Technology hasn't changed love. Here's why | Helen Fisher

207,341 views ・ 2016-10-20

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Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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I was recently traveling in the Highlands of New Guinea,
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and I was talking with a man who had three wives.
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I asked him, "How many wives would you like to have?"
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And there was this long pause,
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and I thought to myself,
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"Is he going to say five?
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Is he going to say 10?
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Is he going to say 25?"
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And he leaned towards me
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and he whispered, "None."
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(Laughter)
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Eighty-six percent of human societies permit a man to have several wives:
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polygyny.
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But in the vast majority of these cultures,
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only about five or ten percent of men actually do have several wives.
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Having several partners can be a toothache.
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In fact, co-wives can fight with each other,
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sometimes they can even poison each other's children.
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And you've got to have a lot of cows, a lot of goats,
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a lot of money, a lot of land,
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in order to build a harem.
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We are a pair-bonding species.
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Ninety-seven percent of mammals do not pair up to rear their young;
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human beings do.
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I'm not suggesting that we're not --
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that we're necessarily sexually faithful to our partners.
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I've looked at adultery in 42 cultures,
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I understand, actually, some of the genetics of it,
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and some of the brain circuitry of it.
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It's very common around the world,
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but we are built to love.
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How is technology changing love?
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I'm going to say almost not at all.
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I study the brain.
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I and my colleagues have put over 100 people into a brain scanner --
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people who had just fallen happily in love,
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people who had just been rejected in love
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and people who are in love long-term.
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And it is possible to remain "in love" long-term.
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And I've long ago maintained
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that we've evolved three distinctly different brain systems
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for mating and reproduction:
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sex drive,
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feelings of intense romantic love
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and feelings of deep cosmic attachment to a long-term partner.
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And together, these three brain systems --
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with many other parts of the brain --
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orchestrate our sexual, our romantic and our family lives.
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But they lie way below the cortex,
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way below the limbic system where we feel our emotions,
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generate our emotions.
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They lie in the most primitive parts of the brain, linked with energy,
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focus, craving, motivation, wanting and drive.
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In this case,
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the drive to win life's greatest prize:
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a mating partner.
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They evolved over 4.4 million years ago among our first ancestors,
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and they're not going to change if you swipe left or right on Tinder.
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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There's no question that technology is changing the way we court:
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emailing, texting,
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emojis to express your emotions,
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sexting,
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"liking" a photograph, selfies ...
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We're seeing new rules and taboos for how to court.
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But, you know --
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is this actually dramatically changing love?
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What about the late 1940s,
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when the automobile became very popular
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and we suddenly had rolling bedrooms?
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(Laughter)
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How about the introduction of the birth control pill?
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Unchained from the great threat of pregnancy and social ruin,
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women could finally express their primitive and primal sexuality.
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Even dating sites are not changing love.
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I'm Chief Scientific Advisor to Match.com,
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I've been it for 11 years.
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I keep telling them and they agree with me,
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that these are not dating sites,
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they are introducing sites.
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When you sit down in a bar,
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in a coffee house,
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on a park bench,
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your ancient brain snaps into action like a sleeping cat awakened,
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and you smile
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and laugh
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and listen
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and parade the way our ancestors did 100,000 years ago.
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We can give you various people --
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all the dating sites can --
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but the only real algorithm is your own human brain.
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Technology is not going to change that.
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Technology is also not going to change who you choose to love.
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I study the biology of personality,
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and I've come to believe
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that we've evolved four very broad styles of thinking and behaving,
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linked with the dopamine, serotonin,
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testosterone and estrogen systems.
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So I created a questionnaire directly from brain science
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to measure the degree to which you express the traits --
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the constellation of traits --
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linked with each of these four brain systems.
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I then put that questionnaire on various dating sites
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in 40 countries.
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Fourteen million or more people have now taken the questionnaire,
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and I've been able to watch who's naturally drawn to whom.
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And as it turns out,
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those who were very expressive of the dopamine system
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tend to be curious, creative, spontaneous, energetic --
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I would imagine there's an awful lot of people like that in this room --
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they're drawn to people like themselves.
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Curious, creative people need people like themselves.
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People who are very expressive of the serotonin system
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tend to be traditional, conventional, they follow the rules,
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they respect authority,
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they tend to be religious -- religiosity is in the serotonin system --
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and traditional people go for traditional people.
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In that way, similarity attracts.
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In the other two cases, opposites attract.
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People very expressive of the testosterone system
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tend to be analytical, logical, direct, decisive,
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and they go for their opposite:
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they go for somebody who's high estrogen,
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somebody who's got very good verbal skills
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and people skills,
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who's very intuitive
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and who's very nurturing and emotionally expressive.
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We have natural patterns of mate choice.
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Modern technology is not going to change who we choose to love.
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But technology is producing one modern trend
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that I find particularly important.
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It's associated with the concept of paradox of choice.
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For millions of years,
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we lived in little hunting and gathering groups.
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You didn't have the opportunity to choose
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between 1,000 people on a dating site.
