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Riveted

Riveted

The Science of Why Jokes Make Us Laugh, Movies Make Us Cry, and Religion Makes Us Feel One with the Universe: The Science of Why Jokes Make ... Religion Makes Us Feel One with the Universe
by Jim Davies 2014 288 pages
3.69
100+ ratings
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Key Takeaways

1. Our brains are hardwired for social interaction and understanding

We are interested in people. We love to see people and learn about people, and we love explanations that involve their desires, loves, and conflicts.

Social cognition is paramount. Our brains have evolved to be exquisitely attuned to social information. This adaptation has profoundly shaped our cognitive architecture, influencing everything from our art preferences to our religious beliefs.

  • We prefer paintings and photographs featuring people, especially faces
  • Narratives centered on human relationships and conflicts are universally compelling
  • Gossip serves important social functions, including:
    • Forming social bonds
    • Transmitting cultural knowledge
    • Enforcing social norms

Our "theory of mind" - the ability to understand others' mental states - is so powerful that we often anthropomorphize non-human entities. This tendency contributes to:

  • Belief in supernatural agents (gods, spirits)
  • Attributing intent to natural phenomena
  • The appeal of personified explanations in various domains

2. Hope and fear profoundly influence our beliefs and behaviors

Wizard's First Rule: People have a tendency to believe things they hope or fear to be true.

Emotions shape beliefs. Our hopes and fears exert a powerful influence on what we find compelling and believable. This cognitive bias has far-reaching implications for how we interpret information and make decisions.

Key aspects of hope and fear's influence:

  • We are more likely to believe information that aligns with our hopes or fears
  • Negative (fearful) information tends to be more attention-grabbing and memorable
  • Hope can lead us to accept comforting but unfounded beliefs
  • Fear can make us overly cautious or susceptible to manipulation

This tendency affects various domains:

  • News media exploitation of fear for engagement
  • The appeal of conspiracy theories
  • Religious beliefs offering hope or assuaging fears
  • Marketing strategies playing on consumer hopes and anxieties

3. Humans are pattern-seeking creatures, sometimes to our detriment

We evolved to be hypersensitive pattern detectors because the cost of missing a pattern (such as a tiger) is greater than the cost of seeing one that isn't there.

Pattern recognition gone awry. Our brains are extraordinarily adept at detecting patterns, a crucial survival skill. However, this ability can lead us astray, causing us to perceive meaningful patterns in random noise.

Consequences of our pattern-seeking nature:

  • Superstitious beliefs and behaviors
  • Illusory correlations (seeing false relationships between events)
  • Overinterpreting coincidences as meaningful
  • Susceptibility to certain cognitive biases (e.g., confirmation bias)

Neuroscience insights:

  • Dopamine plays a key role in pattern recognition
  • Schizophrenia and related disorders may involve overactive pattern detection
  • Skeptics tend to have lower dopamine levels than believers in the paranormal

This tendency has implications for:

  • Scientific reasoning and the need for rigorous methods
  • Critical thinking and decision-making
  • Understanding the appeal of certain religious and paranormal beliefs

4. The sweet spot between pattern and incongruity captivates us

Too little order is confusing, too much order is boring. The sweet spot is that area where tantalizing contradictions are visible, but the stimulus gives us an inkling of a hidden order that can be figured out.

Balancing familiarity and novelty. We are most engaged by stimuli that offer a perfect blend of recognizable patterns and intriguing incongruities. This principle applies across various domains, from art to ideas.

Key aspects of the pattern-incongruity sweet spot:

  • Familiar enough to be comprehensible
  • Novel enough to maintain interest
  • Hints at deeper meaning or order to be discovered

Applications in different fields:

  • Art: Works that balance recognizable elements with innovative techniques
  • Music: Compositions that play with and subvert listener expectations
  • Storytelling: Plots that offer both familiar tropes and unexpected twists
  • Product design: Items that are conventional but with unique features
  • Ideas: Concepts that build on existing knowledge while offering new insights

Understanding this principle can help creators in any field craft more compelling and engaging work.

5. Our biological nature shapes our perceptions and preferences

The physical nature of our senses puts severe constraints on what we find compelling.

Evolutionary constraints on perception. Our sensory systems and cognitive architecture have been shaped by evolutionary pressures, profoundly influencing what we find appealing or meaningful.

Key aspects of our biological constraints:

  • Visual system tuned to specific light frequencies
  • Auditory system sensitive to particular sound ranges
  • Innate preferences for certain environmental features (e.g., savanna-like landscapes)
  • Hardwired emotional responses to specific stimuli (e.g., fear of snakes)

These biological predispositions influence:

  • Aesthetic preferences in art and design
  • The types of experiences we find compelling
  • Our susceptibility to certain optical and auditory illusions
  • The effectiveness of various communication strategies

Understanding these constraints can help us:

  • Design more appealing and effective products and environments
  • Create more engaging art and media
  • Develop better strategies for communication and persuasion
  • Recognize the limits of our perceptual systems

6. Psychological biases affect our decision-making and worldviews

We seem to have a bias that makes us think that the longer something is in existence, the more valuable it is.

