The Story of Stories

故事的故事

Hidden Brain

社会科学

2021-03-16

51 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

Why is my friend late? How does nuclear fission work? What occurs when I sneeze? We all need to understand why certain things happen. Some researchers think the drive to explain the world is a basic human impulse, similar to thirst or hunger. This week on Hidden Brain, we begin a three part series on why we tell stories. Psychologist Tania Lombrozo discusses how explanations can lead to discovery, delight, and disaster.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • This is hidden brain.

  • I'm Shankar Vedantam.

  • 2000 years ago, in ancient Greece, a local ruler had a problem.

  • He suspected his new crown was not made of solid gold, but he couldn't prove it.

  • So he asked the kingdom's most famous mathematician, Archimedes, to investigate.

  • While pondering this puzzle, Archimedes took a bath.

  • He filled the tub to the brim and as he stepped in, the water overflowed.

  • Archimedes had a flash of insight.

  • The water that spilled out of the bath reflected the volume of his own body.

  • He realized that if he put the crown into water, he could measure its volume by seeing how much water was displaced.

  • He could use this to tell the difference between a crown made of pure gold and one that had impurities.

  • He was so excited with his discovery that he leaped out of the tub and ran naked through the streets shouting, Eureka.

  • Eureka.

  • Which is greek for I found it.

  • I found it.

  • The famous story of the Eureka moment may or may not have happened.

  • It was written 200 years after Archimedes died.

  • But it says something profound about our a good explanation gives us pleasure.

  • And when we can't come up with a good explanation, we feel dissatisfied.

  • Something in the human mind yearns to make sense of the world.