Lex Fridman Podcast - #163 – Eric Weinstein: Difficult Conversations, Freedom of Speech, and Physics
Episode Date: February 23, 2021Eric Weinstein is a mathematical physicist and podcaster. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Indeed: https://indeed.com/fridman to get $75 credit - Theragun: https://theragun....com/lex to get 30 day trial - Wine Access: https://wineaccess.com/lex to get 20% off first order - Blinkist: https://blinkist.com/lex and use code LEX to get 25% off premium EPISODE LINKS: Eric's Twitter: https://twitter.com/EricRWeinstein Eric's YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/ericweinsteinphd The Portal podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-portal/id1469999563 PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/LexFridmanPage - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:27) - Aliens and physics (11:12) - Breaking the frame of conversation (12:56) - Time travel across multiple dimensions (19:07) - Is the government in possession of alien spacecraft? (25:31) - Freedom of speech (36:49) - Elon Musk (38:07) - Idealism of every era (41:26) - Non-locality of free speech in the Internet age (47:03) - Glenn Beck (48:57) - Joe Rogan (53:41) - Freedom and fear (55:14) - Jeffrey Epstein (58:53) - Aaron Swartz (1:04:29) - Jeffrey Epstein and Geometric Unity (1:24:04) - Cancel culture (1:26:06) - Alex Jones (1:35:01) - Curtis Yarvin (1:39:40) - Michael Malice (1:42:00) - Intellectual Dark Web (1:48:52) - Innovation (2:02:10) - Economics (2:09:29) - Cryptocurrency (2:15:37) - Geometric Unity paper (2:32:42) - David Goggins challenge (2:34:05) - Father and son
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Eric Weinstein, his fourth time on the podcast, both sadness
and hope run through his heart and his mind, and the result is a complicated, brilliant
human being who I am fortunate to call a friend.
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As a side note, let me ask that whenever we touch difficult topics in this or other conversations
that you listen with an open mind, and forgive me or the guests for a misstep in an imperfectly thought-out statement.
To have any chance of truth, I think we have to take risks and make mistakes in conversation,
and then learn from those mistakes.
Please try not to close your mind and heart to others because of a single sentence or an
expression of an idea.
Try to assume that the people in this conversation are just people in general, are
good, but not perfect, and far from it, but always striving to add a bit more love into
the world and whatever way we know how.
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Here's my conversation with Eric Weinstein. You often talk about getting off this planet, and I think you don't often talk about extra
terrestrial life, intelligent life out there.
Do you wonder about this kind of thing, about intelligent civilizations out there?
I do, but I try to not wonder about it in a particular way.
In a certain sense, I do find that speculating about big foot and the lockness, monster,
and space aliens is kind of a recreation for when things aren't going very well.
At least it gives us some meaning and purpose in our lives.
So I worry about, for example, the simulation hypothesis is taking over
from religion. You can't quite believe enough to go to church or synagogue or the mosque
on the weekend. So then you just take up an interest in simulation theory because that's
something like what you do for your job coding. I do think that in some sense, the issue
of aliens is a really interesting one, but has been spoiled by
too much sort of recreational escapism.
The key question that I find is, let's assume that it is possible to look at it the
night sky and see all of these distant worlds, and then go visit it.
If that is possible, it's almost certainly possible through some is yet unknown or
not accepted theory of physics beyond Einstein.
And I mean, it doesn't have to be that way, but probably is.
If that theory exists, there would be a percentage of the world that have life and sort of a drake equation kind of a way that would have encountered the ability to escape soon enough after unlocking the power
of the atom at a minimum and whatever they have that is probably analogous to the cell
on that world. So assuming that life is a fairly generic thing that arises, probably not carbon-based,
probably doesn't have DNA, but that something that fits the pattern of Darwinian theory, which is
descent with variation, differential success. And everybody's constantly improving and so on, that through time there will be a trajectory
where there will be something increasingly complex
and fascinating and beautiful like us humans,
but much more.
That can also off-gas whatever entropy it creates
to give an illusion that you're defeating thermodynamics, right?
So whatever these things are,
probably has an analog of the biolipid layer
so that cells can get rid of the chaos on one
side of the barrier and keep order on the other.
Whatever these things are that create life, assuming that
there is a theory to be found that allows that civilization
to diversify, we would have to imagine that such a
civilization might have taken an interest in its concept
of the universe and have come here.
They would come here.
They would have a deep understanding of the physics of the universe sufficient to have
arrived here.
Well, there's two questions, whether they could arrive physically and whether their information
could be sent here and whether they could gain
information from us. It's possible that they would have a way of looking into our world
without actually reaching it. I don't know. But yes, if my hope, which is that we can
escape this world, can be realized, if that's feasible, then you would have to imagine that the reverse
is true and that somebody else should be here.
First of all, I want to say this, my purpose when I come on to your show and I reframe
the questions is not to challenge you.
I can sit inside all of those.
It's to give you better audio and video
because I think we've been on an incredible role.
I really love what you do.
And so I am trying to honor you by being as disagreeable
about frame breaking as possible.
I think some of your listeners don't understand
that it's actually a sign of respect as opposed
to some sort of a complex dynamic,
which is I think you can play outside of some of the frames
and that these are sort of offerings to get the conversation started.
So let me try to break that frame and give you something different.
Beautiful.
I think what's going on here is that I can prove effectively that we're not thinking about
this in very deep terms.
As soon as I say we've got to get off this planet, the number of people who assume that I'm talking about faster than light travel is very high. And faster than
light travel assumes some sort of an stiny and paradigm that then is broken by some small
adjustment. And I think that that's fascinating. It shows me that our failure to imagine
what could be being said is profound.
We don't have an idea of all of the different ways
in which we might be able to visit distant worlds.
All we think about is, okay, it must be,
it must be Einsteinian spacetimes,
and then some means of exceeding the speed limit.
And it's just, it's fascinating to me that we don't really have, we've lost the ability
to just realize we don't know the framework.
And what does it even mean?
So one of the things I think about a lot is worlds with more than one temporal dimension.
It's very hard to think about one more than one temporal dimension.
So that's a really strong mental exercise of breaking the framework in which we think, because most of the frameworks
would have a single temporal dimension, right? Well, first of all, most of the frameworks in which we think would have no temporal dimension
and would have pure, like in mathematics, the differential geometry that Riemann came up with in the 1800s.
We don't usually talk about what we would call split signature metrics or lorentine signature.
In fact, if it weren't for relativity, this would be the most obscure topic out there.
Almost all the work we do is in Euclidean
signature and then there's this one freakish case of relativity theory and
physics that uses this one time and the rest spatial dimensions. Fascinating.
So it's usually momentary and just looking at space. Yes, you know, we have
these three kinds of equations that are very important to us. We have elliptic, hyperbolic,
and parabolic. Right? And so the idea is if I'm chewing gum after eating garlic bread,
when I open my mouth and I've got chewing gum between my lips, maybe it's going to form an
elliptic object called a minimal surface.
Then when I pop that and blow through it,
you're going to hear a noise that's
going to travel to you by a wave equation, which
is going to be hyperbolic.
But then the garlic breath is going to diffuse towards you.
And you're eventually going to be very upset with me,
according to a heat equation, which will be parabolic.
So those are the three basic paradigms for most
of the work that we do. And for most of the work that we do.
And a lot of the work that we do in mathematics
is elliptic, whereas the physicists are in the hyperbolic case.
And I don't even know what to do
about more than one temporal dimension
because I think almost no one studies that.
I can't believe you just captured
much of modern physics in the example of chewing gum.
Well, I have an off-color one, which I chose not to share, but hopefully the kids at home
can imagine.
Okay, so, okay.
That is the place where we come from.
Now if we want to arrive at a possibility of breaking the frameworks with two versus zero
temporal dimensions, how do we even begin to think about?
Well, let's think about it as you and I getting together
in New York City.
So if you tell me, Eric, I want to meet you in New York City,
go to the corner of, I don't know, 34th Street and 3rd Avenue,
and you'll find a building on the Northwest corner
and go up to the 17th floor. So when? So when we have third avenue, that's one coordinate, 34th street, that's a second
coordinate and go up to the 17th. And what time is that? Oh, 12 noon. All right. Well,
now imagine that we traded the ability to get up to a particular height in a building that's
all flat land, but I mean, I give you two temporal coordinates. So meet me at 5 p.m. and 12 noon at the corner of 34th and 3rd.
That gets to be two mind-blowing.
I've got two separate watches.
And presumably that's just specifying a single point
in those two different dimensions,
but then being able to travel along those dimensions.
Let me see your right hand.
You have no watch on that.
Yeah.
Okay.
I'm very concerned, Lex, that you're going through life without a wrist watch.
That is my favorite and most valued wristwatch.
I want you to wear it.
This guy is funnier than basically any human on her.
Lex, that has been in my family for months.
It's a fit bit.
Now, what I want you to understand is Lex Friedman is now in a position to live in two
spatial and two temporal dimensions, unlike the rest of us.
I clearly am only fit for four spatial dimensions.
So I'm frozen.
Whereas you can double move. I can double move.
Which is funny because this is set in Austin time. It's 4 p.m. and this is set in Los Angeles
times. Well, that's just with an affine shift in mod 12. My point is, wouldn't that be interesting?
If there were two separate time scales and you had to coordinate both of those, but you didn't
have to worry about what floor of the building because everything was on the ground floor.
Okay?
That is the confusion that we're having.
And if you do one more show, right, then they're going to put a watch on your ankle and
you're only going to have one spatial dimension that you can move around.
But my claim is that all of these are actually sectors of my theory in case we're interested in that, which is geometric
unity, there is a 2-2 sector and a 3-1 and a 1-3 and a 0-4 and a 4-0. And all of these sectors
have some physical reality. We happen to live in a 1-3 sector. But that's the kind of
thinking that we don't do. When I say we have to get off this planet, people imagine,
oh, okay, it's just Einstein
plus some ability to break the law.
By the way, even though you did this for humor sake, I perhaps am tempted to pull a Putin
out, who-
I'm going to get whacked.
No, not quite.
But he was given a Super Bowl ring to look at and he instead of just looking at it, put
it on his finger and walked away with it.
Robert Kraft?
Robert Kraft, that's right.
So, in this same way, I will, if you don't mind, walk away with this bit and taking
all the entirety of your life story with it because there's all these steps on it.
Boy have you lost a lot of weight? And where have I been?
Exactly.
Right, that's what we're talking about.
We're talking about, you want to get into aliens.
Let's have an interesting alien conversation.
Let's stop having the typical free will conversation,
the typical alien conversation,
the typical AGI morality conversation.
It's like, we have to recognize that we're amusing ourselves
because we're not making progress.
Time to have better versions of all these conversations.
Is there some version of the alien conversation that could incorporate the breaking of frameworks?
Well, I think so.
I mean, the key question would be, we've had the Pentagon release multiple videos of strange
UFOs that undermined a lot of us.
I just think it's also really fascinating to talk about the fact
that those of us who were trained called BS
on all of this stuff just had the rug pulled out from under us
by the Pentagon choosing to do this.
And you know what the effect of that is?
You've opened the door for every stupid theory
known to man, my aunt saw a ghost.
Okay, now we're gonna have to listen to,
well, hey, the Pentagon used to deny it,
then it turned out that were UFOs, dude.
Whoever is in charge of lying to the public,
they need a cost function that incorporates
the damage and trust, because I held this line
that this was all garbage and all BS.
Now I don't know
what to think. There's a fascinating aspect to this alien discussion, the breaking of
frameworks that involves the release of videos from the Pentagon, which is almost like
another dimension that trust in itself or the nature of truth and information is a
kind of dimension along which we're traveling constantly that is is
mostly what my head to think about because I do like because if
almost feels like you need to incorporate that into your study of the nature of reality is like the constant shifting
of the notation, the tools we use to communicate that reality.
And so like, what am I supposed to think about these videos?
Is it a complete distraction?
Is it a kind of cosmic joke?
I don't know, but you know what?
I'm tired of these people.
Just completely tired of these people.
The people on the Pentagon side
or the people who are interpreting this stuff on the Pentagon side.
I'm tired of the authority's playing games with what we can know.
The fact that you and I don't,
do you have a security clearance?
A some level of it for,
because I was fond of for DARPA for a while.
I don't have a security clearance.
You know, I am going to release whatever theory I have.
And my guess is that there is zero interest
from our own government.
And so the Chinese will find out about it at the same time our government does because
Lord knows what they do in these buildings.
I watch crazy people walk in and out of the intelligence community, walk in and out of
DARPA.
And I think, wow, you're talking to that person, that's really fascinating to me.
We don't seem to have a clue as to who might have the ball.
Complete lack of transparency.
Do you think it's possible there's the government
is in possession of something deeply fundamental
to understanding of the world that they're not releasing?
So this is one of the famous distractions
that people play with the narrative,
assuming that we're true true of alien life forms,
spacecraft and possession,
that the government is a possession of alien spacecraft.
The sum that were true.
The narrative, yeah.
I don't think the government really exists at the moment.
I believe, and this is not an idea that was original to me,
there was a kind of Michael Tidalbaum
who used to be at the Sloan Foundation, and at some point I pointed out that the US government had completely contradictory
objectives when it came to the military and science. And one branch said this, one branch said that.
I said, you know, I don't understand which is true. What is the government want? He said,
you think there's a government? And I said, what do you mean? He said, what makes you think that the people in
those two offices have ever coordinated? What is it that allows each office to have
a coherent plan with respect to every other office? And that's when I first started to
understand that there are periods where the government coheres and then there are periods
where the coherence just decays. And I think that that's been going on since 1945,
that there have been a few places
where there's been increased coherence,
but in general, everything is just getting less
and less coherent.
And that what war did was focus us on the need
to have a government of people,
emission capacity, technology, commitment, ideology.