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In fact, I've been studying this recently,
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and I actually think there's some sort of sweet spot in the brain;
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I don't know what it is, but apparently, from reading a lot of the data,
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we can embrace about five to nine alternatives, and after that,
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you get into what academics call "cognitive overload,"
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and you don't choose any.
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So I've come to think that due to this cognitive overload,
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we're ushering in a new form of courtship
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that I call "slow love."
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I arrived at this during my work with Match.com.
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Every year for the last six years,
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we've done a study called "Singles in America."
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We don't poll the Match population,
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we poll the American population.
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We use 5,000-plus people,
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a representative sample of Americans based on the US census.
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We've got data now on over 30,000 people,
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and every single year,
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I see some of the same patterns.
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Every single year when I ask the question,
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over 50 percent of people have had a one-night stand --
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not necessarily last year, but in their lives --
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50 percent have had a friends with benefits
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during the course of their lives,
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and over 50 percent have lived with a person long-term
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before marrying.
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Americans think that this is reckless.
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I have doubted that for a long time;
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the patterns are too strong.
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There's got to be some Darwinian explanation --
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Not that many people are crazy.
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And I stumbled, then, on a statistic that really came home to me.
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It was a very interesting academic article
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in which I found that 67 percent of singles in America today
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who are living long-term with somebody,
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have not yet married because they are terrified of divorce.
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They're terrified of the social,
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legal, emotional,
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economic consequences of divorce.
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So I came to realize that I don't think this is recklessness;
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I think it's caution.
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Today's singles want to know every single thing about a partner
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before they wed.
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You learn a lot between the sheets,
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not only about how somebody makes love,
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but whether they're kind,
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whether they can listen
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and at my age,
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whether they've got a sense of humor.
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(Laughter)
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And in an age where we have too many choices,
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we have very little fear of pregnancy and disease
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and we've got no feeling of shame for sex before marriage,
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I think people are taking their time to love.
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And actually, what's happening is,
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what we're seeing is a real expansion of the precommitment stage
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before you tie the knot.
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Where marriage used to be the beginning of a relationship,
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now it's the finale.
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But the human brain --
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(Laughter)
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The human brain always triumphs,
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and indeed, in the United States today,
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86 percent of Americans will marry by age 49.
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And even in cultures around the world where they're not marrying as often,
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they are settling down eventually with a long-term partner.
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So it began to occur to me:
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during this long extension of the precommitment stage,
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if you can get rid of bad relationships before you marry,
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maybe we're going to see more happy marriages.
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So I did a study of 1,100 married people in America --
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not on Match.com, of course --
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and I asked them a lot of questions.
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But one of the questions was,
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"Would you re-marry the person you're currently married to?"
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And 81 percent said, "Yes."
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In fact, the greatest change in modern romance and family life
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is not technology.
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It's not even slow love.
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It's actually women piling into the job market
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in cultures around the world.
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For millions of years,
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our ancestors lived in little hunting and gathering groups.
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Women commuted to work to gather their fruits and vegetables.
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They came home with 60 to 80 percent of the evening meal.
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The double-income family was the rule.
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And women were regarded as just as economically, socially
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and sexually powerful as men.
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Then the environment changed some 10,000 years ago,
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we began to settle down on the farm
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and both men and women became obliged, really,
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to marry the right person,
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from the right background,
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from the right religion
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and from the right kin and social and political connections.
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Men's jobs became more important:
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they had to move the rocks, fell the trees, plow the land.
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They brought the produce to local markets, and came home
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with the equivalent of money.
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Along with this,
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we see a rise of a host of beliefs:
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the belief of virginity at marriage,
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arranged marriages -- strictly arranged marriages --
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the belief that the man is the head of the household,
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that the wife's place is in the home
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and most important,
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honor thy husband, and 'til death do us part.
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These are gone.
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They are going, and in many places,
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they are gone.
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We are right now in a marriage revolution.
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We are shedding 10,000 years of our farming tradition
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and moving forward towards egalitarian relationships between the sexes --
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something I regard as highly compatible with the ancient human spirit.
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I'm not a Pollyanna;
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there's a great deal to cry about.
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I've studied divorce in 80 cultures,
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I've studied, as I say, adultery in many --
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there's a whole pile of problems.
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As William Butler Yeats, the poet, once said,
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"Love is the crooked thing."
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I would add, "Nobody gets out alive."
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(Laughter)
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We all have problems.
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But in fact, I think the poet Randall Jarrell really sums it up best.
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He said, "The dark, uneasy world of family life --
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where the greatest can fail, and the humblest succeed."
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But I will leave you with this:
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love and attachment will prevail,
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technology cannot change it.
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And I will conclude by saying
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any understanding of human relationships must take into account
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one the most powerful determinants of human behavior:
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the unquenchable,
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adaptable
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and primordial human drive to love.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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Kelly Stoetzel: Thank you so much for that, Helen.
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As you know, there's another speaker here with us
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that works in your same field.
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She comes at it from a different perspective.
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Esther Perel is a psychotherapist who works with couples.
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You study data,
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Esther studies the stories the couples tell her
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when they come to her for help.
