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186: Coleman Hughes on The Humanity of Race

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

Release Date: 03/05/2020

206: Chloé Valdary on Love & Race show art 206: Chloé Valdary on Love & Race

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

Today it is great to have Chloé Valdary on the podcast. After spending a year as a Bartley Fellow at the Wall Street Journal, Chloe developed the Theory of Enchantment, an innovative framework for socioemotional learning, character development and interpersonal growth that uses pop culture as an educational tool in the classroom and beyond.

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205: Robert Sutton on Good Leaders vs. Bad Leaders show art 205: Robert Sutton on Good Leaders vs. Bad Leaders

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

Today it’s great to have Robert Sutton on the podcast. Sutton is Professor of Management Science and Engineering and Professor of Organizational Behavior by courtesy at Stanford. He co-founded the Stanford Technology Ventures Program (STVP) and the Hasso Plattner Institute of Design which everyone calls the d.school. Sutton received his PhD in Organizational Psychology from the University of Michigan and has served on the Stanford faculty since 1983.

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204: Chip Conley on Wisdom, Midlife, and Peak Experience show art 204: Chip Conley on Wisdom, Midlife, and Peak Experience

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

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203: Creating a Living Masterpiece with Michael Gervais show art 203: Creating a Living Masterpiece with Michael Gervais

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

Today it’s great to have Dr. Michael Gervais on the podcast. Dr. Gervais is a world-renowned high-performance psychologist and industry visionary. Over the course of 20 years, working with world leading performers, Dr. Gervais has developed a psychological framework that allows people to thrive in pressure packed environments.

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202: Uncancellable with Katie Herzog and Jesse Singal show art 202: Uncancellable with Katie Herzog and Jesse Singal

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

Today it’s great to have Katie Herzog and Jesse Singal on the podcast. Together, Herzog and Signal co-host the Blocked and Reported Podcast.

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201: Keeping it Real with Ayishat Akanbi show art 201: Keeping it Real with Ayishat Akanbi

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

I’m really excited to have Ayishat Akanbi on the podcast today. Ayishat is a writer and fashion stylist based in London. Personal reflection has guided her approach of reminding us of our commonalities instead of our differences. Not just for social awareness but also self-awareness, Ayishat resists the black and white thinking that can lead to divisive socio-political discourse and is comfortable “in the grey”. 

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200: Richard Haier on the Nature of Human Intelligence show art 200: Richard Haier on the Nature of Human Intelligence

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

Today it’s great to have Dr. Richard Haier on the podcast. Dr. Haier is Professor Emeritus in the School of Medicine at the University of California, Irvine. His research investigates structural and functional neuroanatomy of intelligence using neuroimaging.

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199: How Politics Became Our Identity with Lilliana Mason show art 199: How Politics Became Our Identity with Lilliana Mason

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

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198: Geoffrey Miller on Signaling, Mating, and Morality show art 198: Geoffrey Miller on Signaling, Mating, and Morality

The Psychology Podcast with Scott Barry Kaufman

In this episode, I talk with Geoffrey Miller, an American evolutionary psychologist, researcher, and author about elements of evolutionary psychology such as virtue signaling, altruism, sexual selection, and their role in the evolution of human nature.

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197: From Learned Helplessness to Learned Hopefulness with Martin Seligman show art 197: From Learned Helplessness to Learned Hopefulness with Martin Seligman

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“There are very few people who have nothing of any value to say.” — Coleman Hughes

Today it’s great to have Coleman Hughes on the podcast. Coleman is an undergraduate philosophy major at Columbia University and a columnist for Quillette magazine. His writing has been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, City Journal, and the Spectator.

In this episode we discuss:

  • Coleman’s initial plan in life to become a trombonist
  • Coleman’s early childhood education
  • Coleman’s transformation of his thinking about race
  • Coleman’s nuanced thoughts on intersectionality
  • Why we set up a norm against racial stereotyping
  • Is reverse-racism legitimate?
  • How the main message of the civil rights movement is often ignored today
  • Coleman’s humanistic perspective on race
  • Coleman’s criticism of the woke mindset
  • What makes sense about the woke mindset
  • Looking at things from the perspective of police officers
  • Understanding the causes of the underrepresentation of African Americans in gifted education programs
  • The moral imperative to enhance cognitive development of people in the bottom of society 
  • How racial categories can mislead us
  • How people underrate the value of local programs and community to solve problems of racism
  • Why policy shouldn’t look at racial disparities
  • The important distinction between culture and race
  • Why focusing on racial disparities (assuming that racial disparities are a proxy for well-being) is a mistake
  • Coleman’s vision for the good society