
Secure Talk Podcast Why Security Leaders Struggle With Security Culture | Steven Sloman on Secure Talk
Dec 2, 2025
Cognitive scientist Steven Sloman, a Brown University professor and author, dives into the complex interplay between sacred values and decision-making. He examines how outrage and simplified thinking dominate social discourse, making it challenging for leaders to navigate cultural divisions. Sloman discusses the power of humor to disrupt absolutist views and the importance of recognizing our own biases. He also unpacks why insular communities become radicalized and the critical differences that set human deliberation apart from AI associations.
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Sacred Values Simplify But Can Blind
- Sacred values simplify choices and bind people to communities by making actions feel unquestionably right.
- Ignoring consequences becomes dangerous when communities hold sacred values so rigidly that they reject evidence.
Consequentialism Requires Hard Tradeoffs
- Consequentialism focuses on outcomes and requires probabilistic trade-offs and prediction of results.
- Sacred-value thinking avoids costly deliberation by ruling actions right or wrong without weighing consequences.
Attention Economy Fuels Sacred-Value Thinking
- The attention economy shortens focus and favors shallow analysis, nudging people toward sacred-value shortcuts.
- Algorithms amplify outrage by highlighting sacred-value violations, increasing tribal thinking.




