
Two Inconvenient Women Why are we more fixated on capturing life than living it?
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Sep 26, 2025 Explore the cultural obsession with capturing life over truly living it. The hosts discuss how data fixation impacts education and social media, often distorting our real experiences. They delve into the pitfalls of institutional reporting and the 'cobra effect' of metrics. Worldviews shaped by neuroscience and philosophy highlight the imbalance in valuing data over human perception. With insights on vulnerability in social media and the need for embodied knowledge, they invite listeners to engage more deeply with life rather than just documenting it.
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Don't Make Measures The Goal
- Avoid turning measures into the sole target, because people will game systems to meet them.
- Recognise Goodhart's/Cobra effect: measures become poor guides once they are targets.
Control Drives Capture
- The urge to capture comes from a need to control and make sense of uncertainty beyond human comprehension.
- Holly links this to the left-brain urge to reduce life's mystery into tidy maps and rules.
Left-Brain Bias Explains Data Fetish
- Ian McGilchrist argues modern culture privileges left-hemisphere functions (analysis, measurement) over right-hemisphere relational intelligence.
- This imbalance explains why we over-trust quantifiable data and underestimate intuitive, holistic knowing.