And then as soon as that was gone,
you know, different people, those who'd been through World War II had one set of beliefs, those born in the 1950s, you know, or late
40s by the time they got to Woodstock, they didn't buy any of that.
So coherence is the, is it the complete opposite of like, per, like bureaucracy being paralyzed by bureaucracy.
So coherence is efficient functional government
because when you say there's no government meaning
there's no emergent function from a collection
of individuals, it's just a bunch of individuals
stuck in their offices without any kind
of efficient communication with each other
in a single mission.
And so a government that is truly at the epitome of what a government is supposed to be
is when a bunch of people working together in a city.
What are we about?
Are we about freedom?
Are we about growth?
Are we about decency and fairness?
Are we about the absence of a national culture so that we can all just do our own thing?
I've called this thing the USA and the United States of absolutely nothing.
These are all different visions for our country.
So it's possible that there's a alien spacecraft somewhere and there's of like
20 people that know about it and then they're kind of like as you communicate further and
further into the offices that information dissipates, it gets distorted in some kind of, as you communicate further and further into the offices, that information
dissipates, it gets distorted in some kind of way, and then it's completely lost.
The power, the possibility of that information is lost.
We bought a house.
And I had this idea that I wanted to find out what all the switches did.
And I quickly found out that your house doesn't keep updating its plans.
As people do modifications, they just do the modifications
and they don't actually record why they were doing what they were doing or what things lead to.
So there are all sorts of bizarre, like there's a switch in my house that says privacy.
I don't know what privacy is. Does it turn on an electromagnetic field that
some lead shielding go over the house.
That's what we have. We have a system in which the people who've inherited
these structures have no idea why
their grandparents built them.
I'd be finding if there's a freedom of speech switch.
They could also control.
And it would be perfect matter for our parents
to do.
Well, that's different because what they figured out is
is that if they can just make sure that we don't have
any public options for communication,
then hey, every thing that we say to each other goes through a private company, private companies
can do whatever they want. And this is like one of the greatest moves that we didn't really notice.
Electronic and digital speech makes every other kind of speech irrelevant. And because there is no public option, guess what? There's always
somebody named Sundar or Jack or Mark who controls whether or not you could speak and what it appears
to be that is being said and who stuff is weighted more highly than other. It's an absolute nightmare.
And by the way, the Silicon Valley intellectual elite, Lord knows what is going on.
People are so busy making money that they are not actually upholding any of the values.
So Silicon Valley is sort of maximally against it.
It has this kind of libertarian, free, progressive sheen to it when it goes to Burning Man.
And then it quickly just imposes rules on all of the rest of us.
It's what we can say to each other if we're not part of the interrelate.
So what do you think the ideal of the freedom of speech means?
Well, this is very interesting.
I keep getting lectured on social media by people who have no idea how much power the
Supreme Court has to abstract things.
Right now, you have a concept of the letter of the law
and the spirit of the law.
And the spirit of the law would have to say
that our speech that matters is free,
at least at the level of ideas.
I don't claim that I have the right
to endanger your life with speech
or to reveal your private information.
So I really am not opining about directed speech
intended to smear you.
And that's a different
kettle of fish and maybe I have some rights to do that but I don't think that they're
infinite.
What I am saying is that the freedom of speech for ideas is essential that the court
abstracted and shove it down the throat of Google, Facebook, Twitter, Amazon, whoever
these infrastructure companies are, because it really matters which abstraction you use.
The case that I really like is search and seizure.
If I have private data that I entered in my house that is stored on a server that you
hold outside of my house, but I view the, is the abstraction that it's only the perimeter of my house that I have the right to protect?
Or does my password extend the perimeter of my house to the data on the server that is located outside of my house?
These are court, are choices for the court, and the court is supposed to pretend that they
can divine the true intent of the framers.
But all of the sort of, and I've taken the call on this, the problem of internet hyenas,
people with ready-made answers and LOLs and you're such a moron.
These folks love to remind you it's a private company to do whatever it wants.
No, the court has to figure out what the abstractions are. And
just the way, for example, the Griswald decision found that there was a penumbra because there
was too little in the constitution. Therefore, there were all sorts of things implied that
couldn't be in the document. Somebody needs to come up with the abstraction right now that says
right now that says Jack cannot do it over he wants.
It's really, so you say the courts, but it's also us, people who think about the world,
it's you.
It's the courts.
But the courts don't do this, we're toast.
But we can still think about it.
I mean, I don't feel like going down the drain.
Here's what I'm thinking about,
because it's tricky how far it should extend. I mean, that don't feel like going down the drain. Here's what I'm thinking about, because it's tricky how far it should extend.
I mean, that's an ongoing conversation.
Don't you think the interpretation of the law?
I think I'm trying to say something very simple
and it's just not gonna be popular for a while.
Tech dwarfs, previous forms of communication,
print or shouting in a public park.
And so, you know, I can go to a public park and I can shout if I get a permit.
Even there, I think, was in the late 1980s in Atlanta.
We came up with free speech zones where you can't protest at a convention, but you can
go to a park 23 miles out and they'll fence off a little area where you can have your
free speech.
No, speech is dangerous. Ideas are dangerous. We are a country about danger and risk.
And yes, I agree that targeted speech at individuals trying to reveal their private stuff and all that
kind of that is very different. So forget a lot of that stuff. But free speech for ideas is meant to be dangerous. And people will
die as a result of free speech. The idea that one life is too much is preposterous. Like
why did we send, if one life is preposterous, why do we send anyone to the beaches of
Normandy? I just don't get this. So one thing that I was clearly bothered by and maybe you could be my therapist as well.
I thought you were mine.
This is a little bit of a miscommunication on both of our parts then.
Because who is paying who for this?
I was really bothered by Amazon banning parlor from AWS.
Because my assumption was that
the infrastructure I drew the distinction between AWS
the infrastructure on which
competing platforms can be created
is different than the actual platforms
So I the standard of the ideal of freedom of speech I
in my mind, in a shallow way, perhaps, applied differently to AWS and I did to Twitter. It felt that we've created
a more dangerous world that freedoms were violated by banning, uh, parlor from AWS, which
I saw as the computing infrastructure, which enables the competition of tools, the competition of frameworks of communication.
What do you think about this?
First of all, let me give you the the internet hyena answer.
I understand, dude, just build your own Amazon.
Yeah, right.
Yes.
Well, so that's a very shallow statement, but it's also
one that has some legitimacy. We can't completely dismiss it because there's levels to this
game. Yes and no, but if you really wanted to chase that down, one of the great things about
a person-to-person conversation is opposed to like, let's have 30 of our closest friends.
Whenever we have a conversation with 30 of our closest friends, you know what happens? It's like passing light through
a prism. Every person says something interesting. And as a result, it's always muddled. Like
nothing ever resolves.
Well, one my conversational techniques you mentioned, you push back is, first childlike naivety and curiosity, but also...
I feel or simulated.
Real, I'm afraid.
That's a hundred percent real.
All right, so in this paradigm, how could you not see this coming?
I mean, I did a show with Ashley Matthews, who's the woman behind Riley Reed, and specifically
about this.
It was about the idea that if I move away from politics
and go towards sex, I know that there's always a move to use the infrastructure to shut down
sex workers. And in this case, we had Operation Chokepoint under the Obama
administration. We have a positive passion for people who want to solve problems that they
don't like. This company, they don't like that company, Payday Loans would be another
one. And so you have legal companies that are harassed by our financial system that
are, you can't, you know, as Riley Reed actually couldn't get a mail-trip account according to her if I understand her correctly.
And this idea that you charge these people higher rates because of supposed chargebacks on credit cards even if they're chargebacks are low.
Yes, we have an unofficial policy of harassment.
There's something about everybody who shows up at Davos.
They get drunk in the Swiss Alps and then they come back home and they coordinate. There's something about everybody who shows up at Davos.
They get drunk in the Swiss Alps and then they come back home and they coordinate and
they coordinate things like build back better.
We don't really understand what build back better is, but my guess is that the build back
better has to do with extremism in America.
How do we shut down the Republican Party as the source of extremism?
Now, I do think the Republican Party has the source of extremism. Now, I do think the Republican Party
has got very extreme under Trump.
And I do believe that that was responsive
to how extreme the Democratic Party
got under Clinton first and then Obama
and then Hillary.
And in all of these circumstances,
it's amazing how much we want to wield these things as
weapons.
Well our extremism is fine because we pretend that at Tifa doesn't exist and we don't
report what goes on in Portland, but your extremism, my God, that's disgusting.
This is the completely ridiculous place that we're in and by the way, our friends in part are coked up on tech money and they don't appear to hold the
courage of their convictions at a political level because it's not in keeping with shareholder
value.
You know, at some level, shareholder value is the ultimate shield with which everyone
can cloak themselves.
Well, on that point, Donald Trump was banned from Twitter, and I'm not sure it was a good
financial decision for Twitter, right?
Well, perhaps you can correct me if I'm wrong.
Are you thinking locally or are you thinking if Twitter refused to, if Twitter refused to
ban Donald Trump, what does the odds that the full force of the Indie Trust division might find them?
I don't know.
I see.
So there's a complicated thing.
Well, look, these guys are all having a discussion in very practical terms.
You can say, you can imagine the sorts of conversation.
Jack Marks, under really glad you're all here, we're all trying to sing from the same
him alone, row in the same direction. We understand free speech, we're completely committed to it, but
we have to draw along with the extremism guys, we just need, we need to make sure we're all
on the same page. Well, they use the term violence too, and they, I say dumb things to incentivize thoughtful conversation.
Well, whatever these things are, there is no trace, like how old are you, Lex? You're
in your mid 30s? Yeah, to late 40s. Mid late 20s to late 40s. Yeah. Somewhere in that.
That's the demographic.
I do think that partially what's happened is that your group has never seen functional
institutions.
These institutions have been so compromised for so long.
You've probably never seen an adult.
Sometimes I think Elon looks like an adult.
I know that he has a wildlife style, but I also see it like an adult.
What does an adult look like exactly?
Oh, somebody who weighs things, speaks carefully, thinks about the future beyond their own lifespan.
Somebody was pretty good idea of how to get things done,
isn't wildly caught up in punitive actions,
is more focused on breaking new ground than playing rent-seeking games.
I mean, I really had a positive... I was so completely chast,
when I must end up as the world's richest person. He was like, well, that's interesting back to work.
It's just like, that's what a great adult would do. That's what a grown-up would do.
And it just made, you know, weirdly, I said something about, isn't it amazing that the world's richest person
knows what a Lagrangian is?
And he made a terrible Lagrange joke about potentials.
But yeah, I mean, I do think that ultimately, Elon,
maybe one of the closest things we have to an adult,
and I can tell you that the internet hyenas will
immediately descend as to what a fraudster he is
for pumping his stock price, talking his book,
and all this stuff. Shut up. So looking at the world's serious
enriching, you're saying that the people who are running tech companies are running the
mediums on which we can exercise the ideal of free speech are not adults.
I think not. I think first of all, a lot of them are Silicon Valley utopian
businessmen, where you talk a utopian line and you use it, you've heard my take, which is that
the idealism of every era is the cover story of its greatest thefts. And I believe that in many
ways, the idealism of Silicon Valley, about connecting the world, the world of abundance, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, is really about the software eating the world as Mark
Andries and likes to say at the role of these legacy properties and by simply being a bad
tech version of something that previously existed like a newspaper, you could immediately
start to dwarf that by aggregating newspapers in their digital
versions, because digital is so much more powerful.
As a result, yes, we have lots of man-children wandering around what once was the Bay Area
and is now Austin and Miami and other places.
Maybe Singapore, that all of these people, these are friends of ours, and they're brilliant with respect
to a certain amount of stuff, but none of them can get off the drip.
It's amazing that none of them have FU money.
We've got billionaires who don't have FU money.
Okay.
I think the argument used by Jack Dorsey was that there was an incitement of violence,
and not just to act or see by everybody, there was an incitement of violence and not just to add to our city by everybody that was
banning people and then this word violence was used as
a kind of
Just like extremism and so on to
Without much reason behind it. You think it's impossible for Jack Dorsey anybody else to be as you said an adult
A grown-up and read that is pretty close to being a grown-up.
It seems like he is.
Yeah.
As you've discussed, it seems that he's been on the verge of almost being quite serious
and transparent and real.
I don't know where the Jack Dorsey that I met went.
And I worry that that must be something behind the scenes that I can't see.
From my perspective, what I think is the stress, the burden of that when people are screaming
at you.
It's over one's in monk.
He really is.
Jack is an incredibly impressive person, intellectually, morally, spiritually, at least for a couple of meetings.
I don't know him very well, but I'm very impressed by the person I met, and I don't know where that person is, and that terrifies me.
But do you think somebody could step up in that way?
No. So, does a human being have the capacity to be transparent about the reasoning behind
the banning, or do you think all banning eventually, all banning of people from mediums
of communication is eventually destructive, or it's impossible for human beings to reason
with ourselves about it.
Well, let's, let's see what the problem is.
So, my phone has been on airplane mode.
I'm going to unlock it.
I'm going to take a picture of Lex Fridman.
Now, if I can, I'm going to tweet that picture out.
Great.
But here's the weird part about it.
Yeah. That picture sitting with Lex today, this lady's
German saw the sausage is made.
Okay.
In so doing.
Yes.
I have just sent a picture of you in a tiny piece of text all over the planet that has arrived at
if statistics tell the truth just under half a million different accounts.
And then more from sharing and so on.
And we have well, and been some of those accounts are dead, we don't really know how many
places it went. Yeah. But the key issue with that tweet is that
that is a non-local phenomenon.
Yes.
So I just broadcasted to an entire planet.
Somebody in Uganda is reading that at the same time
as somebody in Uruguay.
There is no known solution to have so many people with the ability to communicate non-locally
because locality was part of the implicit nature of speech inside of the constitution.
