When you isolate people, they kind of collapse, right? Psychologically, right? I mean, we're just not able to sustain healthy, sane understanding of ourselves in the world without interaction. The way that human beings have come to be the dominant species on the planet is through cooperation. It's such a part of what it is to be human that you can forget that it's there. Part of what I'm doing here is reminding people and trying to show people what that looks like in a way that is personal, what it looks like in terms of who you are.
You are not autonomous. You are not an island unto yourself. You, my friend, are a social construct. The “self” you haul around — that yammering voice in your head — was entirely shaped by your relationships and social interactions. That may be upsetting for "you" to hear. But our guest today, Brian Lowery, prefers to see it as pleasantly humbling because if you can learn to let go of the idea that you have an essential self, you can embrace a more expansive view of who you are and who you can be.
Brian Lowery is a professor of organizational behavior at the Stanford Graduate School of Business. His new book is “Selfless: The Social Creation of ‘You.’”
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• We just released an original audiobook written and read by Steven Johnson. It's called "Immortality: A User's Guide," and you can download it now!