PODCAST · science
Learning English with Human Beans
by Georges
Welcome to "Learning English with Human Beans," where language learning meets social sciences! Dive into fascinating human behavior topics while naturally improving your English skills. We explore current research from psychology, sociology, anthropology... unpacking key vocabulary and expressions along the way. Each episode combines engaging social science concepts with practical language learning, helping you communicate with confidence about complex human topics. Grow your English skills through the lens of what makes us human!
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#74 – The Psychology Years
Marc's story ...
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#73 — Selfish or Altruistic. What is our true nature?
Are we secretly wired to think only of ourselves, or is the drive to help others hardwired into our DNA?In this episode of Learning English with Human Beans, Alice and Marc debate one of the greatest questions about human nature. Marc, with his scientific and analytical mind, confronts us with Hobbes' cynicism, the laws of evolution, and the brain's dopamine circuits. Alice grounds the conversation in empathy and everyday life, making the case that kindness is far more than a cultural illusion.From the bystander effect to vampire bats, from babies judging puppets to the neuroscience of the "warm glow"—get ready for a deep, thought-provoking exchange that will challenge everything you think you know about why you do good.
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#72 – Is Utopia the Narcissus of politics?
In this new episode of Learning English with Human Beans, Marc and Alice shift into high gear! After deconstructing the illusion of the “perfect self,” we tackle its collective equivalent: the perfect society.Delving into André Comte-Sponville's Treatise on Despair and Bliss, we explore why our political utopias are often just a reflection of Narcissus on a societal scale. From “Make America Great Again” nostalgia to eco-anxiety and progressive technocracy, why do we always fall in love with an image instead of facing reality?If power is always imperfect and history has no magical destination, why continue to engage? Discover how “de-hope” (despair in the noble sense) does not lead to cynicism, but to more lucid, freer, and more vibrant political action.
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#71 – What Does It Mean to Live in De-Hope?
Explore why the "self" is a dream and how "de-hope" leads to radical freedom. This episode dives into André Comte-Sponville’s philosophy to challenge the self-help industry and reclaim the present moment.De-hope is the neutral state of being free from expectations and the "trap of time". It is not a form of sadness, but a way to stop fighting reality and find happiness in the now. This "zero degree of hope" allows us to live with a sense of freedom, unburdened by future projections.The sense of a unified "I" is a narrative construction rather than a permanent substance. We are essentially "characters without actors," performing roles shaped by history, biology, and social forces. Realizing that the self is an illusion liberates us from the exhausting pressures of modern self-optimization.Using Spinoza's concept of conatus, the podcast frames existence as a striving life-force rather than a fixed identity. Inspired by the film About Time, the episode encourages living each ordinary day with total presence. True joy comes from faithfully enjoying our messy, mortal being exactly as it is today.
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#70 – Mikasa Ackerman's Psychological Journey
Mikasa Ackerman is Attack on Titan's most lethal warrior—rated 10/10 in combat, capable of decimating titans and humans alike with surgical precision. Yet beneath her unmatched strength lies a devastating psychological fragility. In this deep-dive analysis, we explore Mikasa through the lens of clinical psychology, examining how Dependent Personality Disorder (DPD) shapes every aspect of her character.From her founding childhood trauma to her final, impossible choice, we dissect the mechanisms of trauma bonding, separation anxiety, and codependency that define her relationship with Eren. We examine how Isayama brilliantly channeled pathological attachment into superhuman violence, creating fiction's most compelling paradox: a warrior who can survive anything except being alone.But Mikasa's story goes deeper. Through her structural parallel with Ymir Fritz, we discover how one woman's liberation from toxic love became the metaphysical key to breaking a 2000-year cycle of enslavement. We explore what the series teaches us about the difference between love and dependence, freedom and attachment, and what it truly costs to choose ethics over comfort.Major spoilers for the entire Attack on Titan series.
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#69 – Music! Music!! Music!!!
Have you ever felt a shiver run down your spine while listening to a violin tune, or a knot in your stomach when faced with a melancholic melody? Why can simple vibrations in the air, pure physics, trigger such deep and visceral emotions?In this fascinating episode of “Learning English with Human Beans,” Alice and Marc explore one of the greatest mysteries of the human experience: the emotional power of music. Beyond the notes, we delve into neuroscience to understand how sounds “hijack” our brains and bodies.On the agenda for this sonic journey:The science of thrills: What happens in our brains when we get “goosebumps”?The paradox of sadness: Why do we actively seek out sad music when we flee from sadness in real life?Mirror neurons and empathy: How music allows us to “feel” the emotion of an instrument as if it were a human voice.Body mapping: Why do we feel music physically in our chest or throat?
