David Krakauer on Emergent Political Economies and A Science of Possibility (EPE 01)

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  • čas přidán 1. 08. 2024
  • The world is unfair - but how much of that unfairness is inevitable, and how much is just contingency? After centuries of efforts to arrive at formal theories of history, society, and economics, most of us still believe and act on what amounts to myth. Our predecessors can’t be faulted for their lack of data, but in 2022 we have superior resources we’re only starting to appreciate and use. In honor of the Santa Fe Institute’s new role as the hub of an international research network exploring Emergent Political Economies, we dedicate this new sub-series of Complexity Podcast to conversations on money, power, governance, and justice. Subscribe for a new stream of dialogues and trialogues between SFI’s own diverse scholastic community and other acclaimed political economists, historians, and authors of speculative fiction.
    Welcome to COMPLEXITY, the official podcast of the Santa Fe Institute. I’m your host, Michael Garfield , and every other week we’ll bring you with us for far-ranging conversations with our worldwide network of rigorous researchers developing new frameworks to explain the deepest mysteries of the universe.
    In this episode, we talk with SFI President David Krakauerabout the goals of this research theme and what SFI brings to the table. We discuss the legacy of long-standing challenges to quantitative history and mathematical economics, how SFI thinks differently about these topics, and a brief outline of the major angles we’ll explore in this sub-series over the next year-plus - including the roles of dimension, causality, algorithms, scaling, innovation, emergence, and more.
    Subscribe to Complexity Podcast for upcoming episodes with an acclaimed line-up of scholars including Diane Coyle, Eric Beinhocker, Ricardo Hausmann, Doyne Farmer, Steven Teles, Rajiv Sethi, Jenna Bednar, Tom Ginsburg, Niall Ferguson, Neal Stephenson, Paul Smaldino, C. Thi Nguyen, John Kay, John Geneakoplos, and many more to be announced…
    If you value our research and communication efforts, please subscribe to Complexity Podcast wherever you prefer to listen, rate and review us at Apple Podcasts , and consider making a donation - or finding other ways to engage with us - at santafe.edu/engage . You can find the complete show notes for every episode, with transcripts and links to cited works, at complexity.simplecast.com .
    Thank you for listening!
    Join our Facebook discussion group to meet like minds and talk about each episode.
    Podcast theme music by Mitch Mignano .
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    Mentions and additional resources:
    Emergent Political Economies and A Science of Possibility
    by David Krakauer for SFI Parallax Newsletter, Spring 2022 Edition
    Policing stabilizes construction of social niches in primates
    by Jessica Flack, Michelle Girvan, Frans de Waal, and David Krakauer in Nature
    Conflicts of interest improve collective computation of adaptive social structures
    by Eleanor Brush, David Krakauer, and Jessica Flack in Science Advances
    The Star Gazer and the Flesh Eater: Elements of a Theory of Metahistory
    by David C. Krakauer in History, Big History, and Metahistory at SFI Press
    The Cultural Evolution of National Constitutions
    by Daniel Rockmore, Chen Fang, Nick Foti, Tom Ginsburg, & David Krakauer in SSRN
    Scaling of Hunter-Gatherer Camp Size and Human Sociality
    by José Lobo, Todd Whitelaw, Luís M. A. Bettencourt, Polly Wiessner, Michael E. Smith, & Scott Ortman in Current Anthropology
    W. Brian Arthur on Complexity Podcast (eps. 13 , 14 , 68 , 69 )
    Reflections on COVID-19 with David Krakauer & Geoffrey West (Complexity Podcast)
    The Dawn of Everything
    by David Graeber and David Wengrow at Macmillan Publishers
    Mitch Waldrop speaks on the history of SFI (Twitter excerpts)
    The Hedgehog and the Fox
    by Isaiah Berlin
    War and Peace
    by Leo Tolstoy
    On the Application of Mathematics to Political Economy
    by F. Y. Edgeworth in Journal of the Royal Statistical Society
    How Economics Became A Mathematical Science
    by E. Roy Weintraub at Duke University Press
    Machine Dreams
    by Philip Mirowski at Cambridge University Press
    All Watched Over by Machines of Loving Grace (TV series)
    by Adam Curtis for BBC
    Can’t Get You Out of My Head (TV series)
    by Adam Curtis for BBC
    The Collective Computation Group at SFI
    Seeing Like A State
    by James. C Scott at Yale Books
    Uncertain times
    by Jessica Flack and Melanie Mitchell at Aeon
    At the limits of thought
    by David Krakauer at Aeon
    Preventative Citizen-Based Medicine
    by David Krakauer for the SFI Transmissions: Reflections series
    The uncertainty paradox. Can science make uncertainty optimistic?
    by Stuart Firestein (SFI Seminar)
    Editorial note: At one point DK mentions "John" Steuart but meant James Steuart, author of
    An Inquiry Into the Principles of Political Economy
    (a more thoroughly-indexed and sear

Komentáře • 3

  • @CaravanseraiSouthValley

    I am a K-12 educator with 13+ years of experience. It is striking how much of SFI’s work and communication parallels to the immense complexity of what really happens in a classroom.

  • @muhokutan4772
    @muhokutan4772 Před rokem +1

    It's interesting to see how many parallels there are in this effort to bring complexity into science to Stephen Wolframs' effort to bring forth cellular automata. The resistance and the uncomfortableness people feel towards new ways of thinking have left Wolfram with the conclusion that his ideas might be ahead of their time. I worry that complexity might end up in a similar winter. There is a meta challenge of bringing ideas to life which are ahead of their time and the barrier it seems are people and not the technicalities. Solving this meta problem could allow us to develop our open-mindedness and take charge of this pandemic of unreasonable skepticism.

  • @77rdcasa
    @77rdcasa Před 16 dny

    The world is Cosme, not Caos.