Lex Fridman Podcast - #176 – Robert Breedlove: Philosophy of Bitcoin from First Principles
Episode Date: April 18, 2021Robert Breedlove is a decentralized finance entrepreneur, philosopher, and podcaster. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Fundrise: https://fundrise.com/lex - LMNT: https://dri...nkLMNT.com/lex to get free sample pack - Munk Pack: https://munkpack.com and use code LEX to get 20% off - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off EPISODE LINKS: Robert's Twitter: https://twitter.com/Breedlove22 Robert's Linktree: https://linktr.ee/breedlove22 What is Money Show: https://www.youtube.com/c/RobertBreedlove22 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/lexfridman - 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 (08:46) - Sovereignty (15:50) - Territorial imperative (20:28) - Property (26:33) - Anarchism (29:11) - Inflation is theft (33:35) - Volatility is truth (38:14) - Taleb and Bitcoin (42:22) - Life is information propagating through flesh (53:21) - Intelligence (57:34) - Space and time (1:04:16) - Pragmatic truth (1:15:14) - Creative destruction (1:19:03) - Capitalism vs Communism (1:31:46) - Jordan Peterson on religion (1:36:03) - Inflation (1:39:54) - What is money? (1:53:30) - What is Bitcoin? (2:04:36) - Bitcoin vs other cryptocurrencies (2:12:47) - Can governments ban Bitcoin? (2:25:29) - Bitcoin toxicity is tough love (2:38:47) - Crypto scammers (2:47:58) - Eric Weinstein and Bitcoin (2:54:21) - Satoshi Nakamoto (2:58:51) - Money is energy (3:06:05) - Proof of stake vs proof of work (3:08:45) - Morality (3:23:30) - Collapse of the Soviet Union (3:27:00) - Jordan Peterson and Bitcoin (3:39:28) - Book recommendations (3:58:49) - Advice for young people (4:02:20) - Love
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The following is a conversation with Robert Breedlove, someone who caught my attention and
was recommended highly as a rigorous scholar and thinker in the space of decentralized
finance and Bitcoin.
His podcast titled What Is Money is a Good Representation of the Way His Mind Works.
He's willing to talk through ideas from many hours, willing to listen, willing to think,
which makes him a great
companion in conversation to explore the history, philosophy, and future of
money. Quick mention of our sponsors, funerized, element, monkpack, and better
help. Check them out in the description to support this podcast. As a side note,
let me say that I'll have a number of conversations in the coming months
at Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies. None of these conversations are financial advice. That's
not a legal warning. That's a genuine description of my goals and approach with these chats.
At least for a while, I personally won't actively invest in Bitcoin or any other cryptocurrencies,
except to learn about the technology itself.
I don't think this should be a journalistic standard like the New York Times trying to
establish, which I very much disagree with, in my humble opinion, I think journalists
should be free to invest in bitcoin if they want to.
Luckily, I'm not a journalist.
I just know my own psychology and I feel that my thinking will be muddled by excitement
if I invest before I understand.
I feel the same way about Tesla, for example,
I still don't own any Tesla stock
and I am still indeed fascinated by Tesla autopilot
as an artificial intelligence system.
I work hard to be cognizant of the biases
that arise in my mind and always try to choose the path
that maximizes or maintains a freedom of thought as much as possible. Also, let me say that I try
to be very careful in selecting guests based not only on the contents of their ideas, but the richness,
complexity, music, style of their mind and character.
Yes, I will talk with people with whom you and I may disagree.
People who some may call bad or even evil human beings.
I want to understand them, because I believe that as Soljin Nitsen said,
the battle line between good and evil runs through the heart of every man.
I think if you always run from evil, you become blind through the heart of every man. I think if you always
run from evil, you become blind to the truth of human nature. As usual, I'll do a few minutes
of As Now. I try to make these interesting, but I do give you time stamps, so if you skip,
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This is the Lex Friedman Podcast, and here is my conversation with Robert Greedlove.
Russo opens his 1762 book, The Social Contract, with the following statement, Man is born free and everywhere he's in chains.
So you talk about freedom and sovereignty quite a bit.
What do these ideas mean to you?
The idea of sovereignty.
Freedom and sovereignty. I think they're very closely
related. It's started just focusing on sovereignty, which is a word I don't think we talk about enough.
And the general definition of that I would give is the authority to act as you see fit.
And it's a word that's etymologically associated with words like monarchy, money, reign.
So historically, it's referred to whatever the locus of supreme power is in the sphere
of human action.
So whether, if you go back in ancient Egypt, the Pharaoh had absolute sovereignty and everyone
else was pretty much operating according to his interest.
You fast forward to today, modern Western democracy, we have more decentralized sovereignty
and that we all get to go vote and elect officials that make decisions on our behalf.
So the theme of sovereignty across history is that it's been gradually decentralizing
across our different models of socioeconomics.
And it's largely, you could say it's rooted heavily
in the money.
I would argue, which is something we'll get a lot into here,
where if you have money, you have the authority to act
as you see fit in the world.
And even in our current political sphere,
if you have enough money, you can actually
reshape the rules.
You can reshape laws.
You can lobby Congress.
If you're in a certain situation like many billionaires, you can negotiate your own tax
treaty, such that you can get favorable tax treatment with certain jurisdictions in the
world.
So this concept of sovereignty, which today we call common to common to call states or nation states or government
sovereign, meaning that they have power over people. But as I argue in a lot of my writing,
I actually think that sovereignty inheres within the individual and that we each have
our own interiorized space of choice, which is something like Victor Frank will call the final human freedom,
and that we, no matter what our circumstances are, no matter what exogenous situation we face,
we always have this endogenous power to choose how we respond to it.
That's one of my favorite books is Mancest for Meaning. Maybe you can break that apart a little bit.
So you've kind of spoken about sovereignty
as a closely linked to power,
but is there something about your own mind
being able to achieve sovereignty
no matter what the monetary system is,
no matter what who has the control of our centralized power,
the money or whatever the mechanisms of sovereignty
and the societal level, use an individual isn't ultimately all
boiled down to what you can do with your mind,
how you see the world.
Yeah, I agree.
And as we get a little bit deeper into this,
I think we'll come to see money as an extension of your mind.
So there's a feedback between money and mind.
For instance, you think in dollars today,
almost guarantee it.
Most of us do here in the US. And it's a tool. It's a tool we're using to de-complexify
the world around us to deal with it, to understand the sacrifices and successes across an entire
history of economic transactions. We can boil that all down to the price. So it's data
compression. And if you can change, if there's a central
body or central governance mechanism that can manipulate that money, it can have an impact
on your mind. For instance, today, so I agree with you, in the first hand, say that I do
believe in free will. I do believe in individual autonomy, but I also think that there are certain devices
and powers in the world around us that can actually influence how we think.
And it's fascinating to think about the fact that money might be actually deeply integrated
into the way we think and into our mind. Like this is, you think about what are the core aspects
of the human mind? What influences cognition, the way
you reason about the world? You have the chomsky like languages at the core of everything.
