The Science of Storytelling Quotes

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The Science of Storytelling The Science of Storytelling by Will Storr
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The Science of Storytelling Quotes Showing 1-30 of 139
“Locked inside the black vault of our skulls, stuck forever in the solitude of our own hallucinated universe, story is a portal, a hallucination within the hallucination, the closest we'll ever really come to escape.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling
tags: story
“The world we experience as ‘out there’ is actually a reconstruction of reality that is built inside our heads. It’s an act of creation by the storytelling brain. This is how it works. You walk into a room. Your brain predicts what the scene should look and sound and feel like, then it generates a hallucination based on these predictions. It’s this hallucination that you experience as the world around you. It’s this hallucination you exist at the centre of, every minute of every day. You’ll never experience actual reality because you have no direct access to it.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling
“The gift of story is wisdom”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling
“We experience our day-to-day lives in story mode. The brain creates a world for us to live in and populates it with allies and villains. It turns the chaos and bleakness of reality into a simple, hopeful tale, and at the centre it places its star – wonderful, precious me – who it sets on a series of goals that become the plots of our lives. Story is what brain does. It is a ‘story processor’, writes the psychologist Professor Jonathan Haidt, ‘not a logic processor’. Story emerges from human minds as naturally as breath emerges from between human lips.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Unpredictable humans. This is the stuff of story.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling
“As the psychologist Professor Brian Little writes, ‘All individuals are essentially scientists erecting and testing their hypotheses about the world and revising them in the light of their experience.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“The only thing we’ll ever really know are those electrical pulses that are sent up by our senses.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“story, are often badly led astray by this inner voice, which is generated by word and speech-making circuitry that is mostly located in the brain’s left hemisphere. This voice is not to be trusted. This isn’t simply because it’s relaying all those flattering hero-making half-truths to us. The narrator can’t be trusted because it has no direct access to the truth of who we really are. It feels as if that voice is the thing that’s in control of us. It feels as if that voice is us. But it’s not. ‘We’ are our neural models. Our narrator is just observing what’s happening in the controlled hallucination in our skulls – including our own behaviour – and explaining it. It’s tying all the events together into a coherent tale that tells us who we are, why we’re doing what we’re doing and feeling what we’re feeling. It’s helping us feel in control of our thrilling neural show. And it’s not lying, exactly. It’s confabulating.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling
“Causes and effects should be shown rather than told; suggested rather than explained. If they’re not, curiosity will be extinguished and readers and viewers will become bored.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“I’m blind to any other reasonable argument – I can’t perceive them – because they’re not part of my perception.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“If tribal thinking is original sin, then story is prayer. At its best, it reminds us that, beneath our many differences, we remain beasts of one species.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling
tags: story
“Stories work on multiple evolved systems in the brain and a skilled storyteller activates these networks like the conductor of an orchestra, a little trill of moral outrage here, a fanfare of status play over there, a tintinnabulation of tribal identification, a rumble of threatening antagonism, a tantara of wit, a parp of sexual allure, a crescendo of unfair trouble, a warping and wefting hum as the dramatic question is posed and reposed in new and interesting ways – all instruments by which masses of brains can be captivated and manipulated.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling
“Identifying and accepting our flaws, and then changing who we are, means breaking down the very structure of our reality before rebuilding it in a new and improved form. This is not easy. It’s painful and disturbing. We’ll often fight with all we have to resist this kind of profound change. This is why we call those who manage it ‘heroes’.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“The ‘most frequently occurring and important theme’ of bestsellers was ‘human closeness and human connection’, an apposite interest for a hyper-social species.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Story artist’ Austin Madison, who’s worked on blockbusters including Ratatouille, Wall-E and Up, has shared a structure he says all Pixar films must adhere to. The action starts with a protagonist who has a goal, living in a settled world. Then a challenge comes that forces them into a cause-and-effect sequence of events that eventually builds to a climax that demonstrates the triumph of good over evil and the revelation of the story’s moral.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“The job of the plot is to plot against the protagonist. Its causes and effects always revolve around some sort of story event – an episode that brings the character into a new psychological realm.