2024-09-02
2 小时 16 分钟Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast, where we discuss science and science based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine.
My guest today is doctor Jamil Zaki.
Doctor Jamil Zakhi is a professor of psychology at Stanford University.
He is also the director of the Social Neuroscience Laboratory at Stanford.
His laboratory focuses on key aspects of the human experience, such as empathy and cynicism, which lie at the heart of our ability to learn and can be barriers to learning.
Such is the case with cynicism today.
Youll learn the optimal mindsets to adopt when trying to understand how to learn conflict resolution and how to navigate relationships of all kinds and in all contexts, including personal relationships and in the workplace.
What sets Doctor Zakis work apart from others is that he's able to take laboratory research and apply that to real world scenarios to direct optimal strategies for things like how to set personal boundaries, how to learn information in uncertain and sometimes even uncomfortable environments, and then how to bring that to bear in terms of your relationship to yourself, your relationship to others, and how to collaborate with others in more effective ways.
I want to be very clear that today's discussion, while focused on cynicism, trust, and empathy, is anything but squishy.
In fact, it focuses on experimental data derived from real world contexts.
So it is both grounded in solid research and it is very practical, such that by the end of today's episode, you'll be armed with new knowledge about what cynicism is and is not, what empathy is and is not.
This is very important because there's a lot of confusion about these words and what they mean.
But I can assure you that by the end of today's discussion, you will have new frameworks and indeed new tools, protocols that you can use as strategies to better navigate situations and relationships of all kinds, and indeed, to learn better.
I'd also like to mention that Doctor Zaki has authored a terrific new book entitled hope for Cynics, the Surprising Science.
Of human goodness, and I've read this.
Book and it is spectacular.
There is a link to the book in the show.
Note captions before we begin, I'd like.
To emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford.