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Home » Something Is Very Wrong With Modern Life – Arthur Brooks (Transcript)

Something Is Very Wrong With Modern Life – Arthur Brooks (Transcript)

Read the full transcript of social scientist Arthur Brooks’ interview on Modern Wisdom Podcast, June 11, 2026.

Editor’s Note: In this insightful conversation, Arthur Brooks explores why modern life often feels like a manufactured simulation driven by algorithms rather than a truly lived experience. He discusses the profound disconnect between what we think we want and what we actually need, offering practical advice on how to break free from this cycle to find genuine meaning, connection, and transcendence.

We’re Living in the Matrix

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Why do so many people feel like modern life is simulated rather than real?

ARTHUR BROOKS: Because it is. We’re living in the Matrix. That movie, The Matrix, came out 27 years ago. I hate to shock and sadden you. It’ll make anybody who was alive then feel old.

But the plot of that movie was that a great artificial intelligence was dominating the human race and kept the human race placid in a pleasant simulation so that it could feed off human kinetic energy. It kept them in pods and ran a simulation.

And the truth of the matter is that we are subjugated, not by people necessarily, but by algorithms that fundamentally are creating a simulated version of a real life that’s pleasant enough, keeps us from being bored, and that feeds off our attention and energy and money. We’re living in the Matrix.

And that’s why people say, “I don’t know, it doesn’t feel like real dating. Doesn’t feel like real friends. Scroll, scroll, scroll. It doesn’t feel like real achievement. Game, game, game.” Because we’re living in a simulation.

The Two Hemispheres of the Brain

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: What’s happening neurologically there?

ARTHUR BROOKS: So what’s happening neurobiologically is that we’re literally in the wrong half of our brains. So this is the work of Iain McGilchrist, the great— have you had him on the show?

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Friend of the show.

ARTHUR BROOKS: He’s fantastic. He’s an Oxford neuroscientist. He’s a great genius, and he brought back the whole idea of hemispheric lateralization. That’s the concept that the two halves of your brain do different things. I mean, they do a lot of things the same too, but the fact is that they have different core competencies.

Now, when I was a kid in the ’70s, this is long before you youngsters were born, there was this belief that there were right-brained and left-brained people. Right-brained people were creative, left-brained people were analytical. My mom, who was an artist, was a right-brained person. My father, who was a mathematician, was a left-brained person. I was a right-brained person like my mom because I was a musician. I was a classical musician and I painted and I wrote poetry. And then I got my PhD and I became apparently a left-brained person because I became a scientist.

Well, the truth is that that theory didn’t work. What does work, however, is what Iain McGilchrist brought back to show that we ask and answer different questions with the different hemispheres of our brain. The right hemisphere is the complex why, the mystery and meaning of life, the things that set us out in the hunt for the things that matter in life. The left brain is the how-to and what. It’s how we execute. It’s the linear side. It’s the analysis. It’s the engineering. It’s the apps of life, the left brain side.

And what’s happening is when we’re running a simulation of life, we’re running a left brain simulation to meet our right brain questions of love and mystery and meaning. And you can’t simulate the meaning of life.

We Need Both Sides

CHRIS WILLIAMSON: Is it not a good thing for people to be more rational and analytical and objective? Is this not something that only a couple of decades ago we were trying to push more on people?

ARTHUR BROOKS: Yeah, I suppose, except that we need both. The truth is that we need both because life is full of both kinds of problems. Look, if you don’t know the why of the things in your life, the how-to and what mean nothing. But if you only know the how-to and what, then the why is elusive. I mean, you get the point that I’m trying to make. I mean, you can either be incompetent at executing anything in your life or you’ll have no purpose in the life that you lead. You actually need both.

I go to work every day. I’m traveling around doing my job. It’s great. I know how to do it. I’m competent at it because my left brain is working properly. I know how to get where I’m trying to go and do what I’m trying to do. I can write my speeches and my columns and books, et cetera. But I’ve got to know why, which is that I want to do something good for the world. I want to support the people that I love. I want to glorify God. That’s what I want. That’s the why side. And that originates on the right side of our brains.

Furthermore, all the things we really care about are not the analytical things. The things that we care about are not the physical, they’re the metaphysical. That’s what we really care about.

So I’ll give you an example. A big left brain question is, how does my car work? I actually don’t know. I don’t have the slightest idea. It’s just a car. But I could know because I could actually get a book, or I could get a guy to come teach me, or I could watch a bunch of YouTube videos. That’s knowable because those are complicated left-brain questions.

My marriage is a right-brain problem. It’s completely unsolvable. I have to live with it. I can’t figure it out. I will never figure out my marriage. I’ve been married 35 years. Just an hour ago she texts me, “I love you.