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“In order to be maximally compelling, protagonists should be active, the principal causer of effects in the plot that follows. Textual analyses reveal the words ‘do’, ‘need’ and ‘want’ appear twice as often in novels that feature in the New York Times bestseller list as those that don’t. A character in a drama who isn’t reacting, making decisions, choosing and trying somehow to impose control on the chaos isn’t truly a protagonist. Without action, the answer to the dramatic question never really changes. Who they are is who they always were, but slowly, dully sinking.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Without Brunetière’s will striving towards a goal being present in the scene of a story, there’s no drama, only description.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“The simple addition of a human goal transformed the gobbledegook into something clear. They remembered twice as much.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“What we see and feel, at any given moment, depends on what we’re trying to get – when we’re caught in the street in a downpour, we don’t see shops and trees and doorways and awnings, we see places of shelter. Goal-direction is so important to human cognition that when information about it is absent we can enter a state of bafflement.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“the one inviolable rule of drama: ‘What we ask of the theatre is the spectacle of a will striving towards a goal.’ Fundamental to successful stories and successful lives is the fact that we don’t passively endure the chaos that erupts around us.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Harmful childhood experiences damage our ability to control the environment of other people. And for us domesticated creatures the environment of other people is everything.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Great storytelling, like great psychology and great neuroscience, is a deep investigation into human behaviour. Literary storytelling is often dominated not by surface action as much as by the laying out of extensive clues as to why the characters behave as they do.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“It’s sometimes assumed that we root for characters who are simply kind. This is a nice idea, but it’s not true. As literary critic Adam Kirsch has observed, goodness is ‘infertile terrain for a writer’. If a hero starts out in perfect selfless shape there’s going to be no tale to tell. For the story theorist Professor Bruno Bettelheim, the storyteller’s challenge isn’t so much one of arousing the reader’s moral respect for the protagonist, but their sympathy.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“As Professor William Flesch writes, ‘We may hate the villain, but our hatred is meaningless. We want him unmasked to people in his world.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Shakespeare understood that there’s nothing more likely to make a person mad, desperate and dangerous than the removal of their status. The play is a tragedy, a form that frequently shows how hubris – which can be viewed as the making of an unsound claim to status – can bring personal destruction.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Evolutionary psychologists argue we have two wired-in ambitions: to get along with people, so they like us and consider us non-selfish members of the tribe, and also get ahead of them, so we’re on top. Humans are driven to connect and dominate.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“apparently catastrophic design flaw, ancient tribes excelled at cooperating. Not only did they manage to do so such that they survived for tens of thousands of years, with some still existing today, they’re thought to have been far more egalitarian than modern humans. How did they do this? How did they control each other’s self-interested behaviour so fantastically, without the help a police force, a judiciary or even any written law? They’d do it with the earliest and most incendiary form of storytelling. Gossip. People would keep track of everyone else, closely tallying their behaviour. When these gossipy stories concerned a person following the rules of the group, and putting its interests first, listeners would experience a wash of positive emotions and an urge to celebrate them. But when they told of someone selfishly breaking these rules, listeners would experience the emotion of moral outrage. They’d be motivated to act – to punish them,”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Humans are people. And yet, despite this apparently catastrophic design flaw, ancient tribes excelled at cooperating. Not only did they manage to do so such that they survived for tens of thousands of years, with some still existing today, they’re thought to have been far more egalitarian than modern humans. How did they do this? How did they control each other’s self-interested behaviour so fantastically, without the help a police force, a judiciary or even any written law? They’d do it with the earliest and most incendiary form of storytelling. Gossip.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better
“Dialogue should be changeful, it should want something, it should drip with personality and point of view, and it should operate on the two story levels – both conscious and subconscious. It can give us clues about everything we need to know about the character: who they are, what they want, where they’re going, where they’ve been, their social background, their personality, their values, their sense of status, the tension between their true self and the false front they’re presenting, their relationships to other characters, the secret torments that will drive the narrative forwards.”
Will Storr, The Science of Storytelling: Why Stories Make Us Human and How to Tell Them Better

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