Episodios

  • Attention and curiosity
    May 1 2022

    Attention and curiosity

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    16 m
  • Revising our relationship with the unknown
    Apr 24 2022

    Revise your relationship with the unknown and change your life.

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    23 m
  • Trolls and misinformation: a symptom of the early internet
    Dec 29 2020

    This is the final episode of season 1. Thanks for joining me on this journey. In this episode, we discuss a hypothesis about internet trolling and misinformation. I provide two pieces of evidence along with one personal anecdote supporting this hypothesis. These are given in the episode and are not provided here in the synopsis. Hopefully they are convincing for you. Time will tell if my hypothesis is ultimately correct.

    The hypothesis is that these phenomena (trolling and misinformation) are symptoms of the early internet that will improve over time. The idea is that every new power is abused in its early years as people adjust to it, but in time people learn to use it properly. Internet access represents a brand new type of power that we’ve never had before, and every day, more and more people are getting access for the first time. They are immediately sucked into fake news websites that proliferate everywhere, and participate in and are affected by internet trolls.

    As the decades go by and internet access becomes the rule rather than the exception, more people will be born with the internet as something that just exists. As this population of people born into the internet grows, the phenomena of trolling and belief in fake news will likely subside. More people will learn internet etiquette, having been taught about it from an early age, and the trolly, bullshitty corner of the internet will begin to shrink in relevance. As that happens, the best version of the internet will begin to grow in importance: the aspect of the internet that facilitates valuable contributions and learning: Wikipedia and GitHub come to mind.

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    22 m
  • Thought streams
    Dec 20 2020
    33 m
  • You can’t binge on good (or bad) behavior
    Dec 13 2020

    One of the things I am learning as I go through life is that you can’t binge on good behavior and expect a good life. What I mean by that is if your behavioral norms are corrupted, you can’t do the occasional good or even the occasional VERY good deed and expect your life to improve significantly and sustainably. Good begets good, and daily habits do the begetting, not occasional acts that are out of character. This is true no matter how large the magnitude of your temporary good deed.

    A good deed will make you feel good for awhile, but eventually you will fall back to the baseline feeling that is the result of your standard behavior.

    Boring, small, daily habits are what matter, not gigantic heroic acts.

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    19 m
  • Why do anything?
    Dec 6 2020

    Are nihilists correct? Is there a point to anything? Are there any effective counterarguments to the nihilistic assertion that life is meaningless? There is little to be found in terms of solid logical counterarguments when it comes to arguing against a nihilist. It always requires a leap of faith, because the nihilist has the intellectual upper hand. The leap of faith involves building your own meaning and hoping that that’s enough; chasing your own dreams tenaciously and hoping for the best. After a few decades, when your dreams unfold, the nihilist may still have the intellectual upper hand, but you’ll have the better life after having shown that even though life may seem (or be) meaningless, it is still worthwhile to pursue something that you consider meaningful, as it leads to a better life, however temporary and fleeting, and that is really the most we can hope for when it comes to countering nihilists. Having the logical upper hand is not the holy grail of winning, necessarily.

    In the middle of the podcast, I provide a way to turn the nihilist perspective against them: the nihilist case for striving to pursue your own meaning.

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    27 m
  • Knowledge-centric and task-centric careers
    Nov 29 2020

    In this episode, we discuss two different career types. In my view, all careers fall somewhere in this dualistic spectrum: knowledge-centric careers (minority) and task centric careers (majority). We discuss the dynamics between people on different ends of the spectrum, and how these can bring about a change in the times – ushering in a dark age or an enlightenment age, depending on how the dynamics play out.

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    15 m
  • The path to right-wing extremism
    Nov 22 2020

    The path to right wing extremism involves the extraction of men from society who don’t feel useful or like their life has a point. Every man has the desire for meaning, and the chance to contribute and improve their world. The views and beliefs are extreme, but I would argue that the men themselves are not extreme at their core. It’s a shame that our society has not harnessed this male desire to make meaningful contributions. Instead, we leave them behind to the detriment of society.

    ANY man can be radicalized if found in the right point in his life and if the conditions are right. Anybody. People are always surprised when they find out that that average Joe or that quiet kid they went to school with is a white supremacist. They can’t imagine someone like that being radicalized. They imagine that only crazy people can be radicalized. But no, anyone can go down this path if they get sucked in by some predatory recruiters who make big promises.

    Some people are like leaves in the wind, and that leaf can land in the sweet spot if the wind is right. If they get caught in a rightward gust, however, they can end up being radicalized. Society should be more structured, and blocking these strong winds to ensure that these leaves end up in more desirable locations.

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    24 m