
Where curiosity meets connection
Think &
Think Again.
Joe Keohane on the benefits of talking to strangers

So much to share from this talk. A few Think Again moments for me:
The idea of the “lesser mind”. I’d never come across that before.
The reminder that humans are hyper-cooperative. The notion that life among strangers is new and beyond our capacity is seriously challenged.
One barrier mentioned, particularly by Brits, was the fear of saying too much about oneself. That really surprised me. How else do we build genuine connection?
The strong messages we absorb from childhood not to trust people we don’t know. No wonder it sticks.
The “exercise” metaphor. We’re not bad at talking to strangers, we’re simply out of practice.
Studies suggesting working-class people tend to be more attentive and engaged in these interactions, while more affluent people can be more distracted or self-focused. That question of why is fascinating.
The interview also explores the idea that friction makes us social, and that in countries without strong central institutions, people become far more skilled at engaging with strangers because they have to.
I’ll leave you with Theodore Zeldin’s theory: "you can only understand the world if you maximise the number of people you’ve interacted with".
https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/curious-minds-at-work/id1049183266?i=1000741199514
💬 A quick note: replies can be easy to miss here, so feel free to add a new comment rather than replying directly. This isn’t a fast-fire space, it’s intentionally slower, and shaped for thoughtful engagement with the ideas themselves, rather than back-and-forth responses.
Seán
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4d ago
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Interesting - especially on not oversharing. It is not only the Brits, in the Muslim world there are several dynamics that push towards privacy and not over-sharing. There is much higher intimacy inside families and communities. While there is hospitality for strangers, sharing the personal aspects of one’s life is something done with intention and only after some credibility is established.
Jeanne
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2d ago
Replying to: Seán
Sean, I am fascinated by this concept of "oversharing". A few follow up questions for you (and others!):
1. Do you have a few concrete examples of something you consider as being an “over share”? What type of "details" are we actually talking about?
2. Why do you consider it over sharing, and what makes you hold back from (over) sharing?
3. What are the circumstances that help you feel comfortable sharing more?
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