Relationships 2.0: Why Did You Do That? + Your Questions Answered: Fred Luskin on Grudges

关系2.0:你为何这么做?+ 你的疑问解答:弗雷德·卢斯金谈怨恨

Hidden Brain

社会科学

2025-04-22

1 小时 26 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

As we go through life, we’re constantly trying to figure out what other people are thinking and feeling. Psychologist Liane Young says this ability to assess other people’s thoughts ​is an extraordinary feat of cognition. This week, in a favorite episode from our archives, we explore this mental superpower — and how it can lead us astray. Then, we welcome back researcher Fred Luskin, who responds to listeners' questions about grudges.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • This is Hidden Brain. I'm Shankar Vedantan.

  • All parents have moments when their kids test their patience.

  • Lian Yang is no exception.

  • I often yell at my kids for things that they did by accident like spilling a smoothie or leaving a cap off of a permanent marker and you know making black permanent stains all over the sofa.

  • When this happens and the couch is covered in black splotches or they're smoothie on the floor,

  • the perpetrators inevitably offer this defense.

  • It was an accident.

  • It's not my fault.

  • I didn't mean to do it.

  • I shouldn't say this, but I tell them it doesn't matter that you didn't mean to do it.

  • What matters is that you won't do it again.

  • Lian's reaction, while understandable, is deeply ironic.

  • She's a psychologist who studies how we read other people's intentions.

  • We need to think about other people's minds in order to figure out who our friends are,

  • who to avoid, whom to punish, whether to punish.

  • And we need to read people's intentions in any ordinary interaction,

  • like having a conversation and figuring out what to say and how to respond.

  • As we go through life,

  • we are constantly making sense of people's actions by interpreting their intentions.

  • Our ability to read what is happening in other people's minds is like an invisible compass guiding us through life.