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#68 – Understanding Narcissism Through Barney Stinson.
"Suit up!" Everyone knows Barney Stinson—the legendary, high-fiving, magic-trick-performing playboy of How I Met Your Mother. But what if the suit isn't an armor of confidence? What if it’s actually a cage?In this episode, Alice and Marc move past the sitcom laughs to perform a deep-dive psychological autopsy on the "Legendary" Barney Stinson. Using his character as a lens, we deconstruct the mechanics of Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD). This isn't about selfies or vanity; it's about the survival of a fragmented self.
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#67 – Do We Really Want What We Desire?
Have you ever worked yourself to the bone to achieve a goal, only to feel completely empty when you finally reached it?In this deep dive into Jack London’s masterpiece (with SPOILERS), Martin Eden, Alice and Marc explore the dark side of the "American Dream." We analyze the tragic journey of a rough, uneducated sailor who transforms himself into a literary genius—not for art, but to be worthy of a bourgeois woman named Ruth.But this is not a simple love story. Using René Girard’s theory of Mimetic Desire, we deconstruct why Martin’s rise to glory leads directly to his end.In this episode, we discuss:Do we really desire things, or do we just imitate the desires of others?Why realizing that your "role models" are mediocre can be fatal. How Martin Eden exposes the "hall of mirrors" of high society.Join us for a terrifying autopsy of the human ego, and find out why the only thing more dangerous than failing is getting exactly what you thought you wanted.
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#66 – The End of Reading? (Pt. 3 – Reader, Come Home)
We diagnosed the illness (Episode 64) and we saw the terrifying prognosis for democracy (Episode 65). Now, it is time for the cure.In this explosive finale of our trilogy based on Reader, Come Home, Alice and Marc refuse the path of the Luddite. We cannot throw away our screens, but we can stop them from rewiring our children.In this episode, we build the "Reader of the Future":The Critical Window (0-5 Years): Why the "Digital Nanny" is a disaster for a toddler's developing brain and why "Lap Reading" creates the physical foundation of attention.The Art of Code-Switching: How to train a Hybrid Mind capable of using the screen for speed and the page for depth—and knowing exactly when to switch gears.Reader, Come Home: A final call to action to reclaim your "Fortress of Solitude" in a world of noise.
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#65 – The End of Reading (Pt. 2 – Why Deep Reading Saves Democracy?)
In the previous episode, we discovered that we have lost our “cognitive patience.” But is it really that bad if we can no longer read complex novels?In this intense second installment of our trilogy based on Maryanne Wolf's Reader, Come Home, Alice and Marc answer with a resounding “YES.” We dive into the heart of the Deep Brain to understand what we really lose when we “skim” a text.On the agenda:The Engine Room: Discover what happens in your brain during the precious milliseconds of delay that digital technology eliminates. This is where insight is born.The End of Empathy: Why deep reading is the only way to practice “Passing Over” (inhabiting the consciousness of another) and why screens turn us into judges rather than observers.A Threat to Democracy: The direct and disturbing link between the atrophy of our attention and the rise of fake news and demagoguery.
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#64 – The End of Reading? (Pt. 1 – The Hemorrhage of Patience)
Have you ever opened a book you used to love, only to find that you can no longer focus on the page? Do you feel an urgent, twitchy need to check your phone after just two paragraphs of "dense" text?In this first installment of our special trilogy based on Maryanne Wolf’s Reader, Come Home, Alice and Marc explore the fragile miracle of the Reading Brain. We discuss why humans were never actually "born" to read and how our brains had to perform a feat of "Neuronal Recycling" to create a circuit for literacy.Discover how the digital age is physically dismantling this circuit. We break down the "F-Pattern" of screen reading, the "Bleed Over" effect that ruins our concentration on paper, and the loss of Cognitive Patience. We also share the haunting story of how the world's leading expert on reading failed her own test against a classic novel.
