
Conversations with Tyler Steven Pinker on Coordination, Common Knowledge, and the Retreat of Liberal Enlightenment
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Sep 24, 2025 Cognitive psychologist and bestselling author Steven Pinker dives into the concept of common knowledge, emphasizing its role in human coordination and societal functions. He debates whether deep recursive knowledge is truly necessary for everyday interactions, like navigating traffic circles. Alongside Tyler, he explores the pros and cons of anonymity in online discourse, discusses benign hypocrisies in society, and examines the retreat of liberal enlightenment. The conversation touches on the challenges of rational agreement and the influence of linguistics on AI, all sprinkled with humor and insights.
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When Recursive Mentalizing Matters
- Recursive mentalizing matters when signals are ambiguous or stakes are high, such as solicitations or favors.
- Humans use layered framing to calibrate how much of a message becomes common knowledge.
Emperor's New Clothes Explains Revelation
- The boy in The Emperor's New Clothes blurted the truth because children lack adult pretense incentives.
- Private initiative often launches public common knowledge.
Anonymity Has Tradeoffs
- Anonymous online posters have mixed effects: they can reveal truths but also amplify trolling and misinformation.
- The net value of anonymity depends on counting helpful revelations versus harms.





