fbpx

John Bargh: Dante, Coffee and the Unconscious Mind

John Bargh, PhD is a Professor of Psychology and Management at Yale University. His name may be familiar because of the replication crisis, but there is so much more to John Bargh than a couple of experiments that were challenged during replication. John has authored more than 100 peer-reviewed articles, chapters in over 30 books, and he founded The ACME lab at Yale in order to research the unconscious and implicit influences on social judgment, motivation, and behavior.

Over the years, his research has focused on embodied cognition effects, or how physical experiences (such as washing one’s hands or holding something warm or rough) influence metaphorically related social variables (like how physical warmth leads to feelings of physical warmth, for example).

Recently, he’s been focused on how social goals and political attitudes can be influenced by the satisfaction of underlying physical-level motivations; for example, how immunization against the flu virus influences attitudes towards immigration as ‘invaders’ of one’s ‘cultural body.’

We feel fortunate to have such a wide-ranging and fun conversation with John and we’re pleased to share his insights and humor with our listeners.

If you would like to support our work at Behavioral Grooves, please consider becoming a Patreon member. You can read more at www.patreon.com/behavioralgrooves.

Other Episodes of Behavioral Grooves You Will Enjoy

Episode 149: Kristen Berman on Behavioral Grooves https://behavioralgrooves.com/uncategorized/covid-19-crisis-kristen-berman/ 

Episode 147: Gary Latham, PhD: Goal Setting, Prompts, Priming, and Skepticism https://behavioralgrooves.com/episode/gary-latham-phd-goal-setting-prompts-priming-and-skepticism/

© 2020 Behavioral Grooves

 

AIRDATE: June 14, 2020 EPISODE 155

This episode also available via:

John Bargh: Dante, Coffee and the Unconscious Mind