Friction, locality, there were all sorts of other aspects to speech. So if you think about speech as a bundle, I like this. Then it got
unbundled. And some of those aspects that we were naturally counting on to retard the impact
of speech aren't present. And we don't have the courage to say, I wonder if the First
Amendment really applies in the modern era
in the same way or we have to work through an abstraction. Either we probably have to amend
the Constitution or we have to abstract it properly. And that issue is not something we're facing
up to. I watch us constantly look backwards. We don't seem to try to come up with new ideas and new theories nobody really
Imagines that we're going to be able to wisely amend the Constitution anymore in the inside of the United States many people abroad
We'll say why are these guys talking about the US? It's a US-centric program. Well, that's because nobody knows where this program lives
The fact by the way that you and I happen to be in a physical place together
is also bizarre. It could be anywhere. It doesn't really matter that it happens to be here.
So the difference between logical and between physical, local, non-local, frictional,
non-friictional is the same thing with firearms. Nobody imagined that the gaddling gun was going to be present when you had to reload a
musket. And that's fascinating to think about. You're exactly right that the
nature of this particular freedom that seems so foundational to this
nation to what made this nation great and perhaps much of the world that is
great, made a great is
changing completely.
Can we try to reason through how the ideal freedom of speech is to be changed?
I mean, I guess I'm struggling.
It feels really wrong, perhaps because I wasn't paying attention to it.
It feels really wrong to ban Donald Trump from Twitter to ban not just the president. That's really wrong
to me, but this particular human for being divisive. But then when there is an incitement of
violence that isn't overused claim, but perhaps there was actual brewing of local violence happening. So one of the things
I know was happening on parlor is people were scheduling meetings together in physical
space. So you're now going going back from this dynamic social, large scale people from Agonda, people from all over
the world being able to communicate, you're now mapping that into now back meeting in
the physical space that is similar to what the founding of the situation was.
But if the violence was pretty digital, if ransomware suddenly was unleashed, the key
issue is the extractions.
So what was freedom of speech as a bundle?
And now it's...
And then how do we abstract the bundle into the digital era?
Do you think we just need to raise the question and talk about it? Do you have ideas?
Well, I'm sure I have ideas, but the key point is that I'm not even welcome in mainstream media.
I've never seen you on mainstream media.
Do you do mainstream media?
So we exist in part of an alternate universe
because the mainstream media is trying to have
a coherent story, which I've called the Gated Institutional
narrative.
And the institutions pretend that they plug their fingers
in their ears and pretend that nothing exists outside
of MSNBC talking to CNN about what
was in the New York Times as covered by the Washington Post.
And so that's effectively like a professional wrestling promotion where they, you know,
the Undertaker faces off against Hulk Hogan and Routy-Routy Piper.
Okay, well, that's very different than MMA.
You've recently been on a Glenn Beck's program.
And there was this kind of one of the things you've talked about is being able to have this
conversation.
I don't know if you would put it as a type of conversation that was happening outside
the mainstream media, but a conversation that reaches across different world views,
having a nuanced or just like the respectful conversation
that's grounded and mutual.
But we can't have the reality
because the main model is the center, both left and right,
is in the process of stealing all the wealth that we built up.
And they've organized the extremes
into two larping teams that I've called
Magistan and Wokistan.
And then you have everybody who isn't part of that complex
all seven of us.
The number of us who are able to earn a living
looking at all of these mad people playing this game.
You know, there's a phrase inside finance when the investment banks are trying to look at price action.
Somebody says this doesn't make any sense. And somebody will say it's just the local stealing from each other.
And that's really what we have. We've got the leaders of Magistan and Wokustan,
you know, championing these two teams is sponsored by the center because it's a distraction
while they steal all the silver
and cut the paintings out of the frames.
That's what you and I are looking at.
So when you ask me, like, do you have any ideas
about the abstraction for free speech?
I've never met Mark Zuckerberg.
I've never met Sundar Pee Chai.
I never met Larry Page.
I was once in a room with Sergey Brin. I've never spoken to Elon Musk.
I hang out with Peter Teal, but we have a very deep relationship, but I don't really
speak to that many other people at this level. In fact, it's almost as if we've destroyed
every sandbox in which we could play together. There's no place that we actually talk, except
long-form podcasting. And by the way, they've found you see what's going on with like Alex
Stamos and the Hoover Institution. We've, you know that there's a loophole left long form podcasting allows people to speak at levels above daytime
See, yeah, it's like well, why do you think they're not watching daytime CNN?
But you know that's that's just silly journalism. They currently have no power to
Displace podcast. That's why it's so powerfulSS feed. I mean, that's why the big challenge
with Joe Rogan and Spotify is like, there's this dance, that's fast, A to C is Joe Rogan is not part of the system.
And then he's also uncancellable. And there's this tension that's happened. Well, how it's turned, how it's turned became much less relevant.
That's happy. Well, it's fascinating.
How it's turned became much less relevant.
So if they can't control Joe by bringing him in house, the key question is, is he going
to continue like, you know, this Joe says this thing about FU money.
Yeah.
Joe's one of the only people with FU money who's actually said FU.
Yeah.
Yeah. Yeah. I don't understand this. I don't have FU money who's actually said FU. Yeah.
I don't understand this.
I don't have FU money.
What exactly is, can we break apart FU money?
Because I always thought I'm unfortunate enough to have, always have FU money in the
sense that my standards were so low that a basic salary in the United States.
This is the stoic point, which is,
if you can live on rice and beans,
you're uncancellable because you're always rich
relative to your needs.
Isn't that FU fundamental FU money?
Why do you say that tech billionaires
don't have FU money?
When you need to hire private security
to protect your family,
how do you protect your two children?
I don't have those yet.
Bingo. My point is that FU money insulates everything that you care about. It's not just
about you. So you're saying as the level of responsibility grows, the amount of money
required for FU. We have a war going on. The war is on academic freedom. Academic freedom
used to be present in the system. As eight in terms of the idea, we trust our elite. Now we have
an idea. You want to be the elite, you know, you want to lower it above us. That's like the first
of all, there's like a populist anti-oletus thing. Then there's the idea that we're going to defer
tenure for forever. Then we're going to defer tenure for forever.
Then we're going to tell people stay in your lane, your tenure is only good for your own
particular tiny micro subject.
Then we're going to also control your grants and we'll be able to load up your teaching
load if we don't like who you are.
We'll make your life absolutely impossible.
We lost academic freedom.
And we ushered in peer review, which was a disaster.
Then we lost funding so that people were confident
that they would have the ability to do research,
no matter what they said.
As a result, what you find is as a world in which there's
no ability to get people to say,
no, I'm not gonna sign your diversity
and inclusion forced loyalty oath.
I won't sign any loyalty oath.
Get the hell out of my office.
You.
F you and you're connecting money to that, but.
Well, my point is that academic freedom is,
the whole idea behind it was that you will have
the freedom of a billionaire on a much smaller seller, right?
Okay
We've lost that. Yeah, the only reason in part that I wanted to go into
academic
Academic as a profession as opposed to wanting to do physical or mathematical research
The great prize was freedom.
And Ralph Garmory of the Sloan Foundation, previously
by B&M Research, pointed it out.
He says, if you lose freedom, you lose the only thing
we had to offer top minds.
Top minds value their intellectual freedom
and their physical and economic security
at a different level than other human beings.
And so people say, you know, I understand, dude, you have the ability to do X, Y, and Z. What's
the problem? It's like, well, I value my ability to raise the middle finger as an American,
practically above everything else. I want to talk to you about freedom here in the context of something you've mentioned,
which one way to take away freedom is to put a human being into a cage to create constraints.
The other one that worries me is something that scaring you into not doing, not expressing the full
spectrum of opportunities you can as freedom. So like when you band Donald Trump, when you
band parlor, you give a little doubt in the minds of millions, like me, a person
who is a tech person who is an entrepreneur, there's a little, that's what I'm afraid
of when I look in the mirror.
Is there not a little doubt in there that limits the amount of options that we'll try?
How certain are you that the COVID virus didn't come from the Wuhan lab
and is by a safety level four? We both know that we're both supposed to robotically say
the idea that the COVID virus came from a lab as a discredited conspiracy theory. There is no
evidence that suggests that this is true. The World Health Organization and the CDC have both
upon this to say otherwise would be incredibly
responsible.
And the threat of that is the thing that ultimately limits
the freedoms we feel.
I should be tweeting about Jeff Epstein all the time.
And you're afraid.
It's also boring.
I said it in the public many times.
Why is it we don't ask where the records are from Valarthas?
Where are the financial records?
Where are the SEC filings?
Where are the questions on the record
to the intelligence agencies?
Was he known to be part of the intelligence community?
So we're not interested in asking questions.
Like am I gonna die as a result of asking the question,
was Jeff Epstein part of the intelligence community
of any nation?
Is there a reason we're not asking about the financial records
of the supposed hedge fund that he didn't run?
It's just like the Wuhan lab.
OK, how do we get to the core of the Jeff Epstein,
the truth behind Jeff Epstein in a sense?
I mean, there's there's some things that are just like useless conspiracy theories around it even if they're true
There's some things that get I hate to say it. You're not gonna like it look at the
1971 media pencil venue break in of the citizens committee to investigate the FBI
those kids and by the way, they weren't all kids
Did what had to be done. They broke in, they broke the law. It was an incredible act of civil disobedience. And God blessed
Judy Fine Gold for taking to her, she was going to take to her grave, the she had been
part of this, like the coolest thing of all time, they didn't say anything for forever.
So civil disobedience, I mean, you have to, we are founded on civil disobedience. Civil disobedience is incredibly, you screw it up and you're just a
vandal, you screw it up, you're a hooligan.
Yeah.
Those, those cats were so disciplined.
It's an art form.
And it was an art form and they risked everything.
They were willing to pay with their freedom.
Those are the sorts of people who earned the right
by putting themselves at risk.
I would not do this.
I am not volunteering to break into anything.
I think it was William Devadon, who was a student of Murray
Gellmont and a physics professor at Havrford, who corralled these people and led
this effort. And right now, what we need is somebody to blow the lid off of
what is controlling everything. We have... I'm happy to hear that it's a system of incentive structures, that
it's a system of selective pressures. I'm happy to find out that it's emergent. I'm happy
to find that it's partially directed by our own intelligence community. I'm happy to
hear that, in fact, we've been penetrated by North Korea, Iran, China, and Russia. But
I need to know why people aren't like the fire bombing of the courthouse
in Portland, Oregon has no explanation.
And somehow this is normal.
This is not normal to any human being.
We have video that people don't believe.
And you know, I come back to the Shaggy defense of it wasn't me.
You know, it's like, um, you remember that song? Shaggy. Yeah. What wasn't me?
Cut you, uh, bang and shower on the collar. Yeah, exactly. It wasn't me. It wasn't me. He says,
his friend says, well, your strategy makes no sense at all. This is what MSFBC is doing.
You dropped him from the graphic.
It wasn't me.
It wasn't me.
You came up with another gang.
It wasn't me.
I will never see MSNBC the same again.
So you've spoken about him before.
I think it'd be nice to maybe honor him to break it apart a little bit
with Aaron Schwartz.
Why was he a special human being in this
ill-covo we're talking about now civil disobedience? How do we honor him now moving forward as human beings who are willing to take
risks in this world? Well, I don't know. I mean, are you inspired by our shorts? I am. How do you
feel about J store? Let's talk about JStore first. So let's say
what JStore is all about. We the taxpayer pay for research. And then the people who do the research
do all the work for a bunch of companies who then charge us $30 an article to read what it is that we already paid for.
And if we don't cite these articles, we're told that we're in violation.
Okay.
I almost never call for civil disobedience because I don't really want to do it.
But fuck, J-Store, fuck Elsevier, fuck Springer.
Who the fuck are these people? Yeah. Get the smart people
need to take the greedy people behind the wood shed and explain to them what science is.
I have a very old fashioned idea that's so out of favor that I will immediately be seen as
knuckle dragon. Yeah. I believe in the great woman theory of history and the great man theory of history.
Emmy Nerdars fantastic.
That's an example.
And I believe in editors over peer reviewers.
And I believe that wrong things should be allowed into the literature.
And I believe that the gatekeeping should go toward zero because the costs associated with distribution are
very, very slight. I believe that we should be looking at the perverse incentives
of sending your paper blindly into your competitors clutches, particularly if
you're a young person being reviewed by an older person. Are you familiar with the
Dhuottasignor? Are you familiar with the legend of the Magnaia? No. The Magnaia is the Miller's
daughter and the largest food fight in the entire universe, I believe, is held, I think in Italy,
is held, I think in Italy, called the Battle of the Oranges, and it celebrates the Miller's daughter who had fallen in love with her beloved.
And when it came time for them to marry, the Virginal Magnaia was in fact told that the
Lord of the land had the right to have the first night with the bride. Well the
Magnaya had a different idea. So she seemed to consent to this perhaps mythical
right also called the Prima note de the first night. And by legend she
concealed a dagger underneath her robes. And when it came time for the hated lord of the
manor to extract this right, she pulled the knife out and killed him. And I
think it also echoes a little bit of particularly wonderful scene from game of
thrones. But that inspired both men and women. And the Magnaia is the legendary
hero. Right now, what we need to do is we need
to resist the premonote, the right of first look. Right? F you. You don't have the right of
first look. I don't want to send something blindly to my competitors. I don't want to
subject myself to you naming what work I've done. Why are you in my story?
That's my question.
Get out of my story.
If I do work, and then you have an idea,
oh, well, it's the Matthew principle,
to him who has much more will be given.
I've gone to the National Academy of Sciences
and talked about these things, and it's funny.
I've been laughed at by the older people who think,
well, Eric, you know, science proceeds funeral funeral by funeral, that's Plonk,
you know, the Matthew principal,
you know, the Matilda principal,
the things done by women are attributed to men,
that these are not new.