Cognitive shortcuts shape reality. Our minds employ numerous heuristics and biases to navigate the complexities of the world. While often useful, these mental shortcuts can lead to systematic errors in judgment and decision-making.

Key psychological biases affecting our worldviews:

  • Availability heuristic: Judging frequency based on ease of recall
  • Confirmation bias: Seeking information that confirms existing beliefs
  • Just-world hypothesis: Believing the world is inherently fair
  • Anchoring effect: Relying too heavily on initial information
  • Dunning-Kruger effect: Overestimating one's abilities in areas of low competence

These biases influence:

  • Political beliefs and polarization
  • Consumer behavior and marketing strategies
  • Risk assessment and decision-making
  • Interpretation of scientific findings
  • Formation and maintenance of religious beliefs

Recognizing these biases is crucial for:

  • Improving critical thinking skills
  • Making more rational decisions
  • Understanding and bridging ideological divides
  • Developing more effective communication strategies

7. Religion and art exploit our cognitive tendencies for compellingness

Like art and other sensory experiences, beliefs and explanations have aesthetic qualities that make us more or less likely to believe them.

Cognitive vulnerabilities exploited. Both religion and art tap into fundamental aspects of human cognition to create compelling experiences and beliefs. Understanding these mechanisms can shed light on why certain ideas and creations resonate so powerfully.

Common cognitive tendencies exploited:

  • Anthropomorphism and agency detection
  • Pattern recognition and meaning-making
  • Emotional resonance (hope, fear, awe)
  • Social cognition and theory of mind
  • Desire for explanation and closure

Examples in religion:

  • Personified deities and spirits
  • Ritual and repetition
  • Narratives of cosmic significance
  • Explanations for natural phenomena
  • Promises of afterlife or cosmic justice

Examples in art:

  • Use of familiar patterns and motifs
  • Strategic violation of expectations
  • Emotional manipulation through various techniques
  • Exploration of human relationships and conflicts
  • Creation of immersive, alternate realities

Understanding these mechanisms can:

  • Enhance our appreciation of art and religious experiences
  • Improve our critical analysis of beliefs and ideas
  • Inform more effective creation of compelling content

8. Science provides a superior epistemology, but isn't always compelling

Scientific ideas might start out on equal footing with religious ones, but the beautiful thing about science is that it requires testing.

Rigor vs. resonance. While science offers a more reliable method for understanding reality, it often struggles to compete with more emotionally resonant or intuitively appealing explanations.

Strengths of scientific epistemology:

  • Empirical testing and falsifiability
  • Peer review and replication
  • Self-correcting nature
  • Predictive power

Challenges for science in public discourse:

  • Complexity of scientific concepts
  • Counterintuitive findings
  • Lack of narrative or personal relevance
  • Uncertainty and provisional nature of findings

Strategies for making science more compelling:

  • Improved science communication and storytelling
  • Addressing emotional and social aspects of issues
  • Highlighting real-world applications and benefits
  • Fostering scientific literacy and critical thinking skills

Balancing scientific rigor with compelling communication is crucial for:

  • Evidence-based policy-making
  • Public understanding and support of scientific research
  • Combating misinformation and pseudoscience
  • Addressing global challenges (e.g., climate change, public health)

Last updated:

Review Summary

3.69 out of 5
Average of 100+ ratings from Goodreads and Amazon.

Riveted receives mixed reviews, with ratings ranging from 1 to 5 stars. Positive reviewers praise its comprehensive analysis of human behavior and compelling scientific research. Critics find the writing repetitive, disorganized, and overly focused on religion. Many readers appreciate the book's insights into psychology and neuroscience but note its potential bias against religion. Some find the pop culture references engaging, while others consider them distracting. Overall, readers value the book's exploration of why humans find certain things compelling, despite its flaws in structure and presentation.

About the Author

Jim Davies is a professor at Carleton University's Institute of Cognitive Science and directs the Science of Imagination Laboratory. His research focuses on visualization processes in humans and machines, encompassing artificial intelligence, analogy, problem-solving, and the psychology of art, religion, and creativity. Davies has contributed to understanding how people use visual thinking for problem-solving and imagining scenarios. Beyond academia, he is a multifaceted artist, engaging in poetry, playwriting, painting, calligraphy, and swing dancing. His diverse background in cognitive science and the arts informs his unique perspective on human cognition and creativity.

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