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Dialectic

Podcast Dialectic
Jackson Dahl
Conversational portraits of original people, across technology, media, business, and creativity. By Jackson Dahl.

Episodios disponibles

5 de 11
  • 11: Eugene Wei - Amusing Each Other to Death
    Eugene Wei (Website, X) is a writer, product thinker, and cultural observer best known for his essays on technology, media, and social networks, including Status as a Service, Invisible asymptotes, and TikTok and the Sorting Hat.Eugene spent seven years at Amazon in its early days before following a brief detour to pursue filmmaking at UCLA. He then led product, design, editorial, and marketing teams at Hulu, co-founded Erly, and worked at Flipboard and Oculus. Today, he works on his own ideas at the intersection of media and technology while advising and angel investing.This conversation explores the evolving landscape of entertainment, social media, community, and humanity in our digital age—topics Eugene has examined deeply. We revisit some of Eugene’s greatest hits on how platforms like Twitter and TikTok shape society and also get into fresh ideas he's yet to share publicly.We start by discussing how today's social media world compares to the television-centric world that Neil Postman lamented in Amusing Ourselves to Death, and how entertainment-maximizing, adversarial, algorithmic social platforms might lead us to "Amusing Each Other to Death." Eugene unpacks TikTok's profound impact on our "digital nervous system," differentiating between social networks and social media—highlighting the latter's emphasis on frictionless positivity rather than meaningful connection.Amid rising nihilism among young people, Eugene analyzes how cultural and economic structures contribute to lost hope, exploring social media’s role in exacerbating these trends. We discuss power laws influencing tech, media, sports, and finance, and how that drives pervasive speculation across culture. Then, he traces these themes through American television, from 1960s-1990s sitcoms to shows like The Sopranos, Succession, and Industry, revealing how they reflect the erosion of community and purpose in late-stage capitalism.Throughout, Eugene offers nuanced observations on how technology's removal of friction has paradoxically weakened our sense of meaning and connection. We wrap up with how AI might shape media and creativity, what elements of humanity may be valued in the future, learnings from Bezos and film school, and a movie recommendation for anyone trying to make sense of it all.Timestamps(02:10): Amusing Each Other to Death and "Frictionless Positivity": Neil Postman, TV vs. Social Media(14:35): Dunking, Quote Tweets, and Proximity to the Other(19:09): Prisoner's Dilemma of Twitter: Concede or Dunk(24:52): Is TikTok the Final Form of Social Media?(31:02): Status Games in the Algorithm Era(39:02): Technology's Reduction of Friction & Avoiding Confrontation with the Other(48:45): The Internet's Reversal of Vita Activa and Vita Contempliva(50:53): Growing Nihilism Toward Online Status Games: If You Don't Capture Attention, You Aren't Relevant Anymore(55:54): Late State Capitalism's Disappointment, Gen Z Nihilism in US and China, Death of Community(1:03:01): Speculation Culture and Playing to the Power Law(1:08:08): NBA, NFL, Netflix, Power Laws, and Distraction-Friendly Viewing(1:15:55): Playing for Attention: the Only Goal(1:18:43): Video and Image vs. Text(1:20:57): The Subconscious of American Culture and the Decline of Community According(1:32:31): Terminally Online Culture, Role Models, Evolving Search for Meaning(1:45:23): Friction and the Internet's Impact on Communities(1:50:50): AI, "The Most Human Human" and Creativity(1:56:38): Lighting section: Invisible Asymptotes for Social Media and Eugene, and Writing(2:02:08): Beginner's Mindset, Film School, What Technologists Could Learn from Filmmakers(2:06:40): What Idea from a Book Would Be Most Compelling to "Transmute" into an Audiovisual Medium?(2:08:56): Bezos and Removing Friction(2:11:09): Left Brain vs. Right Brain, Engineering Problems vs. Human Problems(2:15:07): Why Film is Meaningful and a RecommendationEpisode transcript⁠ with all linked references:
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  • 10: Josh Wolfe - Illuminating Tomorrow
