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Tim Ferriss · 2020-04-19 · 1h 39m

Dr. Jane Goodall — The Legend, The Lessons, The Hope | The Tim Ferriss Show

Jane Goodall reflects on her wartime childhood, decades studying chimpanzees at Gombe, and why hope and individual action still matter.

Dr. Jane Goodall — The Legend, The Lessons, The Hope | The Tim Ferriss Show
The guest

Dr. Jane Goodall — World-renowned primatologist whose 1960 discovery that chimpanzees make and use tools transformed science. She founded the Jane Goodall Institute and the global youth program Roots & Shoots, and is a UN Messenger of Peace and Dame Commander of the British Empire.

The gist

Tim Ferriss interviews Dr. Jane Goodall from her childhood home in Bournemouth, England, during COVID lockdown. She traces her path from a curious, animal-loving child growing up during World War II, through saving up as a waitress for her first trip to Africa, to her landmark chimpanzee research at Gombe under mentor Louis Leakey. Goodall shares vivid stories of individual chimpanzees, what their behavior reveals about both compassion and aggression in human nature, and her observations on motherhood and being alone. The conversation centers on her enduring reasons for hope, the Roots & Shoots youth program, the power of storytelling to change minds, and the idea that every individual makes a difference every single day.

Big reveals

  • Goodall's 1960 discovery that chimpanzees not only use but make tools rocked the scientific world and redefined the relationship between humans and animals.
  • David Greybeard, the first chimp to lose his fear of her, gradually allowed her closer, and his calm presence reassured the other chimpanzees that she was not dangerous.
  • Her observation of David Greybeard making and using tools to fish for termites came just before the six-month funding deadline, which secured National Geographic's support to continue the study.
  • She recounts the story of Old Man, an abused former lab chimp, who pulled three attacking females off his caretaker Mark Cusano and saved his life.
  • Goodall argues humans differ from chimps in that chimp aggression is roused emotion, while humans can plan deliberate, cold-blooded torture, crossing from aggression into evil.
  • Her core method for changing minds: you cannot argue people into change, you must reach the heart, often through storytelling.
  • From watching chimp mother Flo, she learned good mothers play with their babies for hours, and she deliberately played with her own son the same way.
  • Asked for a billboard message to billions, she answered: 'Remember that you make a difference every single day.'

Things worth remembering

  • Growing up in wartime Bournemouth, German fighters would dump unused bombs near the coast, and her family sheltered in a small cage-like air raid shelter.
  • As a four-and-a-half-year-old she hid for hours in a hen house to discover where eggs come out, prompting a near-call to the police when she went missing.
  • Her mother screamed 'Rex' and sobbed at the exact moment her uncle was shot down over Egypt, before any news arrived.
  • Louis Leakey believed women made better, more patient observers and wanted someone with a mind 'uncluttered' by reductionist science, so Goodall's lack of a college degree was a plus.
  • During the 1974-78 Gombe chimpanzee 'war,' one community was annihilated, and dominant females were observed killing the young of other females.
  • A polio epidemic, caught from humans, devastated the Gombe chimps; the paralyzed Mr. McGregor was shunned by others and eventually had to be euthanized.
  • Mr. H, a stuffed chimp with a tail, was given to her by Gary Horn, a man who went blind at 21 yet became a magician who taught himself to paint.
  • Her childhood stuffed chimp Jubilee, given at age one and a half, now sits in a bulletproof glass case in a National Geographic exhibition called 'Becoming Jane.'
  • Offspring of supportive chimp mothers tend to do better: more assertive and confident, males reaching higher rank and females becoming better mothers.
  • Goodall says she takes no supplements and does no formal exercise, eats little, is vegetarian (vegan at home), and credits good genes from her father for her endurance.

Recommended in this episode

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RecommendedMedia

Jane Goodall: The Hope

National Geographic

“unfolds in a brand new documentary, and I highly, highly recommend watching it, Jane Goodall: The Hope, premiering on Earth Day, April 22nd” — Tim Ferriss 00:06:55
Find it on Amazon