Episodes

  • The Difference Between Real and Polished
    May 28 2024

    Society has become a little too enamoured with analysis and explanation, at the cost of building real things. Nature only validates by making things that work. This is what true validation looks like; less talking, more pointing (at what has been made). In this episode I use Mike Tyson as an example of the difference between real and polished.

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    19 mins
  • Is Death Irrational?
    May 21 2024

    In this episode I discuss the increasingly popular idea that valuing death is irrational, and that death should be treated as a problem to solve. I argue that such a stance is itself irrational, and that death should be viewed more objectively as an essential piece to how nature works. I show how the death-as-a-problem stance suffers from being intractable, and fails to align to the fundamental roles that constraints and iteration play in successful systems.

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    26 mins
  • Nature is not Magic, Just Different: Why AI Shouldn't Surprise You
    May 16 2024

    In this episode I use a recent statement made by Sam Altman, regarding the emergence of intelligence, to highlight the outdated way both laymen and many scientists view AI specifically, and complexity more broadly. I argue that, despite what we are old, a truly scientific and rigorous theory or decision does not demand a causal explanation, and in fact such causal approaches are quite counter to doing good science today.

    Sam Atlam's excerpt: https://www.instagram.com/reel/C60dq1Oyw_r/
    Tweet: https://twitter.com/sean_a_mcclure/status/1789315878544453977

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    32 mins
  • Round and Round We Go: The Circularity of IQ
    May 12 2024

    In this episode I discuss one of the core flaws in IQ research, showing how it violates basic logic (let alone any notion of complexity). I discuss how such studies are not mere niche areas of research, but rather directly affect people's lives through the policies they encourage.

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    28 mins
  • Low Dimensional Thinking
    May 7 2024

    For video version: https://youtu.be/kAnnsjl-jyg

    In this episode I discuss the problem with taking only the final/best parts of something, and using those parts as a system to run our lives. I look at the importance of "waste" and redundancy in natural systems, and how this runs counter to our modern world's obsession with stripped down efficiency.

    Apologies for audio quality on this episode.

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    28 mins
  • Protecting Your Reputation is a Tragedy
    Mar 14 2024

    Reputations are things people tend to protect. But protecting our reputation means blocking our values from being known, which I argue invites the wrong opportunities into our lives. Having a life filled with wrong opportunities means never having the chance to deliver your real potential to the world, which really is a tragedy.


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    30 mins
  • People Who Understand Beethoven Don’t Play Beethoven
    Mar 10 2024

    Many people proclaim to understand something because they study it. But you cannot know a thing by studying the thing, you have to create the thing. Playing Beethoven is replicating what you see in front of you, it is not creating the thing you see in front of you. Those who don’t create don’t understand. It doesn’t matter what you create, but if you want to understand something you must attempt to build it.


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    21 mins
  • Bet What You Know
    Mar 7 2024

    Placing bets means wagering something of value on the outcome of an uncertain event with the hopes of achieving a payoff. The decisions we make in life are akin to placing bets, and as with all bets, access to good information is what increases the chances of a bet achieving a payoff. Most people approach accessing good information by conducting research, analysis, understanding odds and placing all these into a clear strategy. But what really makes systems tick is something deeper than anything research, analysis, odds or strategy can access. This deeper “good” information that really makes systems tick aligns with what we call intuition. In this episode I discuss the importance of betting what we (truly) know.

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    28 mins