I Know that She Knows that I Know that She Knows: Steven Pinker on the Mysteries of Money, Power, and Everyday Life

I Know that She Knows that I Know that She Knows: Steven Pinker on the Mysteries of Money, Power, and Everyday Life

A Note from James

I first got really impressed with Steven Pinker when he wrote The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined. He basically shows that over the past 10,000 years, every single century has been less violent than the one before it. You might think, “That can’t include the 20th century,” right? We had World War I, World War II, atomic bombs, the flu pandemic of 1920, Vietnam—all these massive wars. But when you look at violent deaths per capita, the 20th century was actually less violent than the 1800s, which were less violent than the 1700s, and so on. It’s a beautiful, data-driven argument for optimism.

But it’s his latest book that really fascinated me: When Everyone Knows That Everyone Knows: Common Knowledge and the Mysteries of Money, Power, and Everyday Life. That subtitle alone—“common knowledge and the mysteries of money, power, and everyday life”—you can’t just skip past that. You have to know what it means.

Take poker, for example. If someone bluffs you, you have to think: are they bluffing? Or are they making me think they’re bluffing, but they’re not? Or do they know that I think they’re bluffing, so now they’re actually not bluffing at all? That kind of circular reasoning—what philosophers call “common knowledge”—shows up in real life all the time.

Like when you ask someone up for “a cup of coffee” after a date. You’re not really talking about coffee. But you’re also not saying what you actually mean. You’re hinting. You’re creating a safe, ambiguous space where both people know what’s being suggested without anyone having to say it outright. The same thing happens when you ask your boss, “Can we discuss taking on more responsibilities?” instead of saying “I want a raise.” We give partial information all the time, because being direct can change the relationship—or close off possibilities.

Steven and I talked about why we communicate this way, how shared knowledge shapes everything from flirtation to power to money, and what happens when that balance breaks down.

And by the way—if you’ve never seen Steven Pinker—he looks exactly like what you’d imagine a Harvard professor to look like. Long white hair, sharp blue eyes, and this kind of wild genius energy. Jay and I joked that he looks like Einstein meets Jimmy Page meets Beethoven. He’s the best-looking academic I’ve ever seen.

Anyway, here’s our conversation on When Everyone Knows That Everyone Knows: Common Knowledge and the Mysteries of Money, Power, and Everyday Life, with my good friend Steven Pinker.


Episode Description

In this conversation, James and Steven Pinker explore how much of life runs on signals, innuendo, and the unsaid. Pinker explains how “common knowledge”—what everyone knows that everyone else knows—shapes everything from romantic attraction to political polarization to financial panics.

They discuss why laughter matters, how game theory explains social awkwardness, and why being “brutally honest” all the time can destroy relationships. From Seinfeld to poker tables to the stock market, Pinker shows that our most human moments depend on the subtle art of leaving things unsaid.


What You’ll Learn

  • Why subtle hints and shared assumptions keep relationships, negotiations, and societies stable
  • How laughter creates “common knowledge” and strengthens social bonds
  • The role of game theory and “recursive thinking” in everything from dating to diplomacy
  • Why total honesty isn’t always a virtue—and how “rational hypocrisy” preserves relationships
  • How stock market behavior, toilet paper hoarding, and bank runs all reflect the same hidden logic


Timestamped Chapters

  • [00:00] Introduction – When everyone knows that everyone knows
  • [03:00] A Note from James: Why Pinker’s optimism matters
  • [08:00] The hidden rules of communication and “weasel words”
  • [10:00] Why we hint, wink, and avoid blurting the truth
  • [13:00] “I love you” and the creation of common knowledge
  • [16:00] How humor and laughter level the playing field
  • [20:00] Politics, laughter, and social signaling
  • [27:00] Bluffing, poker, and recursive thinking
  • [31:00] Negotiation, honesty, and the limits of directness
  • [38:00] Rational hypocrisy vs. radical honesty
  • [42:00] Stock markets, speculation, and public knowledge
  • [47:00] The toilet paper paradox: when panic becomes reality
  • [56:00] Why intimacy can’t be legislated
  • [01:00:00] Trade-offs, awareness, and flexible social norms
  • [01:01:00] The “Sagan Curse” and being a public intellectual
  • [01:04:00] The logic behind life’s unspoken rules


Additional Resources


See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Episoder(1408)

What is Great Sex: Myths About Sex, and What Separates Good Sex and Bad Sex! | Dr. Nicole McNichols

What is Great Sex: Myths About Sex, and What Separates Good Sex and Bad Sex! | Dr. Nicole McNichols

A Note from James:This might be the most useful episode I’ve ever done. Not that the others weren’t useful—they were—but this one goes above and beyond. It was also awkward for me, and honestly a litt...

12 Feb 26min

From the Archive: Jocko Willink | Discipline Equals Freedom

From the Archive: Jocko Willink | Discipline Equals Freedom

Episode Description:This was one of those interviews where James thought he was talking about leadership—and realized halfway through that he was really talking about responsibility.Jocko Willink does...

7 Feb 1h 28min

From the Archive: David Goggins - Embrace the Suck

From the Archive: David Goggins - Embrace the Suck

Episode Description:This was one of the most intense conversations James ever recorded.This archive conversation captures David Goggins at the moment Can’t Hurt Me was launching — before the mythology...

31 Jan 1h 45min

From the Archive: Tim Ferriss on Possibility, Mentors, and the DISS Learning Framework

From the Archive: Tim Ferriss on Possibility, Mentors, and the DISS Learning Framework

Episode Description:This second installment of “From the Archive” returns to James’s early, unfiltered conversation with Tim Ferriss. They unpack how to market by creating newsworthy moments (includin...

23 Jan 1h 34min

Is Mind-Reading AI Coming Soon? My First Real AI Nervous Moment

Is Mind-Reading AI Coming Soon? My First Real AI Nervous Moment

A Note from James:Data is oil. Data is the gold of this AI revolution. Imagine you have an AI that has all of everybody’s thoughts also—so it’s not just learning on tweets and texts, it’s learning on ...

17 Jan 21min

Scott Adams: The Advice I Still Think About

Scott Adams: The Advice I Still Think About

A Note from James:You know, I’ve known Scott Adams for probably 12 or 13 years. He was one of the first guests on this podcast, and he’s the creator of Dilbert, which was my favorite cartoon strip for...

16 Jan 1h 3min

From the Archive: Sara Blakely on Fear, Failure, and the First Big Win

From the Archive: Sara Blakely on Fear, Failure, and the First Big Win

Episode Description:To launch our “From the Archive” series, James revisits his candid talk with Sara Blakely about turning fear into fuel, reframing failure, and selling a simple product with languag...

14 Jan 1h 13min

Why Peter Thiel’s Founder Rules Keep Paying Off

Why Peter Thiel’s Founder Rules Keep Paying Off

A Note from James:One of my favorite conversations on this show was with Peter Thiel. Yes—PayPal, Facebook, Palantir, and a dozen other hits. I first ran this episode years ago, and the advice still h...

21 Des 20251h 4min

Populært innen Business og økonomi

stopp-verden
lydartikler-fra-aftenposten
dine-penger-pengeradet
e24-podden
rss-penger-polser-og-politikk
rss-borsmorgen-okonominyhetene
pengepodden-2
pengesnakk
livet-pa-veien-med-jan-erik-larssen
rss-politisk-preik
utbytte
morgenkaffen-med-finansavisen
tid-er-penger-en-podcast-med-peter-warren
finansredaksjonen
lederpodden
stormkast-med-valebrokk-stordalen
rss-markedspuls-2
liberal-halvtime
rss-sunn-okonomi
rss-pa-konto