But you're kind of placing money as pretty close to the core of what it means to be an intelligent
reasoning human. I think money is a direct derivation of action and speech actually.
It's another expression of the logos.
If we even think of what it means to think,
is that we are generating two different courses of action,
potential courses of action,
and we're populating them with avatars, right?
Maybe ourself or others, and then we're comparing
how we may act in each situation
and what we think the result would may act in each situation and what
we think the result would be.
So actually, it's comparison.
Basically it's comparison and contrasting of possible courses of action.
And that's the same thing with words, themselves.
Like, you know, most words, the vast majority of words only have meaning and relationship
to other words, right?
It's all contextual definitions of a word or more words.
Now, people have argued with me about this because there is a first word where you pick
up rock and say rock.
But most other words and much in higher abstractions tend to be relative.
And what's funny about action and speech, and this gets, I get into a bit of this in our
paper here, is it linked to evolutionary biology, and that once human beings adopted upright
stance, we freed our hands.
We no longer needed our hands for locomotion.
So we started to evolve more dexterity, and notably we have opposable thumbs.
So this gives us an
ability to manipulate and particularize the environment in a way that most
other animals cannot. And what's interesting about this is that as we gain
this ability to manipulate natural resources and you know count point, pointing
was a big deal and that we could indicate, pray or items that are far off distance and
we could organize ourselves.
At the same time, we co-evolved this fine musculature in the face and tongue.
So it's as if speech developed, co-evolved really with our dexterity.
And as a natural extension of that came us making tools, right?
We started to create things to better satisfy our wants over time.
And the most tradable tool in any society or the most tradable thing is money.
So I really, I argue that action and speech are quintessential modes of self-savv and
expression.
And then money is just sort of a tech layer we've put right on top of that,
and that it's a natural derivation of action and speech.
Okay, that's fascinating to think about sovereignty from the evolutionary perspective,
and then ultimately, money is the technology layer that enables sovereignty.
So, you know, it's really fascinating to think about our modern human society as deeply
rooted in these like evolutionary roots from the very origins of life on earth. So what, you know,
some of the ideas you just mentioned, what do you see are some interesting characteristics of just life on the earth that propagated to us humans.
Like what ideas are propagated through, have roots in the evolution?
Yeah, I think one of the deepest
impulsions in life is the territorial imperative. So all life is seeking to expand
its dominion over space and time.
And we think about, you know, again, physically with space, it's advantageous to an animal
or an organism to have more territory under its control to raise offspring.
So it's all about reproductive fitness at the end of the day.
And then we'd also think of reproduction itself as the genetic impulse to replicate oneself across
time.
So it's territoriality across time in a way.
And this is very common in most animals, not all animals are territorial, but many
are.
And you see very interesting behaviors resulting from territoriality.
This is like animal combat.
The reason birds sing is territoriality.
A number of other things. And
it's my hypothesis and others have shared this hypothesis as well that
mankind is clearly, I think, what are your territorial species and that he expresses this territoriality in
property rights.
So property, one that word, we hear that word,
we typically think of an asset,
we think of, oh, this house,
or this stock, or whatever.
But property is actually the socially acknowledged
relationship between a human and an asset,
such that you have exclusive rights and responsibilities
to a particular asset.
It is not the asset itself.
So property, it's information, it's a relationship.
By the way, my mind was just blown. Property is information, it's not the actual asset. That's
really important. Very important. That's really interesting. Yeah. And then it comes down to how do
we organize ourselves such that property that the contributions people are making or commensurate with the consideration they're receiving
So if you're adding value to a piece of property you're developing a piece of land for use in theory like to be fair
You should have the rights to that fruit right if you go out and plant a garden or whatever it may be
and and to that fruit, right? If you go out and plant a garden or whatever it may be.
And this is rooted in natural law, where we have rights to life, liberty, and property. Those are kind of just the base, the fundamental layer of morality and capitalism, frankly. And you could
think of, to get really primordial with it, the first capitalist in the world, just to kind of get some
definitions out here, I'll say capitalism versus communism or socialism as the spectrum
I'll speak on.
The first capitalist in the world would be the guy, the caveman, that maybe dug a little
hole for himself to shield himself from the elements, right?
Maybe there was a brainstormstorm, a snowstorm,
and he dug a little enclave and he protected himself.
I think you were gonna go,
because you said primordia,
I thought you were gonna go back to like earlier
biological systems.
I guess primordial for human, for human.
For human, yeah.
Okay.
And then the first communist or socialist
would be someone that decided the fruits of his
labor belong to him.
So he would have violently encroached on that individual and taken his plot for himself,
for his own use.
And that's the spectrum across which capitalism, the pure sense and communism, the pure sense
operate in that capitalism capitalism each individual has the
exclusive rights to the fruits of their labor. So anything they spend their time, effort, energy,
creating in the world, they own the rights to that and they can trade those rights with others,
other self-owned people that have done similar things. Communism or socialism would imply that
other people, typically the state, have the rights, at least some
rights to your, to the value you've created.
So there's this interesting moment when that first caveman, that first capitalist, drew
a line, a circle in this cave and said, you know, this is mine.
You could say it was free to be claimed at the time he claimed it. But it's an interesting moment when asset becomes
an asset. When space time, as you were referring to, it becomes something that's now can be
possessed by a human being. Is there something special about this moment? Because it feels
like, first of all, in terms of space and time,
it feels like there's a lot of available space time yet to be claimed.
So if we just look at the universe, right?
We're talking about, there's a funny thing
with Elon Musk and Mars.
I think they sneaked in there for SpaceX
that nobody on Earth has any authority on Mars or any.
Oh, this is a very interesting question.
It seems almost like humorous at this time,
but perhaps not, perhaps there will be sections of space,
not just on planets that are going to be even fought over.
So is there something special about this moment?
Because in discussing sort of violence and respect for property,
it feels like this is a special moment,
because ultimately conflict arises when you make claims
on a particular territory.
It's not always in conflict where people say,
when you look at Hitler or something, for example,
his claim would be in many of the lands that he attacked and
invaded that this has always belonged to Germany.
So is there something you could say as to what it means to own an asset or a property?
Yeah.
So in the ancient days of hunters and gatherers, we could say that property was mostly a
loyal title, which meant it's just whatever you can defend.
Right. So if you've got knives and daggers and satchels and maybe some pelts, you've
hunted whatever you can hold and defend is yours.
And there's not like there's a government to appeal to.
You're just sort of free
agent operating in the wild, defending the assets you can protect on you more or less.
And what really changed the nature of property is when we get into the agricultural age.
So there's a big flip where we went from just foraging and hunting all the time, constantly
moving, trying to stay alive, to deciding we're going to settle here.
We figured out how to cultivate crops.
We can create, you know, we can increase the population because we can harvest more energy
from the sun and we can establish a longer term civilization.