And like, and you guys just live like this?
Yeah.
So the Revolutionary Act now is to resist
all of these things that we need,
these things that are not new.
So you asked me about Aaron Schwartz.
Aaron Schwartz was the magnaya.
One of the things you've done very beautifully is to communicate love.
And I think about, you know, some of our conversations, you got me to talk
a little bit about my own experiences and, uh, 02138 and 39.
Um,
we are the product of our trauma.
And what people don't understand is that very often when you see people taking countermeasures
against what appear to be imaginary forces, they're really actually replaying things that
really happen to them.
And having been through this system and watching all of the ways in which it completely rewrites
the lives of the people who I am counting on to cure our diseases, build our new industries,
keep us safe from our foes, the amount of pressure the system is putting on the most hopeful minds
is unimaginable. And so my goal is to empower somebody like an Aaron Schwartz in memory.
And to talk about a Jeffrey Epstein situation, do you know that the first person outside
of me to get a look at geometric unity was Jeffrey Epstein?
How did he know I was working on this?
I don't know.
So your ideas that formed gym
community was something that his eyes had seen. I was pushed to talk to Jeffrey
Epstein as one of the only people who could help me. No, no, listen to this. How
does this? Yeah, how does this connect? Okay, well, first of all, my old synagogue, my old shul, was the conservative minion at Harvard Hillel.
And I believe it's called Rysovsky Hall, after Henry Rysovsky in the economics department,
who was a Japan scholar, if I'm correct.
And they became provost or dean of Harvard.
I believe that that was built with Jeffrey Epstein's money.
And I wondered, in part, whether the Jewish students at Harvard
all sort of passed through a bottleneck of Harvard Hilla.
So that was something I found very curious,
but I don't know much about it.
I also found that Jeffrey Epstein hanging around scientists.
I don't think that either you or Joe exactly, I mean, got me correct in your last interchange.
For the record, for people who didn't have
and listened to Joe Rogan program,
Joe was claiming the air-quise sign
was the only person who has gotten laid.
Paid.
Oh, paid.
And you said you also got paid as a young man, right?
I believe the word was laid, but allegedly my hearing
isn't so good at age 55. All right, leaving that aside. Yes. What was Jeffrey Epstein doing
hanging around all of these scientists? I don't think that was the same program that was about
compromising political leaders and business people and entertainment figures. I think these are two different programs that were being run through one individual.
And Joe seemed to think that I didn't think he was smooth. I thought he was glib.
I think what Joe was really trying to get out of is that I found his
mysticism, merititious. He had an ability to deflect every conversation that might go towards revealing
that he didn't know what he was talking about. Every time you started to get close to something
where the rubber hit the road, the rubber wouldn't hit the road.
And yet, can you help me, on tangles, the fact that you thought deeply about the physics of the nature of our universe. And Jeffrey
Epstein was interested. How did he know? I wasn't really talking about this stuff until,
even my close friends didn't really know what I was up to. And yet you're saying he
did not have sufficient brilliance to understand when the rubber hit
the road.
So why did he have sufficient interest in care?
Tell you what I thought.
I have been waiting to find out does my government even know I exist?
Do you have any answer to that question?
I have a couple times the government has reached out to me.
In general, there is zero interest in me, like less than zero interest.
I find that fascinating.
As far as you know, right?
I mean, well, that's what I'm trying to say.
The question of not being able to see through a half-silvered mirror,
you don't know what's going on behind the half-silvered mirror.
To you, it's all you see is your reflection.
But your intuition still holds,
like this is where I've mentioned that I,
this is where I'll say naive dumb things,
but I still hold on to this intuition that,
Jeff, not, I'm not confident in this,
but I am leaned towards that direction,
that Jeffery Epstein is the source of evil,
not something that's underlying him.
You have a bias.
It's different than mine.
Arbazion priors are tutored by different life experiences.
Yeah.
If I was mostly concerned, like Sam Harris was concerned,
that people fill their heads with nonsense,
I would have a very strong sense that people need order
in the world that they take mysterious situations. They build entire castles in the air and then
they go move in if they really get crazy. The old saying is that neurotics build castles
in the air and psychotics move in. Coming from a progressive family, we had a different
experience. It's really weird when the government is actually out to get you, when they actually send a spy,
when they actually engage in disinformation campaigns, when they smear you.
And if you've ever had that brought to bear on your family, you have a Howard Zinn
sort of understanding of the country, which is different than having a wow to people believe
crazy stuff because they watch
too much TV.
And both of these things have some merit to them, but it's a question of regulated expression.
When do you want to express more Sam Harris and when do you want to express more Howard
Zin?
And you can express both, correct?
The one human being can express both?
Sure, but there's a trade-off between them.
In other words, most of most people, like the Michael Schirmers
of the world are going to tilt very strongly
to extraordinary claims, require extraordinary evidence.
You're going to have that kind of energy.
And then somebody else is going to say,
how many times do I have to get hit on,
how many times do I have to hammer my own thumb
before I realize that there's a problem?
So my feeling about this is, yes, people see patterns
in clouds, they see faces in scripture and all sorts of things.
And it's just random cloud pattern.
And it's also the case that there's tremendous pressure not to see conspiracies when conspiracies
are relatively more common than the people who shout conspiracy theory will claim.
So both of these things are true.
And you have to ask, when do you express your inner zen and when you're in a Harris?
And those are different.
I want to find the most of the difference in you and I biases aside is you've actually
met Jeffy Epstein and I'm listening to like reverberations years later of stories and
narratives throughout the story.
Luckily only met him once and I think I had one or perhaps two phone conversations
with him other than the one meeting. You can learn a lot in just a few words, right, from a human being.
Well, that's true. But I think that the bigger issue was I saw something that I don't hear much
remarked upon, which is Jeffrey Epstein is all there that there is. In other words, there's the National Science Foundation,
National Institute of Health, Howard Hughes.
There's all this stuff
that kind of has the same feel to it,
a little bit of variation and difference,
Department of Energy.
If you fall outside of that, there's just Jeffrey Epstein.
That's what you're told.
That's not quite true.
There's Cavali, maybe Jim Simons is now in the game.
Peter Teal has done some stuff.
You had Yuri Milner and Mark Zuckerberg try.
So there is other money running around, Templeton.
But very strongly, there was a belief
that if you're doing something really innovative
and the system can't fund it because it's,
we become pushies, Jeffrey Epstein's your guy.
And that's because it's fun all that you're supposed to go through.
That's right. And the idea is that you get called to the Great Man's house and, you know,
the sort of a lubricious version of Ralph Lauren, you know, takes you in and asks you bizarre questions and maybe he has an
island, maybe he has a plane. And, you know, when you're starved, you know, somebody showing you a
feast or when you're dehydrated in a death's door and somebody says, oh, you know, I have a well.
You know, I have a well. You know, that's what it is.
And so the thought is, wow, can somebody get some effing money into the science system
so that we don't have super creeps trying to learn all of our secrets ahead of time?
WTF, what is your problem with transparency and taxpayer dollars?
Just all of you, you wouldn't have a country.
You'd be speaking German.
So essentially, you believe that human beings would not be able to,
in the, when the money is lacking in the system, like unreasoned,
reduce public goods.
You and I are meant to produce public goods.
Now, I sell athletic greens and I sell Therogen and I sell Unagi scooters
and chili pad.
Or can I be honest. I love these products, but I
Didn't get into this game for the purpose of selling
I'm trying to figure out how do you have an FU lifestyle
But you know something Lex. I don't know why you built this channel. It's kind of a mystery. Yeah, I don't know why. I'll tell you why I built my channel.
It's going to be a lot harder to roll me this time in an alley.
Yeah, I got rolled multiple times and my point is,
I didn't want to become a celebrity. I didn't want to become well known.
But it's a lot harder to roll somebody who's getting, you know, I think I'm, I don't know if this is mistaken,
but I think I am the math PhD with the largest number of followers on Twitter. And there was
nothing you could do before. I mean, again, to put a little responsibility on you, you've created
something really special for the distribution of your own ideas.
But because it's not necessarily currently scalable, you also, perhaps you and I have their
responsibility of giving other people also a chance to spread their ideas.
I mean, Joe Rogan did this very effectively for a bunch of people that...
That's why they're angry at him because he's a gatekeeper and he let all sorts of people through that gate
From Roger from Roger Penrose to Alex Jones to
Jordan Peterson to I mean even well first of all to you to Abby Martin to Abby Martin to Barry Weiss. Yeah
That's the problem
Well, but you you have not successfully built up a thing that allows that to carry that thing.
Oh, no, no, no.
We are all vulnerable to reputational attack because what happens, you see, the problem
like says is that you are now an institution at some level.
You walk around with all this equipment in a duffle bag.
The last suit you'll ever need.
And you have the reach of something like CNN to people who matter.
Okay. So now the question is, how do we control something that doesn't have a board,
doesn't have shareholders, doesn't have to make SEC filings, FCC, so the best answer they have is, well, we just have to destroy
reputations. All it takes is for us to take something that gets said or done or
alleged. And I think it's incredibly important, one of the things people don't
understand is that I'm going to fight general reputational
attacks, not because some people don't deserve to have their reputations dragged through
the mud, but because it's too powerful of a tool to hand it to CNN, MSNBC, Princeton,
Harvard, the State Department.
Yes.
But as some of it is also...
It's in Oregon. the State Department. Yes, but as some of it is also James Morgan, Muhammad Ali style, being good enough at doing
everything you need to do without giving enough meat for the
reputational attacks, not being afraid, but not giving enough meat.
I don't see why the people who have good ideas
have to lead lives that are that clean.
If you can do it.
You can be messy.
You should be able to be messy.
Otherwise, we're suppressing too many people.
Look too many to billion minds.
Can you believe Elon Musk smoked a blunt?
I still people tell me this.
Okay, I have discussions about Elon and people,
the Avilob, the Harvard scientist,
who's talking about Amur Moa,
that it might be Eileen Technology.
He told me, this outside the box thinker,
when speaking to me about Elon said,
the, called him the guy who smoked,
he smokes weed.
The blunt in a dismissive way.
Like this guy is crazy because he smokes some weed.
I was looking at him.
I was like, why?
Wow.
Wow.
I think you should be able to have
consensual drug-filled orgies, fuck perfect lives. Yeah, you should be a lot of you messy. Yeah, right. I take back my state I'm just saying
Respectability is the unique prison where all of the gates are open and the inmates beg to stay inside
It's time to end their prison of respectability
because it's too effective of a means
of sidelineing and silencing people,
including it is better that we have bad people
in our system than this idea of no platforming people
who are beyond the pale because it's such a simple technique. So, what's the heroic action here on the...
Well, for example, having Ashley Matthews on my program.
By the way, she was absolutely delightful as a guest.
She was... she is polite in the extreme, far more polite than I am.
And I had her right after Roger Penrose as a guest
because I wanted to highlight this program
can go anywhere.
We can talk to anyone.
What about social media?
You've started highlighting people being banned
on social media.
How do we fight this?
Like if you get banned from social media,
so you're saying nobody will stand up to me.
Let's just figure out what your incentive structure is
before.
Assume that they're,
assume that I get banned on social media because somebody wants to make sure that my message doesn't
interfere with the dominant narrative.
What will happen, by the way, I'm very glad to be able to explain this on your show because
that video will presumably be archived and they can't easily make you take it down.
Okay, so what's gonna happen is,
is that there'll be a whole bunch of very low quality
bot-like accounts that dog you every time you talk about.
Dude, it's getting old, getting born, we already heard you.
Dude, that was like, let it go.
Not a good look.
Not a good look is one of my favorites.
But what about the high profile ones? Well, then then you'll get a few high profile ones and some
of the high profile ones command armies. Right. Like at some point I had 10,000 people using
exactly the same templated tweet tweeting at me. It was just actually, it got to the point where
it was funny because everybody
said, did you, did you hear that hipster coffee shop? I was like, why are you all suddenly
talking about hipster coffee? It's hilarious. Those things will cause you to think better
of it. You'll start to see your follower can't go down because it's easy to give you a
bunch of bot-like follows and then just pull them. So I think that's pretty well known how,
and then maybe your account will be suspended
and it can't be revoked and, you know, et cetera, et cetera.
And then three days later, you'll be told it was an error.
So let me push back.
I just don't see not defending you.
Like, okay, so what are the things you would do
that given that I can actually talk to you offline,
that would make me not defend you.
Well, it's first of all.
I can't, I mean,
I can imagine some,
but all of us have things.
If somebody says, do you hear what your boy Lex said about you?
What did Lex say about me?
Oh, he said you were flawed, dude.
Oh, shit. You know, they so distressed because none of us want to stand behind flawed people.
That's why you have everybody rushing to say, I need a condemn or condone.
I know, I don't condemn.
You know, why, what is that?
We're all trying to say for the record, I said that Eric is smarter than me in a brilliant
human being, but flawed like all humans are.
My point is, I've now come up with a new policy, which is, I don't care what my friends have
done.
I am not disavowing my friends, not because they didn't do the wrong thing.
Maybe they did do the wrong thing.
I don't know.
What's the value of friendship if that's not that?
Like, for example, we've had the situation with Brian Callan. Brian Callan was featured recently
in Los Angeles Times. I know nothing about the allegations. I can't. I didn't even know Brian
at the time, right? I've known him for roughly the time I've been in Los Angeles, maybe a year and a
half during that period of time, never seen anything wrong.
Now I'm in a situation, well, what do you think you did?
Do you think you didn't?
It's like, you know what?
I don't know.
But I do know this.
Everyone's entitled to have friends because we can't afford isolated people.
And if your friends do the wrong thing, they're still your friends.
