yego.me
💡 Stop wasting time. Read Youtube instead of watch. Download Chrome Extension

Michio Kaku: Why flat-Earth theory and anti-vax conspiracies exist | Big Think


2m read
·Nov 3, 2024

We still have Flat Earthers, we have people that don't believe in vaccinations, and what do we do about it? Well, first of all, I think there's a gene. I think there's a gene for superstition, a gene for hearsay, a gene for magic, a gene for magical thinking. And I think that, when we were in the forest, that gene actually helped us. Because 9 times out of 10, that gene was wrong. Superstition didn't work. But 1 time out of 10, it saved your butt. That's why the gene is still here, the gene for superstition and magic.

Now, there's no gene for science. Science is based on things that are reproducible, testable -- it's a long process, the scientific method. It's not part of our natural thinking. It's an acquired taste, just like broccoli. You have to learn how the power can be unleashed by looking at your diet, for example. So I think 1,000 years from now, 1,000 years from now, we will have Flat Earthers. A thousand years from now, we will have people that still do not want to be vaccinated. OK? So what do we do about it?

Well, it's a struggle. It's a struggle that's eternal, because I think it's part of our genetic makeup. And there's even a name for some of this superstition. It's called pareidolia. What is pareidolia? It's the idea that when you look in the sky, you see things that are not there. Here's one experiment: Look at the clouds and try not to see something there. It's very difficult. You look at the clouds. You can't help it. You see Donald Duck. You see Mickey Mouse. You see snakes, animals. You see all sorts of stuff. You can't help it.

Recently, the Notre Dame Cathedral partially burned down. And sure enough, somebody said, 'I see Jesus Christ there.' I saw the picture. Maybe you did, too. It really did look like Jesus Christ. But it was the ashes of Notre Dame. And how many times do people see the Virgin Mary in a glass of tea? So we are hardwired to see things that are not there. Because for the most part, they're harmless. For the most part, they do nothing. And once in a while, it saves our butt.

And so that's why I think we will have Flat Earthers, we will have the people who don't like vaccination, because hearsay throughout human history was the dominant form of information-sharing. You know, the internet is very new. Newspapers are very new. Science and technology is very new. But gossip, hearsay, slander, rumors, there's a gene for that. OK? So how do you combat it? Slowly, carefully, painfully -- it's a painful process, but in some sense, we're going up against our genetic predisposition to believe in nonsense.

More Articles

View All
Good Things Are Coming Into The Crypto Landscape! | Kitco NEWS
[Music] Kevin: Great to have you with us. Roy: Thank you! Great to be here. Kevin: Alright, Kevin, as wonderful as it is to have Mr. Wonderful, we also have quant maestro and Bitcoin OG Roy Niederhoffer. Roy has been a Bitcoin bull since 2011. He’s the…
Roar: The Most Dangerous Movie Ever Made | The Strange Truth
What makes Roar so unique is that you will never see people in close proximity with animals. I mean, in with them, touching them every day was life and death. You would never be allowed to do that now. Good God, how to describe Roar? Most films you talk …
Why Is Ice Slippery?
Why is ice slippery? Ice slippery? Oh, I don’t know, I couldn’t tell you that. Um, but you skate on it. I skate on it, but, uh, you know, that it feels pretty slippery, doesn’t it? It does feel slippery, but you would feel a different slipperiness to me …
Example translating points
What we’re going to do in this video is look at all of the ways of describing how to translate a point and then to actually translate that point on our coordinate plane. So, for example, they say plot the image of point P under a translation by five unit…
Worked examples: slope-intercept intro | Mathematics I | High School Math | Khan Academy
Do some practice examples from our intro to slope-intercept exercise. What is the slope of y is equal to negative 4x minus 3? So, you might already recognize this is in slope-intercept form. Just as a reminder, slope-intercept form is y is equal to mx p…
YouTube changed my life (Started exactly one year ago today)
So you usually want to make a video. I’ll plan it out a little bit ahead of time, and I’ll make it like a format of what I’m gonna say and in what order, so don’t miss any points. Put a video like this, I figured it’s probably just best I just make a spu…