What happens in that transition is that we begin creating economic surplus.
So for the first time in history, we have stock houses of grain to defend,
or maybe meat, or cattle, or whatever it is we're creating. We now have savings.
And it's at that time when government emerges as well. Because once you have savings,
so you have an economic surplus,
you have something that other people want to steal. Right? This one thing we'll touch on a lot
today is people always want something for nothing. There's all people always seeking the path to get
something for nothing. And I think that drives a lot of our decision making. And it actually encourages
us to be innovative in a lot of ways, right? We're trying to, you could say it's our laziness.
It's helping us be inventive in a way.
We're trying to accomplish greater results with less efforts over time.
But we can cross that line in seeking something for nothing
where we start to violate the life, liberty, and property of others.
And that's where we shift from kind of capitalistic society to something more communist.
And so that's what government is.
It's a protection producing enterprise
for the economics surplus generated by a trading society.
So when people begin to trade,
they create what's called the division of labor,
which is a very common economic term.
Basically, it means you're better at making hats,
I'm better at making boots.
If you specialize in hats, I specialize in boots
and we trade, we've created a positive sum game
or you and I both benefit.
So we become collectively more than the sum of our parts
through trade.
And that's why human beings do trade
because we become more energy efficient as a result.
We create more outputs for a unit of input.
And you could think of government in that respect,
if we're looking at it, maybe in a text sense,
that the economy is the trade network that generates wealth,
generates innovation, generates all this whole lap
of luxury we live in today that we've inherited
from our forebears is from the market.
It's not from a government.
The government is the network security, if you will.
So we're paying expenses to a vendor to protect peace, to preserve life-liberating property in that network,
so that we can have, you know, when there's inevitably disputes over private property, we can have non-violent dispute resolution in the rule of law.
And we can have a reasonable expectation of being able to conduct commerce without
violence.
The problem has been that the protector tends to, you know, they're in a monopolistic position,
we'd say, they tend to start abusing that position to obtain property for themselves.
Again, trying to get that something for nothing. When you control,
you know, you are the security guard for the economy. The first thing they tend to monopolize
is money, because if you can control the money, you're effectively controlling people,
their energy, their perceptions. And that becomes a, you know, particularly through inflation,
becomes an avenue to get something for nothing,
and that you can just print more money that everyone else is forced to sacrifice their
time and energy to obtain.
What are your thoughts about anarchism?
So I talked quite a bit.
He'll be here in a few days, actually, Michael Malis, about ideas of anarchy and his idea or the idea of anarchists is that
any amount of government will eventually become the very kind of thing that you're referring
to.
So there's almost no way to have a government that doesn't then try to monopolize power,
money and all those kinds of things.
Do you think it's possible to have a government
sort of on that spectrum of like anarchy, maybe libertarianism? I'm not sure how exactly
the spectrum goes, but where you have a small government that protects the liberty and property
rights and those kinds of things and doesn't expand to then also control the monetary system and all those other things.
Agreed.
Agreed completely.
It was not possible until Satoshi Nakamoto.
So for the first time in history, we have a money that cannot be monopolized, cannot
be corrupted, cannot be changed, cannot be weaponized, frankly.
Our current monetary system is weaponized by those who
can print money against those who cannot.
And I think when you have at the heart of every modern economy,
which even we could say the US, we pride ourselves
as free market capitalists.
We outcompeted communism in the 20th century.
We think that this is the superior model.
Most business people will tell you
that the free market is the best allocator resources,
all of these things.
But what we have at the heart of every modern economy,
including the U.S., is an anti-capitalistic institution,
which is the central bank.
The temptation to monopolize money throughout all of history has been too
strong for anyone to resist. So any even benevolent quote unquote dictators that have taken
over, many dictators have inherited say an inflationary regime or societies coming apart
because someone was clipping the coins or someone was printing too much money and they'll
commit to going back to a hard money standard. So they'll keep society on a gold standard, for instance,
such that they cannot violate the money
to benefit themselves.
But inevitably over time, because it is a political institution,
there's an incentive there, right, for again,
to get something for nothing, to spend more
than you're making through tax revenues.
And with that incentive, people typically ultimately
end up pursuing that inflationary path.
So we can get deeper into that about.
Inflation is a term that we've been conditioned
to think today is just something normal.
The prices just go up.
And then it's pertinent to a healthy economy, but it's actually, if
you look at it from real first principles, it is just theft integrated into the money.
It's a technology backdoor.
There's another way to think about it.
You wouldn't buy a cell phone knowing that someone could siphon your data off of your
private calls and sell it into the market.
Now, I know we do that with a lot of social media stuff today and that's something else
we can get into, but you wouldn't do it willingly, right? You
wouldn't, you prefer that your cell phone and your data was monetized by you or if
you're going to sell it, you would be able to selectively sell it.
Inflation is that it's similar. It's a tech backdoor. So it's a money that
only a few people can siphon value off of serotonously, typically slowly, but eventually, as we've seen
throughout history, that slowly builds up into a rapidly
and then causes the monetary system to collapse.
Do you think there's a benefit to inflation possibly? So
when you have perfect information, but perhaps you don't need inflation,
perhaps it is purely theft. But I think of inflation as like the snooze button on the alarm.
Like you just, so if you have a hard standard,
you better wake up when the alarm rings.
But you know, all of us kind of like probably shouldn't
but use the snooze button.
He's like, okay, well, five more minutes, ten more minutes.
And then you're saying there's naturally a slippery slope
where you, you, I, it becomes a drug
that you fall in love with in your abuse.
But nevertheless, the usefulness of this news button
is that you don't know how you'll be actually feeling
when that alarm rings.
You might be able to ready to pop up.
It might be like, you really need those few more minutes
like to psychologically get
yourself out of bed.
This metaphor is just not working at all.
No, no, do you think there's a use to inflation sometimes from like an economic perspective?
I think the drug metaphor is a little more apt, and that inflation does provide an immediately stimulative effect when used early on.
So, but what it's doing is it's, again, we talk about the balance between incentives and
disincentives, right?
That being necessary for a system to function properly.
With inflation, you're essentially giving the people that can print money a way to damp
in the distance that they face.
It destroys feedback loops, I guess you might say.
Another way to look at this is when you—using inflation, using quantitative easing, you can
decrease short-term volatility in the marketplace.
So the market is basically this idea,
this form of free exchange that's trying to zero in
on the best ideas.
And the ideas are those that are most fit to reality,
to satisfying the most wants.
It's going to overshoot, it's going to undershoot,
you have these little business cycles.
But when it's undershooting and you're experiencing
business recession, in a capitalist
environment, the market needs to clear that malinvestment, that misallocation of capital.
That means someone made a bet on a certain idea that it would satisfy once in a particular
way, and that bet did not pan out.