    Josh Wolfe (Website, X) is co-founder and Managing Partner of Lux Capital, a venture firm focused on emerging science and technology at the outermost edges of what is possible.Josh is a masterful storyteller who moves seamlessly between science, culture, and markets. As an investor, he seeks the counter-narrative—what others aren't talking about—and has backed countless breakthrough companies in AI, space, biotech, robotics, defense, and beyond. Beyond investing, Josh founded Coney Island Prep charter school and is a trustee at the Santa Fe Institute.Our conversation explores the interplay between science and storytelling, the power of belief in both doubters and advocates, patterns in creative rebels, and what makes someone both "arrogant" enough to assert a new reality while remaining grounded enough to see reality clearly. We discuss America's scientific competitiveness, the value of competition in institutions, Josh's voracious appetite for the new, and his personal journey with control, trust, and family.Josh is one of my favorite examples of someone who is radically unhedged on himself: he leans into his genius—and thus sometimes, disfunction—in ways that make him authentically effective. Throughout the episode, he demonstrates his rare combination of wisdom and childlike curiosity, competitive drive, and deep care for the things that matter to him. His ideas on storytelling, science, and human nature offer a guide for thinking about bringing new things into the world.Episode transcript.Timestamps (2:12): Science & Stories (6:30): Are technology outcomes and timelines determined or variable based on cultural movements, societal reaction, and stories? (11:14): Who is Imagining the Future of Tomorrow? (16:34): Originality, AI, and Everything is a Remix (20:52): Improving as a Storyteller (23:55): Secrets & Magic (31:35): Josh's Biggest Believers (34:20): Belief Beyond Capital, Motivation, and Fuel (37:53): Patterns in Creative Rebels (40:53): "Arrogance of the Highest Order" in Entrepreneurs, Asserting Reality, Great Men of History, and Elon (47:02): US Exceptionalism and Celebrating Science & Technology (55:23): Institutions, Academia, Government, and Competition (1:00:56): Josh: Accomplished Yet Childlike - Finding the Edges (1:04:07): Breadth and Depth: a Heat-Seeking Ability to Go Deep (1:12:03): Managing Dowsides and Lessons that Could Have Been Learned Sooner (1:15:58): Control, Past, and Future (1:19:57): Learnings from Mom (1:20:57): Trust and learning from Optimistic Partners (1:22:54): LegacyLinks & References Kevin G's Josh Wolfe Compilation Kevin's much shorter twitter thread summary of Josh's spikeyness Lux Q3 2024 LP Letter - Four Parables of Four Greek Titans Various Lux LP Letters "And the Band Played On" / HIV Work Inspiration Josh's music taste Isabelle Boemeke (Nuclear Energy Influencer) The Three Body Problem Neil Gaiman Neil Stephenson - Polestan Writing Doom (Short Film) Everything is a Remix Man on the Moon (1999) Derek Del Gaudio's In and of Itself (2020) A Conversation with Josh Wolfe: Macro, Mentors, Motivation - Compound Manual - Frederik Gieschen 33: Josh Wolfe - The Mind Financing The Future - The Portal Josh Wolfe - This is Who You Are Up Against - Invest Like the Best, EP.76 EP 115: Josh Wolfe (Co-Founder, Lux Capital) On Uncovering Hidden Opportunities - The Logan Bartlett ShowDialectic is available on all platforms.Join the ⁠telegram channel⁠Follow ⁠on Twitter⁠Follow on InstagramSubscribe on YouTube
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  • 9: Jacob Horne - Markets for What Matters
    Jacob Horne (Website, Zora, X, Farcaster), is co-founder and CEO of Zora, a platform that allows the tokenization of media.Jacob started his career at Coinbase where he was a product lead and helped create USDC. Five years ago, he left to wade deeper into the waters of internet and crypto-native coordination and creativity and co-founded Zora.His central interest is how people coordinate together using the internet—the includes currencies, markets, ownership, art, speculation, and memes. We discuss how memes and symbols enable coordination, "The Meme and the Memo," words, money, and laws, Zora's premise built on Stewart Brand's "information wants to be free but it also wants to be expensive," a case for markets around attention, the new version of Zora and "a coin for every piece of content," speculation vs. gambling, token-powered brands, Ethereum and Solana, Coinbase and USDC, and a wide-ranging personal section that showcases why Jacob is so generative.The parting prompt I hope this conversation leaves all of us with is this: while information