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#63 - When Paradise Becomes Prison (Pluribus - Review)
What if the end of the world wasn't a hell of dust and violence, but a paradise of comfort and harmony?In this episode, Alice and Marc dissect the narrative universe of the Pluribus series. Forget brutal invasions like Star Trek; here, humanity is not undergoing a war, but an “update.” We explore how this collective consciousness (the Hive Mind) uses abundance and empathy as weapons of mass destruction of identity.
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#62 – Born to Kill? (The Science of Evil)
Are "monsters" made, or are they born?In this chilling episode, Alice and Marc venture into the dark side of the brain to explore the biological roots of violence. We debunk the myth of pure evil by looking at the Biopsychosocial Etiology of Antisocial Personality Disorder.Discover why a low resting heart rate might be a predictor of criminality (the Stimulation Seeking Theory) and how the "Warrior Gene" (MAOA) can turn a child into a ticking time bomb—but only if the environment pulls the trigger.From the lead paint on your nursery walls to the "broken brakes" of the prefrontal cortex, learn why the line between a criminal and a victim of biology is thinner than you think.
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#61 – Why Do Smart People Hate Small Talk? (Need for Cognition and Intellectual Stimulation)
Why does a polite conversation about the weather sometimes feel like a physical assault on your energy? Why do you feel like a wilting plant when stuck at a dinner party with no "real" topics?In this episode, Alice and Marc reveal that your impatience isn't arrogance—it's a biological hunger. We explore Cognitive Intolerance to Under-stimulation and why a High Need for Cognition turns boredom into a state of Agitated Stress (cortisol spike), literally starving your brain of dopamine.From the "Surface Acting" that drains your battery to the Japanese concept of Shoshin (Beginner's Mind), learn how to stop fleeing social droughts and start "gardening" conversation.
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#60 – Why Your Intelligent Brain Exhausts You Chasing the "Best" ?
Have you ever spent three hours comparing toasters at midnight, paralyzed by the fear of making the "wrong" choice?In this episode, Alice and Marc diagnose the curse of bright minds: Pathological Optimization. Discover why having a High Need for Cognition (loving to think) paired with a Maximizer mindset (wanting the best) turns every mundane decision into a neurological ordeal.We explain how your own intelligence can backfire, causing Analysis Paralysis and Ego Depletion, and we provide the tools to break the cycle: from Dereification techniques to the mathematical proof that being a "Satisficer"—settling for "good enough"—is actually the most rational choice you can make.
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#59 – Does Concrete Have a Soul? (The Brutalist - Review).
Is "Brutalism" just about ugly grey buildings, or is it a philosophy of truth?In this episode, Alice and Marc decode Brady Corbet’s monumental film, The Brutalist. Follow the journey of László Tóth (Adrien Brody), a Holocaust survivor trying to rebuild his life in a predatory post-war America.Discover why concrete becomes an armor against trauma and how the clash between the architect and his billionaire patron (Guy Pearce) exposes the dark side of the American Dream. We analyze the controversial violence, the "haptic" nature of the 70mm cinematography, and the ultimate question the film poses:Can art save the artist, or is it just a commodity to be consumed by capital?
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#58 – Why Does Your Libido Ghost You When You’re Naked?
You've got everything planned: the hotel, the champagne, the mood... but when the moment arrives, your body displays an “Error 404: Desire not found” message?In this episode, Alice and Marc tackle the complex mechanics of sexual desire. Discover the Dual Control Model: why your brain sometimes hits the brakes when you want to accelerate.From the anatomical truth about the CUV Complex (goodbye to the myth of the vaginal orgasm!) to Non-Concordance (why lubrication is not proof of desire), we deconstruct common misconceptions. Learn to accept Reactive Desire, to “close the stress loop” according to Emily Nagoski, and to silence your inner critic (Spectatoring) to rediscover the path to pleasure.
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#57 – Is Your Identity Just Another Fiction? (The Don Quixote Syndrome)
What if the "Real You" didn't actually exist? In this grand finale of our trilogy "The Self is a Fiction," Alice and Marc tackle a dizzying question: is your identity merely a narrative construction constantly manufactured by your brain? From the gentle madness of Don Quixote to the trap of "Bovarism," discover how our minds superimpose stories onto the real world. But don't worry, this isn't bad news. By exploring the concept of the "Conscious Don Quixote," learn how to pick up the pen and become the co-author of your own life—without losing touch with reality.
