Why We Cling to Certainty, Conspiracies, and Bad Predictions
The Michael Shermer Show # 612 We like to think the future can be figured out if we just gather enough information. Pick the right expert, read the right forecast, find the right framework, and the fog will lift. Simone Stolzoff argues that this impulse often works against us. In his new book How to Not Know, he makes the case for getting better at uncertainty—not as a slogan, and not as an excuse to believe nothing, but as a practical skill: knowing when to act without perfect information, when to distrust easy answers, when to revise your beliefs, and when uncertainty might point toward something worth discovering. The conversation covers why people cling to conspiracy theories, what cults offer that ordinary life does not, why experts are so bad at predicting the future, how the replication crisis changed psychology, what relationships teach us about irreversible choices, and why the unknown is not only frightening, but also where possibility begins. Simone Stolzoff is a San Francisco–based journalist and author. His work has appeared in The New York Times, The Atlantic, and on the TED stage. He is a graduate of Stanford University and the University of Pennsylvania. His debut book, The Good Enough Job, has been translated into more than a dozen languages. His new book is How to Not Know: The Value of Uncertainty in a World That Demands Answers. SUPPORT THE PODCAST If you enjoy the podcast, please show your support by making a $5 or $10 monthly donation. https://www.skeptic.com/donate/ #michaelshermer #skeptic Listen to The Michael Shermer Show or subscribe directly on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and Amazon Music. https://www.skeptic.com/michael-sherm...

From Equality to Equity: How Social Justice Becomes Ideology

There Is No AI, Really (It’s Just People), with Jaron Lanier

Is It Ever Okay to Lie? Father vs Son on Truth, Trust & White Lies

Christian Apologist: The Truth About Christianity (And Why Atheism Is Fading)

Alan Moore on Reclaiming Our Imagination from the Authoritarian Overlords

Can Science Fix Criminal Justice?

Debra Soh on Why Men and Women Are Drifting Apart, Dating Apps, and Gen Z

Gad Saad: When Empathy Becomes Dangerous

Father of VR: They're Creating a Future Nobody Wants | Jaron Lanier

The Uncomfortable Truth About AI “Reasoning” | World Science Festival

The Best Defense Against A.I. is Reading Plato | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

Before Genesis: What the Old Testament Borrowed from Mesopotamian Stories

No One Is Prepared for What's Coming with AI | Tony Robbins x DOAC

Richard Dawkins at 85: Genes, God, and conversations with Claude

Father of VR: The best AI future nobody is talking about | Jaron Lanier

Sam Harris: How to Think Clearly When the World Is Designed to Make You Panic | Commune Podcast

Niall Ferguson on Cold War II and the Rise of Anti-History

Why Do We Exist? Hakeem Oluseyi

Scott Galloway: AI Wasn’t Built For You. The Rich Don’t Need You Anymore!

