i'm not writing a book specificalyabout him, but it meant that i was researching some aspects of him and his life. So this, let's call him the killer, the killer in vagus. It was been fascinating to resurch him, because i think, an officer, you never want to generalize from individual cases. But so it's clearly the case that this killer was profoundly socially alienated. He appeared to haveno ans er his er. There is literally a macdonald's bag r the other side of the laptop of which i was speaking to you. And we know that what happens is that junk food appeals to the part of us that needs nutrition, but
Author and journalist Johann Hari talks about his book, Lost Connections: Why You Are Depressed and How to Find Hope, with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Hari, who has suffered with depression as a teenager and an adult, offers a sweeping critique of the medical establishment's understanding of depression and the frequent reliance on pharmaceutical treatments. Hari argues that it is our lost connections with each other, with our work, and with ourselves that explains the rise in depression in recent times.