Home Lex Fridman Notes
Lex Fridman · 2023-01-08 · 57m

1984 by George Orwell | Lex Fridman

Lex Fridman summarizes George Orwell's 1984 and shares personal takeaways on love, hate, power, and resisting totalitarianism.

1984 by George Orwell | Lex Fridman
The guest

Lex Fridman (solo) — AI researcher and host of the Lex Fridman Podcast. This is a solo video in which he reads and reflects on a classic book rather than interviewing a guest.

The gist

In this solo episode, Lex Fridman gives a spoiler-filled summary of George Orwell's dystopian novel 1984 and then walks through his own concrete takeaways from rereading it. He explains the world of Oceania, Ingsoc, Big Brother, Newspeak, doublethink, and the three social classes, then reflects on love as the last and most powerful act of rebellion, the animalistic human capacity for hate, and power as both the means and the end of totalitarianism. He argues the book is a warning against totalitarianism of all political stripes rather than a critique of socialism, and cautions against overusing '1984' and 'Hitler' comparisons. He closes with thoughts on technology as a double-edged sword, the value of independent thought, the science of torture, and a candid account of being mocked online for sharing his 2023 reading list.

Big reveals

  • Lex's central takeaway: when everything human is stripped away, love is the last thing left and the key revolutionary act.
  • Argues 1984 is misused by conservatives to call left-wing policies 'orwellian'; notes Orwell was a Democratic Socialist and the book attacks totalitarianism, not socialism.
  • Highlights Winston's hypocrisy: both the totalitarian state and the blind rebellion against it can be evil.
  • Reveals he called Andrew Huberman on the phone to discuss the neuroscience and effectiveness of torture.
  • Discusses literature suggesting perception itself can be changed (seeing five fingers as four), calling it terrifying.
  • Notes the appendix theory: because it's written in past tense, the regime may have already fallen, a hidden message of hope.
  • Opens up about a painful Twitter controversy where prominent figures mocked his 2023 reading list.
  • Admits the mockery hurt and he is now hesitant to share his reading publicly going forward.

Things worth remembering

  • 1984 has been translated into over 65 languages, sold over 30 million copies, and was banned as recently as 2022 in Belarus.
  • The 'two minutes of hate' shows how mass rage can be redirected at any target like the flame of a blow lamp.
  • O'Brien's view: power is not a means but an end; the object of torture is torture, the object of power is power.
  • A Reddit comparison links the novel's 'society as an organism' idea to Lex's conversation with biologist Michael Levin.
  • Lex argues there is no Utopia and that the healthy state is constant turnover and messy freedom, not perfection.
  • Room 101 contains each person's worst fear (rats for Winston), prompting Lex to wonder what it would be for each of us.
  • Lex notes science suggests torture is ineffective for gathering accurate intelligence because people will say anything to make it stop.
  • Julia's rule: 'if you keep the small rules you can break the big ones'; Lex reframes it as picking your battles in life.
  • Lex reads about an hour a day on Kindle plus up to two hours of audiobooks, often during 10-15 mile runs.

Recommended in this episode

Books, products and media the guest or host genuinely endorsed here — with the buy link.

Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

RecommendedBook

1984

George Orwell

“1984 by George Orwell is one of the most impactful books ever written” — Lex Fridman 00:00:00
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedBook

The Plague

Albert Camus

“my favorite book Now by kamu is probably the plague and all of that has evolved” — Lex Fridman 00:47:58
Find it on Amazon
RecommendedBook

The Brothers Karamazov

Fyodor Dostoevsky

“this book means a lot to me ... these books have been lifelong companions to me” — Lex Fridman 00:51:35
Find it on Amazon