Episode 18, feat. Alexander Siegenfeld
Manage episode 313397238 series 3269172
TIMESTAMPS
- 2:35 Natural Scientists vs. Social Scientists in Complexity Science
- 8:29 Alex’ paper about elections
- 27:00 Professor Friston’s work in relation to Complexity Science
- 36:13 Can data be to weak to be useful?
- 40:35 Complexity Science in relation to philosophy and empiricism vs. rationality
- 46:29 What is the hardest thing in your work?
- 55:38 Successful people in academia
- 1:02:00 Circles & Loops
- 1:05:00 Measuring success
- 1:10:30 Are religions circular?
- 1:17:09 Language compression and emotion transfer devices
- 1:21:00 Meta-talk
- 1:24:29 Why is it hard to talk about ”deep things”?
- 1:28:22 The nature of learning
- 1:31:30 Memory
- 1:36:50 A subagent in our embodied cognition that is ”higher” than us?
- 1:49:11 What advice do you have for younger students?
Intrested in CS? Award-winning intro to Complexity Science by Alex: https://www.hindawi.com/journals/complexity/2020/6105872/
Mentioned resources:
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Structure_of_Scientific_Revolutions (Note from Alex: It seems less original now than at the time it was written)
- The Master and His Emmissary by Iain McGilchrist
- Another book recommended by Alex: I and Thou by Martin Buber (he recommends the translation by Smith)
- The review article in Nature Physics: https://arxiv.org/abs/1810.11489
Regarding proxies to internal goals, I’d recommend the following Medium article: https://adamahm.medium.com/data-linkage-visualization-for-assisting-policy-makers-d4ba40715693x
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