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The episode moves from developmental neuroscience to curriculum politics, showing how the United Daughters of the Confederacy helped normalize the Lost Cause through textbooks and monuments, and how modern textbook markets and state standards can still standardize sanitized history at national scale through bodies like the Texas State Board of Education. The throughline is epistemology: children learn through simplicity because complexity is cognitively expensive, and institutions exploit that necessity by deciding which “simple story” becomes default. The result is a public trained for narrative coherence before it is trained for verification, which leaves democracy vulnerable when persuasion starts replacing method.
By Tyler SmithThe episode moves from developmental neuroscience to curriculum politics, showing how the United Daughters of the Confederacy helped normalize the Lost Cause through textbooks and monuments, and how modern textbook markets and state standards can still standardize sanitized history at national scale through bodies like the Texas State Board of Education. The throughline is epistemology: children learn through simplicity because complexity is cognitively expensive, and institutions exploit that necessity by deciding which “simple story” becomes default. The result is a public trained for narrative coherence before it is trained for verification, which leaves democracy vulnerable when persuasion starts replacing method.