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How Your Brain Builds a Philosophy

How Your Brain Builds a Philosophy

Episode 3570 Published 1 week, 2 days ago
Description
How do you actually arrive at your beliefs about truth, morality, and how the world works? This episode explores the fascinating research on personal epistemology — the study of how individuals develop their philosophies of knowledge and meaning. We trace the work of Barbara Hofer, who mapped how these belief systems develop from childhood through adulthood, and William Perry, whose 1950s Harvard studies revealed a predictable sequence from dualistic thinking to contextual commitment. We examine Jonathan Haidt's controversial claim that moral intuitions come first and reasoning comes second — the emotional elephant carrying a rational rider. We explore how culture, religion, and life experience shape our worldviews, from the "big gods" theory of moralizing deities to the sensitive-period hypothesis that suggests our philosophical operating system gets installed early. And we tackle the question of stability versus flux: when do our philosophies change, and what forces can trigger a complete rebuild?
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