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My Idiot Brother Questions Everything

Podcast af Bratherbands

engelsk

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The My Idiot Brother Questions Everything is hosted by two brothers—self-proclaimed “idiots” with a serious passion for critical thinking. Each episode encourages critical thinking in the context of myriad subjects: from books and articles to barriers to reasoning, and from psychological, social and environmental influences to real examples of critical and non-critical thought. We draw on current events, history, our own experiences and smart guests for lively, logical, good-humored conversations. Join us if you want to think more clearly, but especially if you don't.

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20 episoder

episode Episode 19: Willful ignorance - the ostrich strategy! cover

Episode 19: Willful ignorance - the ostrich strategy!

Ignorance is usually framed as a lack of information. But what if it’s sometimes a management strategy? In this episode of My Idiot Brother Questions Everything, we examine willful ignorance — the deliberate avoidance of information that would create responsibility, liability, or uncomfortable change. The law doesn’t treat this lightly, and neither should we. Deliberately avoiding confirmation counts as knowledge, whether we like it or not. In other words, “I didn’t want to know” doesn’t hold up well under cross-examination. From corporate executives ignoring bribery red flags to friends launching businesses without written agreements to “keep things simple,” we explore how strategic blindness shows up in legal practice and civil life. The short-term goal is harmony or profit. The long-term result is often litigation. We then move into medicine, where the stakes are measured in survival rates. Why do people skip screenings when early detection dramatically changes outcomes? Why do individuals continue behaviors that predictably lead to liver failure, diabetes, or cardiovascular disease? The risks are public. The data is clear. And yet avoidance persists. In everyday life, we look at texting and driving — behavior as dangerous as intoxication — and ask why knowledge so often loses to convenience. In politics, we examine how proximity to power can incentivize uncertainty, using elite associations in the Epstein scandal as a case study in social and institutional reluctance to scrutinize uncomfortable facts. In religion, we explore how belief systems can discourage revision when identity and community are at stake. Across domains, the pattern is consistent: knowledge creates pressure. Pressure creates obligation. Obligation is uncomfortable. Critical thinking, then, is not just about acquiring better information. It is about tolerating what that information demands of us. The real question isn’t “What don’t we know?” It’s “What are we carefully choosing not to?”

22. feb. 2026 - 1 h 41 min
episode Episode 18: Why fear works (even if it shouldn’t). cover

Episode 18: Why fear works (even if it shouldn’t).

Fear kept our ancestors alive. Today, it keeps us compliant. In this episode of My Idiot Brother Questions Everything, we explore fear as one of the most effective—and most abused—motivational tools in modern society. Using neuroscience, psychology, and real-world examples from religion, politics, business, health, and pop culture, we break down what fear does to the brain, why it shuts down critical thinking, and how institutions weaponize it to drive behavior. We look at the amygdala, fight-or-flight responses, and the concept of “amygdala hijack,” then follow the trail into fear-based messaging you’ve almost certainly encountered: existential political ads, end-times religious warnings, corporate scare tactics, pharmaceutical panic, and nonstop media crisis framing. This isn’t an argument that fear is always bad. Short-term fear can protect and motivate. But when fear becomes chronic, vague, and externally maintained, it stops being useful—and starts being profitable. The goal isn’t to eliminate fear; it’s to recognize when fear is being used on you. Because the most powerful motivator isn’t fear itself—it’s fear you never stop to question.

8. feb. 2026 - 1 h 38 min
episode Episode 17: Heores, villains, and questionable quotes. cover

Episode 17: Heores, villains, and questionable quotes.

What happens when a villain says something kind… and a hero says something ugly? In this episode of My Idiot Brother Questions Everything, we put our instincts on the stand and put vibes on trial. We start with some of the worst advice people swear by—“trust your gut,” “follow your heart,” and other phrases that sound profound right up until you think about them for ten seconds. Then we move to the main event: a live critical-thinking experiment where we each bring quotes designed to cause moral dissonance. Ugly quotes from people history loves. Virtuous quotes from people history hates. Quote first, context second, guess the speaker third—and no advance knowledge allowed. Along the way, we explore why we’re so bad at evaluating ideas on their own merits, how reputation hijacks our judgment, and why history is a terrible place to look for moral simplicity. If you’ve ever agreed with a quote and then felt uncomfortable when you found out who said it—or rejected an idea because you didn’t like the messenger—this episode is for you. No heroes. No villains. Just ideas… and the uncomfortable work of thinking about them.

1. feb. 2026 - 1 h 32 min
episode Episode 16: Sunk costs, broken trust, and other midlife messes. cover

Episode 16: Sunk costs, broken trust, and other midlife messes.

Critical thinking is easy when the problem is abstract. It’s much harder when the problem is your life. In this episode of My Idiot Brother Questions Everything, we move critical thinking out of theory and into midlife—where decisions are shaped by fear, loyalty, identity, and incomplete information. Using a long, painful divorce as a case study, we examine how people reason when trust is compromised, values collide, and waiting feels safer than concluding. This is not an episode about who was right or wrong. It’s about how uncertainty, sunk costs, hope, and moral pressure distort judgment—and how disciplined thinking can help us see when endurance becomes avoidance, when patience stops being virtuous, and when clarity finally costs less than confusion. If you’ve ever stayed too long, trusted too loosely, or postponed a hard conclusion because the alternative felt unthinkable, this episode is an invitation to examine not your choices—but the reasoning behind them.

26. jan. 2026 - 1 h 59 min
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