All In The Mind od ABC Australia
ABC Australia
Radio: ABC Classic FM
Kategorije: Zdravlje
Slušaj posljednju epizodu:
Politics, war, abortion, gun control — why do some topics make us so outraged? One theory is that our preoccupation with preventing harm is to blame. So today, we examine how humans developed morality, why we differ in what we consider right and wrong, and how that drives us to moral outrage. And after all of that, we'll find out how to have better conversations with people you disagree with (even if you're feeling outraged). If you want to hear more about that, check out The skills supercommunicators use, which you can learn too. This episode first aired in January 2025. Guest: Dr Kurt Gray Professor in Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Director, Deepest Beliefs Lab and the Center for the Science of Moral Understanding Author, Outraged: Why We Fight About Morality and Politics and How to Find Common Ground Credits: Presenter/producer: Sana Qadar Senior producer: James Bullen Producer: Rose Kerr Sound engineer: Roi Huberman More information: Lethal Mass Partisanship: Prevalence, Correlates, & Electoral Contingencies The transcript for this episode can be found on its original webpage. You can catch up on more episodes of the All in the Mind podcast with journalist and presenter Sana Qadar, exploring the psychology of topics like stress, memory, communication and relationships on ABC Listen or wherever you get your podcasts.
Prethodne epizode
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1039 - The psychology behind our moral outrage Sun, 19 Apr 2026
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1038 - Staying sane in space Sun, 12 Apr 2026
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1037 - Mind Hacks with Dr Billy Garvey: "being a bit kinder to myself" Wed, 08 Apr 2026
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1036 - Tantrums, sleep training and anxiety: Dr Billy Garvey answers your parenting questions Sun, 05 Apr 2026
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1035 - The psychology of masturbation Sun, 29 Mar 2026
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1034 - Mind Hacks: Casey Beros Wed, 25 Mar 2026
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1033 - Tough conversations and anticipatory grief: being a carer Sun, 22 Mar 2026
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1032 - Family estrangement and infidelity: Esther Perel answers your questions Sun, 15 Mar 2026
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1031 - Mind Hacks: Joel Pearson Wed, 11 Mar 2026
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1030 - Is AI making our brains lazier? Sun, 08 Mar 2026
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1029 - Mind Hacks: Esther Perel Thu, 05 Mar 2026
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1028 - Couples therapy with an AI partner? Esther Perel's just done it Sun, 01 Mar 2026
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1027 - We want your parenting questions Thu, 26 Feb 2026
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1026 - Why do we choke under pressure? Sun, 22 Feb 2026
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1025 - Can 'normalisation of deviance' help to explain a catastrophe? Sun, 15 Feb 2026
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1024 - Got a question for Esther Perel? Fri, 13 Feb 2026
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1023 - The paradox of petty problems: Why small annoyances can snowball Sun, 08 Feb 2026
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1022 - Grief and guilt: losing a loved one to suicide Sun, 01 Feb 2026
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1021 - Driving me mad: why we get road rage Sun, 25 Jan 2026
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1020 - The cognitive distortions of a high achiever Sun, 18 Jan 2026
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1019 - Healing from self-hatred Sun, 11 Jan 2026
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1018 - The fight for focus in a world of distraction Sun, 04 Jan 2026
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1017 - Got the ick? Dating, disgust and evolutionary psychology Sun, 28 Dec 2025
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1016 - What to know about kids mental health Sun, 21 Dec 2025
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1014 - Difficult people and radical acceptance: answering your questions about tricky relationships Sun, 14 Dec 2025
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1013 - From prohibition to social media - what makes bans succeed ... or fail? Sun, 07 Dec 2025
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1011 - The music that saves us Sun, 30 Nov 2025
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1010 - If everything is traumatic, is anything traumatic? The power of labels Sun, 23 Nov 2025
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1009 - ‘What if I’m a paedophile?’ The intrusive thoughts that haunted Uma Sun, 16 Nov 2025
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1008 - Consumer behaviour and the quest for cool Sun, 09 Nov 2025
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1007 - Narcissist, or just a pain? How to deal with difficult people Sun, 02 Nov 2025
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1006 - How borderline personality disorder makes it harder to hold down a job Sun, 26 Oct 2025
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1005 - From school avoidance to food anxieties: navigating neurodiverse parenting Sun, 19 Oct 2025
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1004 - Brain Rot: Meet the people who ditched their smartphones Sun, 12 Oct 2025
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1003 - Brain Rot: Internet addiction Sun, 05 Oct 2025
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1002 - Brain Rot: What is tech doing to your memory? Sun, 28 Sep 2025
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1001 - Brain Rot: Will AI turn us off human relationships? Sun, 21 Sep 2025
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1000 - Brain Rot: Is your phone destroying your attention span? Sun, 14 Sep 2025
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999 - Why revenge feels good — and what it costs Sun, 07 Sep 2025
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998 - Task paralysis and procrastination - why it's so hard to get sh*t done Sun, 31 Aug 2025
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997 - Cruel intentions: how toxic tabloids and celebrity culture changed the way we talk about mental health Sun, 24 Aug 2025
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996 - Is clutter making you feel bad? Sun, 17 Aug 2025
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995 - Serial killers: answering your questions about how they think Sun, 10 Aug 2025
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994 - Depersonalisation — when nothing feels real Sun, 03 Aug 2025
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993 - Divination isn’t scientific, but can it ever be therapeutic? Sun, 27 Jul 2025
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992 - Where have all the serial killers gone? Sun, 20 Jul 2025
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991 - Kleptomania: when compulsive stealing takes over your life Sun, 13 Jul 2025
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990 - Pyromania vs revenge – why do people light fires? Sun, 06 Jul 2025
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989 - Munchausen by Proxy: when parents hurt their kids Fri, 27 Jun 2025
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988 - INTRODUCING — Criminal Psychology Mon, 23 Jun 2025