Steven Pinker

Steven Pinker

Johnstone Family Professor in the Department of Psychology at Harvard University

A man with curly gray hair wearing a blue suit, white shirt, and dark tie poses against a plain light background.

Steven Pinker is an experimental psychologist who conducts research in visual cognition, psycholinguistics, and social relations. He grew up in Montreal and earned his BA from McGill and his Ph.D. from Harvard. Currently Johnstone Professor of Psychology at Harvard, he has also taught at Stanford and MIT. He has won numerous prizes for his research, his teaching, and his books, including The Language Instinct, How the Mind Works, The Blank Slate, The Better Angels of Our Nature, The Sense of Style, and Enlightenment Now. He is an elected member of the National Academy of Sciences, a two-time Pulitzer Prize finalist, a Humanist of the Year, a recipient of nine honorary doctorates, and one of Foreign Policy’s “World’s Top 100 Public Intellectuals” and TIME’s “100 Most Influential People in the World Today.” He was chair of the Usage Panel of the American Heritage Dictionary and writes frequently for The New York Times, The Guardian, and other publications. His twelfth book is called Rationality: What It Is, Why It Seems Scarce, Why It Matters.

15mins
The experimental psychologist discusses the quest for understanding what makes us tick.
7mins
The experimental psychologist examines himself.
2mins
The experimental psychologist says not all problems have to have a moralistic solution.
6mins
Steven Pinker deconstructs the evolution of speech.
2mins
“You’re kind of unclear as to why this Leviathan would just be kind of a fascist dictator, as if that would be better than life in the state of anarchy.”
1mins
The experimental psychologist confronts the contradictions of moralists.
6mins
Steven Pinker’s personal philosophy is based on reason.
5mins
Evolutionary psychologist Steven Pinker’s strangely optimistic forecast.
1mins
Leaders can’t say that there’s something uniquely special about the United States because it’s the United States,
1mins
It’s important for universities to embrace new ideas.
9mins
Steven Pinker see our greatest challenges as overcoming the obstacles to secular enlightenment in many parts of the world.
7mins
Synthesizing ideas really depends on having a universe of ideas to recombine in the first place, says Steven Pinker.
12mins
Language sheds light on the idea that the mind is a computational system.
10mins
People will always have a measure of self-deception.
5mins
Not all problems have to have a moralistic solution.
2mins
There’s no such thing as free will in the sense of a ghost in the machine; our behavior is the product of physical processes in the brain rather than some […]
7mins
Steven Pinker starts by asserting that using the word God or faith for that which you don’t know is a cop out. He goes on to describe what he sees […]