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#56 – Can You Heal Your Brain With Stories? (Bibliotherapy & The Proteus Effect)
If reading can change us for 20 minutes, can it transform us forever?In this episode, Alice and Marc move from simulation to therapy. Discover the science of Bibliotherapy and why the NHS prescribes novels instead of pills.We dive into the Proteus Effect: how adopting a mental avatar can physically alter your confidence. Learn why your "Self" is actually a Narrative Identity and how to use the Behavioral Bridge protocol to hardwire your favorite character's traits into your own brain.You aren't a statue; you are a story in progress.
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#55 – Do you become someone else when you read? (The Experience Taking)
Have you ever wanted to run a marathon right after finishing a novel... even though you hate sports?In this first installment of the “The Self is a Fiction” saga, Alice and Marc explore the fascinating phenomenon of Experience Taking. Discover why immersive reading is not mere observation, but a true dissolution of identity.Unlike simple “Perspective Taking” (conscious empathy), learn how your brain temporarily “turns off” your own personality to viscerally simulate that of the protagonist. From influencing your voting choices to unconsciously reducing prejudice, discover why stepping into a character's shoes changes your biological reality.Reading isn't just escapism. It's becoming.
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#54 – Why Are Dragons More Reassuring Than Humans?
Why do some people feel more "at home" in Middle-earth or aboard a starship than in their own neighborhood? Why is a dragon’s fire sometimes less frightening than a simple social conversation?In this final installment of our trilogy, Alice and Marc explore the vital role of fiction for neurodivergent minds (Autism, ADHD). Discover how stories act as a "social manual" with explicit rules, and why the predictability of a favorite movie watched for the 100th time is a crucial tool for emotional regulation.We’ll debunk the myth of the "lack of empathy" by looking at hyper-empathy and the Double Empathy Problem. From the honesty of robots to the safety of fantasy worlds, learn how fiction isn't an escape from reality, but a bridge that makes a chaotic world finally readable.
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#53 – Is Your Best Friend Imaginary?
Why does the finale of Friends feel like a real-life breakup? Why do we feel a deep void when characters who don't know we exist disappear from our screens?In this episode, Alice and Marc decode the mechanics of Parasocial Relationships. Far from the cliché of the lonely geek, discover why your brain is evolutionarily wired to bond with fictional people through concepts like Social Snacking and the Benjamin Franklin Effect.From the "Gym of Empathy" theory to the Pratfall Effect (why we love clumsy heroes), learn how fiction acts as a safe "social simulator" that can actually upgrade your real-world emotional intelligence.
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#52 – Why Do You Pay to Have Nightmares?
You know it’s just a movie. You know the characters are just pixels. So why are you sobbing on your couch like you’ve lost a best friend?In this episode, Alice and Marc decode the Paradox of Fiction. Discover why your "Rational Brain" (Belief) knows it's fake, while your "Primal Brain" (Alief) reacts as if it were life-or-death.From the "Low Road" of the amygdala to the theory of Make-Believe, learn how storytellers hack your biology to trigger Quasi-Emotions and why crying over a fictional death isn't a weakness—it's the ultimate workout for your empathy.
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#51 – Does Culture Control Your Emotions? (The Engineering of Surprise – Part 3/3)
Is the "Three-Act Structure" universal, or just a Western obsession?For the grand finale of the trilogy, we travel East to explore the Kishōtenketsu—the narrative structure that powers everything from Totoro to Parasite.While the Western brain demands Conflict and linear causality (the "Chekhov’s Gun"), the Eastern brain embraces Contrast and harmony. Marc and Alice decode why Westerners often find Asian movies "confusing" or "without an ending," and how learning to accept a story without a villain can actually rewire your brain’s predictive software.
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#50 – Why Do You Love Spoilers? (The Engineering of Surprise – Part 2/3)
Are you the type of person who reads the last page of a book first?In this second installment, we investigate the Paradox of Suspense. If the brain loves surprise, why do we rewatch movies we know by heart? Alice and Marc explore how Processing Fluency and Dramatic Irony turn a known story into a comforting "safety belt" for the brain.We also dive into Neurodiversity: discover why the Intolerance of Uncertainty makes spoilers therapeutic for anxious minds , and how the autistic brain’s hyper-focus on detail can shatter the illusion of a plot twist before it even happens.
