Stories act as a safe "simulator" for life's many challenges. By navigating fictional conflicts, we practice social interactions and moral decision-making without real-world risks.
Stories serve as a powerful "pro-social" technology. They create shared values and empathy by forcing us to step into the shoes of others. The Storytelling Animal: How Stories Make Us Human
We don't just tell stories to others; we tell them to ourselves. Our "self" is a narrative we've constructed to make sense of a chaotic world. The Dark Side of the Narrative Stories act as a safe "simulator" for life's many challenges
Jonathan Gottschall’s The Storytelling Animal explores the idea that humans are "evolutionary anomalies" because we spend so much of our lives in fictional worlds. From dreams and children’s play to novels and Netflix binges, Gottschall argues that storytelling isn't just a pastime—it’s a biological necessity that defines our species. The Biology of "Neverland" They create shared values and empathy by forcing