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The Pistomechanics Podcast
di Eron Falbo
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Stagione 1
Inheritance
You are the only person who has ever lived inside your head. So why do you keep breaking resolutions you meant, and losing the same argument with yourself for years? You are the world's expert on you, and you keep being wrong about what you will do next. If you cannot reliably act like yourself, who wrote the part? The episode follows cognitive psychology, declassified Cold War history, 1930s sociology. The finding is that the part of you that talks and reasons did not write your beliefs, and was never in the room where they were installed. It is a press secretary, briefing the world about decisions it never attended. Your intelligence works as your beliefs' defense lawyer. Winning the argument with yourself changes nothing you do. Then: nothing you were ever told reached your deepest convictions. Not argument, not evidence, not even your own sincere agreement. Whatever reached them worked beneath speech, in the household, the tongue, the table, the thousand things you were shown before you had words to object. You inherited them. Studies and researchers cited Dan Kahan (Yale) — Motivated numeracy. The most numerate reason worst when the math threatens their politics, and rising science literacy widens the partisan gap. Lord, Ross & Lepper (1979) — The same mixed evidence handed to both sides left everyone more polarized. Biased assimilation: intelligence hired to defend rather than to audit. Richard LaPiere (1934) — Served in person 250 of 251 times. Over 90% of the same establishments later swore in writing they would refuse. Alan Wicker (1969) — Across the field, what people say they believe predicts under a tenth of what they actually do. Pascal Sheeran — The intention-behavior gap. A sincere, measured intention becomes action about half the time, at best. Michael Gazzaniga — Split-brain "interpreter." The speaking hemisphere invents confident reasons, on the spot, for actions it never authored, and believes them. Johansson & Hall — Choice blindness. People fluently defend choices they never made: faces, jam, secretly reversed political surveys. Jonathan Haidt — Moral dumbfounding. Every reason gets knocked down and the judgment barely moves. Church Committee (1975-76), the U-2 (1960), the Gulf of Tonkin (1964) — Deniability engineered so the spokesman's own denials would be sincere. Trivers & von Hippel — Self-deception evolved to make deceiving others more convincing. The sincere spokesman has no tells. Festinger & Carlsmith (1959) — The $1/$20 study. Paid too little to justify the lie, the mind rewrites the belief to fit the conduct. Festinger — When Prophecy Fails. The saucer never comes and the faith only gets louder. Adams, Wright & Lohr (1996) — Stated attitude against measured physical response (caveated on air; mixed replications). Hugo Mercier & Dan Sperber — Reasoning evolved for persuasion, not private truth. Its ancestor is Hume: reason is "the slave of the passions." What it argues You did not reason your way into your deepest beliefs, so you cannot reason your way out of them, and neither can anyone else. The talking self is a sincere narrator, kept ignorant on purpose, because a spokesman who believes the script has no tells. Introspection just interviews the press office. To find what you actually believe, you trace it, the way investigative journalism works against its own administration. A script implies a hand that wrote it. A hand that never once used an argument. The full framework, sources, and essays: pistomechanics.org What can be studied can be learned.
Blank Pill
IA
A pharmaceutical company spends a billion dollars and a decade building a molecule. Before it can sell a single dose, the law requires it to prove that molecule can beat a pressed disc of sugar. The sugar wins regularly. Then it gets thrown in the bin. The placebo effect survives five skeptic's objections, each one dismantled by published, peer-reviewed science, and then the conclusion itself gets pulled out from under the listener. The predictable 30% placebo response that shows up in trials is the floor. The ceiling has never been measured, because the clinical trial was built to average and isolate, the two operations that erase the force of a single believing human being. Four anomalies show what leaks through when the instrument breaks: tumors melting like snowballs, dopamine flooding a damaged Parkinson's brain on a PET scan, a belief outperforming an actual brain graft, biological aging markers reversing in a week. Studies and researchers cited Levine, Gordon, Fields (1978) — Dental surgery + naloxone. Blocking opioid receptors killed the placebo effect: the relief was real endorphin chemistry. Kaptchuk, Harvard (2010) — Open-label placebo for IBS. Patients knew the pills were fake. Symptoms improved anyway. Moseley (2002) — Sham knee surgery, NEJM. Fake surgery matched real surgery two years on. Statin nocebo trials — Sugar-pill recipients developed muscle pain after being warned about side effects. Belief manufactured a physical adverse reaction from nothing. Crum (2007) — Hotel maids told their work counted as exercise. No change to workload. Four weeks later: lower weight, blood pressure, body fat. Crum — Milkshake study — Same shake, different label. Ghrelin plummeted with "indulgent," barely moved with "sensible." The gut followed the label, not the substance. Rosenthal — Pygmalion — Teachers told random students were "intellectual bloomers." Measurable IQ gains by year's end. Levy, Yale — 660 people, 20+ years. Positive beliefs about aging added 7.5 years of life. More than low cholesterol or not smoking. Parkinson's PET scan (2001) — Science. Placebo injection triggered real dopamine release in a damaged brain, visible on a scanner. Fetal cell transplant trial (2004) — Patients who believed they received the graft outperformed patients who actually received it. Klopfer (1957) — Mr. Wright. Terminal lymphosarcoma. Tumors melted after an injection, returned when he read the drug failed, melted again after water, returned and killed him after the final verdict. Langer — Counterclockwise (1979) — Men in their late 70s lived one week in 1959. Eyesight, hearing, grip strength, flexibility improved. (Never peer-reviewed; not replicated.) What the episode argues The clinical trial is the most rigorous measurement instrument humanity has built. It is also incapable of seeing what it is measuring. The soloist gets drowned by the choir. The same current that melted Mr. Wright's tumors runs unsubtracted through classrooms, sales floors, diagnostic conversations, the mirror. The full framework, sources, and essays: pistomechanics.org What can be studied can be learned.
The Human Art of Belief
IA
Why do humans, alone among species, cooperate in the millions? And who figured out how to use that — on purpose? This first episode establishes the foundation of the series: belief is the technology that built civilization, and engineering it has been a conscious, documented practice for 2,400 years. Philosophers designed founding myths. States wrote manuals for manufacturing consent. Companies discovered that a believer manages himself. None of it was hidden — the books are published, the authors are named, and you can read them today. You'll also hear the discovery that separates the masters of this art from the amateurs: beliefs make decisions — people execute them. Once you see that mechanism, you can't unsee it: in politics, in advertising, in your workplace, in yourself. Thinkers and sources cited Yuval Noah Harari — Shared fictions (money, nations, gods) are what let strangers cooperate in the millions. Plato — The "noble lie": a founding myth deliberately built to bind a city together. Sun Tzu — Victory is won before the battle, by shaping what the enemy believes. Walter Lippmann — Named "the manufacture of consent"; the public acts on the pictures in its head, not the facts. Edward Bernays — Turned Lippmann's insight into an industry, engineering demand by binding products to desire. David Ogilvy — Advertising as belief-craft: the brand is a story the buyer tells himself. Robert Cialdini — Catalogued the documented levers of influence: reciprocity, authority, social proof, scarcity. Émile Durkheim — Shared belief and ritual are the glue that makes a society cohere. What the episode argues Belief is the load-bearing material of civilization, and shaping it has been a named, published craft for 2,400 years. The amateur argues with what a person concludes; the master installs the belief upstream and lets the person carry out the decision himself. Once you can see the mechanism, you find it everywhere a human is asked to act — the ballot, the checkout, the meeting, the mirror. The full framework, sources, and essays: pistomechanics.org What can be studied can be learned.