"I feel smart if I'm not careful about how deep and thoughtful I am," he says. "When you read that sentence in the newspaper, you read something that's not what's there." He adds: "Even if you're enough, even if you're a lot like all the people that have to survey"
Neurologist and author Robert Burton talks about his book, On Being Certain, with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Burton explores our need for certainty and the challenge of being skeptical about what our brain tells us must be true. Where does what Burton calls "the feeling of knowing" come from? Why can memory lead us astray? Burton claims that our reaction to events emerges from competition among different parts of the brain operating below our level of awareness. The conversation includes a discussion of the experience of transcendence and the different ways humans come to that experience.