And if they do terrible, terrible things, you bring out of them privately. And
it's not my responsibility to disavow in public. You know, we've had this situation that I don't
like where, you know, particular people that I've been close to. I'm put under tremendous
pressure to disavow them. What do you think now about your buddy? I like Dave Rubin, all that
kind of stuff. Here's the thing. My friends are my
friends. I don't disavow my friends. We all need to make a statement that we will not be brought
under pressure to disavow our friends, our family members because mass murders are dangerous the more isolated they become.
It is not a good idea to constantly push to isolate people.
Yes.
And it's dangerous.
And it sends a signal to everybody else to fit in, to be more...
Right.
...synical about the healing.
So my experience with you...
If I find out you've been selling heroin to elementary school students, you're still
my friend. and I will
not be disavowing you.
And if I have a problem with you selling heroin to elementary school students during school
hours, I will bring it up with you privately, because we don't need to hear my voice added
to that condemnation.
Are there things that you could do that would caused me to say actually F this guy?
Yeah above and beyond that, but simply doing the wrong thing. I think we've gone down a terrible path.
I think isolated people are about the most dangerous thing we could have in a heavily armed society.
So I deeply agree with you on Brian Callan and on all these people that quote unquote got canceled.
And I'm not saying that they I don't know the truth value because we can't.
And even if I did know the truth value, I'm not setting up an incentive structure for
the personal destruction as a means of letting institutions combat the fact that individuals
are the last thing that can say, none of you guys make any sense.
I don't treat these things like,
you know, I had a conversation where Kevin Spacey
was at the dinner table when I came down from a hotel room
and I had a very long conversation with Kevin Spacey.
I will not detail because I don't do that
as to what we discussed,
but we talked very specifically about him being canceled.
And I don't think that the world has heard that story in part because there is a very strong sense that he has to be outgrouped.
And as a result, do we want to disavow the space program because it touched Werner von Braun?
Do we want to disavow quantum mechanics because Pascal Jordan and Werner Heisenberg passed through it,
is Aaron Fess theorem false because he murdered his child?
I mean, at what point do we recognize
that we are the problem?
Humans are humans.
And there is no perfect group of people,
even all of the most oppressed people,
the supposed victims of the world,
who we now have fetishized into thinking that they're all oracles because their lived experience
informs us and their pain is more salient than everyone else's pain. Those people are
necessarily great people. You know, it's like none of us. We can't do this in this fashion.
So when we sit down to have a conversation across the table
from somebody, you should be willing to, like you should not have NPR in your mind, you
should be willing to take the full risk and to see the good in the person without with
limited information and to do your best to understand that person. Everybody is entitled
to a hypocrisy budget. I don't believe
this is of institutions. Everybody is entitled to a certain amount of screwing up in life.
You're entitled to a mendacity budget. You're entitled to an aggression budget. The idea
of getting rid of everybody is, you know, people haven't even blown through their budgets and we're already.
Yeah.
I think about, for example, one person, I'd be curious to get your thoughts about Alex Jones.
Let's not talk about Alex Jones for a second.
Let's talk about the national inquire.
Is everything the national inquire says false?
No.
Okay.
Do you remember the John Edwards story?
Uh, did she run his wife?
Sorry.
I get a child from an extramarital affair.
Yes.
I believe that the national inquirer broke the story.
And then what does the New York Times do?
The New York Times, I think, is allowed to report that the not-guirer is making a claim.
That way they don't have to substantiate the story.
So why is the New York Times talking to Mike Cernovich, or using the National
Choir as a source? Are they using Alex Jones as a source?
Who? Here's the big problem that we're having.
Why are certain people entitled to talk to everybody, and other people are entitled to talk to no one?
I don't really understand this. This is an indulgence system. This is how the Catholic Church used to do things.
It's hard to fight the system because the reason you don't talk to Alex Jones is because the platforms on which you do the communication will
will de-platform a movie.
But I'm not platformed. I used to I used to do NPR and I used to do the news hour and I used to provide stories to Washington
Post-New York Times.
That has gone away.
They've circled the wagons closer and closer and more of us are unacceptable.
Right now I have no question that they're going through anybody who has a platform trying
to say, okay, what do we have against that person in case we need to shut that down?
We have to make a different decision, Lex, and the different decision is that it doesn't matter how many times
Joe said the N word. It doesn't matter that somebody else, you know,
like with mathematical theorems. If the worst person in the world proves a mathematical
theorem like the unibomber, we can't undo the theorem.
You know, and I point out Charles Manson's song, Look at Your Game Girl is an amazing
song.
It's a really good song.
I don't think it's one of the greatest songs ever, but it happens that he wasn't in
no talent.
And, you know, I don't know how Hitler was as an artist.
Fiction not bad.
Okay, we've gotta get past this.
We've gotta get past this idea that we're gonna purge
ourselves of our badness and we're just gonna,
this is like a, I like it to teenage girls in cutting.
We're just, all we're doing is destroying ourselves
in search of perfection. And the answer is no, we're not perfect. We're flawed, all we're doing is destroying ourselves in search of perfection.
And the answer is no, we're not perfect.
We're flawed, we're screwed up.
And we've always been this way.
And we're not going to silence everyone who you can point a laser beam at and say, well,
that person, look at how bad that person is.
If we do that, kiss the whole thing goodbye.
We might as well just, let's learn Chinese. But there is an art to
having those messy conversations with Alex or anybody else. Okay, let's talk about Alex.
There's particular stuff that Alex does that's absolutely nauseating. And there's other
stuff that he's doing that's funny. The methodology of the way he carries it. And sometimes
he's talking about the truth. And sometimes he's talking about a conspiracy. His variance is incredibly high. The right way to approach Alex Jones or James
O'Keefe or the National Enquirer, anything you don't like is to say, great, go long short.
Or something. Well, if you invest in a mutual fund, all the stocks in the mutual fund are held
long. But if you invest in a hedge fund, you do something called relative value trade.
It's like, well, you long tech or short tech.
Well, actually, I'm long Microsoft and I'm short Google.
Why is that? Oh, because I believe Google got way too much attention
and that Microsoft has been unfairly maligned.
And so this is really a play on legacy tech over more modern tech.
Okay.
Which part of Alex Jones are you long and which part are you short?
One of the things that should be requirement for being a reporter is like, what did Donald
Trump do that was good?
Right.
Nothing.
Okay.
Then you're not a reporter.
What did Hitler do that was good?
The Rosenstrasse protest.
Non-Jewish women campaigned for their Jewish men to be returned home to them
from certain death almost in death camps. It should have been that there were no death camps. It should have been that every what he was returned home
But you know what the fact that the women of the Rosenstrasse brought it. I mean, sorry
I get very emotional about you know some of the baddest ass chicks in the world
God their husbands returned to them
Cole a code and
not
I'm not celebrating Hitler Hitler's the worst of the worst. But God damn it, you know, this idea that we can just say everything that person does is a lie, everything that person does is evil.
This reflects a simplicity of mind that humanity cannot afford. Is Google evil because it will sell you mine comp?
Is Amazon evil because it will sell you mine comp? If you find out that mine comp rests on
somebody's bookshelves, do you have any idea what it means? If you find out that a scholar
uses the N word, should that person lose their job? Come on. grow the hell up. I guess our responsibility to lead by example in that, because
you have to acknowledge that the fact like the current public is.
Have somebody on your podcast who you're worried about. But do it in a principled fashion.
I mean, in other words, I'm not here to whitewash everything. On
the other hand, if somebody makes, you know, some allegations, I don't know that I'm obligated
to treat every set of allegations as if, no, how do you defend yourself against the
out? No, allegations are so cheap to make at this moment.
Well, my, sort of my standard, I don't know, maybe you could speak to it,
is I don't care, like in a case of Alex Jones, for example,
I don't, I'm willing to have a conversation
with Alex Jones and people like him
if I know he's not going to try to manipulate me.
So, he is going to try to manipulate you.
I can't, then we're not going to be two humans.
Okay, but Lex, I want you to think well of me.
I put on a jacket. I don't usually wear a jacket. Okay. Um, thank you. All right. I'm trying to
manipulate you. There's an entire field. No, there's an entire field that says that speech
may be best thought of as an attempt to manipulate each other. This is too simplistic. Everything that we keep talking through.
Yes.
You know better than this.
No, I disagree.
I think there is ways,
there's, of course, it's a great area,
but there is a threshold where your intent
with which you come to a meeting,
to an interaction,
is one that is not one that's grounded in like a
respect for a common humanity like a love for each other as deeply messy. If
somebody's doing really bad stuff, I expect you to try to keep them from doing
really bad stuff. But you know, just keep in mind that when I was a younger man, I saw an amazing anti pornography document documentary
and it was called rate it X. And I don't know where it went.
But the conceit of it was, we're going to get some pornographers in front of a camera
because they want to talk and we're going to ask them about what they do for a living
and why it's okay.
No commentary.
Okay.
You could potentially, if you really think Alex Jones is the worst, and again, I'm not
intimately familiar with him.
You could decide to just let him talk.
Now, I have decided not to do that with particular people.
I've spoken to Stefan Malinu.
Stefan Malinu makes many good points.
It makes many bad points.
And he makes many good points in bad ways.
And I worry about it.
And I don't feel that it's not my obligation
to make sure that Stefan Malinano has a voice on the portal. But I did stand up and say I didn't
want to ban from social media and I do think that a lot of the people who are
being banned from social media were worried that they're right rather than that
they're wrong. I certainly don't really think that I'm worried in some sense
that some of the
really wrong people are wrong.
But if you look at, for example, Curtis Yarvan, there's a tremendous amount of interest,
if he's Eric and I speak to Curtis Yarvan.
Curtis Yarvan says many interesting things, and he says many horrible stupid things, very
provocative.
And I haven't invited him onto the portal, but I haven't said I will never invite him
onto the portal.
We are in all in a difficult position.
That's what I'm saying.
You're making it kind of, I think it's a much more difficult task that, and burden carry
it as people who have conversations because Curtis Aaron is a good example.
How much work do I have to put in reading Curtis's work to really under?
I'm just talking about the problem of Curtis Yarvan.
Yes.
Because I think it's a problem of illustrative.
There's this big question,
is why does somebody who says such stupid-ass things listen to by so many people?
Very smart people, people who are part of our daily lives,
discuss Curtis Yarvan in hushed tones.
Now, let's go to the question.
My belief is that Curtis Yarvan has made a number of very interesting provocative points,
and they associate Curtis Yarvan as the person who has made these points, and they treat
the completely ass-in-hine stuff that he says that's super dangerous as well, that's Curtis, right?
Right.
They give him the credit for he's he's kind of like, sorry to use the term first principles
deep think or about in some way the way the way the cataclet is some some space above
the world.
Yeah.
But as a result, we don't actually know why Curtis Yarvan is knocking around so many Silicon Valley luminaries lives?
What's see see you said that he said a lot of SMS stupid stuff and that's the
sense I got from a few things I've read not just about it. This is not just like
Wikipedia stuff is he he's a little like I've said before he seems to be
careless. I don't think he's care. No, no, no, it's like Jim Watson.
Jim Watson wants to say very provocative things
in order to prove that he's free.
It's not a question of careless.
He enjoys the freedom to say these things.
And the key point is that there's,
I expect something more of Curtis.
I expect that if somebody is insightful about all sorts of things up to that point
that they're going to have enough care. Now, I, for example, make this point repeatedly that vaccines are not 100% safe.
Most people who have an idea that anybody as an anti-vaxxer should be silenced
are in a position where they they probably don't say vaccines are 100% safe, but you keep finding that statement over and over again.
Believe all women, vaccines are 100% safe, climate science is settled science.
Whatever this mountain Bailey is where you make extraordinarily vapid blanket claims, and then you retreat into something. Well, defund the pull, you know, we don't want no more police, actually just means we want the police to not take on mental health duties.
We've come up with an incredibly disingenuous society.
And what I'm claiming is that I might talk to Curtis Yardvin,
but I have really very little interest to talk to a guy who seems to be kind of giddy about who makes good slaves and who makes bad slaves.
It's like, why do I want to do that on the portal?
One, first of all, because just as you said, that's not Curtis's main thing. He has a lot of ideas.
What I've read of him, which is not a huge amount, is there's these very thoughtful about the way
this world works. And on top of that, he's an important historical figure in the birth and the
development of the alt-right, or what we call the alt-right. There's a new reaction. Yeah.
And there's, so he's an just an important intellectual. And so it makes sense to talk to them. The question is,
how much work do you put in? Well, this is the issue of Fugu. I'm not a chef that necessarily
can serve that Fugu. So you have a puffer fish. You can eat the puffer fish. You can get a
kind of a tingle sensation on your tongue if you get a little bit of the poison organ. But my point is I don't know how to serve Curtis Yarvan so that in fact, I'm not worried
about what happens.
But I believe that if somebody else was a student of the new reactionary movement, that person
might be in a better position to host Curtis Yarvan.
So somebody, that's a really example.
Somebody I think you've spoken with that's an intermediary.
That's a powerful one is Michael Malas.
And he's spoken with Curtis Jarvan.
And Michael wrote a book about, by the way, Michael somewhat changed my mind about Michael
Malas.
I'm glad he did.
I think I would call him a friend and I think he's underneath it all a really kind human being. And I think your skepticism
about him was initially from a surface level of what did you call him? Hyenas, the trolls,
and so on. I'm not happy about his, it's been so long since I've seen good trolls.
Yes. So he needs higher quality of drawing, but he aspires to that. I mean, you know, disagree or not, I really enjoy how much care he puts into the work he does like on North Korea
and the study of the world and how much privately, but also in public, love he has for people, especially those who are powerless.
Yeah.
Just like genuine admiration for them.
But yeah, I think Curtis actually does too.
I don't know.
I mean, you have to appreciate the first time I met Curtis,
he introduced me, he says,
I'm the most right-wing person you've ever met.
