Andrew Huberman· PhD
I think it's also about the IR experiential statistics that you have been exposed to so this this boy who says you I'm gonna take all this food because you can't hit me I mean we don't know but the the picture that grows out of my imagination is this boy had a lot of experiences of people hitting them a lot of experiences of not enough food MH and not a lot of experiences of strangers being nice to them you know like not a lot of people that you could trust that's the that's the experiential statistics that would fit this model someone like like you who's coming in being like Oh no there's more I'm going to give you guys more food for free you know I'm going to give you even more food for it's you know it the experiential statistics are you've come from a world of abundance where people are you know generosity being you've learned being generous can make you have a lifelong friend and all these amazing opportunities that make your quality of life that food is you're never going to think about food again it's about the relationships because that's your experiential statistics and so I think this is such a profound concept about about neuroscience and the Brain about our social structures and how they form