about the new

scarcity. And I think what AI is going to do is it's going to make creativity very abundant. It's going to make it easier, more accessible to most people. The time that it takes to go from idea to execution is drastically going to get reduced. And I, I generally think that anybody who is a creative, first of all, if you're not messing around with it and trying to use it, you, you're dumb. You're already behind that.

You're already behind. And then two, I think it's just, it's going to make creatively talented people even better. I don't think it's going to replace creativity. I I just think it's going to make the creative people even better. But what I'm excited for, and this is something I've actually been asking myself this a lot since Chachi BT broke out. It's like, what is the new scarcity going to be? And I have AI have a theory

about this. I think AI is actually going to put a premium back on in person connection in relationships and community in particular, because we've already seen, you know, information is already commoditized. Information is already free and abundant. And there's like probably too much of it. There's like so much bad information. Like we can actually probably deal. We'd probably be better off if we had a little bit less

information. Pretty soon we're going to have something similar with creativity. Like it's just any, any, anything that you want to be entertained by or any crazy idea you have, it's going to be out there. There's going to be some version of it available. What's going to be hard to find is people that you connect with, people that you feel like you're part of something, people that you relate to.

And I actually think there's, I've got the a little pet theory around this, which is I think there, I think we're going to end up with two internets and I think of them as human Internet and machine Internet. So the machine Internet is basically anytime you just want to solve a problem or know a fact or get feedback on something, you're just going to go ask the AI. You're like, you know, read these five books and summarize for me and 10 bullet points and

blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And the AI will do that pretty much instantaneously. And that's great because then it's a tool that's going to help you and it just makes your life better. But there's no emotional sustenance in that, right? Like I, I could go to chat GP. Let's pretend ChatGPT is like 10 times better than it currently is. And let's say it's good enough to write like a Pulitzer Prize winning novel.

I could go and ask it, hey, write me a Pulitzer Prize winning novel about this, this and this with these themes and whatever. I could read it and be like, this is a really good novel, but it's going to lack there because I know it's a machine and it's not a human. There's going to be some sort of missing piece there. I'm not going to feel like I'm relating to the author.

And I personally believe very strongly that a huge percentage of why we like art is because of the person behind it, right? Like, if that wasn't true, then it wouldn't bother us that like, Michael Jackson was a pedophile or it wouldn't bother us that, you know, I don't know, Leo DiCaprio doesn't sleep with a girl over 25. Like, it, it, it, it's we care about those things because we attach people's art to the person. And that's human nature. And that's never going to change.

I think the, the example that a lot of people refer to, which is indicative is that computers have been better than humans at chess for over 20 years now. Yeah. And there are tons of chess tournaments for software, like software developers enter their software into chess tournaments. 00:45:29,200 And they have. They compete in the exact same way that humans compete to see which software is the best chess software nobody watches. That Who gives a shit? Nobody gives a shit.

Nobody knows who won. Nobody cares. Everybody knows that Magnus Carlsen's the best chess player in the world, and he has been for the last 12 years. He has millions of followers online. He has tons of fans. He's made millions of dollars, right? Why? Because he's the best human player, and that's what we care about. We care about who is the best human chess player. So I think we're the second Internet is going to be the human Internet.

And that is where we go to connect with people, where we go to relate to people, to hear drama and stories and judge each other and do all the human things and be parts of communities and, and ideally see each other more in person. Because AI is going to solve all the abstract informational stuff for most of it for us. So what it can't solve is that human to human relational. Right. Well, OK, a lot to unpack there, but one, I think I'm already starting to use the Internet that way.

I found anyway, I don't I really don't even use Google anymore. I use perplexity. Have you used? Have you been? Using I've not messed with perplexity. It's pretty sweet. I've heard it's. Great. It's like a it's like AI for Google basically. And it kind of like you put in a question that gives you the answer and it gives you the citations, you know, so you can click into those. So it's that's a cool way to use kind of the AI Internet right now.

But then what I've also noticed too, and this is something I wanted to ask you about. Should we all be investing in Reddit, you think? Because that's the human side of the Internet. I think that's the early human Internet that you, I think you might be talking about because now it like it, like you just said, if I want to go and I want to find out, OK, oh God, should I have kids or not?

