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The Human Risk Podcast
Human Risk
354 episodes
2 weeks ago
People are often described as the largest asset in most organisations. They are also the biggest single cause of risk. This podcast explores the topic of 'human risk', or "the risk of people doing things they shouldn't or not doing things they should", and examines how behavioural science can help us mitigate it. It also looks at 'human reward', or "how to get the most out of people". When we manage human risk, we often stifle human reward. Equally, when we unleash human reward, we often inadvertently increase human risk.

To pitch guests please email guest@humanriskpodcast.com
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Social Sciences
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All content for The Human Risk Podcast is the property of Human Risk and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
People are often described as the largest asset in most organisations. They are also the biggest single cause of risk. This podcast explores the topic of 'human risk', or "the risk of people doing things they shouldn't or not doing things they should", and examines how behavioural science can help us mitigate it. It also looks at 'human reward', or "how to get the most out of people". When we manage human risk, we often stifle human reward. Equally, when we unleash human reward, we often inadvertently increase human risk.

To pitch guests please email guest@humanriskpodcast.com
Show more...
Social Sciences
Science
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James Geary on The Art of The Aphorism
The Human Risk Podcast
1 hour 4 minutes
1 month ago
James Geary on The Art of The Aphorism
Can a single sentence change the way you see the world? My guest on this episode, James Geary thinks so.

Episode Summary
On this episode, I speak with writer and journalist James, whose lifelong fascination with aphorisms — the world’s shortest literary form — reveals why brevity really is the soul of wit.

James explains what makes an aphorism work, shares the five laws that define them, and explores how these concise little sayings have guided human thought from ancient times to social media.

We discuss:
  • The difference between aphorisms and proverbs
  • How short phrases can serve as decision-making tools and emotional signposts
  • Why humour and contradiction are central to wisdom
  • How modern culture, marketing, and even AI continue the aphoristic tradition
  • James’s book The World in a Phrase and why he chose to update it 20 years after originally publishing it
I also ask him whether my friend James Victore's phrase 'what made you weird as a kid, makes you great today' is an aphorism (spoiler alert: it is!).

Guest bio
James Geary is a writer, journalist, and Deputy Curator at Harvard’s Nieman Foundation for Journalism. He is the author of 'The World in a Phrase: A Brief History of the Aphorism' and 'Geary’s Guide to the World’s Great Aphorists'.

Links to topics 
  • James' book The World in a Phrase: A Brief History of the Aphorism (Second Edition) — University of Chicago Press page. University of Chicago Press
  • James' official website (book + aphorism archive). jamesgeary.com+1
  • Harvard Gazette profile piece (“Brief bursts of wisdom”). Harvard Gazette
  • James Geary — TED Talk “Metaphorically speaking.” TED
  • Earlier Human Risk podcast episode with James Victore (where he shares “the things that made you weird…”): The Human Risk Podcast
AI-Generated Timestamp Summary
[00:00:00] Opening, why short phrases stick; introducing James Geary and my confession about “aphorism” pronunciation and definition.

[00:01:00] What aphorisms are; oldest literary form; Reader’s Digest spark at age eight.
 
[00:03:00] First memorable line: “difference between a rut and a grave”; why compressing meaning captivated him. 

[00:05:00] The five laws: brief, personal, definitive, philosophical, with a twist; applying them to the Victore quote.
 
[00:06:30] Truth vs. usefulness; contradictions (Johnson vs. Bierce) and situational wisdom.
 
[00:08:45] Aphorisms as everyday philosophy; “signposts” and “violin in public” imagery.
 
[00:10:45] Teenage collecting; writing aphorisms on the backs of rock posters.
 
[00:12:45] Joy + darkness; why humour helps memory; “Why can angels fly? Because they take themselves lightly.”
 
[00:16:30] Family sayings; “If you’re not living on the edge, you’re taking up too much space.”
 
[00:17:45] Redundancy story; “treacherous ground” aphorism as psychological footing.
 
[00:19:30] Secular scripture; Pascal’s tennis metaphor; timelessness across traditions.
 
[00:23:00] Originality vs. recurrence; why the twist makes the familiar new.
The Human Risk Podcast
People are often described as the largest asset in most organisations. They are also the biggest single cause of risk. This podcast explores the topic of 'human risk', or "the risk of people doing things they shouldn't or not doing things they should", and examines how behavioural science can help us mitigate it. It also looks at 'human reward', or "how to get the most out of people". When we manage human risk, we often stifle human reward. Equally, when we unleash human reward, we often inadvertently increase human risk.

To pitch guests please email guest@humanriskpodcast.com