The Good Book Club Podcast

Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life by Dacher Keltner

1 h 28 min · 9. nov. 2025
episode Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life by Dacher Keltner cover

Description

Awe: The New Science of Everyday Wonder and How It Can Transform Your Life by Dacher Keltner explores how experiences of awe—moments that spark wonder, vastness, and deep emotional resonance—can meaningfully improve our well-being. Drawing on scientific research and stories from around the world, Keltner shows that awe helps us feel more connected, reduces stress, broadens our perspective, and inspires kindness. The book encourages readers to seek out awe in everyday life, whether through nature, creativity, spirituality, or human connection, as a path to greater fulfillment and resilience. This The Good Book Club Meeting was originally held on November 9th, 2025. ***How to DONATE to The Good Book Club: If you would like to help financially support our bookclub, you can DONATE to support us through Mormonish Podcast's non profit here: Mormonish Podcast is a 501(c) (3) https://donorbox.org/mormonish-podcast

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59 episodes

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The Founding Fathers and the Debate over Religion in Revolutionary America

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Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me): Why We Justify Foolish Beliefs, Bad Decisions, and Hurtful Acts

Mistakes Were Made (But Not by Me): Why We Justify Foolish Beliefs, Bad Decisions, and Hurtful Acts by social psychologists Carol Tavris and Elliot Aronson is a compelling dive into the hidden mental machinery that causes us to deflect blame and justify our actions. Rather than simply admitting fault, the human brain unconsciously creates stories that protect our self-image, convincing us that we are always smart, moral, and right.Core Concepts ExploredCognitive Dissonance: The psychological discomfort we feel when our actions contradict our beliefs. The book explains how our brains resolve this jarring feeling by changing our beliefs rather than our behavior.Self-Justification: The automatic, unconscious process that allows us to justify bad decisions, hold on to outdated attitudes, or hurt others instead of admitting we were wrong.Memory Distortion: How our brains unconsciously reconstruct the past to support our present self-image and edit out our own errors.Real-World Impact: How these psychological mechanisms play out everywhere—from everyday romantic arguments and medical errors to the highly polarized political landscape.This The Good Book Club meeting was originally held on April 12, 2026.

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Eve: How the Female Body Drove 200 Million Years of Human Evolution by Cat Bohannon is a popular science book that reexamines human evolution by placing the female body at the center of the story rather than treating it as secondary. The book traces key traits—such as lactation, pregnancy, brain development, language, and menopause—back through millions of years of mammalian and human evolution, showing how female biology has fundamentally shaped our species. By following a series of “Eves” (representing different evolutionary stages), Bohannon argues that many scientific narratives have historically overlooked or misunderstood women’s bodies, leading to gaps in knowledge in fields like medicine and anthropology. Overall, the book challenges male-centric assumptions about evolution and demonstrates that understanding the female body is essential to understanding human history, health, and behavior today. This The Good Book Club Meeting was held on March 8th, 2026.

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