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Let's have her join us on the stage.
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Esther?
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(Applause)
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So Esther,
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when you were watching Helen's talk,
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was there any part of it
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that resonated with you through the lens of your own work
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that you'd like to comment on?
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Esther Perel: It's interesting, because on the one hand,
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the need for love is ubiquitous and universal.
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But the way we love --
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the meaning we make out of it --
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the rules that govern our relationships, I think,
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are changing fundamentally.
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We come from a model that, until now,
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was primarily regulated around duty and obligation,
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the needs of the collective and loyalty.
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And we have shifted it
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to a model of free choice and individual rights,
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and self-fulfillment and happiness.
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And so, that was the first thing I thought,
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that the need doesn't change,
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but the context and the way we regulate these relationships
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changes a lot.
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On the paradox of choice --
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you know, on the one hand we relish the novelty
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and the playfulness, I think,
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to be able to have so many options.
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And at the same time,
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as you talk about this cognitive overload,
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I see many, many people who ...
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who dread the uncertainty and self-doubt
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that comes with this massa of choice,
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creating a case of "FOMO"
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and then leading us --
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FOMO, fear of missed opportunity, or fear of missing out --
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it's like, "How do I know I have found 'the one' --
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the right one?"
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So we've created what I call this thing of "stable ambiguity."
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Stable ambiguity is when you are too afraid to be alone
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but also not really willing to engage in intimacy-building.
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It's a set of tactics that kind of prolong the uncertainty of a relationship
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but also the uncertainty of the breakup.
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So, here on the internet you have three major ones.
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One is icing and simmering,
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which are great stalling tactics
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that offer a kind of holding pattern
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that emphasizes the undefined nature of a relationship
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but at the same time gives you enough of a comforting consistency
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and enough freedom of the undefined boundaries.
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(Laughter)
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Yeah?
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And then comes ghosting.
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And ghosting is, basically,
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you disappear from this massa of texts on the spot,
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and you don't have to deal with the pain that you inflict on another,
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because you're making it invisible even to yourself.
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(Laughter)
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Yeah?
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So I was thinking -- these words came up for me as I was listening to you,
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like how a vocabulary also creates a reality,
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and at the same time,
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that's my question to you:
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Do you think when the context changes,
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it still means that the nature of love remains the same?
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You study the brain and I study people's relationships and stories,
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so I think it's everything you say, plus.
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But I don't always know the degree to which a changing context ...
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Does it at some point begin to change --
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If the meaning changes, does it change the need,
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or is the need clear of the entire context?
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HF: Wow! Well --
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(Laughter)
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(Applause)
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Well, I've got three points here, right?
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First of all, to your first one:
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there's no question that we've changed, that we now want a person to love,
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and for thousands of years, we had to marry the right person
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from the right background and right kin connection.
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And in fact, in my studies of 5,000 people every year,
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I ask them, "What are you looking for?"
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And every single year, over 97 percent say --
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EP: The list grows --
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HF: Well, no.
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The basic thing is over 97 percent of people
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want somebody that respects them,
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somebody they can trust and confide in,
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somebody who makes them laugh,
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somebody who makes enough time for them
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and somebody who they find physically attractive.
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That never changes.
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And there's certainly -- you know, there's two parts --
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EP: But you know how I call that?
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That's not what people used to say --
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HF: That's exactly right.
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EP: They said they wanted somebody with whom they have companionship,
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economic support, children.
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We went from a production economy to a service economy.
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17:40
(Laughter)
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We did it in the larger culture, and we're doing it in marriage.
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HF: Right, no question about it.
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But it's interesting, the millennials actually want to be very good parents,
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17:49
whereas the generation above them wants to have a very fine marriage
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17:54
but is not as focused on being a good parent.
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You see all of these nuances.
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There's two basic parts of personality:
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there's your culture -- everything you grew up to do and believe and say --
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18:04
and there's your temperament.
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Basically, what I've been talking about is your temperament.
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18:08
And that temperament is certainly going to change with changing times
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18:12
and changing beliefs.
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18:13
And in terms of the paradox of choice,
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18:17
there's no question about it that this is a pickle.
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18:19
There were millions of years where you found that sweet boy
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18:22
at the other side of the water hole,
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18:24
and you went for it.
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EP: Yes, but you --
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HF: I do want to say one more thing.
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The bottom line is, in hunting and gathering societies,
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18:30
they tended to have two or three partners during the course of their lives.
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18:34
They weren't square!
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18:35
And I'm not suggesting that we do,
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18:37
but the bottom line is, we've always had alternatives.
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18:41
Mankind is always --
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18:42
in fact, the brain is well-built to what we call "equilibrate,"
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18:46
to try and decide:
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Do I come, do I stay? Do I go, do I stay?
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18:49
What are the opportunities here?
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18:51
How do I handle this there?
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18:52
And so I think we're seeing another play-out of that now.
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KS: Well, thank you both so much.
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I think you're going to have a million dinner partners for tonight!
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(Applause)
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19:02
Thank you, thank you.
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About this website

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