open.spotify.com/episode/2ah6SYMqNxJ89zo3cw2Qjx
Preview meta tags from the open.spotify.com website.
Linked Hostnames
1Thumbnail
Search Engine Appearance
Jonathan Haidt on the Righteous Mind
Listen to this episode from EconTalk on Spotify. Jonathan Haidt of New York University and author of The Righteous Mind talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about his book, the nature of human nature, and how our brain affects our morality and politics. Haidt argues that reason often serves our emotions rather than the mind being in charge. We can be less interested in the truth and more interested in finding facts and stories that fit preconceived narratives and ideology. We are genetically predisposed to work with each other rather than being purely self-interested and our genes influence our morality and ideology as well. Haidt tries to understand why people come to different visions of morality and politics and how we might understand each other despite those differences.
Bing
Jonathan Haidt on the Righteous Mind
Listen to this episode from EconTalk on Spotify. Jonathan Haidt of New York University and author of The Righteous Mind talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about his book, the nature of human nature, and how our brain affects our morality and politics. Haidt argues that reason often serves our emotions rather than the mind being in charge. We can be less interested in the truth and more interested in finding facts and stories that fit preconceived narratives and ideology. We are genetically predisposed to work with each other rather than being purely self-interested and our genes influence our morality and ideology as well. Haidt tries to understand why people come to different visions of morality and politics and how we might understand each other despite those differences.
DuckDuckGo
Jonathan Haidt on the Righteous Mind
Listen to this episode from EconTalk on Spotify. Jonathan Haidt of New York University and author of The Righteous Mind talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about his book, the nature of human nature, and how our brain affects our morality and politics. Haidt argues that reason often serves our emotions rather than the mind being in charge. We can be less interested in the truth and more interested in finding facts and stories that fit preconceived narratives and ideology. We are genetically predisposed to work with each other rather than being purely self-interested and our genes influence our morality and ideology as well. Haidt tries to understand why people come to different visions of morality and politics and how we might understand each other despite those differences.
General Meta Tags
15- titleJonathan Haidt on the Righteous Mind - EconTalk | Podcast on Spotify
- charsetutf-8
- X-UA-CompatibleIE=9
- viewportwidth=device-width, initial-scale=1
- fb:app_id174829003346
Open Graph Meta Tags
178- og:site_nameSpotify
- og:titleJonathan Haidt on the Righteous Mind
- og:descriptionEconTalk · Episode
- og:urlhttps://open.spotify.com/episode/2ah6SYMqNxJ89zo3cw2Qjx
- og:typemusic.song
Twitter Meta Tags
5- twitter:site@spotify
- twitter:titleJonathan Haidt on the Righteous Mind
- twitter:descriptionEconTalk · Episode
- twitter:imagehttps://i.scdn.co/image/ab6765630000ba8a5c5d67acf89a582aa0f4aebe
- twitter:cardsummary
Link Tags
31- alternatehttps://open.spotify.com/oembed?url=https%3A%2F%2Fopen.spotify.com%2Fepisode%2F2ah6SYMqNxJ89zo3cw2Qjx
- alternateandroid-app://com.spotify.music/spotify/episode/2ah6SYMqNxJ89zo3cw2Qjx
- canonicalhttps://open.spotify.com/episode/2ah6SYMqNxJ89zo3cw2Qjx
- iconhttps://open.spotifycdn.com/cdn/images/favicon32.b64ecc03.png
- iconhttps://open.spotifycdn.com/cdn/images/favicon16.1c487bff.png
Website Locales
2en
https://open.spotify.com/episode/2ah6SYMqNxJ89zo3cw2Qjxx-default
https://open.spotify.com/episode/2ah6SYMqNxJ89zo3cw2Qjx
Links
9- https://open.spotify.com
- https://open.spotify.com/episode/0hQvVUcRajHoQZ9dUmtuSm
- https://open.spotify.com/episode/2xOHHNUTZRE5nYcL3dskOl
- https://open.spotify.com/episode/4wYLkkTN1yqzi3asZIdhzm
- https://open.spotify.com/episode/6aYkkidfC8b3GnStJgIuCv