If you then paper over the losses that business is creating, you're now delaying and exacerbating
the volatility that that
idea created. So this is kind of a Taliban concept where you can dampen short-run volatility,
but volatility is truth. Volatility is us matching our ideas to reality, right? We're constantly
again, overshooting and undershooting. So you delay volatility,
you're just amplifying it and exacerbating it in the long run.
And that's what central bank is doing. The central bank mandate is
low unemployment and low and expected inflation, basically.
And so they're trying to achieve economic growth in a stable way, quote unquote, stable way.
This is their ostensible purpose.
And that's just not possible.
Growth is an inherently unstable process.
Can you elaborate a little bit about the nature of volatility?
Why is it communicating truth? That's something that a lot of people
are afraid of is the volatility. Almost like it's a sign of chaos, and so they want to
escape chaos. But you're saying that that's actually whether it's chaos or not, I don't
know, but it's getting us closer to the fundamental like reality that we should not be trying to escape.
Yeah, so if we consider that the universe is pervaded by entropy, this is the second law
of thermodynamics is that every closed system tends towards greater disorder of time.
And that life itself, again, I would argue, expressed through the logos,
we, life, is the anti-entropic principle. It's the only thing that's converting entropy
into order, chaos into order. And that's what entrepreneurs are doing, right? We're living
at the edges of the known, and we're trying to, we're testing ourselves against the entropy of nature, trying to figure out
new and better ways of saying doing or making things. And then if we do crack a code or figure
something out, we then have a big incentive, the incentive is to get rich, right? Because then
you have a new idea that you could then sell back into the marketplace. So it's this sequence of
courageously confronting the entropy of nature and converting it into
good and useful order, which by the way is like the ancient idea of God and Genesis, which
I think is interesting, that actually enables us to construct civilization in these layers
of anti-interpy or order, you might say. So today, we live in a bubble of anti-entropy or order.
You know, like the coastlines are guarded by the nation and the city has a certain police
force that keeps it in order.
Even the way we talk, like clearly the words matter, but also the nonverbal cues, all
these things are like order that has been established over many, many,
many thousands of years of human evolution.
And I think that when I say volatility is truth,
what I'm saying is that the experience of uncertainty is something that's
inerradicable from life, right?
In certainty, like it's kind of a paradox
because we're fighting against it.
We're trying to innovate our way away from uncertainty
to create more capital, which capital is very simply
a way of mitigating uncertainty.
So this is why you might have like a stash of food
in case the power goes out or a generator
like it helps you overcome uncertainty over time.
But uncertainty is also where all the sweetness of life is.
So there's got to be this balance with one foot in, one foot out.
And so human societies is this kind of bubble of order that we've constructed and slowly
expanding, but at the edges, you're always going to have that chaos, that volatility, and
that the entrepreneurs are kind of like jumping into that chaos, that volatility, and that the entrepreneurs
are kind of like jumping into that chaos, some of them die, and some of them succeed.
And so, like, if you want to grow this bubble of order, you have to be embracing the volatility
at the edges.
Yes.
And reverence for entrepreneurship, because these are the people putting their neck out,
so to speak, risking themselves.
And they're going to contribute to society, by the way, whether they go up in flames or
not.
If they go up in flames, society has witnessed their experience as something not to do,
or something that doesn't work in a particular time and place, so that you could say they're
them going up in flames as we even lightening the rest of us or if they figure something out. Oh, sure. You know, Steve
Jobs creates the iPhone. It changes the world forever. So enlightening the rest of
the game. And Taleb would say the fire of their failure. Okay. Yeah, exactly. Taleb
would say individual fragility is inseparable from ensemble anti-fragility.
So this means that, again, every time that entrepreneur goes up in flames or say a restaurant
goes out of business, when a restaurant goes out of business, that particular cuisine
strategy, they were implementing in that particular time and place, that's a signal to all
the other restaurants in the area that that doesn't work.
So restaurant food improves from bankruptcy to bankruptcy. So is this this death of the individual components that contributes to the growth of the ensemble?
As a small aside, maybe you can guide me through it. I don't know if you're paying attention, but there was some
chaos around
Teleb and the Bitcoin community. I wasn't quite paying attention, but from my
outsider's perspective, I thought it seemed to lab was a supporter of Bitcoin, and then
a lot of people are very upset about something. I'm sorry if I don't know the details, but
can you pull out some profound philosophical ideas from the disagreement of the chaos. I admittedly don't know too much about it either. I've a big fan of his writing.
He's always been a little different in person.
Like, I actually, he signed one of my books, I met him in person. He's just,
he's got a very abrasive personality. He's kind of known for it. It's not,
I don't think I'm passing any judgment here. He's sort of abrasive.
Yeah. But he had written the forward
to a really important book in Bitcoin
called the Bitcoin Standard for safety and amuse.
And then I think they had a little Twitter beef
because safety is very much against COVID mask
and state intervention,
whereas Taleb's on the other side of the fence.
And so, and then after that beef, Taleb came out against Bitcoin or saying,
oh, Bitcoin is a crazy and wrong.
I think the great mask debate of the 2020 will probably be the thing that ultimately
is the World War III.
I've been very surprised how tense, how much, like, division this one little arguably silly thing has led to.
I think a lot of people sort of project their, like, it's almost like not wearing a mask
as a statement of sovereignty, of freedom, of like saying fuck you to the man, the government,
the centralized power, or the dishonesty, or the, in the scientific community, all those
kinds of things.
And then wearing a mask is a sort of kind of signaling
of various kind of social aspects.
I don't know.
I'm not paying attention to it.
I actually tuned out.
I was part of a group of scientists
that were looking into like, do masks work?
This very interesting question.
To me, it was an interesting question.
I sort of roll in to ask that very interesting question, because I think it is an interesting scientific question. To me, it was an interesting question. I sort of roll in to ask that very interesting
question, because I think it is an interesting scientific question. But then I quickly realized
that just as I was doing this like scientific exploration of this very interesting question
about viral particles, like what kind of things. Like from a scientific perspective, how do we prevent
the spread of a pandemic? Forget COVID, any pandemic. Super deadly or not deadly. Like, there's tools, there's testing, there's masks,
there's all these tools, how well do they work? And then I realized, you know, in April or
so, it became a tool of politics, a tool of philosophy. And that's when I sort of pulled
out, so it's fascinating. I think it's a it's a canvas on which people project their
emotions. And I guess, until I got caught up in that kind of. So there's nothing fundamental,
I suppose, to their disagreement. Not that I'm aware of, but he is, you know, he's written some
about in his books, the problem with centralization. I mean, a lot of his writing addresses that.
And he actually
points to i think switzerland is the best government in the world because it's decentralized
so there's that i don't think he has any i'm not to speak for him but i don't think he's
voiced any specific critiques on bitcoin per se could be wrong about that. It's just maybe his flavorful language in the way he likes to communicate.
And the other theory is that maybe he's playing 40 chests and having a Twitter
boating accident, you know, so I don't believe in Bitcoin.
I've sold on my Bitcoin and oh, I see.
Yeah. What?
