Our work consumes us. But does it have to? Anthropologist James Suzman has spent decades living in the Kalahari Desert with one of the world’s last hunter-gatherer societies, and he’s concluded that our modern attitudes about work don’t mesh with the views held by our ancestors. For 95 percent of human history, we spent the bulk of our time doing … nothing. What changed? In this millennia-spanning conversation with Next Big Idea Club curator Adam Grant, James makes the case for spending less time toiling away at labor we loathe and more time working at things we love.
EDUCATION 4o: How AI Will Revolutionize the Way We Learn
AFTERLIFE: Sebastian Junger’s Journey to the Edge and Back
FUNNER: How Language Evolves and Why It Matters
DEMON OF UNREST: Why the Civil War Matters Today (with Erik Larson)
ALGEBRA OF WEALTH: Scott Galloway’s Formula for Financial Success
WHY WE REMEMBER: The New Science of Improving Your Memory
SLOW PRODUCTIVITY: Can We Get More Done by Doing Less?
MAGICAL OVERTHINKING: Why Modern Life Is Making Us More Irrational
Everything Paul Bloom Knows About Psychology
GET THE PICTURE: Why Bother With Art?
LOOK AGAIN: How to See Your Life With Fresh Eyes
GENEROSITY: How Simple Acts of Kindness Can Change the World
BURN BOOK: Kara Swisher Takes on Big Tech
SUPERCOMMUNICATORS: How to Connect With Anyone
MIDLIFE: Once a Crisis, Now an Opportunity
RADICAL CANDOR: Why Compassionate Honesty Is a Gift
BLOCKCHAIN: Why Chris Dixon Still Thinks It Matters
BIG BETS: A Practical Guide to Changing the World
CLIMATE OPTIMISM: Can We Still Build a Sustainable World?
FREE WILL: Are We Better Off Without It?
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