
Inner Cosmos with David Eagleman Ep138 "Why do our political brains mistake opinion for truth?" with Kaizen Asiedu
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Jan 26, 2026 Kaizen Asiedu, a philosopher-turned-political commentator who runs Clear Thinker, discusses why certainty in politics often feels truer than it is. He explores why conspiracies thrive, how social identity and outrage entrench beliefs, and why simple, emotional narratives beat complex truth. Conversation covers teaching clearer reasoning, social media’s amplification, and using AI and debate training to raise the rhetorical bar.
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Brains Build Maps Not Mirrors
- The brain builds a rough internal model, not a perfect mirror of reality.
- That model is shaped by limited experience, emotion, and social context, not objective truth.
Social Incentives Outweigh Accuracy
- Our brains evolved to be social and subjective, not objective truth machines.
- Modern media amplifies outrage and speeds inputs that bias our internal models toward engagement, not accuracy.
Adopt Epistemic Humility
- Cultivate epistemic humility by recognizing the limits of your knowledge and being willing to say, "I might be wrong."
- Challenge your assumptions and treat beliefs as provisional, not final.




