What do you think?
Rate this book


Some things are funny -- jokes, puns, sitcoms, Charlie Chaplin, The Far
Side, Malvolio with his yellow garters crossed -- but why? Why does humor exist in the
first place? Why do we spend so much of our time passing on amusing anecdotes, making wisecracks,
watching The Simpsons? In Inside Jokes, Matthew Hurley, Daniel
Dennett, and Reginald Adams offer an evolutionary and cognitive perspective. Humor, they propose,
evolved out of a computational problem that arose when our long-ago ancestors were furnished with
open-ended thinking. Mother Nature -- aka natural selection -- cannot just order the brain to find
and fix all our time-pressured misleaps and near-misses. She has to bribe the brain with pleasure.
So we find them funny. This wired-in source of pleasure has been tickled relentlessly by humorists
over the centuries, and we have become addicted to the endogenous mind candy that is
humor.
376 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 2021
An engineering team was demonstrating their voice-synthesis software to their executives, and decided to have some fun. So they built a cardboard robot on stage, hiding the computer within, programmed with a series of jokes making fun of management. On the day of the presentation they watched and enjoyed the mixture of discomfort and ironic amusement among the audience when, to their surprise, someone in a back row seat stood up and started complaining. "Managers play an important role in business! Just because engineers and their managers see the world from a different perspective isn't evidence that managers are stupid — I'm sick and tired of being treated like an idiot just because I've taken a job that isn't as hands-on as the people I'm managing".This was actually a blonde joke in the book; I thought I would update it to a group that is more a politically correct target for scorn.
The engineering team nervously glanced at each other, until the team manager stood up and apologized: "Uhm, we meant this in good fun, and certainly didn't intend any" —
The manager cut him off: "Quiet — shut up! I'm talking to the robot, not you."