Yuval Noah Harari on the myths we need to survive

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Published 2015-10-23
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Filmed at the Royal Geographical Society on 23rd September 2015.

Myths. We tend to think they’re a thing of the past, fabrications that early humans needed to believe in because their understanding of the world was so meagre. But what if modern civilisation were itself based on a set of myths? This is the big question posed by Professor Yuval Noah Harari, author of Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, which has become one of the most talked about bestsellers of recent years. In this exclusive appearance for Intelligence Squared, Harari will argue that all political orders are based on useful fictions which have allowed groups of humans, from ancient Mesopotamia through to the Roman empire and modern capitalist societies, to cooperate in numbers far beyond the scope of any other species.

To give an example, Hammurabi, the great ruler of ancient Babylon, and the US founding fathers both created well-functioning societies. Hammurabi’s was based on hierarchy, with the king at the top and the slaves at the bottom, while the Americans’ was based on freedom and equality between all citizens. Yet the idea of equality, Harari will claim, is as much a fiction as the idea that a king or rich nobleman is ‘better’ than a humble peasant. What made both of these societies work was the fact that within each of them everyone believed in the same set of imagined underlying principles. In a similar vein, money is a fiction that depends on the trust that we collectively put in it. The fact that it is a ‘myth’ has not impeded its usefulness. It has become the most universal and efficient system of mutual trust ever devised, allowing the development of global trade networks and sophisticated modern capitalism.

Professor Harari came to the Intelligence Squared stage to explain how the fictions that we believe in are an inseparable part of human culture and civilisation.

All Comments (21)
  • @havenbastion
    If people are switching stories so easily, they are not relying on truth, but on feelings.
  • 14:15 When he talks about German history, as a German myself I have to comment on this. The point made here is that people are able to live under different myths and quickly exchange them basically without major difficulties, and.. it seems true, but something that is presupposed here is that stories and myths are sort of the driving elements of society when in fact you can argue against this confidently and instead point towards other human pressures being the real force and stories only a circumstantial thing on top of it all, an average German in the nazi regime may not have even bought into the nazi story but remains part of the system because of his more prevalent desire to fulfill human needs such as food, security and community. The story is almost secondary.
  • @byronsmith1982
    One of the key players in this recent plandemic/global genocide scheme
  • @aigen-journey
    I don't think he is as widely recognized as he deserves to be, but in my opinion Yuval Harari will become one of the most influential thinkers of the XXI century.
  • Who's the interviewer? He's excellent. And so are the questions of the audience. I love a smart audience.
  • @markmartens
    "My son turned six yesterday. What advice would you give him as he prepares for a world of robotics and artificial intelligence?" "That nothing they teach him in the educational system today is really relevant to the world in which he will actually live. The most important capacity he will need to have is to, throughout life, learn. There will be no ending to learning and to reinventing ourselves again, and again, and again...The pace of change is so fast, that you'll have to learn all your life." Yuval Noah Harari on the myths we need to survive.
  • @jeffreylynn3525
    As one listens to Yuval or any speaker they admire, one must question whether YOUR frontal cortex has shut down!
  • @E.Hernandez108
    The woman makes a very good question, "is love a myth?" which he jugdes and dismisses. He exclude what he fears, and becomes a slave of it, revealing a weak spot by excluding his own image. The projection is annoying as a moderator.
  • @qyarn588
    Harari's overall future outlook (data as new existencial story, mainly biotek as new tool to realise the story) reminds me quite a bit on Houellebecq's novel "The Possibility of an Island". Thanks for this great talk!!!
  • If one is discouraged to question from childhood their scriptures, elders or teacher the ability for critical thinking cannot develop.
  • @sudhabansal4084
    The speaker has such a vivid insight into future and his knowledge seems to be very very vast. I am , ordinary person , incapable to comment. I enjoyed listening it nonstop.
  • @Stallnig
    This: ~"You see a man wearing the same hat and suit as you do, and you know he most likely believes the same stories you do" That is the best description of a culture I've come across. We are subconciousely very good at recognising familiarity and foreignness in appearance and its correlations with mental traits and ideals, which we pickup through experience. I believe that dislike of cultural differences is often conflated with racism. I believe most people who don't like people of other ethnicities don't dislike them because of where they are from or how they look, but because of the mindset, believes and values they mostlikely hold, since those are prevalent at their origin place. Those things can bear a lot of conflict and danger. Therefor prejudice and preventive measures on its behalf aren't all that unreasonable imo.
  • Two favourite quotes from him ignorance was the greatest scientific discovery , Gossip is what hold some myths and stories together.
  • @OriDomshlak
    I am from israel and I am 13 years old, I read all of his books....
  • This was autostarted for me by YT. Didn't look for it. What a brilliant enjoyable talk.
  • never learned, revisited gratifyinly, REALLY THOUGHT so much in such a short space of time ...