Books Brothers

booksbrothers

Two brothers talk through the BEST non-fiction books about science, evolution, culture, history, complexity science, nature, cognitive neuroscience, artificial intelligence.

  1. APR 6

    Japan, India, China: What Kissinger Gets Right About the World's Next Superpower Fight

    In Part 2 of our coverage of Henry Kissinger's World Order, Andrew and JD turn the Eye of Sauron east, tracing how Japan, India, and China each entered (or were dragged into) the modern international order, and what that history means for how they behave on the world stage today. From Commodore Perry's gunboat diplomacy and Kautilya's ancient blueprint for global domination, to Mao's Cultural Revolution, Deng Xiaoping's economic pragmatism, and the Opium Wars that still shape China's worldview, this episode covers the deep historical roots of modern Asia's relationship with the West. Then we pivot to America itself: how Teddy Roosevelt's peace-through-strength realism and Woodrow Wilson's liberal internationalism became the two poles of U.S. foreign policy, how the League of Nations failed, and why the Straussian reading of Kissinger suggests that containment, not victory, has been America's real strategy ever since Korea. We wrap with the big question Kissinger leaves on the table: what is the right world order, and is the U.S. still the one to build it? 00:00:00 Intro and Asia overview 00:03:18 Japan: isolation, Commodore Perry, and the rise to empire 00:04:59 India: Kautilya, colonialism, and Cold War free agency 00:09:27 Chapter 6: China from the Qin dynasty to Mao and Deng 00:17:08 China vs. USA: sovereignty, human rights, and Kissinger's contrast 00:19:36 Chapter 7: The United States and Its Concept of Order 00:27:08 Woodrow Wilson, the League of Nations, and collective security 00:33:57 Chapter 8: Truman, NATO, Korea, and the question of what comes next 📖 Book covered: World Order by Henry Kissinger (2014) 🎙 Hosted by Andrew and JD Dennison Like and subscribe, and drop a comment telling us which book you'd like us to cover next.

    41 min
  2. How Markets and Monogamy Built Modern Prosperity, Part 2 | Books Brothers

    FEB 2

    How Markets and Monogamy Built Modern Prosperity, Part 2 | Books Brothers

    Southern Italy is poorer than northern Italy because the Catholic Church never conquered it. And that's not a hot take, that's what the data says. Part 2 of our deep dive into how the Western church's marriage bans accidentally created modern psychology, and why understanding WEIRD culture matters for everything from trade to testosterone to trust. Not "quirky." Not "unique." Statistically, measurably, scientifically WEIRD (Western, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, Democratic). In Part 1, we covered how banning cousin marriage broke down clans. Now we go deeper into what happened next: charter towns, guilds, impersonal markets, monogamy lowering testosterone, and how commerce created moral norms without anybody planning for it. The church reached down and grabbed men by the testicles (that's an actual Henrich quote). Monogamy domesticated wild males, gave them kids, lowered their T, gave them a stake in the future. Crime rates dropped 35%. Meanwhile in China's one-child policy: 38 million surplus males, crime rates rose 14% per year 18 years later. This is Henrich's answer to Guns, Germs, and Steel. What you'll learn: 🤝 why southern Italy has the Mafia (kinship vs society) 🌾 rice farming in Asia = collectivist = non-WEIRD 🇨🇳 how Communist China in 1950 banned the exact same things the church banned a millennium before 💪 monogamy as a testosterone suppression method 🏛️ charter towns, guilds, universities as kin group replacements 🤝 how markets created interpersonal trust with strangers 📍 every hour closer to a town market = 15 percentage point increase in cooperation scores 🔄 impersonal markets reduce in-group sociality, increase prosocial behavior with strangers ✉️ the Republic of Letters and Europe's collective brain ⚙️ James Watt didn't invent the steam engine from scratch, he added a condenser 📚 why Enlightenment thinkers were just standing on the shoulders of a great society 🧬 cultural evolution shaped our genes, then institutions shaped our psychology Timestamps: 0:00 Intro: Henrik Stays in His Lane 2:01 Breakdown starts here: Southern Italy & the Mafia 4:07 Rice Farming = Collectivist Asia 6:21 Communist China Banned Cousin Marriage 8:03 Monogamy vs Polygamy 10:58 Poor Samuel's Problem 15:16 Monogamy Lowers Testosterone 16:49 China's One-Child Policy: 38M Surplus Males 19:34 Commerce and Cooperation 27:38 Charter Towns & Individual Property Rights 29:04 Domesticating Competition 37:05 Market Mentalities: Time & Clocks 43:18 Trust & Fairness Experiments 48:30 Self-Concept & Mental States 55:52 Law, Science, and Religion 58:31 Afghanistan Democracy Quote 1:01:21 Protestantism: Super WEIRD 1:06:30 Birthing the Modern World 1:14:50 James Watt & the Steam Engine 1:18:47 Dark Matter of History 1:20:37 Henrik's Final Quote 1:22:32 Wrap-Up Last quote from Henrich that sums up the whole book: "The much heralded ideas of Western civilization like human rights, liberty, representative democracy and science aren't monuments to pure reason or logic, as so many assume. People didn't suddenly become rational during the enlightenment of the 17th and 18th centuries and then invent the modern world instead. These institutions represent cumulative cultural products born from a particular cultural psychology that traces their origins back over centuries through a cascade of causal chains involving wars, markets, and monks to a peculiar package of incest taboos, marriage prohibitions, and family prescriptions that developed in a radical religious sect, Western Christianity." Based on The WEIRDest People in the World by Joseph Henrich, this episode explores cultural psychology, human evolution, and how institutions shape our minds. Books Brothers Season 2: The Rise of States examines how states cities and civilizations emerged. Previous episodes covered the Ancient City, Secret of our Success, Against the Grain, Guns Germs and Steel, Origins of Political Order, and the Medici. 📚 book: The WEIRDest People in the World by Joseph Henrich (2020) 🎙 hosts: Andrew and JD let us know in the comments if you're weird or not weird

