Andrew Huberman· PhD
In that sense, transacting some of the money to the other person. Like, you get to have some of it, too. You get to have some of the benefit from it. And the person who is at home, who's taking care of the family in the home, saying, you get to have some of that too, right? You get to come home, the children are taken care of, right? The home is taken care of. So both are transacting something to the other. I mean, that's the truth of it. If you look at what's really going on there, one person's getting the benefit of money they didn't earn, the other person's getting benefits. They have childcare they didn't do or pay for. They're not paying for childcare, they're sharing resources. So, yes, that's true. But is that it? Are these two robots? One is the money making robot, and the other is the childcare robot. That's not what's going on. The way we want to envision that, i f we have two healthy people with g enerative drives is they love one another, they're creating something better than they could create on their own. In fact, they've created children, they've created a home together, and they're nurturing that family together. That is generative.