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EP 250 Alexander Bard Part 1: Process and Event
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- Episode Transcript
- Process and Event, by Alexander Bard and Jan Söderqvist
- JRS Currents 065: Alexander Bard on Protopian Narratology
- JRS EP95 – Alexander Bard on God in the Internet Age
- JRS Currents 100: Sara Walker and Lee Cronin on Time as an Object
- The Emergence of Everything: How the World Became Complex, by Harold Morowitz
- Hierarchy in the Forest: The Evolution of Egalitarian Behavior, by Christopher Boehm
Alexander Bard is a philosopher, artist, songwriter and music producer, author of six books with Jan Söderqvist, living in Stockholm, Sweden. Bard built his career as a philosopher in parallel with a highly successful 25-years-plus career in the international music industry. Bard & Söderqvist’s philosophy concentrates on the relationship between human beings and technology, using human beings as the constant throughout civilization, with technology as the ever faster changing variable. Their work takes inspiration from thinkers like Hegel, Nietzsche, Whitehead, Deleuze, and Eastern philosophy and spirituality, in the latter case adding Persia to the well known triad of India, China and Japan. They are convinced philosophy will be the last human activity to ever be affected by AI.
EP 249 Seth Lloyd on Measuring Complexity
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- Episode Transcript
- JRS EP 79 – Seth Lloyd on Our Quantum Universe
- The Origins of Order: Self-Organization and Selection in Evolution, by Stuart Kauffman
EP 248 Timothy Clancy on the Israel-Hamas War
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- Episode Transcript
- JRS Currents 057: Timothy Clancy on Russia’s Mid-Game
- START Researcher Spotlight: Timothy Clancy
- “Dynamics of Atrocity Scripts in Conflict,” by Timothy Clancy
Timothy Clancy is an Assistant Research Scientist at START specializing in studying wicked mess problems, including violence and instability, as complex systems. Current research topics include understanding violent radicalization as a system, the terror contagion hypothesis for public mass killings, the emerging-state actor hypothesis for asymmetric and irregular warfare conflicts, and advancing methods for modeling social complexity through computer simulations integrated with AI.
EP 247 Sergey Kuprienko on Drone Warfare in Ukraine
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- Episode Transcript
- JRS EP 244 – Samo Burja on Lessons from the Russo-Ukrainian War
- “Don’t Bring a Patriot to a Drone Fight—Bring Fighter UAVs Instead,” by Paul Maxwell
Sergey Kuprienko is the CEO and co-founder of Swarmer, a software company for drone software.
EP 246 A.M. Hickman on Hitchhiking in America
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Jim and A.M. Hickman trade stories about the pleasures and tribulations of hitchhiking. They discuss Andy & his wife’s recent hitchhiking honeymoon, how he started hitchhiking as a teenager, growing up in Utica, New York, the Adirondacks, multi-generational itchy-foot syndrome, “hobo college,” Jim’s earliest hitchhiking experience, hitchhiking on the East Coast, crazy happenings, fertilized chicken eggs, a four-year-old driver, psychoactive chemicals, a shift against hitchhiking in the Eighties, post-Covid leeriness, the decline in hitchhiking, finding odd jobs, the low cost of living on the road, Mormon country, ultra-light gear, the diversity of America’s traveling homeless, sleeping in a Honda Civic on a freight train, rescuing a fourteen-year-old hitchhiker in Eureka, California, and much more.
A.M. Hickman is an itinerant geographer from the foothills of the Adirondack Mountains. He writes on Substack at Hickman‘s Hinterlands.
EP 245 Bob Levy on the Second Amendment and the Supreme Court
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- Episode Transcript
- The Dirty Dozen: How Twelve Supreme Court Cases Radically Expanded Government and Eroded Freedom, by Robert Levy & William Mellor
- “The Peculiar Story of United States v. Miller,” by Brian L. Frye
Bob Levy was, for 14 years, chairman of the board of directors at the Cato Institute. He is now chairman emeritus. Bob joined Cato as senior fellow in constitutional studies in 1997 after 25 years in business. The Institute’s Robert A. Levy Center for Constitutional Studies is named in his honor. He has also served on boards of the Federalist Society, the Foundation for Government Accountability, and the Institute for Justice. Bob received his PhD in business from the American University in 1966, then founded CDA Investment Technologies, a major provider of investment information and software. At age 50, after leaving CDA in 1991, Bob went to George Mason law school, where he was chief articles editor of the law review and class valedictorian. He received his JD degree in 1994. The next two years he clerked for Judge Royce Lamberth on the US District Court and Judge Douglas Ginsburg on the US Court of Appeals, both in Washington, DC.
EP 244 Samo Burja on Lessons from the Russo-Ukrainian War
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- Episode Transcript
- JRS EP 243 – Yaroslav Trofimov on Ukraine’s War of Independence
- JRS EP 221 – George Hotz on Open-Source Driving Assistance
Samo Burja is the founder and President of Bismarck Analysis, a consulting firm that specializes in institutional analysis for clients in North America and Europe. Bismarck uses the foundational sociological research that Samo and his team have conducted over the past decade to deliver unique insights to clients about institutional design and strategy. Samo’s studies focus on the social and material technologies that provide the foundation for healthy human societies, with an eye to engineering and restoring the structures that produce functional institutions. He has authored articles and papers on his findings. His manuscript, Great Founder Theory, is available online. He is also a Research Fellow at the Long Now Foundation and Senior Research Fellow in Political Science at the Foresight Institute. Samo has spoken about his findings at the World Economic Forum at Davos, Y Combinator’s YC 120 conference, the Reboot American Innovation conference in Washington, D.C., and elsewhere. He spends most of his time in California and his native Slovenia.
EP 243 Yaroslav Trofimov on Ukraine’s War of Independence
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- Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine’s War of Independence, by Yaroslav Trofimov
- No Country for Love, by Yaroslav Trofimov
Yaroslav Trofimov is the author of three books of narrative non-fiction and one novel. He has worked around the world as a foreign correspondent of The Wall Street Journal since 1999, and has served as the newspaper’s chief foreign-affairs correspondent since 2018. Born in Kyiv, Ukraine, he was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize in international reporting in 2023, for his work on Ukraine, and in 2022, for his work on Afghanistan. His honors include an Overseas Press Club award for coverage of India as well as the Washington Institute gold medal for the best book on the Middle East. His latest non-fiction book, Our Enemies Will Vanish, was a finalist of the 2024 Orwell Prize.
EP 242 Magatte Wade on a Vision for African Economic Development
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- Episode Transcript
- The Heart of A Cheetah: How We Have Been Lied to about African Poverty, and What That Means for Human Flourishing, by Magatte Wade
- Magatte Wade (website)
- Africa’s Bright Future (Substack)
Magatte Wade is the Director of the Center for African Prosperity at Atlas Network, the leading organization of African free-market think tanks. She was listed as a Forbes “20 Youngest Power Women in Africa,” a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum, and a TED Global Africa Fellow. Magatte’s passion for the role of free markets in overcoming poverty and the power of enterprise to tackle social issues and promote entrepreneurial education make her a sought-after speaker and thought leader at major conferences, events, and universities around the world.