    1h 23m
  3. 2025-09-01

    Against the Grain: How States Went Wrong | Ep. 13

    Yo! Let’s go. JD and Andrew are back in the Fertile Crescent, baby—where civilization supposedly “leveled up” but maybe just took a massive L. In this episode, the bros break down James C. Scott’s Against the Grain: A Deep History of the Earliest States, a book that argues farming, governments, and the rise of states weren’t exactly the glow-up history books made them out to be. We’re talking fire hacks, Homo erectus barbecue parties, stationary bandits (aka ancient mob bosses), marshland living, and why grain might be the world’s first “Big Tech monopoly.” JD digs into archaeology and science, Andrew keeps us grounded with the big cultural picture, and together they wrestle with whether civilization was really worth all the taxes, laws, and SWAT teams. As always, it’s educational, a little ridiculous, and super accessible. Hit play, grab a snack (non-taxable please), and find out what life was really like before the IRS showed up. Timestamps (Chapters): 00:00:00 – Intro hype + “barbecued cat bones & Homo erectus poop” 00:01:00 – What is this book? Scott vs. the State 00:03:10 – Bandit theory vs. coordination theory (why states even exist) 00:04:50 – Stationary bandits = ancient mob bosses 00:07:00 – Domestication of fire (and how it domesticated us) 00:10:30 – Fire as predator deterrent + the ultimate gang hangout tool 00:13:00 – Niche construction: ancient humans as ecosystem engineers 00:17:30 – Marshlands, mobility, and why early states hated swamps 00:22:00 – Grain: the world’s first surveillance + tax technology 00:28:40 – Bureaucracy, walls, and why early states kinda sucked 00:35:00 – Rebellion, resistance, and the “dark side” of civilization 00:42:00 – Closing thoughts: was the state really progress… or a trap? Listen if you’ve ever wondered: Was grain basically the original Facebook? Why did marshes make governments sweat harder than the IRS in April? Would you rather hang with Homo erectus around a fire… or Mesopotamian tax collectors? Stay tuned, stay curious, and remember—sometimes going “against the grain” is the smartest move.

    58 min

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Two brothers talk through the BEST non-fiction books about science, evolution, culture, history, complexity science, nature, cognitive neuroscience, artificial intelligence.

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