Self-Control is the Key to Success: John Tierney and Roy Baumeister on Willpower
How to make good on your New Year's resolutions.
"There are two qualities that correlate with success," says New York Times journalist John Tierney. "One of them is intelligence and the other is self-control. And so far researchers haven't figured out what to do about intelligence, but they have rediscovered how to improve self-control."
Tierney spoke at an event sponsored by the Reason Foundation on January 28, 2014 at New York City's Museum of Sex. He was joined by Roy Baumeister, the Francis Epps Eminent Scholar in psychology at Florida State University, and the co-author with Tierney of Willpower: Rediscovering the Greatest Human Strength.
Baumeister and Tierney discussed the importance of willpower in determing our success in life and offered tips for improving our self-control. The conversation touched on laboratory experiments that show how willpower can be depleted (6:20); the effect of glucose levels on self-control (10:15); how to make good on your New Year's resolutions (16:30); why dieting undermines self-control (20:45); how to make an effective to do list (22:30); Tierney and Baumeister's experience meeting David Allen, author of Getting Things Done (24:30); why it's a good idea to weigh yourself every day if you're trying to shed pounds (25:30); the role of genetics in determining a person's willpower (31:00); why self-help literature rarely emphasizes willpower (33:00); the victim mentality and Alcoholics Anonymous (35:20); willpower and crime (38:50); procrastination as a tool for getting things done (47:20); and willpower and evolution (51:45)
About 1 hour and 2 minutes.
Shot and edited by Jim Epstein.
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"Today at the Museum of Sex, we discuss self-control..."
Lesson 1: kegel exercises
So smart people with discipline tend towards success? Some bombshell insight there.
Without Top. Men., who would have known?
Yeah, that's really what they spent an hour talking about.
This one's even better than the Paleo diet session. Nicely done, Reason.
And only an hour of watching to find out!
Expecting people to exercise self control is clearly racist.
Once, on a politically correct discussion board, I explained why all possible courses of action are racist. Almost immediately, someone agreed with me.
Care to post your explanation here? I'd love to have that in my back pocket for particularly intractible progressives.
they have rediscovered how to improve self-control.
Really?
"The beatings will continue until self-control improves."
I read about a study that showed the self-control you develop by the age of 4 is a wonderful predictor for your future success in school and work. See? It's all genetic. No one is to blame for their actions, so no one should be forced to suffer the consequences of their actions.
I actually think a lot of traits are genetic, but that still doesn't excuse people from the consequences of their actions. I don't see why the two have to be mutually exclusive.
Look at these fucking phrenologists.
Experimentation: how does it work?
Did anyone else mistaken the pause-frame for a before-after pic?
"procrastination as a tool for getting things done"
Sign me up for that.
I always dug this:
http://www.structuredprocrastination.com/
Thanks!