I was just like, well, this is a conversation
that's already over.
It's theatrical in a way that's not conducted to actually having a real connection.
Well, it just turned me off because it was like, you need to be the most right-wing person.
And so it's like, I'm a troll, I'm a troll.
Yeah.
Okay, why are we doing this?
Yeah.
But what I'm trying to get at is different.
I'm trying to say that Michael Malice is a friend of yours,
if you found out something terrible,
you should still be a friend.
You should still continue to be his friend.
And Michael Malice's case is very likely
that we'll find out something.
Curtis is an acquaintance of mine
because he hangs around with some people that I know.
I did not get it.
I've started to understand why the people in my life,
some of them are Curtis Yarvin fans, many of them disregard the stupid stuff. But my feeling is that too
much poison organ, not enough fish. I don't know how to serve that two-intermingled. I'm
not your chef.
Speaking for defending your friends, staying with your friends, and bringing the old band together again, you coined the term IDW until I'd like to talk to you dark web.
I like it. It represents a certain group of people that are struggling with that are almost like a challenge, the norms of social and political discourse from all different
angles.
Right.
What do you think is the state of the IDW?
What do you think is its future?
Is it still a useful?
Well, it never exists.
Is it a protocol?
Is it a collection of people featured in an article?
What I learned very clearly is that there's a tremendous desire
in the internet age to pin people down.
Well, what do you say?
Who's in it?
What are the criterion?
It's like, I understand.
You want to play the demarcation game and you want to make everything that is demarcated
instantly null and void.
No, thank you.
So I resisted saying who was in it.
I resisted saying what it was.
I resisted saying that Barry Weiss' article was the definitive thing.
You know, they chose a ridiculous concept for the photographs that we couldn't get out of.
I did not want those photographs taken.
They decided that the Pulitzer Prize winning photographer needed to take them all at twilight.
I don't know some such thing.
I didn't even necessarily want to do the article.
Barry convinced me that it was the right thing to do.
Undoubtedly, Barry was right, I was wrong.
But the key point is nothing can grow in this environment.
There's a reason we're not building.
It does not appear that we found a way
to grow anything organic and good and decent that
we need right now.
And that's kind of the key issue.
Who's the weed?
I mean, us as a society.
Those of us who wish to have a future for our great grandchildren.
Let's take the subset of people who are worried about things long after their demise. But do you think it's useful to have a term
like the IDW to capture some set of people,
some set of ideas or maybe principles
that capture what I think the IDW, okay,
you could say it's not supposed to be,
it doesn't exist, it doesn't mean anything,
but to the public, to me, okay, I'll just speak to me, it represented something.
Yeah.
I represented, I think it's like this to you.
It's my, in my first attempt to interview the great Eric Weinstein, I said that I spoke
to him about you, but I UW in general is trying to point out the elephant in the room, or
that the emperor has no clothes.
They're set of people that do that in their own way.
If there are multiple elephants in the room, yes.
The point is, is that the IDW was more interested in seeing the totality of
elephants and trying to figure out how do we move forward as opposed to saying,
I can spot the other guys elephant in the room, but I can't see my own.
And, you know, in large measure, we didn't represent an institutional base. And therefore,
it wasn't maximally important that we look at our own hypocrisy because we weren't on the institutional
spectrum. This is where friendship comes into responsible for the exactly thing that you said.
Did you hear what I don't know, I think it's a day. Oh, what Sam Harris said about IDW.
That kind of thing is my chuckled lovingly or chuckled like I was angry at some people who had said things that caused
Sam to say what Sam said about turning his imaginary club membership into the IDW.
People said very silly things and you know I think that there is just this
confusion that integrity means calling out your friends in front of the world.
I've been pretty clear about this.
I try to choose my friends carefully, and if you would like to recuse me, because I'm not
a source of reliable information, people that I know and love the most, maybe that's reasonable
for you.
Maybe you prefer somebody who was willing to throw a friend under the bus at the first sign of trouble
By all means exit my feed. You don't have to subscribe to me if that's if that's your concept of integrity
You're barking up the wrong tree. What I will say is as I knew these people well enough to know that they're all flawed
Thank you for the call back. But the issue is that I love people who are flawed.
And I love people who have to earn a living, even if you call them a grifter.
And I love people who, you know, like the fact that Donald Trump didn't get us into new wars,
even if you call them alt-right. I love the fact that some people believe in
structural oppression and want to fight it, even if they're not woke, because they don't believe
that structural oppression is hiding everywhere. I care and love different people in different ways.
And I just, I think that, you know, the overarching thing, like, so we're not getting at is that we were sold a bill of goods
that you can go through life like analyze a program with pre-programmed responses.
Well, it's what aboutism, it's both sides of them. It's all right. It's the loony left,
it's campus madness, you know, it's like, okay, why don't you just empty the entire goddamn magazine?
All of those pre-recorded
Snips
Now that you've done all of that
Now we can have a conversation your son put it really well, which is we should
a son put it really well, which is we should, in all things, resist labels. But we can't deal without labels. We have to generalize. But we also have to keep in mind that just
in the way in science, you deal with an effective theory that isn't a fundamental one.
In science, most of our theories we consider to be effective theories. If I generalize about Europe, about women, about Christians, those things have to be understood
to mean something and not to have their definitions extend so broadly that they mean nothing at all, nor that they're so rigid that their claims that clearly won't bear scrutiny.
Lex, what do you really want to talk about? That's always my question to you.
That always gets me. That's a good, there. Maybe you are the therapist.
But like, you and I could talk about anything.
People love up until now at least. People have loved listening to the two of us in conversation.
And my feeling is that we're not talking about neural nets.
And we're not talking about geometric unity.
And we're not talking about where distributed computing might go.
And I don't think that we're really focused on some of the most exciting things we could
do to transform education.
We're still caught in this world of other people that we don't belong.
I don't belong in the world as it's been created.
I'm trying to build a new world and I'm astounded that the people with the independent
means to help build that world are so demotivated that they don't want to build new structures. And the people who do
want to build new structures seem to be wild-eyed. Wild-eyed, what do you mean? But
wild-eyed. They're not. I guarantee you that I will get some message in my DMs.
It's this Heyeric. I'm a third-year chemistry student at South Dakota State, and I've got a great idea.
I just need funding.
I want to build.
They don't have the means.
So the people who have the means.
Or the sophistication.
It's like you're looking for somebody who's proven themselves a few times to say, I've
got $4 billion behind me that's soft circled. I want to figure out what a new university would be,
and what it would take to protect academic freedom and who we would hire,
and what are the different characteristics, because I can clearly see that everything
following the current model is falling apart. Nobody, in my understanding, is saying that nobody is saying, let's take that which is functioning independently
and make it less vulnerable.
Let's boost those signals.
And a critical component as money, think.
It's not only that, but it's also a kind of,
these people are mobbed up, hands off.
Let's imagine for the moment
that Sundar, Pichai, Jack Dorsey, and Mark Zuckerberg
founded a university come social media entity. And they said, the purpose of this is to make sure
that academic freedom will not perish from this earth because it's necessary to keep us from all going crazy.
We are going to lock ourselves out.
We've come up with this governance system.
The idea is that these people will be assigned the difficult task of making sure that society
doesn't go crazy in any particular direction.
We have a fact-based, reality-based, feasibility-based understanding.
We can try to figure out where our real opportunities are.
So, it feels like everybody with the ability to do something like that, and with the brains
and experience and the resources, would rather sit in the current system and hope to figure
out where they can flee to
if the whole thing comes apart.
Well, yeah, and maybe they push back in a little bit.
I agree with you, but it feels like there are some people
are trying that.
So for example, Google purchased DeepMind.
DeepMind is a company that kind of represents
a lot of radical ideas.
They've become acceptable, actually. AGI artificial
general intelligence used to be really radical of a thing to talk about and deep mind open
AI are two places which is made and more acceptable. I know you can now start to criticize
well they're really now that it's become acceptable, they're not taking the further step of being more and more radical. But, you know, that wasn't in town by Google to say
that let's try some wild stuff. Sort of like Boston Dynamics.
Like Boston Dynamics. Boston Dynamics is a really good example of trying radical ideas for perhaps no purpose whatsoever, except
to try to try out their ideas.
Well, the idea is that innovation is like dessert.
You can have dessert after you solve the problem of the main course and the main course is
a bunch of insoluble problems.
So that is we can get into innovation
once we perfect ourselves.
And you're saying that we need to make innovation
the main meal.
Well, I'm saying that there really is structural oppression.
I mean, if you train a deep learning system
on exclusively white faces, it's going to get confused.
So let's not disagree that there are real issues around this.
In fact, that's an issue of innovation and data.
Your data should be responsive.
On the other hand, there are things we can't do anything about that are actually fundamental.
And those things may have to do with the fact that some of us taste cilantro
is soap, and some of us don't. There are differences between people, and some of them are in
the hardware, some of them are in firmware, some of them are in the software that is
the human mind. And this completely simplistic idea that every failure of an organization to promote each person who has particular for another time, because it's such a fascinating conversation.
You talked about this with Glenn Beck,
is the whole sort of stagnation of growth and all that kind of stuff.
Your idea is that, in as much as the current situation
is a kind of Ponzi scheme,
the current situation in the United States,
it's a kind of Ponzi scheme built on the promise of constant
unending innovation. We need to fund the true innovators and encourage them and empower them
and sort of culturally say that this is what this country is about. Let's put it this is the
brilliant minds. We're going to kill each other. If we don't grow, growth is like an immune system.
And you always have pathogens present, but if you don't have growth present, you can't fight
the pathogens in your society. And right now the pathogens are spreading everywhere.
So if we don't get growth into our system fairly quickly, we are in really seriously bad
shape.
So, it's very important that if I had a horrible person who was capable of building something
that would give us all a certain amount of what I've called financial beta to some new
technology where we all benefit, let's say quantum computing comes in and everybody, the
dry cleaner has a quantum computing comes in and everybody, the dry cleaner has
a quantum computing angle, right?
Okay.
That's necessary to keep this system that we built going.
We can try to redesign the system, but our system expects growth.
We've started, started for growth, and the madness that we're seeing is the failure
of our immune system to be able to handle the pathogens that have always been present. So people can say, well, this was always there. Yes, it was. What's changed was your immune system.
We have got to make sure that one, we understand why diversity is potentially really important.
We have mined certain communities to death. You and I are Ashkenazi Jews.
Everyone knows that Ashkenazi Jews
are good at technical stuff.
We know that the Chinese are good at technical stuff.
The Indians have many people who are good at technical stuff
as the Japanese.
I also believe that we have communities
where if you think about the Pareto idea
of diminishing returns,
if you've never mined a community, many of the people you're going to get at the beginning are
going to be amazing because that community, it's like, did you drill for more oil
in Texas? Texas is pretty thoroughly picked over. Do you find some place that's
completely insane? Maybe there's oil there. Who knows? In particular, I would like to displace our reliance on our military competitors in
Asia, in our scientific laboratories, with women, with African Americans, with Latinos,
people who are in different categories than we have traditionally sourced.
I would like to get them the money that the market would normally give these fields
were we not using visas in place of payment, right? Now, I have crazy idea, which is that
I play you and I both play music. And I find the analytic work that I do when I'm trying
to figure out chord progressions and symmetries and tritons and all these sorts of things
to be very similar to the work that I do when I do physics or math.
I believe that one of the things that is true is that the analytic contributions of African
Americans to music are probably fungible to science. I don't know that that's true. It's true,
I haven't done controlled research, but I believe that it is very
important to let the people's Republic of China know that they are not staffing our laboratories
anymore. And that we need to look to our own people. And in particular, we are going to get a
huge benefit from making sure that women, black Americans, Latinos, are in a position
to take over some of these things. Because a many of these communities have been underutilized.
Now, I don't know if that's an insane idea.
I want to hear somebody tell me why it's an insane idea, but I believe that part of what
we need to do is we need to recognize that there are security issues, there are geopolitical
issues with the funding of science, and that what we've
done is we've starved our world for innovation, and if we don't get back to the business of innovation,
we should be doing diversity and inclusion out of greed rather than guilt. Now, part of the problem
with this is that a lot of the energy behind diversity and inclusion is based on guilt and accusation. Yeah. And what I want is I want to kick ass.
And my hope is is that diminishing returns favors
mining the communities that have not been traditionally mined in order to extract output
from those communities.
Unless there's a flaw in that plan.
If there's a flaw somebody needs to tell me if there isn't a flaw, we need to get greedy
about innovation rather than guilty about innovation. That's really brilliantly put my biggest problem
with what I see is exactly speaks to that in the discussion as diversity. It's used when it's
grounded in guilt. It's then used as a hammer to shame people that don't care about diversity enough. F that shit.
Okay.
So my point is, I'm excited about the idea
of Jimmy Hendrix doing quantum field theory.
I'm excited about the idea of art Tatum trying to figure out
what the neural nets figured out about protein folding.
I have some idea of the level of intellect of people
who have not found their way into STEM subjects
in incredibly technically demanding areas.
And if there's a flaw in that theory,
I want somebody to present the flaw.
But right now, my belief is that these things
are merit-based.
And if you really believe in structural oppression,
you do not want an affirmative action program. You want to make sure that people
have huge amounts of resources to get themselves into position. I want to push
out, I just tried this on this clubhouse application, I want to push out
client bottles as a secret sign inside of rap videos in HEPOP, right?
I want people to have an idea that there's an amazing world.
And I want to get the people who, hopefully I'm trying to lure
into science and engineering.
I want to get them paid.
I don't want them as just cheap substitutes for the fleeing white
males who have learned that they can't make any money in science and engineering.
So the problem is that we need to take over the ship, Lex.
And it doesn't need to be you and me, because right now I'm saying I have no desire to
administer.
I don't want to be the chief executive officer of anything.
