
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Richard Wrangham is a professor at Harvard, a primatologist, and the author of multiple books including "The Goodness Paradox: The Strange Relationship Between Virtue and Violence in Human Evolution."
------------
Book a meeting with Dan
------------
Keep Talking Substack
Spotify
Apple Podcasts
Social media and all episodes
------------
Support via Venmo
Support on Substack
Support on Patreon
------------
(00:00) Intro
(00:50) How humans have removed alpha male bullies
(09:59) Christopher Boehm's "Hierarchy in the Forest"
(16:06) Implications of human's self-domestication through violence
(22:03) Bullying male behavior that would lead to execution
(28:45) How the threat of violence influenced our moral impulses
(34:23) Psychopathy and reactive aggression in adult men
(45:25) How can someone spot a psychopath?
(50:07) Jane Goodall and how Richard views human nature
(01:02:53) Cooking and fire
(01:03:13) Richard's views on removing the y chromosome
(01:10:39) Removing genes for extreme aggression rather than men altogether
4.8
3939 ratings
Richard Wrangham is a professor at Harvard, a primatologist, and the author of multiple books including "The Goodness Paradox: The Strange Relationship Between Virtue and Violence in Human Evolution."
------------
Book a meeting with Dan
------------
Keep Talking Substack
Spotify
Apple Podcasts
Social media and all episodes
------------
Support via Venmo
Support on Substack
Support on Patreon
------------
(00:00) Intro
(00:50) How humans have removed alpha male bullies
(09:59) Christopher Boehm's "Hierarchy in the Forest"
(16:06) Implications of human's self-domestication through violence
(22:03) Bullying male behavior that would lead to execution
(28:45) How the threat of violence influenced our moral impulses
(34:23) Psychopathy and reactive aggression in adult men
(45:25) How can someone spot a psychopath?
(50:07) Jane Goodall and how Richard views human nature
(01:02:53) Cooking and fire
(01:03:13) Richard's views on removing the y chromosome
(01:10:39) Removing genes for extreme aggression rather than men altogether
1,849 Listeners
2,580 Listeners
11,934 Listeners
198 Listeners
1,837 Listeners
332 Listeners
12,626 Listeners
2,477 Listeners
969 Listeners
1,592 Listeners
27 Listeners
5,269 Listeners
12 Listeners
1,062 Listeners
295 Listeners