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#49 – Why Does Your Brain Love Being Tricked? (The Engineering of Surprise - Part 1/3)
Why do we pay to be lied to?In this first episode of our trilogy on the neuroscience of storytelling, Alice and Marc crack open the black box of the Bayesian Brain. Discover how your mind is actually a "prediction machine" that hallucinates your reality, and why a good plot twist triggers a massive dopamine hit by generating a Prediction Error.From The Sixth Sense to Fight Club, learn how directors hack your attention and why, the second the twist is revealed, your memory rewrites itself to make you believe you "knew it all along" (Hindsight Bias). It’s not just entertainment; it’s a survival simulation.
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#48 – What If You Were Already Dead and No One Told You?
Imagine looking in the mirror and knowing—with absolute mathematical certainty—that you no longer exist.In this episode, Alice and Marc explore the chilling world of Cotard’s Delusion (Walking Corpse Syndrome). Far from being "crazy," discover why these patients are actually too rational: when the brain loses its emotional connection to the body (Emotional Anosognosia), the only logical conclusion is death.From the tragic story of Mademoiselle X to the reversal of Descartes' "Cogito," learn why pure logic leads to the grave and why feeling pain is the ultimate proof of life.
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#47 – Why Do You Suddenly Want to Throw Your Baby Out the Window?
Have you ever stood on a cliff edge and felt a sudden urge to jump? Or held a newborn and visualized dropping them?In this episode, Alice and Marc tackle the terrifying phenomenon of Intrusive Thoughts and the Call of the Void. Far from being a sign of madness, discover why these dark flashes are actually "Misinterpreted Safety Signals" generated by a hyper-vigilant brain.From the High Place Phenomenon to the critical difference between Ego-Dystonic (unwanted) and Ego-Syntonic thoughts, learn why your horror is the ultimate proof of your sanity and why the "vertigo of freedom" scares us all.
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#46 – Post-Orgasmic Shame: Why Do You Become a Puritan Philosopher in 3 Seconds?
Why do you suddenly want to delete your browser history and join a monastery the second the "fun" is over?In this episode, Alice and Marc decode the neurochemistry behind Post-Nut Clarity. Discover why the sudden crash of Dopamine and the rise of Prolactin turn your brain from a risk-taker into a risk-averse judge.From the Japanese concept of Kenjataimu ("Sage Time") to the evolutionary humor of the Coolidge Effect , learn why your Behavioral Immune System makes you feel "dirty" and why you should never make life-changing decisions in the 20 minutes following an orgasm.
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#45 – Who Is Driving the Bus When You Scroll?
Do you control your thumb, or is an algorithm holding the steering wheel?In this episode, Alice and Marc dive into the terrifying mechanics of the Attention Economy. From the "slot machine" effect of Intermittent Reinforcement to the zombie-like state of Dark Flow, discover how Silicon Valley hacks your dopamine to keep you scrolling.Learn why you can’t stop watching useless videos at 2 AM and how to reclaim your agency by reintroducing Frictioninto your digital life.
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#44 – What Happens When You Do Nothing?
Why does a simple 6-minute wait at a bus stop feel like torture without your phone?In this episode, Alice and Marc explore the "Crisis of Emptiness." From Blaise Pascal’s philosophy to the neuroscience of the Default Mode Network, discover why your brain desperately needs you to be bored to function properly.Find out why reading a phone book can actually boost your creativity and how to overcome the "Intolerance to Boredom Paradox" to turn those empty moments into a laboratory for your mind.
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#42 – Do the words you use change how you feel?
Does your morning “meh” hide a much more specific emotion?In this episode, Alice and Marc explore Emotional Granularity and discover why the precision of your vocabulary acts as a real biological brake on your amygdala (the center of fear).From Wittgenstein's philosophy (“The limits of my language are the limits of my world”) to untranslatable emotions such as the Russian Toska or the Portuguese Saudade, learn why “to name is to tame” (Name it to tame it) and how enriching your inner dictionary can transform your reality.
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#41 – Why you are an entire universe that is dying out, and why that's okay.
What if the apocalypse wasn't the end of the Earth, but simply the end of your world?Alice and Marc revisit the film The Life of Chuck from a new angle: the neuroscience of consciousness. Drawing on the theory of Controlled Hallucination, they decipher why the death of a single man is comparable to “a burning library” and how your brain populates your reality with the “ghosts” of the people you encounter.A dizzying reflection on our finitude, proving that in the face of the inevitable extinction of our inner universe, the only sensible response... is to dance.