is ~free today (and also abundant, infinite), it is also quite expensive to consume in terms of time. We ought to think carefully about what content we spend our precious time consuming and rewarding. That you would spend some of yours listening to Dialectic is as always a privilege and I hope you find it worthwhile.Transcript available here.Timestamps (3:03): Obsession with Memes: How do you get people to organize? (8:46): The Meme and the Memo via Balaji Srinivasan (11:32): Three Fundamental Questions: Words, Money, Laws (12:39): The Midwit Meme and other Favorites (15:55): What makes media and information valuable? (19:26): Zora, Tokenized Media, and Information wants to be Free and Expensive (22:53): Provenance (28:30): Why Do We Want Markets for Attention?Deeper Crypto Section (37:08): A coin for every piece of content: prediction markets on attention (42:49): Investing in People or “Creator” / “Social”Tokens (44:14): Not fighting internet gravity: NFTs, “utillity,” 1 of 1s, and skeumorphic ideas along the way (47:52): Speaking to potential concerns and incentivizing more durable and useful information (52:23): Speculation vs. Gambling: positive sum vs. zero-sum (56:00): AI: Market Data as an input for for Models (58:56): Speculating on how a future of AI and attention markets will be good for creatives (1:04:50): Small market cap content can still be meaningful (1:08:11): Crypto-optimism and regulation (1:13:52): Saint Fame, Nouns, and Ideas for Future Token-Coordinated Orgs (1:22:32): Reflecting on “Hyperstructures” (1:28:55): Jacob's shift toward market-oriented thinking for solving coordination problems (1:30:40): Ethereum, Solana, and Blockchain CompetitionCoinbase (1:36:23): The Coinbase Internship that Never Ended (1:40:49): Starting USDC (1:49:14): Bloomberg Terminal's DesignGeneral Jacob (1:50:09): Bezos and adoption of technology (1:52:47): Tokenized Identity (1:55:41): Matt Dryhurst and Holly Herndon and Bridging Art and Technology (1:58:43): What idea has the world not come around on yet? (2:00:12): What are the aesthetics of Jacob's AI model? (2:04:20): The FAFO Zone and Local Maximums (2:11:03): The alternate reality where Jacob didn't discovery Bitcoin (2:14:54): Cultural and Artistic Inspirations (2:17:55): Patronus Problems (2:20:44): Australians and Americans (2:23:42): Jacob's Favorite Ideas (2:28:27): Lessons for Jacob's kids about creativityLinks "Meme Structure" Midwit Meme What is Cryptomedia? Jacob's Mints on Zora Mintellectual Property Onchain Predictions AI+ Saint Fame Nouns Hyperstructures Stewart Brand Pace Layers Tokenized Identity Tweet Herndon Dryhurst Jacob's Horse image meme "The FAFO Zone" Patronus Problems Earth is becoming sentient — Steph Ango Steve Jobs on agencyDialectic is available on all platforms.Join the ⁠telegram channel⁠Follow ⁠on Twitter⁠Follow on InstagramSubscribe on YouTube
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  • 8: Steph Ango - Tools for Amplifying Our Light
    Steph Ango aka Kepano (Website, X) is a designer, writer, entrepreneur,and toolmaker, best known as the CEO of Obsidian, a powerful and flexible writing and thinking tool. Steph's education is in biology and industrial design, but he is true multi-hyphenate creative, working across mediums including software, hardware, supply chain and packaging, words, wood, furniture, ink, color schemes, open-source systems, video, podcasts, and more. Above all, he makes tools—deeply opinionated ones—designed to reduce friction for himself and others in the act of creating. Steph joined Obsidian after initially contributing as a fan and enthusiast and impressing its co-founders, Shida Li and Erica Xu. Under his leadership, Obsidian has grown into one of the most beloved and powerful independent software tools in the world, with millions of users. As a daily user myself, I rely on Obsidian for my research and thinking for this podcast. Before Obsidian, Steph founded Lumi and Inkodye, the former of which was acquired by Narvar. Beyond design, Steph is one of my favorite writers. His concise, sub-500-word essays have shaped my thinking on design, software, learning, agency, constraints, and creativity. While we couldn’t cover all of his ideas in this conversation, we explored many of them in what became my longest conversation to date—one that is packed with wisdom. I believe these ideas will challenge you in unexpected ways and push you to be more creative, agentic, and optimistic. Transcript for episode 