Sorry, the boating accident in Bitcoin is this, um, I guess it's
proverbial by this point where it's
the way you lose your Bitcoin.
So if someone comes after you and says, hey, whether it's a government or an individual's
coming after you, so you can give me all your Bitcoin or pay these taxes and Bitcoin,
you go, oh, I had a boating accident and lost them all.
Lost them all.
So, yeah.
Back to the fundamental nature of space time.
Let me ask you, because we're kind of left it.
I'd like to go back to this idea of
that you said that everything we think, say,
or do occurs within the balance of space time.
So first of all, maybe you can comment on,
what do you mean in this context about space time, but also about the nature of all, maybe you can comment on what do you mean in this context about space, time,
but also about the nature of truth.
Like how much of all of this is noble?
How much of this is accessible to us humans?
How much uncertainty like we're talking about
is there in the world?
Are you do you fall in a place where we can reason deeply
about this world and it's noble or is
it mostly chaos and we're just holding on for your life?
Yeah, I think I said that all action occurs within the balance of space time.
The other thing, everything we say do or make, the other thing is that everything we say
do or make starts out as an idea.
So there's this concept of universal dormitism, which basically applies Darwinian principles,
but outside of the biological sphere. So we could say that this kind of gets into Richard Dawkins'
mimetics, even ideas are competing, reproducing, recombining. That idea is so barfled, by the way.
I don't think it's been understood fully. I think in the 21st century, in the digital world,
from my perspective, in artificial intelligence,
there's yet to be some profound things
to be discovered about this whole concept.
Agreed completely.
It's been called an acid, actually,
and that it just strips away all of the non-informational
components of something that strips it down to its bare bones.
I have a quote near somewhere about that, but.
Sorry, which is called the NASA, the idea is the universal Darwinism.
Darwinism applied broadly outside of the system.
I broadly, and I would all condition all of this, saying that most of my thinking is shaped
by a book I wrote recently called The Case Against Reality which introduced me to this concept but it tied
into Darwinism that I've used more broadly in the past looking at things like money and economics.
So the book The Case Against Reality by Donald Hoffman, he has a quote in the book that describes
universal Darwinism. It's a quote, universal Darwinism can,
without risk of refuting itself, address our key question.
Does natural selection favor true perceptions?
If the answer happens to be no,
then it hasn't shot itself in the foot.
The uncanny power of universal Darwinism
has been likened by the philosopher,
Dan Dennett, to a universal acid.
And Dan Dennett says, quote, there is no denying at this point that Darwin's idea is a universal solvent, capable
of cutting right to the heart of everything in sight. The question is, what does it leave
behind? I have tried to show that once it passes through everything, we are left with
stronger, sounder versions of our most important ideas. Some of the traditional details perish, and some of these are losses to be regretted,
but good riddance to the rest of them.
What remains is more than enough to build on."
So the way I would interpret that is that life itself, I've come to view life as information propagating through flesh.
And that we are, I guess DNA is a quadratic code.
I think it's four letters, maybe versus a binary zeros and ones.
And we are ideas. We are strategies competing with each other.
And nature is that which selects.
It's what selects the winning idea, the ones that are most fit to environmental conditions,
frankly.
You know, talking about sovereignty and individualism, there might need to be some rethinking here
about what is actually the basic individual entity that is to be sovereign. Like, maybe our biological meat vehicles were like way overly attached to them.
Like, maybe especially with genetics and all those kinds of things or artificial intelligence
or living more and more in virtual worlds will become detached from that kind of idea. So for example, if I can clone you,
you know, make one million robbers and, you know, but you will all have the same idea.
What is your real value as the like I could just shoot you and those still be 999 of you,
but the idea is the important thing. Yeah. The things you believe.
So I would argue that I don't know, even if you clone someone perfectly, I don't think
you can reproduce the individual themselves because we're all a product of nature and
nurture, right?
So my particular concourse of experiences, the path dependence that I represent cannot
be replicated as nor can anyone's for that matter. Well, that's that's a hypothesis. So we
That's of course a human meatbag would say
so
Like desperately trying to preserve himself
You know, it's I think it reduces the month of questions about what is consciousness and whether
that can be cloned, all those kinds of, you know, it gets to the core of what it is to
be human.
What are the things that make you particularly you?
Yeah, I think it would assume kind of a materialist viewpoint on reality and that if you could
reproduce every atom of an individual, that you would have their experience encapsulated
in that.
And, you know, Hoffman's, which is a book, is very radical.
He argues that space and time is not an objective reality.
It's a biological interface.
So we are scanning our environment for fitness payoffs.
And this space and time is the rendering specific to human beings that allows us to navigate
reality effectively.
So the further argument would be that we all have pretty similar interfaces, but they're
all slightly different too, because we're all adapting in different ways, and that different
animals have their own unique interfaces.
So we have a certain amount of photo receptors in our eye, whereas I think the number three
might be five, or something
like the mantis shrimp has like seven or nine. So they can see, and we only see one 10
trillionth of the light spectrum. So talk about a tiny fraction. I mean, one 10 trillionth
is a very minuscule number, and that makes up all of the light that we can interpret
with our eyes. But it's something like a mantis shrimp could see, you know, much more of that.
So I think there is this, we're very conditioned to have a fully materialist viewpoint on reality
today, or we think, you know, the atomic clockwork kind of universe. But I think there's,
I don't think that's true exactly. And another school
that goes into that is actually Austrian economics, where we could say that, you know, we mentioned
earlier that an asset is not property. It's actually based on the relationship between
the individual and the property. There's this whole realm of relevance associated with, we're all moving through life in the course of a goal directed action.
So when we walk across a room, I go from A to B, it's because I valued B more than A.
So value is inseparable from human action. We have a rank-ordered value system in our mind, each of us, and we're
constantly taking action in accordance with those rank values. Anything that accelerates us on the
course of our goal-directed action towards our goal is useful. Anything that impedes us, or we can
say, is valuable. Anything that impedes us is actually obstructing to value.
And anything that's irrelevant is just valueless.
So this table that we're using right now,
like this is a, it's an accessory to you and I
because it's holding this paper,
that's holding the information,
that's guiding our conversation.
But we could pay some $100 to jump over this table.
And this table could simultaneously be an accessory
to you and I and an obstacle to someone else. So it's this domain, this silent contention
of willpower and agendas occurring across the face of the earth that is what Austrian economics
really looks at. It's the realm of human action, as I call it, called praxeology. So it's a non-materialist viewpoint on reality,
and that things, we think in terms of matter being reality,
but it's often more so in the sphere of human action,
what matters that is reality?
It's the relevance of a thing to the course of one's goal-directed action.
And that's ultimately, I exist in the space of ideas.
Yes. Not in the space of physical matters. And just to jump back to this line here, I think his
fundamental line here is the question is talking about universal Darwinism as an asset. What does it
leave behind? I've tried to show that once it passes through everything, we're left with stronger
sounder versions of our most useful ideas. That's the key point to me, and that
ideas and information, so far as we can tell, are the most fundamental substrate of reality.
