Books: Trying Not to Try Adam Barnett Books: Trying Not to Try Adam Barnett

The Other Press: Achieving our goals

There’s something to be said about making a plan and ironing out all the steps along the way, but it’s not always the ideal approach to getting things done. You see, when you try to organize every aspect of your life, you’ll find yourself overworked and disappointed when things inevitably don’t play out the way you anticipated, or rather, planned.

In his book, Trying Not To Try, Edward Slingerland talks about how “we too often devote ourselves to pushing harder or moving faster in areas of our life where effort and striving are, in fact, profoundly counterproductive.” If we gave in a little bit to the idea of spontaneity or flow we’d find ourselves achieving our goals much easier.
Morgan Hannah, The Other Press

Morgan Hannah, “Trying Not to Try,” The Other Press, March 16, 2021.

Read More
Books: Drunk Edward Slingerland Books: Drunk Edward Slingerland

Publishers Weekly: Witty and Well-Informed

Slingerland contends that the benefits of intoxication, including boosted creativity, stress relief, and enhanced cooperation, were key to the rise of the ‘first large-scale societies’…. A witty and well-informed narrator, Slingerland ranges across a wide range of academic fields to make his case. Readers will toast this praiseworthy study.
— Publishers Weekly
Read More
Books: Trying Not to Try Laura Trippi Books: Trying Not to Try Laura Trippi

The Wall Street Journal: spontaneity is scarce these days

Spontaneity, always in short supply, is scarce these days. It is nearly impossible to get reservations for dinner at coveted restaurants. Movies sell out, and vacations are planned to the 15-minute increment. A month ahead, parents can be sure their child gets into an art activity at the local museum and reserve ice cream at the nearby cafe for lunch afterward.
Nina Sovich, The Wall Street Journal

Nina Sovich, “The Age of Organized Spontaneity,” The Wall Street Journal, February 2nd 2016.

Read More
Research Adam Barnett Research Adam Barnett

Science: People are nicer when god is watching

People are nicer to each other when they think someone is watching, many psychology studies have shown—especially if they believe that someone has the power to punish them for transgressions even after they’re dead. That’s why some scientists think that belief in the high gods of moralizing religions, such as Islam and Christianity, helped people cooperate with each other and encouraged societies to grow. An innovative study of 96 societies in the Pacific now suggests that a culture might not need to believe in omniscient, moral gods in order to reap the benefits of religion in the form of political complexity. All they need is the threat of supernatural punishment, even if the deities in question don’t care about morality and act on personal whims, the new work concludes.
Lizzie Wade, Science

Lizzie Wade, “To Foster complex Societies, Tell People a God is Watching,” Science, March 4th, 2015.

Read More
Books: Trying Not to Try Adam Barnett Books: Trying Not to Try Adam Barnett

The Sydney Morning Herald: go with the flow

It is endlessly frustrating to be told to “just relax” or “just be yourself” when you’re feeling anything but. Often, being told to “take it easy” makes you feel even more self-conscious and stressed.

But, according to Professor Edward Slingerland, it’s exactly that “go with the flow” state that we should strive to achieve.
Rachel Clun, The Sydney Morning Herald

Rachel Clun, “The art of just being yourself,” The Sydney Morning Herald, December 17th, 2014.

Read More
Books: Trying Not to Try Laura Trippi Books: Trying Not to Try Laura Trippi

The New York Times: a paradox essential to civilization

How you can force yourself to relax? How can you try not to try?

It makes no sense, but the paradox is essential to civilization, according to Edward Slingerland. He has developed, quite deliberately, a theory of spontaneity based on millenniums of Asian philosophy and decades of research by psychologists and neuroscientists.
John Tierney, The New York Times

John Tierney, “A Meditation on the Art of Not Trying,” The New York Times, December 15th, 2014.

Read More
Research Adam Barnett Research Adam Barnett

Science: The rise of moralistic religions

Today’s most popular religions all have one thing in common: a focus on morality. But the gods didn’t always care whether you are a bad person. Researchers have long puzzled over when and why religions moved away from a singular focus on ritual and began to encourage traits such as self-discipline, restraint, and asceticism. Now, a new study proposes that the key to the rise of so-called moralizing religions was, of all things, more wealth.
Lizzie Wade, Science

Lizzie Wade, “Wealth may have driven the rise of today’s religions,” Science, December 11th 2014.

Read More
Books: Trying Not to Try Adam Barnett Books: Trying Not to Try Adam Barnett

The Atlantic: the enemy of cool

Calculation is the enemy of cool, it seems. Earlier this year I spoke with Edward Slingerland, a professor of Asian studies at the University of British Columbia, who studies cool full-time. In a post called “How to Not Try,” he explained to me four approaches to not trying. I think about them constantly.
James Hamblin, The Atlantic

James Hamblin, “No one Wins the Breakup on Social Media,” The Atlantic, December 4th 2014.

Read More