If Books Could Kill
Michael Hobbes & Peter Shamshiri
Elon Musk
About This Episode
A biography that dares to ask: Is a lifetime of worker abuse and narcissism worth it to experience robot butlers?
Where to find us:
- Our Patreon
- Our merch!
- Peter's newsletter
- Peter's other podcast, 5-4
- Mike's other podcast, Maintenance Phase
Sources:
- What Elon Musk Gets Wrong about South Africa
- Elon Musk’s Anti-Semitic, Apartheid-Loving Grandfather
- Elon Musk claims he was once one of the best Quake players around
- Watch Elon Musk Talk About Being an ‘Illegal Immigrant’ in Video From 2013
- Elon Musk’s dad Errol says he can ‘prove’ existence of emerald mine in new bombshell claim revealing its location
- How Elon Musk Went from Superhero to Supervillain
- The Believer
- Elon Musk: The Architect of Tomorrow
- How Elon Musk Plans on Reinventing the World (and Mars)
- Tesla factory workers reveal pain, injury and stress: 'Everything feels like the future but us' | Tesla
- Hundreds of Tesla workers tested positive for the virus after Elon Musk reopened a plant, data shows
- Inside Tesla as Elon Musk Pushed an Unflinching Vision for Self-Driving Cars
- Tesla video promoting self-driving was staged, engineer testifies
- Elon Musk Says His 'Running Robot' Will 'Actually Eliminate Poverty' As He Shares Video Of Tesla Optimus Jogging
- Elon Musk Wants ‘Strong Influence’ Over the ‘Robot Army’ He’s Building
- There’s a Very Simple Pattern to Elon Musk’s Broken Promises
Thanks to Mindseye for our theme song!
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More Episodes
The Body Keeps The Score
In this episode of If Books Could Kill, the hosts provide a critical examination of Bessel van der Kolk’s influential 2014 bestseller, The Body Keeps the Score. While acknowledging that the book serves as a vital resource for many readers by validating the physical symptoms of trauma and highlighting the importance of structural social factors, the hosts argue that the text is marred by outdated and scientifically debunked theories. The discussion focuses on several key areas where the author deviates from modern psychological consensus. The hosts analyze van der Kolk’s reliance on the "Triune Brain" model and the "polyvagal theory"—concepts they clarify have been largely discarded by contemporary neuroscience. Furthermore, they express significant concern over the author’s use of the Rorschach test, which they characterize as pseudoscience. The episode also critiques the book’s clinical vignettes, specifically an anecdote involving a Vietnam veteran that the hosts argue lacks necessary ethical context. By cross-referencing these claims with trauma experts and current research, the podcast challenges the validity of the book’s central scientific framework while exploring why such a flawed text achieved massive, long-standing popularity.
Think And Grow Rich
In this episode of If Books Could Kill, the hosts dissect Napoleon Hill’s 1937 classic, Think and Grow Rich. While often hailed as the spiritual progenitor of modern self-help and the manifestation movement, the hosts argue that the book is a poorly written, pseudoscientific manual rooted in the "New Thought" philosophy of the era. Hill famously claims his success philosophy was derived from a secret passed down to him by Andrew Carnegie—a narrative the hosts reveal to be entirely fabricated. The episode moves beyond the text to explore the chaotic and fraudulent life of Napoleon Hill. Through detailed research, the hosts expose Hill as a lifelong grifter, detailing his history of multi-level marketing schemes, stock fraud, embezzlement from prison charities, and a series of dubious claims regarding his connections to high-profile figures like Woodrow Wilson and FDR. They highlight the irony that Hill only achieved financial success after selling a book about becoming rich to others. Ultimately, the hosts dismantle the "ancient wisdom" of the book, framing it as the work of a serial con artist whose only true expertise was in self-promotion and deception.
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