And information itself, back to entropy, information is the resolution of entropy.
That's what the bit is, right? It's a one or zero. Whatever reduces your entropy by half is a bit and we measure information in bits. So, you're right, people don't have ideas, ideas have people. Honestly, it's a really
profound idea or a statement about reality, a reframing of reality. It's a, if we're actually being
deeply honest about it, it's quite painful.
I do appreciate that you defended your biological meat back earlier,
but it seems like ideas are the things that have power.
That me, Lex, for example, is worthless,
and relative to the ideas that used my brain for a bit of a time.
But so far as we know, only human beings can generate
and share ideas.
So you can't say Lux is worthless.
Like you are the node of the idea sphere.
I'm like the newest sphere.
So I'm, what is it from a Bitcoin perspective?
I'm like I'm mining, I'm solving the cryptographic problem
in the engineering.
I'm on that sense, I'm a useful node.
Yeah, you're competing to solve the puzzle of entropy, right?
And when you do solve it, it benefits the entire network.
But I guess from my perspective, just because just working
in an AI, I'm looking at the long-term vision.
I see us humans in AI systems as really the same,
and AI systems ultimately as something that supersedes humans.
So what is intelligence?
So in the context of our current discussion, I think intelligence is very closely linked
to this notion of ideas and its ability to generate model, into some theory that efficiently compresses
the chaos in a way where you can then integrate it with other ideas and they can play in
all those kinds of things.
So in that sense, it's the turning chaos into order, it's the molding of ideas such that
our human brains can work with it.
And just from my perspective, I don't see any reason why they cannot be algorithmicized,
converted into computational systems.
I would agree.
Which is scary.
Scary or potentially really promising, right?
It's kind of the case with all novelty.
It's terrifying as much as it is promising. That's what you're pursuing it so heavily. But I would maybe take it
step further and say the intelligence and maybe the most simplistic form is error correction.
So we humans have wants, again, we're constantly expressing our value through action. There's no other way to express it, by the way. It's whatever you choose to do in any moment,
you are expressing the values you hold in your mind and your heart.
As we move from less valued A to more valued B,
we entropy happens, uncertainty happens, we fall, of course.
And it is intelligence that enables us to render information from that experience and
error correct, right?
So that we can move slightly, shift our trajectory slightly more towards B that we're trying to
move towards.
So I think that there's something there that I don't know that we can make synthetically
and that one, if we define intelligence as error correction, it's an error correction
to what?
It's error correction towards what we find is valuable.
So we're trying to satisfy human wants.
Why not just be our own?
Could be others as well.
If I'm an entrepreneur, I'm trying to solve the wants of others, not just myself. And I'm trying to error correct myself
towards that goal using intelligence and processing environmental feedback through intelligence,
the error correct. So I don't know how if you eliminate the human element completely,
who's doing the wanting, right? Where does value come from?
I know the machine learning people who are listening are saying that's exactly what
machine learning is which is error correction because you have a loss function
objective function that measures how wrong your thing is and you want to make it
less wrong next time. That's a whole process of machine learning but you're saying
what humans are able to do is in a world where there's no
maybe objective values, absolute values, you're generating that very lost function, that objective
function, that you're that function that measures the error comes from the human mind.
Some aliens might disagree with you because they might have a different objective function.
The purpose comes from consciousness, I think, and without purpose, there's not error correction.
Yeah, I mean, this is again a hypothesis. Like where does purpose come from? It seems to come from consciousness here, right?
That's where suffering comes from and you want to less than suffering. That's
where pleasure comes from. It seems like it's consciousness. Maybe there's something to this
biological meat back. So to take it one layer deeper on this and the reason I like this book so much,
again, the case against reality. So he's making the case at space and time are not fundamental.
Yes. Which I started my intellectual explorations in physics, actually astrophysics.
So for the longest time, even the way I described money as I talk about space and time, so
that blew my mind.
But this dovetail nicely with another book called Lila.
The author is Robert Persig, so he wrote Zen in the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, which
is a very popular book.
20 years later, he wrote Lila, which no one's heard of, which is crazy.
And he basically says he was wrong about his first book, and he lays out this entire other
metaphysics of quality, he calls it. So it's the metaphysics, I think it's the metaphysics of quality.
But his supposition is that it's not physical reality that's fundamental.
It's not informational information that's fundamental.
It's value.
So he actually, and it's a beautiful book, I highly recommend it.
He essentially is refuting causality itself.
We think a causes b.
This book makes the case that B values
precondition A, so that we are actually creating our future through our value
systems. And this goes back to something, I think Solzhenitsyn said this, that the
the line between good and evil runs down the heart of every man. So it's as if our moral decisions are actually what's creating the outcomes in reality over time.
And then that gets into all the wisdom traditions related to religion, or it's always talking about, you know,
loving by neighbor and loving God and all of these other things that are good morally to create the best outcomes.
So values are fundamental.
Value, yes.
Value.
Yeah.
It's fundamental.
Oh boy, yeah, that's interesting.
I mean, it does feel like physics is not capturing something.
There's some people,
panpsikists argue that consciousness might be one of the fundamental
properties of nature, like from which emerges everything we see.
So that could be just other words for this same notion of value.
And then the basic laws of physics are not capturing that currently.
So maybe humans in order to understand from where
humans came from, we have to understand these other properties of nature, which are yet
to be discovered at the physics level. And we contend with that underlying nature,
whatever it is, with the logos. So we are looking at uncategorized nature, and then we're looking at uncategorized nature,
and then we're assigning a word to it.
So we're slicing up chaos into little boxes of order,
and then we're establishing this social consensus
as to those labels, which we call words,
and we're using that to communicate.
And when we communicate,
we can start to build these other things.
This is like the Uval
Harari imagined orders. So we can create these useful fictions, right, whether
it's the nation state or human rights or money, and that allows us to
cooperate flexibly in large numbers so that we can better contend with the
reality. We can produce more complicated things. We can we can enlarge that
bubble of civilization against entropy.
And that's what capitalism is all about. It's about further specializing knowledge, further
enriching mankind's treasury of knowledge, but to do that, the communication media that we're using, the words have to have stable meaning.
The money needs to have value that's dependable.
It needs to be something that's not dictated by any one group.
It's reached by consensus of the entire group.
That's how, so you think it's like optimizing for error correction again, where a free market
would be harnessing the intelligence of all market actors and a central planning or
essentially planned market would be harnessing just the intelligence of a small group of bureaucrats.
And it's not obvious how to achieve this kind of consistent mechanism.
I mean, there's obviously, we'll talk about sort of
Bitcoin as an idea. Ultimately, the idea of Bitcoin is connecting it to physics. So, like,
you can trust that physical matter won't change. But, you know, there could be other ideas
that were yet maybe physics could be changed. Very coincident, I mean, I say about it.