What I do want is I want the baby boomers who've made this mess and can't see it to be gone.
They had almost all of our universities and I want fresh blood, fresh resources, I want academic
freedom and I want greed for our country and for the future to determine diversity inclusion as
opposed to shame and guilt which is destroying our fabric.
That's as good of a diversity statement as I've ever heard.
This is a U-turn, but somebody commented on the tweet you sent that as one of the top
comments, they definitely have to ask you about cryptocurrency.
So, it's a U-turn, but not really, since you're an economist, since you're a deep, not an economist, you...
I mean, I pretend to be an economist, hoping that the economists will take
issue, that I'm not an economist, so that I can advance gauge
theoretic and field theoretic economics, which the economics
profession has failed to acknowledge was a major innovation
that happened approximately
25 years ago. I don't think that economists understand what a price index is that measures
inflation, nor do I think economists understand what a growth index or a product, a quantity
index is that measures GDP. I think that they don't even understand the basics of
price and quantity index construction and therefore
they can't possibly review
field theoretic economics. They can't review gauge theoretic economics. They're intellectually not in a position to manage their own field.
He talked about that there's a stagnation in growth currently. I looked at for my microeconomics, macroeconomics and college perspective, GDP doesn't seem to capture the
productivity, the full, the spectrum of what I think is as a function is a successful society.
They don't. What do you think is broken about DP? What does it need to include at these indices?
Like what?
Let me explain what they don't understand to begin with.
Sure.
Imagine that all prices and all quantities of output
are the same at the end of a year as they are at the beginning.
And you ask, what happened during that year?
Was there inflation?
They meandered over the course of the year,
but miraculously, they all came back
to exactly their values.
The amount produced at the end of the year
is the same as at the beginning and every single quantity.
Typically, the claim would be that the price index
should be 1.0 and that the price index should be 1.0 and that the
quantity index should be 1.0. That's clearly wrong.
Well, it's much easier to see with... it speaks to a fundamental confusion that economists
have. They don't understand that the economy is curved and not flat. In a curved economy, everything should be
path dependence, but they view path dependence as a problem because they are effectively the
flat earth society of market analysis. They don't understand that what they've called,
and they've actually called it, the cycling problem, is exactly what they need to understand
to advance their field. So I'll give you a very simple example.
Let's imagine that we have Bob and Carol in one hedge fund,
and Ted and Alice in another.
In both cases, the females that is Alice and Carol
are the chief investment officers.
And Bob and Ted are the chief marketing officers
in charge of trying to get money into the fund
and trying to get people not to, in fact,
remove their money from the funds, okay?
If you, in fact, had,
Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice,
and both hedge funds were invested in assets whose
prices came back to the same levels and whose exposures were in the same quantities.
And you wanted to compensate these two hedge funds.
Would you compensate them the same necessarily? What if, for example, Carol was killing
it in terms of investments? Every time she bought some sort of security, the price of
that security went up. But Bob was the worst marketing officer. And it's chief marketing
officer. There were tons of redemptions because Bob was constantly drunk. Bob was making off-color
comments. Now, as a result, at the end of the year, the fund hasn't grown in
size because even though Carol was crushing it in terms of the investments,
Bob was screwing up everything and the redemptions were legendary.
So people were making money and still pulling it out of the fund.
In the other fund, Alice can't seem to buy a base hit every time she gets into a security
of the thing, plummets.
But Ted's amazing marketing skills allowed the fund to get all sorts of new subscriptions and halted the
redemptions as people hoped that the fund would get its act together. Okay. Price
indices should be how Carol and Alice are compensated. And quantity indices should be how Bob and Ted are compensated.
So even though both funds had closed loops that come back to the original states, what
happened during the period that they were active tells you how people are supposed to be compensated.
Now, we know that whatever the increase in the price index is compensated by a decrease
in the quantity index or conversely because prices and quantities return to their original
values.
You can have another fund where nothing much happened, there were no redemptions, no
subscriptions, the fund remaining cash the whole time.
So in that third fund, let's call that Tristan and his older, right, that fund should have
no bonuses paid because nobody did anything, but nobody should be fired either.
Now, the fact that economists don't even understand that this is what their price and
quantity indices were intended to do that they don't
Understand that you can actually give what would be called ordinal agents the freedom to change their preferences and
Still have something defined as a
Conace cost of living adjustment
They don't even understand the mathematics of their field so the the indices need to be able to capture some kind of dynamics
That we have had indices
that capture these dynamics due to the work of Francois de Vizia since 1925.
But the economists have not even understood what de Vizia's index truly represent.
What do you miss with such crude indices then?
Well, you miss the fact that you're supposed to have a field theoretic subject. The representative consumer should actually be a probability
distribution on the space of all possible consumers weighted by the probability of
getting any particular pull from the distribution. We should not have a single
gauge of inflation. What is that in 1973 dollars? Any more than you should be able to say,
What is that in 1973 dollars? Any more than you should be able to say it was 59 degrees Fahrenheit on Earth yesterday.
So when we get to the cryptocurrency, what I'm going to say is that because we didn't
found economic theory on the proper marginal revolution, because we missed the major opportunity
which is that the differential calculus of markets is gauge theory. It's not ordinary
differential calculus. We found that out in finance that it was stochastic differential calculus.
We have the wrong version of the differential calculus underneath all of modern economic theory.
And part of what I've been pushing for in cryptocurrencies is the idea that we should be understanding that gold is a gauge theory, just as modern economic
theory is supposed to be a gauge theory, and that we should be looking to liberate cryptocurrencies
and more importantly, distributed computing from the problem of this unwanted global aspect
which is the blockchain. The thing that is most celebrated in some sense
about Bitcoin is in fact the reason
that I'm least enthusiastic about it.
I'm hugely enthusiastic about what Satoshi did.
But it's an intermediate step towards trying to figure out
what should digital gold actually be.
If physical gold is a collection of upcorks and downcorks in the form of protons and neutrons
held together, the quarks by gluons with electrons orbiting it held together by photons with the
occasional weak interaction beta decay, all of those are gauge theories. So gold is actually
coming from gauge theory and markets are coming from gauge theory.
And the opportunity to do locally enforced conservation laws, which effectively is what a Bitcoin
transaction is, should theoretically be founded on a different principle that is not the blockchain.
It should be a gauge theoretic concept in which effectively the tokens are excitations on a network of computer nodes.
And the fact that, let's imagine that this is some token.
By moving it from my custodianship to your custodianship, effectively I pushed that glass as a gauge theory
towards your region of the table.
We should be recognizing the gauge theory is the correct differential calculus for the 21st century.
In fact, it should have been there in the 20th century.
You're saying it captures these individual dynamics.
Why should my giving you a token have to be, why should we alert the global community in this token that that occurred?
You can talk about side chains, you can talk about any means of doing this.
But effectively, we have a problem, which is if I think about this differently, I have
a glass that is excellent.
You have a glass that is absent.
We're supposed to call the constructor method on your glass at the same moment we call the
destructor method on my glass in order to have a conservation principle. It would be far more
efficient to do this with the one-series system that is
known never to throw an exception, which is
nature. And nature has chosen gauge theory and
geometry for her underlying language. We now know
due to work of PM Alani at Harvard in economics in
the mid-1990s, which I was her co-author on.
But I wish to promote her as well as this being my idea.
We know that modern economic theory
is a naturally occurring gauge theory.
And the failure of that community to acknowledge
that that work occurred and that it was put down
for reasons that make no analytic sense is important in particular due to the relatively new innovation
of distributed computing and Satoshi's brainchild. So you're thinking we need to have the mathematics
that captures that enforces cryptocurrency as a distributed system, as opposed to centralized one where the blockchain says that crypto should be centralized.
The abundance economy much discussed in Silicon Valley or what's left of it is actually
a huge threat to the planet because what it really is is that it is what Mark Andreessen
is called software eating the world.
What that means is that you're going to push things from being private goods and services
into public goods and services.
And public goods and services cannot have price and value tied together.
Ergo, people will produce things of incredible value to the world that they cannot command a
price and they will not be able to capture the value that they have created, or a significant
enough fraction of it.
The abundance economy is a disaster.
It will lead to a reduction in human freedom.
The great innovation of Satoshi is locally enforced or semi-locally enforced conservation laws,
where the idea is just as gold is hard, you know, why is gold hard to create a destroy?
It's because it's created not only in stars, but in violent events involving stars,
like supernova collisions.
When gold is created and we transact,
we're using conservation laws,
the physics determines the custodianship,
whatever it is that I don't have you now have
and conversely.
In such a situation, we should be looking for the abstraction
that most closely matches the physical world because the physical world is known not to
throw an exception. The blockchain is a vulnerability. The idea that the 51% problem isn't solved,
that you could have crazy race conditions, all of these things. We know that they're solved
race conditions, all of these things, we know that they're solved inside of gauge theory somehow.
So the important thing is to recognize that one of the greatest intellectual feats ever in the history of economic theory took place already and was essentially instantly buried and I will
stand by those comments. Satoshi, wherever you are, I probably know you. Are you Satoshi?
No. No, no, no, I don't have that kind of ability. I really don't. I do other things.
Speaking of Satoshi, engage theory. You've mentioned to Brian Keating that you may be releasing a J.M.A.Q. paper this year, some other form of additional material in the topic.
What is your thinking around this? What's the process you're going through now?
Well, it's very trained this.
I used April 1st to try to start a tradition, which I hope to use to liberate mankind. The tradition is that at least one day a year, you should be able
to say heretical things and not have Jack Dorsey but you off or Mark Zuckerberg, your provost
shouldn't call you up and say what did you say? We need at some level to have a jubilee from
centralized control. And so my hope is that you don't know
what a tradition is in America.
Something a baby boomer did twice.
Impeachment.
That's very funny.
Anyway, so when I'm not a baby boomer, but as an exer,
I thought about whether or not April 1st would be a
good date on which to release a printed version of what I already said in lecture form,
because I think it's hysterically funny that the physics community claims that it can't decode
video election. Yeah, it must be paper. And you know what, there will be a steady stream of new
complaints up until the point
that they fit it into a narrative that they like.
Yeah, I'm thinking about April 1st,
as a date in which to release a document,
and it won't be perfectly complete,
but it'll be very complete.
And then they'll try to say, it's wrong,
or you already did it, or no, that was done,
but what we just did on top of it is brilliant or it doesn't match experiment or who knows what.
They'll go through all of their usual nonsense.
It's time to go.
Is there still puzzles in your mind that you need to be figured out for you to try to put it on paper?
I mean, those are different mediums, right?
It was a great question.
I did not count on something that turns out to be important.
When you work on your own outside of the system for a long time, you probably don't think
you're going to be doing this as a 55-year-old man.
And I have been so long outside of math and physics departments and I've been occupied
with so many other things, as you can see, that the old idea that I had was if I always did it in
little pieces, then I was always safe because it wouldn't be steelable. And so now those pieces
never got assembled completely. In essence, I have all the pieces
and I can fit them together.
But there's probably a small amount of glue code,
like there are a few algebraic things I've forgotten how to do.
I may or may not figure them out between now and April 1st.
But it's pretty complete.
But that's the puzzle you're struggling to now figure out to get it all on the same.
Look in the glue together.
I can't tell you whether the theory is correct or incorrect.
But like, you know, for example, there's what's the exact form of the super symmetry algebra or how to what's the rule for passing a minus sign through a particular operator.
And all of that stuff got a lot more difficult because I didn't do it.
Look, it's a little bit like, if you're a violinist and you don't touch your violin regularly for 15 years,
you come back to it and you pretty much know the pieces sort of, but there's lots of stuff that's missing your tone is off and that kind of stuff.
I would say, I'll get the ship to the harbor and it'll require a
tugboat, probably to get it in. And if the tugboat doesn't show up, then I'll pilot the thing
right into the dock myself. But it's not a big deal. I think that it is essentially complete.
Psychologically, it says a human being. I remember perhaps by accident, but maybe there's no accident in the universe.
I was tuned in.
I don't remember where I referenced on April 1st.
Yeah.
To you.
Oh, I think I'm your discord.
Yeah.
Uh, kind of thinking about thinking through this release.
I mean, it wasn't like, uh, it wasn't obvious that you were going to do.
You were thinking through it.
And I remember those intellectual,
personal, psychological struggle with this.
Yeah.
Well, because I thought it was dangerous.
If this turns out to be right,
I don't know what it unlocks.
If it's wrong, I think I understand where we are.
If it's wrong, it'll be the first
fool's gold that really looks like a theory of
everything. It'll be the iron pyreides of physics. And we haven't even had fool's gold in my
opinion yet. Got it. So what is your intuition why this looks right to you. Like why it feels like it would be, if wrong, it's very simple.
I can say it very simply.
It's way smarter than I am.
Can you break that apart a little more?
Every time you poke at it, it's giving you intuitions that follow with the Kremlin-
Well, let's put it in computer science terms.
Yes, please.
Okay.
There's a concept of technical debt that computer scientists struggle with.
As you commit crimes, you have to pay those crimes back at a later date.
In general, most of the problem with physical theories is that as you try to do something
that matches reality, you usually have to go into some structure that gets you farther
away.
And your hope is, is that you're going gonna be able to pay back the technical debt.
And in general, these wind up as check-cutting schemes,
or like you're funding a startup
and there are too many pivots, right?
So you keep adding epicycles in order to cover
the things that have gone wrong.
My belief is, is that this thing represents something like a summit
to me, and I'm very proud of having found a root up this summit. But the root is what's
due to me. The summit can't possibly be due to me. You know, like Edmund Hillary and
Tenzing Norge did not create Mount Everest. They know that
they didn't create that. They figured out a way up.
You got to tell me what Mount Everest is in this metaphor
relative and also connected to the technical depth. The
technical depth is a negative thing that it's kind of, you're a little bench,
they have to pay it.
