Try GOLD - Free

Say know more

Hindustan Times Mumbai

|

October 12, 2025

There's a science to how we read things - people, situations, moods - as we make our way through each day. A lot of it has to do with what I know you know I know, and so on. In cognitive science, this is called 'common knowledge'. Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker's new book explores the impact of this ability on us - our society, history, culture

- Kanika Sharma

We laugh at the same jokes (usually for the same reasons), blush at innuendo, bow to dictators (at least temporarily), all because of a sense of implicit understanding: ie, common knowledge.

We maintain social contracts such as friendships and kinship, and group together as mobs, based on common knowledge too.

The idea of common knowledge is key to understanding human social constructs, says Steven Pinker, 71, a Canadian psychologist and psycholinguist at Harvard University.

"As a cognitive scientist, I have spent my life thinking about how people think," Pinker adds. "So the ultimate subject of my fascination would have to be how people think about what other people think, and how they think about what other people think they think, and how they think about what other people think they think they think. As dizzying as this cogitation may seem, we engage in it every day, at least tacitly.

Pinker's new book, When Everyone Knows That Everyone Knows, examines the social ramifications of this kind of coalescing, and seeks to untangle how this cognitive ability has impacted history, culture, society.

What do they look like, the mental acrobatics that govern our social world?

Excerpts from an interview.

Common knowledge isn't just "what everyone knows" but "what everyone knows that everyone knows". That sense of acknowledgement is crucial, isn't it?

I open the book with the story of the emperor's new clothes, which I think captures this distinction; because when the little boy points out that the emperor is naked, he isn't telling them anything they don't already know.

MORE STORIES FROM Hindustan Times Mumbai

Hindustan Times Mumbai

India’s rare earth magnets plan draws global suppliers

Australia’s Lynas Rare Earths Ltd, Iluka Resources Ltd and Rainbow Rare Earths Ltd of the UK, among others, have evinced interest in supplying rare earth oxides to prospective bidders under the planned 27,300 crore rare earth magnet manufacturing scheme, said three people in the know of the development.

time to read

2 mins

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Xi won’t invade Taiwan in my term: Trump

President Donald Trump says that Chinese President Xi Jinping has given him assurances that Beijing would take no action toward its long-stated goal of unifying Taiwan with mainland China while the Republican leader is in office, AP reported.

time to read

1 mins

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

OBAMA SAYS HE'S SURPRISED HOW FAST BIZ LEADERS BENT THE KNEE TO APPEASE TRUMP

WASHINGTON: Former president Barack Obama said on Saturday that he was taken aback by how quickly many of the United States’s business leaders, law firms and universities “bent the knee” to appease President Donald Trump, as he urged voters to push back against what he called the “lawlessness and recklessness” of the Trump administration, Reuters reported.

time to read

1 min

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Hindustan Times Mumbai

23 dead in Mexico explosion

A supermarket explosion killed at least 23 people in northern Mexico on Saturday, according to local officials, with investigators saying the blast was an accident possibly caused by a faulty electric transformer.

time to read

1 mins

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Canada’s lawmakers slam SFJ for targeting Anita Anand at protest

Canada’s cabinet ministers have condemned the brazen targeting of minister of foreign affairs Anita Anand during a protest organised by the secessionist group Sikhs for Justice (SFJ) outside the Indian Consulate in Toronto on Friday.

time to read

1 min

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Experiments with weather modification tech to alter rain patterns on govt radar

The Union government is actively considering experimentation of various weather modification technologies for rain enhancement and suppression for widespread application in a few years.

time to read

2 mins

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

DIVYA EXITS IN FIRST ROUND OF CHESS WORLD CUP

Wildcard Divya Deshmukh’s FIDE World Cup campaign ended in the first round after she lost her second straight classical game, even as a flock of young Indians advanced to the next round in Goa on Sunday.

time to read

1 min

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Pant’s 90 carries India A to victory in unofficial Test

Around skipper Rishabh Pant’s glittering central act of 90, late order batters played dogged little knocks as India A registered a fighting three-wicket win over South Africa A in the first four-day match here Sunday. India A now lead the two-match series 1-0, and the second match will be played at the BCCI CoE grounds from next Thursday.

time to read

2 mins

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Cocktail 2 cast gears up for Delhi shoot amid high AQI

Actors Shahid Kapoor, Kriti Sanon and Rashmika Mandanna are gearing up for the Delhi leg of Cocktail 2, which kicks off this month. We have learnt that the production team has made special arrangements for the outdoor schedule, with the Capital's AQI crossing 300.

time to read

1 min

November 03, 2025

Hindustan Times Mumbai

Hindustan Times Mumbai

INDOMITABLE INDIA

There are moments in time when a sport elevates itself from the boundaries of skills and tactics. When it receives such widespread support that it takes the form of a revolution.

time to read

1 min

November 03, 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size