Like, it's on, you know, we right now believe
that physics can't be changed.
The physical matter of the world, but maybe you can.
In a way that we're totally non-understanding.
You mentioned sort of reality from Donald Hoffman's perspective.
Like if we don't have even close to direct access
to the fabric of reality,
maybe we're living in a world that's very like many dimensions, that the notions of space and
time is just like a silly and useful construct that's not at all connected. You're starting to
look at like Stephen Wolfram's, I don't know if you're familiar with this view of the world that
it's like hypergraphs underneath it all,
like these mathematical structures
from which everything emerges.
Like they're like many, many, many orders of magnitude
smaller than what we think of.
As they're even smaller than like strings and string theory.
So like those are the basic mathematical objects
from which it emerges.
I don't, you know, I think that's an interesting
philosophical framework.
It's also people should check out
a cool way to play with beautiful,
hypergraph mathematical structures.
So he has, I don't know if you know
Stephen Wilferman is, but he created,
well from Alpha and all these tools
that you can actually visualize and play with.
So you can play with physics in a visual way, which is, uh, uh, or at least this group mathematics,
which I think is incredible. He doesn't get enough love.
One of the reasons he, I think, doesn't get enough love is because of this little quirk of human nature,
which is the ego. And he sometimes frustrates a few folks
because he's very, let's say, proud of his work. But it's interesting to think about a world
where we don't have direct access to reality as Hoffman argues. And maybe I don't know if you can comment,
I don't know if you're familiar with Iron Rands work
and her whole philosophy of objectivism,
or her whole contention is that, you know,
we do have access.
I don't want to misstate it, but at least,
she would claim that it's not useful or I think she'll probably say it's not correct
to argue that we don't have access to reality.
We have the hand subjectivism.
We have direct access to reality.
That's the only thing we can reason about.
And the only way to live life morally is to reason through everything
starting with the axioms of reality which we do have direct access to.
You have thoughts about her work. I am slightly ashamed to say I have not read
Iron Rand yet so she is high on my list and she's been recommended a number of
times but so I don't know a lot specifically about her philosophy or
objectivism, but to me, it resonates closely with what the American pragmatist
commented on truth, and they distinguished what you could say is absolute truth,
which is at the bottom of reality, whether it's, you know, Mr. Wolfram's
mathematical formulas or value, whatever it may be. It's something ineffable, something beyond the reach of epistemology perhaps even.
And maybe that's why religion just sort of points to it, right? It's trying to use,
I think Joseph Campbell said something like, religion is
using stories to point towards the same transcendental mystery we all experience but
cannot articulate.
So something like the artist, the artist uses lies to point to the truth, something like
that, that kind of thing.
That's really good.
But the American pragmatist said that because at the end of the day, this is all about, when
we say truth, we need something that is socially close to social consensus and is not
shakeable by political action.
So that's what physics and mathematics are.
It's an unshakeable point of reference, I guess you might say. So the American pragmatist defined truth as the end of inquiry.
And in markets, we could say that the market itself is a forum that generates truth.
We call this pragmatic truth to separate pure objective truth that we can't even talk
about without polluting it versus pragmatic truth
Which is something that's useful so that the example here would be if I give you a map and
You're trying to go from your house to the local brisket restaurant and the map gets you from your house the brisket restaurant
Is that because the map is true or is that because the map is useful?
Right, they're very hard to disentangle which is when you're just looking at it pragmatically brisket restaurant. Is that because the map is true or is that because the map is useful?
Right. They're very hard to disentangle. When you're just looking at it pragmatically.
And in markets, markets I argue generate three forms of pragmatic truth. One is the price.
So this is the collective subjective demand and purchasing power of humanity, running up against the objective supply of capital and resources in the marketplace.
There's demand overlaid on supply.
The result of that is the price.
That is the most truthful exchange ratio, which is the closest approximation to the value
of any good in the marketplace. It gives us a data point on which we can operate.
It's compressing all known market realities down into a single actionable number.
You know based on the price of bread or copper, whether you want to buy more of it,
you want to abstain from buying it, or maybe you want to try and find substitutes.
And you can think of that price signal.
It's like an economic nerve signal. It's coordinating human action across time.
So if we're one socioeconomic,
super organism more collective,
that the price signal is the nerve.
And that's the first form of pragmatic truth
that markets generate.
The second form would be tools and innovations themselves.
So entrepreneurs are experimenting across time.
They're trying to satisfy the wants of consumers.
Consumers are sovereign in the marketplace. Whatever the consumer wants, the consumer gets.
I'm trying to satisfy that. I'm trying to do it out of profit. So I'm trying to take
viewing the existing price signals of goods in the marketplace. I'm trying to assemble those in a
way at a cost lower than the final solution I'm delivering to my customer.
I'm selling it at a price higher than the productive factors I combine to create it.
And in that, that iterative process, we're constantly discovering new and better ways
of solving problems or satisfying wants.
So we could say to go out and dig a hole, someone wants a hold dug that a shovel is going to let you do it much faster per hour than you would with your bare hands.
So what is the pragmatic truth of digging holes?
It's a shovel.
It's the best way we know how to solve any particular problem based on the existing treasury of knowledge. So every tool, again, we're back to ideas being fundamental.
The shovel itself is just a knowledge structure.
We've figured out a way to create this particular implement,
and then we've indexed the raw materials we found in nature
to this knowledge structure to create a shovel,
which allows us to better satisfy human wants,
you know, faster, cheaper, better.
I'm trying to generalize,
you're blowing my mind a little bit here.
I'm trying to generalize the idea of tool
to how to think about it,
because I keep, I keep just, when you say tool,
I keep imagining different, like specific
instantiations of a tool.
I'm trying to see, so the price is a pragmatic truth
a tool. I'm trying to see, so the price is a pragmatic truth that's communicating value in this network. Subjective demands against objective supply. Subjective. So it's an
economic objective. Democracy got it. So that's the demand supply. And then the tools are
the ways of extracting or solving problems is the more general kind of
or satisfying wants satisfying wants so wants is somehow that's the that's part of the supply and
the demand and wants are back to value right because everything someone wants are expressing their
value okay yeah so the shovel is a pragmatic truth. The shovel is truth.
It feels like a good book title. Okay. So what are their pregnant? What is the third one? I would argue
is virtue actually. Oh, wow. And another way to maybe think about this is competitive competency, but it's also cooperative competency.
So, we're learning over time what characteristics, what patterns of action, what mindsets,
what mental tools, what heuristics are most useful to satisfying customer wants.
So, I think that becomes, over time, becomes sharpened and diverge you.
We know it's best to be honest, because if you lie,
it's very energy and efficient.
You're creating this little fork of reality,
and then if someone else asks you about that lie,
again, you have to put another layer of lies on top.
Where if you just tell the truth,
you're just recollecting what happened.