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#40 – Why is it physically impossible to admit that you're wrong?
Why can a simple political debate trigger real physical pain in your stomach?In this episode, Alice and Marc dive into the neuroscience of bad faith. Discover why your rational brain is often just a “shady lawyer” serving your emotions (the Elephant) and how the fear of being wrong activates the same neural areas as an actual physical injury.Understand the trap of Error Blindness (why being wrong feels exactly like being right) and learn how to switch from Soldier mode to Scout mode (Scout Mindset) to finally lay down your arms.
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#39 – Does it hurt, or do you think it hurts?
Can you feel excruciating pain without having a single scratch?In this episode, Alice (and her sore little toe) and Marc delve into the mechanics of suffering. From the Buddhist parable of the “Two Arrows” to the incredible true story of the worker pierced by a nail, discover why pain is a construct of the brain.
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#38 - Are you sure you're awake?
Look at your hands. Are you absolutely sure you're not dreaming?In this episode, Alice and Marc explore the most fascinating flaw in our brains: lucid dreaming. Find out why it's physically impossible to run fast in a dream and how scientists have achieved the unthinkable: communicating in real time with people who are asleep.Between neuroscience and philosophical vertigo, get ready to question the very nature of your reality. Being awake may just be a controlled hallucination...
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#37 - Why are incompetent people so confident? (And why you doubt yourself)
Why does Uncle Gerard, who has only read one article, think he understands geopolitics better than an expert? And why do the most brilliant people live in constant fear of being “exposed”?In this episode, Alice and Marc explore the two sides of the same metacognitive coin: the arrogance of ignorance (the Dunning-Kruger effect) and the paralysis of expertise (impostor syndrome). Find out why 80% of people think they are better drivers than average and how to transform your paralyzing doubt into “confident humility.”An essential guide to understanding why doubt is not a weakness, but the price we pay for intelligence.
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#36 - Why do you think everyone is looking at you? (Escaping Social Paranoia)
Ever felt like a tiny coffee stain on your shirt was a neon sign screaming for attention?In this episode, Alice and Marc dive into the Spotlight Effect to explain why our brains trick us into believing we are the center of the universe. From the famous "Barry Manilow T-shirt" experiment to the Illusion of Transparency, discover why you are statistically "invisible" to the people around you.Stop worrying about judgment and learn why being a background extra in other people’s lives is actually your ultimate freedom.
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#35 - Why do you treat your future self like a stranger? (The science of procrastination)
Why is it so difficult to go to bed early, even when we know full well that we'll regret it the next morning?In this episode, Alice and Marc debunk the myth of laziness. Find out why your brain neurologically treats your “future self” as a complete stranger (literally as if it were Matt Damon) and how “Revenge Procrastination” becomes an act of emotional rebellion.Forget iron discipline: learn why procrastination is an empathy bug and how to reconcile yourself with the stranger you will become tomorrow.
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#34 - Does analysis paralyze genius? (Or why overthinking kills art)
Why does a champion miss an easy shot under pressure? Why does a centipede stumble when asked how it walks? In this episode, Alice and Marc delve into the paradox of expertise: that critical moment when conscious analysis, an essential tool for learning, suddenly becomes the enemy of performance. From the neuroscience of jazz improvisation to the tragedy of focal dystonia, discover the biological duel between your internal “Editor” and your “Creator.”Learn how to avoid the trap of overthinking and master the subtle art of not thinking in order to unleash your genius.
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#33 - Understanding Metacognition Through Mindfulness
What if meditation wasn’t what you think it is? Forget the cliché of the monk sitting in silence trying to think about "nothing."In this episode of Learning English with Human Beans, Alice and Marc (a cognitive psychology researcher) lift the hood of the human mind to watch the engine running.Discover metacognition, a mental "superpower" that allows you to switch from being an actor trapped in your own movie to becoming a free, benevolent spectator. Learn why your brain loves "autopilot," how to turn down the volume on your internal radio, and how to finally regain control... paradoxically, by stopping the struggle to control everything.