I'm going to go to Reddit for that because there's threads of people who've done it now there's people in their 60s, seventies around there, people in their 20s still thinking about it and everybody in between. That's kind of the human Internet. That's how I'm starting to use the Internet more and. More I would say I, I think it's all social media. So I, I really think you're going to have the social media and then you're just going to have the AI.

Which already the social media is already the Internet for a lot of people. It, it really is. It really is. And and it's funny too because I I get on social media to find new information or hear about new things and then I go to Google or an AI to verify and learn more about it. And like see what? Is this true? Like who said this? Or you know what? Did this actually happen? So yeah, I, I'm kind of already using it as like 2 separate

internets as well. But I, I really do think I, I, I just think the, the social media companies, yeah. They're pretty well positioned. You can, you can hate on them as much as you want, but they are where the human internet's going to live. And and we, you know, I, I think we will eventually appreciate that, Yeah. I do. I think you're absolutely right though, about social connection being being the new scarcity and you're already seeing that as well.

Not chess you, you, you said that, but chess events like live chess events where people play, they're hugely popular right now. There's chess is more popular than it's ever been and we can't there's nobody on the planet who can beat the best chess computers. It's insane. A is can write songs. You can put in all sorts of parameters.

Be like, write me the next pop hit of 2024 or whatever it is, and they can probably put you out something that's going to be it would be close to it. Live music, though, is also at an all time high. There's probably a little bit of like revenge live music stuff from the pandemic, but still live music venues are doing as as best they have the touring artists. That's how they're making all their money right now because people want that.

I have a friend in London who runs like a little record label on live event music and all of my other friends in England are like, oh God, we need this so bad into London. London's has great music, but the the social connection scene there is is just it's just now starting to flourish. It's insane. The other thing too, that I think I I sent this to you recently, dating apps are becoming a little bit less. You, you did send that to me that that people are leaving dating apps.

And we might talk about this on another, another episode at some point, But I want to make the point here about how, you know, as soon as like ChatGPT came online and then, you know, all these other tools that were kind of already around, they started getting repurposed for all these different, all, all different things that people do. One of them was here, use AI to improve your, your dating profile on these apps. And I think people were just like, Jesus Christ, are you

serious? And so actually now, like on Eventbrite, live events, live dating singles events are more and more popular than they're ever interesting. So I think, I think the trend is already there. I don't think, I don't think it's a prediction you're making. 00:50:23,960 I think it's already. Happening. Yeah, yeah, I believe it. I believe it. It's, it's in my experience too. 00:50:31,720 I mean, you know, when, when ChatGPT first came out, I kind of had the same fear.

I think I even tweeted this at one point and I like joked I was like, OK, how long do I have before I, I'm out of a job? And I was like, I think I can make it to 20-30. But honestly, the way the last two, you know, the more I use it, the, the less convinced I am that it's going to replace

anybody. I just think it's, I mean, the, the, the phrase that's going around Silicon Valley to my understanding at the moment is you're, you're not going to be replaced by an AI. You're going to be replaced by somebody who knows how to use the AI. And I've definitely found that to be true that it's if I tell we were actually joking earlier that if you, if you tell ChatGPT to like write something in the style of Mark Manson, it is

awful. It is like the worst half assed parody of my work that you've ever seen. But but I use ChatGPT all the time to help research. I use it to come up with title ideas. I use it to come up with segment ideas. Like it's it's super useful as a tool. And so, yeah, big UPS on AI. Yeah, I think this is one of those where we need to just embrace it, don't fight it so much. I get the push back.

I do understand the the knee jerk reaction to it, but it, it, it is, it's it's like a huge unlock for us. And I think if we we need to not be so scared about it, not not be so scared of it so we can use it in in better. Ways. Yeah, I agree. Yeah. Cool. Well that's our show. This was not produced by an AI. It was not. This was produced by two humans, Or was it? Yeah, the wisdom of the week mark, this one comes from Mason Cooley, who said this goes back

to the regret. Mason Cooley said regret for wasted time is more a wasted time. I really like that. Well said. Yeah, well said. That's it. We'll be back next week. Please like and subscribe. And if you have a question, feel free to submit it. You can comment on YouTube or e-mail us at podcast at markmanson.net. We will be back next week. And maybe, just maybe, we might be more empathetic next time.

The Subtle Art of Not Giving a Fuck podcast is produced by Drew Bernie. It's edited by Andrew Nishimura. 00:52:47,160 Jessica Choi is our videographer and sound engineer. Thank you for listening and we will see you next week.

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