8. Timestamps: (1:56): Constraints and style (11:51): Aggressively planting creative seeds but being patient for them to grow (17:42): Stadium of past and future selves (22:34): Asking what can be removed and making incremental progress (28:47): Building a product and company (Obsidian) with the "constraint" of ideology and principles (38:52): Using Obsidian makes Steph better at building Obsidian (44:09): What makes for good design and seeing the world as something designed (by nature or man) (53:11): What makes a good tool? (56:20): Thinking tools and Obsidian (1:04:32): "In good hands" and caring more than anyone else (1:21:38): Engaging all five senses (1:24:46): Creating cohesion or your own cinematic universe (1:30:43): How to time travel (1:33:08): Designing for digital durability or permanence & "File over app" (1:56:46): Investment and "selfishness" in extending your light (2:05:54): Choosing problems to work on (2:09:10): "Nibble and your appetite will grow" (2:12:31): Compounding (2:19:55): "Caloric energy is precious" (2:26:21): "Earth is becoming sentient" (2:39:31): Busy being born and sharing along the way (2:42:11): Love and freedom Links Style is consistent constraint Buy wisely Stadium of selves What can we remove? File over app Obsidian Manifesto In good hands Pain is information Quality software deserves your hard‑earned cash Don't delegate understanding Nibble and your appetite will grow A little bit every day Caloric energy is precious Erewhon by Samuel Butler Earth is becoming sentient Agents of chaos Concise explanations accelerate progress Always learning, always teaching Six definitions of love Dialectic with Jackson Dahl is available on all podcast platforms.Join the ⁠telegram channel for Dialectic⁠Follow ⁠Dialectic on Twitter⁠Follow Dialectic on InstagramSubscribe to Dialectic on YouTube
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  • 7: Toby Shorin - The Shapes of Culture
    Toby Shorin (Website, Blog, X) is a researcher, writer, consultant, and cultural anthropologist for the internet era. His interests and work include culture, identity, organizational design, psychology, cryptocurrency and blockchains, brands, health and care, spirituality, and social forms and institutions. Today, Toby works on Care Culture, a community and research platform focused on mental health and spirituality. Toby also co-founded Other Internet, a research institute known for its deep cultural analysis and work with crypto organizations. Conversations with Toby and his work—especially ‘Headless Brands’ and ‘Squad Wealth’—were deeply influential to my interest in crypto and related subcultures and ideologies. Over time, I have been even more energized by his broader thinking and ability to interpret cultural change especially with regard to evolving sources of meaning, identity, and connection. This conversation is primarily about themes I’ve noticed across his work and how those have evolved toward what he is working on now. In many ways, this is the pattern of modern culture “secularizing” more sacred forms—including but not limited to practice, faith, ideology, morality, and religion—and how that happens at individual and collective levels. Episode Transcript Timestamps: (02:26): Post-Authenticity & Romantic-Era Individualism (10:08): Squad Wealth: a seed of collectivism--the collective as the atomic unit (14:40): Other Internet (18:45): Life after lifestyle, headless brands, and new forms of collective beliefs, cults, and religions (30:55):  Toby's pivot away digital to physical social forms; from technology and brands to health (38:51): The body, the will, and new kinds of individualism and collectivism (52:47): Prototyping Social Forms of Care (58:08): The theme of Toby's work: practice-- and new spiritual and religious forms (1:00:50): Secular and Sacred (1:04:35): The social body and the social spirit (1:05:56): Toby's central question (1:10:13):  Observing and Critiquing vs. Prescribing (1:13:03): Innovating on social forms like we innovate with business and technology (1:21:52): Reflecting on time spent in Crypto (1:29:23): Protocols (1:31:50): Social forms in lieu of institutions (1:34:43): Learning about yourself through writing (1:37:44): Spirituality Links: Dialectic with Jackson Dahl is available on all podcast platforms.Join the ⁠telegram channel for Dialectic⁠Follow ⁠Dialectic on Twitter⁠Follow Dialectic on InstagramSubscribe to Dialectic on YouTube
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