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#32 - Deconstructing "It Was Better Before" - Pt. 4
After three episodes dismantling the "good old days" myth, Alice and Marc ask a crucial question: In our justified rejection of golden age nostalgia, are we throwing out the baby with the bathwater? This nuanced finale explores what traditional life might have genuinely done better for human flourishing—without falling back into romantic mythology.Through four compelling themes, they examine valuable lessons we might have overlooked: our relationship with time (discovering the psychological benefits of cyclical thinking versus our modern linear rush), the quality of human connections (understanding "thick relationships" that encompass multiple life dimensions versus today's specialized "thin relationships"), the satisfaction of repair culture (exploring how fixing things with our hands nurtures competence and environmental sustainability), and the surprising wisdom of constraints (learning how chosen limitations can actually increase happiness and creativity).This isn't about returning to the past—it's about consciously integrating traditional wisdom into modern life. Alice and Marc show how we can recover the psychological benefits of seasonal rhythms, deep community bonds, hands-on skills, and meaningful constraints while keeping all the genuine progress we've made.The series conclusion challenges listeners to be specific about what they miss from the past and offers practical ways to blend ancient wisdom with modern knowledge to build a better future.Perfect for English learners who want to engage with sophisticated concepts about culture, psychology, and social change while learning vocabulary around tradition, modernity, and human well-being.
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#31 - Deconstructing "It Was Better Before" - Pt. 3
Why does nostalgia seem to be everywhere? In this eye-opening episode, Alice and Marc pull back the curtain on the multi-billion-dollar nostalgia economy that surrounds us daily—from the Nintendo game that made Alice spend £60 on childhood memories to the political slogans that promise to restore imaginary golden ages.Discover how companies have turned our emotional vulnerabilities into sophisticated business models using three types of nostalgia marketing: personal nostalgia (targeting your individual memories), collective nostalgia (exploiting generational experiences), and the most manipulative of all—simulated nostalgia, which sells people longing for eras they never experienced.But this isn't just about commerce. Alice and Marc explore how the same psychological techniques that make you buy retro products are weaponized by politicians to sell mythical visions of the past. From "Make America Great Again" to Brexit's "Take Back Control," they reveal how nostalgia has become a cultural operating system that shapes how we see the world.Learn to develop "nostalgic literacy"—the critical skills to recognize when your emotions are being manipulated while still enjoying the genuine comfort that healthy nostalgia can provide. Because understanding the game changes how you play it.Perfect for English learners who want to understand the intersection of psychology, marketing, and politics while building vocabulary around media manipulation and consumer culture.
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#30 - Deconstructing "It Was Better Before" - Pt. 2
"Memories lie, but statistics don't." In this data-driven episode, Alice and Marc set aside emotions and personal anecdotes to examine the cold, hard facts about how life has actually changed over the past century.From life expectancy and workplace safety to education access and women's rights, every measurable aspect of human existence tells the same story: we're living through what might honestly be called the golden age of humanity. The question isn't whether the data proves life is better now—it's why our brains are so convinced it was better before.Perfect for English learners wanting to engage with statistics, historical comparisons, and the vocabulary of social progress while discovering some truly surprising facts about the "good old days."
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#29 - Deconstructing "It Was Better Before" - Pt. 1
Do you ever think music was better in the past, or that people were more polite when you were younger? You're not alone. Today, we're exploring "The Architecture of Nostalgia"—why our brains are wired to believe things were better before, even when they probably weren't.I'm Alice, and joining me is Marc, a sociologist who studies how we construct meaning from our experiences. Together, we'll uncover why every generation thinks the next one will destroy civilization, how our minds edit memories like sentimental film editors, and why this beautiful human tendency can sometimes be exploited.Prepare to question your most cherished assumptions about the good old days.
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#28 - Walter White - Anatomy of a Tragic Overcompensation
What do a mild-mannered chemistry teacher turned drug kingpin and a pioneering psychologist from Vienna have in common? In this episode, we dive into the psychological transformation of Walter White—Breaking Bad’s iconic antihero—through the lens of Alfred Adler’s individual psychology.Alice and George explore how Walter’s descent from overlooked teacher to ruthless Heisenberg perfectly embodies Adler’s theory of the inferiority complex and overcompensation. Drawing on Adler’s ideas—like the drive for superiority, the danger of unresolved inferiority, and the importance of “social interest”—the hosts unpack the hidden motives behind Walter’s choices, the wounds of Gray Matter, and the psychology of power and self-destruction.Join us as we connect key moments from Breaking Bad to timeless questions of worth, shame, and ambition. Whether you’re a fan of high-stakes drama or curious about what drives people to reinvent themselves (for better or worse), this episode blends pop culture and psychology for a gripping, insightful listen.No prior knowledge of Adler required—just a willingness to question what really makes us “break bad.”