Are you saying in the,
in the ascent that you're seeing now?
So you, you know,
is your do not have much technical debt?
Well, that's right.
I think that what happens is that early on,
what I would say is,
I believe now that the physics community
has said many things incorrectly about the current state of the universe.
They're not wildly off, which is why, for example, the claim is that there are three generations
of matter.
I do not believe that there are three generations of matter.
I believe that there are two generations of matter and there is a third collection that looks like a generation of matter as the first two only at low energy.
Okay, well that's not a frequent claim. People imagine that there are three or more generations
of matter. I would claim that that's false. People claim that the matter is chiral, that is,
it knows it's left from its right. I would claim that the chirality is not fundamental, but it is emergent. We
could keep going at all these sorts of things. People think that space
time is the fundamental geometrical construct. I do not agree here. I think it's
something that I've termed the observers. All of these different things represent a
series of over-interpretations of the world that preclude progress.
So you gave, I think you gave some credit to String Theory as String Theory, I
think, quantum gravity, if I remember correctly, as like getting closer
to the full's gold.
I said that Garrett Leesee phenomenologically
gets a lot of things right.
He's got a reason for chirality, a reason for uniqueness
using E8, and in fact, E8 uses something called
vial fermions, which are chiral.
E8, in fact, is that E8 uses something called vial fermions, which are chiral. He has a way of getting geometry to get remons geometry underneath general relativity to play
with aris-monz geometry, which is underneath the standard model, using something called
cartan connections that are out of favor.
He's figured out something involving superconnections to make sure that the fermion the matter in the system isn't quantized
The same ways the bosons were which is a problem in his old theory
He's got something about three generations for triality. He's got a lot of phenomenal logical hits
I don't think Garrett's theory works. It also has a very simple Lagrangi's basically using the Yang mills
Norm squared the same thing you would use as a cost function
if you were doing neural nets.
Okay?
The string theorists have a different selling point, which is that they may have gotten a
re-normalizable theory of gravity if quantum gravity was what we were meant to do.
And they've done some stuff with black holes that they can get some solutions
correct, and then they have lots of agreements with black holes that they can get some solutions
correct, and then they have lots of agreements with where they show mathematical truths that mathematicians didn't even know.
I'm very underwhelmed by string theory based on how many people have worked on it and how little is supporting the claims to it being a theory of everything.
But those are the two that I take quite seriously. I don't yet take Wolframs quite seriously because if he really finds one of these cellular
automatics that are really distinct and generative, it'll be amazing.
But he's looking for such a thing.
I don't think he's found anything.
Techmark, I view, as a philosopher
who is somehow taking credit for Platonism, which I don't see any reason for fighting with
Max because I like Max, but if it ever comes time, I'm putting a post-it note that I'm not
positive with the mathematical universe hypothesis is really anything new. And in general,
Luke quantum gravity really, I think, grew out of some hopes that the
general relativistic community had for that they would be able to do particle theory.
And I don't think that they've shown any particle theoretic realism. So essentially, here's
what I really think, Lux. I think we didn't understand how big the difference between an effective theory and a theory
of everything is conceptually.
Maybe it's not mathematically that different, but conceptually, trying to figure out what
a theory of every...
How does the universe, and I've compared it to Escher's drawing hands, how do two hands draw
themselves into existence?
That's the puzzle that I think has just been wanting.
And I'll be honest, I'm really surprised that the theoretical physics community
didn't even get up on their high horse and say this is the most stupid nonsense
imaginable because clearly I'm always I always say I'm not a physicist
So I'm just a I'm I'm an amateur with the hardest biggest all out doors
So in your journey of releasing this and I'm sure there further maybe
He will be another American tradition on April 1st that will continue for years. I'll come
in my There's sort of crumbs along the way that I'm hoping to collect
in my naive view of things of the beauty that in your geometric view of the universe.
your geometric view of the universe. So one question I'd like to ask is if you were to challenge me to visualize something beautiful, something important about geometric community,
in my struggle to appreciate some of its beauty from the outsider's perspective, what would
that be, that be? Think B. Interesting question.
Perhaps we can both have a journey towards April 1st. Take a look at that.
Some kind of a scrunchy that I picked up on Melrose, not Melrose, a Montana in Santa Monica.
Now you'll notice that all of those discs rotate independently.
Yes.
If you rotate groups of those in a way that is continuous, but not uniform everywhere, what you're
doing is a so-called gauge transformation on the Taurus seen as a U1 bundle over a U1 space time.
So the concept of space time here in a very simplified case isn't four-dimensional, but
it's one-dimensional, it's just a circle.
And there's a circle above every point in the circle represented by those little disks. Imagine if you will that we took a rubber band and placed it around here and decided
that that was a function from the circle into this circle that is representing a y-axis that's
wrapped around itself. Well, you would have an idea of what it means for a function to be constant
if it just went all around the outside. But what happens if I turn this a little bit,
then the function would be mostly constant, it would have a little place where it dipped
and it went back. It turns out that you can transform that function and transform the
derivative that says that function is equal to zero when I take
its derivative at the same time.
That's what a gauge transformation is.
Amazing to me that we don't have a simple video visualizing things that I've already had
built and that I can clearly demonstrate when you do that tourists who the
code of the tourists is itself generating. This is a U1 principle bundle and the
world needs to know what a gauge theory is not by analogy, not with Lawrence
Krauss saying it's like a checkerboard if you change some of the colors this way
not saying you know that it's a local symmetry involving,
it's none of those things.
It's a theory of differential calculus
where the functions and the derivatives
are both subject to a particular kind of change
so that if a function was constant under one derivative,
then the new function is constant
under the new derivative transformed in the
same fashion.
And would you put that under the category of just gauge transformations?
Yes.
That would be gauge transformations applied to sections and connections where connections
are the derivatives in the theory.
This is easily explained.
It is pathological that the community of people who understand what I'm saying
have never bothered to do this in a clear fashion for the general public.
You and I could visualize this overnight.
This is not hard.
The public needs to know, in some sense, that, let's say quantum electrodynamics, the theory
of photons and electrons, more or less electrons or functions,
and photons or derivatives. Now there's some, you can object in some ways, but basically
a gauge theory is the way in which you can translate a shift in the definition of the
functions and the shift of the definition of the derivatives so that the underlying physics
is not harmed or changed.
So you have to do both at the same time. Now you and I can visualize that. So if what you wanted
to do rather than going directly to geometric unity is that I could sit down with you and I could
say here are the various components of geometric unity. And if the public needs a visualization in
order to play along, we've got a little bit over two months.
I might be happy to work with you.
I love that as a challenge and I'll take it on and I hope we do make it happen.
And David Goggins, if Lex doesn't do some super macho thing because he's got to work
to get some of this stuff done, you'll understand he'll be available to you after April.
Thank you for the, thank you for this game clause.
I really needed that escape clause.
I'm glad that's not right.
I'm worried 48 miles and 48 hours.
By the way, I just want to say how much I admire
your willingness to keep this kind of hardcore attitude.
I know that Russians have it and Russian Jews have it in spades,
but it's harder to do in a society that's sloppy and
that's weak and that's lazy. And the fact that you bring so much heart to saying, I'm going to bring
this to Jiu-Jitsu, I'm going to bring this to guitar, I'm going to bring this to AI, I'm going to
bring this to podcasting. It comes through loud and clear. I just find it completely and utterly
inspiring that you keep this kind of hardcore aspect at the same time that you're the guy who's
extolling the virtue of love in a modern society and doing it at scale.
Thank you. That means a lot. I don't know why I'm doing it, but I'm just following my heart on it and just going with a gut.
It seems to make sense somehow.
I personally think we better get tougher or we're going to get in a world of pain and I do think that when it comes time to lead
It's great to have people who you know don't crack under pressure
Do you mind if we talk about love and what it takes to be a father for a bit? Sure. Do you mind if Zev joins us? I'd be an honor
So Eric I've Zev joins us. Are we being honored?
So Eric, I've talked to your son Zev who's an incredible human being, but let me ask
you, this might be difficult because you're both sitting together.
What advice do you have for him as he makes his way in this world, especially given that,
as we mentioned before, and Joe Rogan, you're flawed in that just like all humans, you're
mortal?
Well, at some level, I guess one of my issues is that I've got to stop giving quite
so much advice.
Early on, I was very worried that I could see Zeb's abilities
and I could see his challenges.
And I saw them in terms of myself.
So a certain amount of Zeb rhymes with whatever I went through
as a kid.
And I don't want to doom him to the same outcomes
that suffice for me.
I think that he's got a much better head on his shoulders at age 15.
He's much better adjusted.
And in part, it's important for me to recognize that because I think I did a reasonably decent job early on,
I don't need to get this part right.
I don't need to get this part right. And I'm looking at Zev's trajectory and saying,
you're going to need to be incredibly, even pathologically
self-confident.
The antidote for that is going to be something you're
going to need to carry on board, which is radical humility.
And you're going to have to have those in a dialectical tension, which
is never resolved, which is a huge burden. You are going to have to forgive people who do
not appreciate your gifts, because your gifts are clearly evident, and many people will
have to pretend not to see them, because if they see your gifts, then they're going to
have to question their entire approach to education or employment or critical thinking.
And what my hope is is that you can just forgive those who don't see them and who complicate and
frustrate your life and realize that you're going to have to take care of them too.
So let me ask you the more challenging question because the guy sitting right here,
what advice do you have for your dad? Since after talking to you, I realize you're the more brilliant
aside from the better-looking member of the family.
Um.
It's a good question.
Yeah.
Um.
Sorry.
You could say anything you want is the last time we're going to be seeing less.
Um.
It's been a awkward drive home.
I think sort of a new perspective I've taken on parenting is that it is a task for which
no human is really supposed to be prepared.
You know, there are, you know, in Jewish tradition, for example,
there are myriad analogies in the Torah and the Talmud that compare the role of a parent
to the role of a God, right? No human is prepared to play God and create and guide a life, but somehow we're forced into it as people. And I think sometimes it's
hard for children to understand that however their parents are failing.
Sort of a theme here. Is something for for which we must budget because our parents
play a role in our lives of which they're not
worthy and they devote themselves to regardless because that becomes who they are in a certain
sense.
So, I hope to have realistic expectations of you as a human because I think too often it's
easy to have godly expectations of people who are far from such a role.
And I think I'm really happy that you've been as open as you have with me about the fact
that you really don't pretend to be a god in my life.
You are a guide who allows me to see myself and that's been very important considering the fact
that by yourself teaching paradigm, I will have to guide myself and being able to see it
and see myself accurately has been one of the greatest gifts that you've given me. So I'm very
appreciative and I want you to know that I don't buy into the the role that you're you're supposed to
into the role that you're supposed to sort of fake your way through in my life, but I am unbelievably happy with a more realistic connection that we've been able to build
and lieu of it.
So I think it's been easier on you actually as you come to realize what I don't know what I can't do.
And that there's been a period of time, I guess, that's fascinating to me where
you're sort of surprised that I don't know the answer to a certain
thing as well as you do. And
that I remember going through this with
a particular mathematician who I held, I still hold an awe, I'm David Kajdan. And you know,
he famously said to him, and weirdly our family knew his family in the Soviet Union. But he said,
you know, Eric, I always appreciate you coming to my office because I always find
what you have to say interesting, but you have to realize that in the areas that you're
talking about, you are no longer the student, you are actually my teacher.
And I wasn't prepared to hear that.
And there are many ways in which, as I was just saying with the Mozart, I am learning
an incredible rate from you. I used to learn from you because I didn't understand what was possible.
You were very much, I mean, this is the weird thing.
There used to be this thing called Harvey, the invisible rabbit.
This guy had a rabbit that was like six feet tall that only he could see maybe was talking.
And that was like you at age four, as you were saying,
that should crazy things, that were all totally sensible and
nobody else could put them together. And so what's wonderful is that the world
hasn't caught on, but enormous numbers of people are starting to. And I really
do hope that that genuineness of spirit and that outside the box intellectual commitment serves you well as the world starts to appreciate that I think you're a very trustworthy voice. You don't get everything right, but the idea that we have somebody at your age who's embedded in your generation who can tell us something about what's happening is really valuable to me.
I do hope that you'll consider boosting that voice more than just at the dinner table.
I apologize for saying this for a letter word, but do you love?
So I was really worried it was going to be another word.
There's so many.
There's so many.
It doesn't even rise to the level of a question. I mean, I just...
There are a tiny number of people with whom you share so much life that you can't even think of yourself in their absence.
And I don't know if that would find that, but you can have a kid and never make this level
of connection.
I think even right down to the fact that Zep chooses Boogie Wogie Piano for his own set
of reasons why I would choose Boogie Wogie Piano if I could play in any style. It's a question about a decrease in loneliness.
You know, like my grandfather played the mandolin, and I had to learn some mandolin because
otherwise that instrument would go silent.
You don't expect that you get this much of a chance to leave this much of yourself in another person who is choosing it and recreating it
rather than it being directly instilled. And my proudest achievement is in a certain
sense having not taught him and having shared this much. So, you know, it's not even love, it's like well beyond.
So you mentioned love for you making a less lonely world.
I think I speak for, I would argue,
probably millions of people that you, Eric,
because this is a conversation with you,
have made for many people, for me, a less lonely world.
And I can't wait to see how you've developed as an intellect, but also I'm so
heart-worn by the optimism and the hopefulness that was in you, that I hope develops further.
you that I hope develops further. And lastly, I'm deeply thankful that you, Erica, my friend
and would give me what honor me with this watch. It means more than what it can say. Thanks, guys. Thanks for talking to me today. Thank you. Thanks for listening to this conversation with
Eric Weinstein and thank you to our sponsors.
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And now let me leave you some words from Socrates.
To find yourself, think for yourself.
Thanks for listening and hope to see you next time.
Thank you.