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#27 - Wolf Children
Dive into the poetic world of Mamoru Hosoda's Wolf Children. George and Alice explore how this modern fable questions our identity choices: should we adapt to belong or stay authentic at the risk of isolation?Through Hana's journey as a heroic single mother and the surprising evolution of her children Yuki and Ame, discover a profound reflection on motherhood, difference, and the courage to accept that true love sometimes means letting go of those we cherish.With integrated English vocabulary to enrich your discussions about identity, family, and self-acceptance.
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#26 - Sentimental Value
Can art truly heal family wounds, or does it sometimes make them worse? In this deep dive into Joachim Trier's acclaimed film Sentimental Value, George and Alice explore a story that challenges everything we believe about creativity and healing.When filmmaker Gustav Borg returns to his family after years of absence, he brings not apologies, but a movie script about their shared trauma. As three generations of pain echo through a haunted Oslo house, the film asks uncomfortable questions: Can you be a brilliant artist but a terrible father? What happens when trauma passes from grandmother to father to daughter? And why is it that the most authentic relationship in the story—between two sisters—holds the key to breaking cycles of pain?Join us as we unpack themes of generational trauma, the power of genuine human connection, and the dangerous myth that art can substitute for presence. Plus, learn essential vocabulary for discussing family dynamics, creative ethics, and the complex relationship between artistic genius and personal responsibility.Warning: This episode contains major spoilers for "Sentimental Value." We recommend watching the film first for the full experience.
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#25 - The Genius Illusion - Pt. 3
What if the biggest obstacle to recognizing genius today... is our own brain?In the final installment of our "The Genius Illusion" trilogy, George and Alice explore the psychological and structural reasons for our nostalgia for a past filled with giants. Discover how cognitive biases, like "survivorship bias," systematically polish history to make it seem brighter than it truly was.This episode finally reveals where genius is hiding in the 21st century: not in solitary heroes, but in collaborative networks and complex systems. Don't miss the conclusion of this debate that will change the way you see our modern world, all while enriching your English vocabulary on psychology and innovation.Sources:Wald, A. (1943). A Method of Estimating Plane Vulnerability Based on Damage of Survivors. Statistical Research Group, Columbia University.The Decision Lab. (2021, 11 octobre). Survivorship bias. The Decision Lab. https://thedecisionlab.com/biases/survivorship-biasRoese, N. J., & Vohs, K. D. (2012). Hindsight bias. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 7(5), 411–426. https://doi.org/10.1177/1745691612454303Halbwachs, M. (1992). On collective memory. University of Chicago Press.London, J. (1909). Martin Eden. Macmillan.
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#24 - The Genius Illusion - Pt. 2
Is a genius born... or made? In this second installment of our "The Genius Illusion" trilogy, the debate intensifies.After questioning the very definition of genius, George and Alice tackle its origins. George argues that even a talent like Newton's or Beethoven's is a product of its time, needing the validation of institutions to enter the history books. Alice, on the other hand, defends the "Great Man" theory—the idea of the exceptional individual who shapes their time.This episode takes you behind the scenes of the "hero factory" to reveal the social and historical forces behind the greatest names in history. Join the discussion and enrich your English vocabulary on history and sociology.Sources: Bourdieu, P. (1991). Language and symbolic power. Harvard University Press.Bourdieu, P. (1993). The field of cultural production: Essays on art and literature. Columbia University Press.Carlyle, T. (1841). On heroes, hero-worship, and the heroic in history. James Fraser.DeNora, T. (1995). Beethoven and the construction of genius: Musical politics in Vienna, 1792–1803. University of California Press.Spencer, H. (1896). The study of sociology. D. Appleton and Company.
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Welcome to "Learning English with Human Beans," where language learning meets social sciences! Dive into fascinating human behavior topics while naturally improving your English skills. We explore current research from psychology, sociology, anthropology... unpacking key vocabulary and expressions along the way. Each episode combines engaging social science concepts with practical language learning, helping you communicate with confidence about complex human topics. Grow your English skills through the lens of what makes us human!
HOSTED BY
Georges
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