And so that sort of keeps, again,
when we're talking about delaying volatility,
if you lie, you're delaying short-term volatility, but you're talking about delaying volatility, right, if you lie, you're delaying
short-term volatility, but you're increasing long-term volatility.
What about murder?
I haven't been able to figure out why murder is bad because I just keep wanting to murder
people.
And I've murdered many.
Jesus.
That's why I'm trying to get an interview with Vladimir Putin.
So that's fascinating.
Virtue in this market with the supplies and demands and there's the tools,
which is also pragmatic truth and there's virtue. It's a pragmatic truth.
Yeah. And if we interfere with that free market process, again, if we overstep,
which is maybe ties into murder, if you start to be coercive against life,
liberty or property. So if you're forcibly taking
someone's life, you're breaking down the trust in that market that generates these pragmatic
truths.
If you forcibly infring on someone's liberty, right?
For any reason, other than them originally breaking or infringing one life, liberty, or
property, then that's not going to work either.
And then if you violate private property rights,
if you steal property from others, you're breaking down
the trust that the intersubjective fabric of money
and markets and the rule of law, all of these useful
fictions are meant to preserve.
You're corrupting it and breaking it down.
With kind of interesting to think about the market is helping evolve the virtues.
It's sharpened into virtues.
And then these virtues can then go into motivational posters.
Or like in books that we all agree on.
And then eventually take for granted as if they were somehow fundamental to human nature.
But they're not
perhaps fundamental, they're just pragmatic truths.
Yeah, it's another way to consider competition itself is that it is a discovery process.
So entrepreneurs are competing with one another and they're trying the best satisfy consumer
wants at the lowest possible price.
So they're placing bets of time, energy, and capital on themselves, on their idea, their business plan.
And then the market decides, right, to collect the consensus of market actors decide which one was
better. One lives, one dies. So competition itself is helping us get closer to truth, to pragmatic truth.
So we're discovering what is the right price for this asset.
And that price, by the way, is derived, again, in the sense of data compression.
Everyone in the world can see that price.
Everyone in the world can then put their skin in the game by choosing to buy or sell or
short or go long or do any number of financial actions on that price.
And that information is then propagated back out to everyone else. So it's this feedback loop between
market actor and price that makes it so useful. And that's what carries us, so it's these collisions of interest that curious, it removes the
unuseful aspects of ourselves or of our tools or of a price and reveals pragmatic truth to us. Can you
play my therapist for a second and if we talk about creative destruction, I think Bukat Anapokowski
I think Bukat Anapakowski,
Hounder Stompson is a quote, something like, for all instances of beauty, many souls must be trampled.
Wow.
But it, there just needs to be an aspect of competition that destroys, you were talking about entrepreneurs, sort of on the
outside of the circle of order striving to make sense to compress
volatility of the chaos of the universe. Is there some way to protect a little bit
against the pain of that destruction, or that creative destruction,
that entrepreneur screaming on fire as he enlightens
the rest of us.
Is there some role for us humans together
in the togetherness of it?
Also government, but any kind of collectives
in helping that entrepreneur who's on fire,
maybe after a few minutes to spray him with some water and put him out of his misery.
I would say that pain is the inarguable basis of being. Right Pain is, no matter how you try to explain it away or describe it, it's not something
you can rationalize away.
No one, I think, someone may want to cut themselves to have an endorphin high, but no one
wants to suffer, we'd say, right? So pain in that sense, it is what we're constantly trying to deal with and to move away from
or create buffers between us and potential pain or potential uncertainty.
And that pain is information.
When we experience something that is misfit to the outcome we desired, that pain is what
puts us, it encourages us to change our trajectory to get back on course towards our valued aim.
So as far as, you need entrepreneurs that are exploring and you're trying to do something
new, if you're a pioneer of any kind, you are courageously facing pain, you're willfully confronting it.
So I don't think it's avoidable in that sense.
It's not like we can have pain-free economic growth, like the central bank would maybe
have us lend to believe that we can just run these experiments and when they fail, we'll
just paper over all the losses and continue.
Or you're just delaying and exacerbating the inevitable volatility back to reality.
But what I would say is that capitalism, because we're building, we're increasing the capital
stock of the world, which again, capital is the mitigation of risk.
So we're reducing the overall risk of existence by accumulating more capital in the world.
And that's what protects that entrepreneur that's deciding, hey, I saved up a million bucks. I'm going to go try this
business idea. I'm going to put all my money on the line. And if he goes up in flames,
then he his cost of living, when he comes back to reality and he's starting over from zero,
his cost of living is substantially lower starting over from zero than he would be
out in the wilderness on his own.
Right, so it's the accumulation of capital stock
is the buffer against uncertainty for everyone.
And it gives you actually more potential
to go out and experiment, to go out and confront
the chaos of nature because you are,
are better healed effectively.
So I think we're speaking
instead of idealistic terms about the power of capitalism
when it works well.
Is there any aspects that you think
that don't work well in a free market
in all the basic pragmatic truths
that we're talking about?
Is there ways it can go wrong?
So I would first truths that we're talking about, is there ways it can go wrong? So, I would first argue that we have never seen
an actual purely free market.
Closest example would be,
you know, kind of geopolitically, we have a free market
and that governments are not necessarily
governed.
But they are premised on governing large groups of individuals.
So that's not, doesn't exactly.
You mean between governments?
Yes.
See, but isn't there still, so a free market, maybe you can correct me? Is the
free market still grounded in the ideas of property rights and all those kinds of things?
Yes. So governments tend to also sometimes be violent towards each other.
That's right. So they don't respect all the basic aspects of capitalism.
That's right. So maybe another way to look at this is that gold is the original
governor of government actually. And this is the reason governments have abused and gone off of
the gold standard. So historically, if you are a bank or a nation state and you produce more
or a nation state, and you produce more currency
than your gold reserves can justify,
then gold will flow out of your bank or out of your country. So there's this natural check via the money
that via capitalistic money, which is gold, right?
Gold was selected by the free market.
It's not decreed by a government.
It provided this natural check on government action.
So my, I guess to get back to the original question
is we've never seen a pure free market
because money has always been monopolized
and coerced, frankly.
So to try and answer what goes wrong
with a free market is really difficult
because we've never actually seen it.
And I would define free market is one
in which government only protects
life, liberty, and property.
And so that's a very minimal role in society.
Again, just as
network security for the economic trade network, and anything that any government function
that goes beyond those three core functions, which by the way are pretty much the core
tenants of morality as well, so governments just really intend to preserve natural law, if you will.
Anything that goes beyond that is moves us closer to an unfree market.
Every regulation, every act of coercion is actually a gradation closer to a purely
unfree market, which would be a monopoly.
In terms of what theoretically we could say goes wrong in the free market, is that be a monopoly. So in terms of what, I guess theoretically, we could
say goes wrong in the free market is that it's volatile. It's trading off, it's accepting
short-term volatility in exchange for less long-run volatility.
Yeah.
And this tends to be the way of nature, by the way. So if we look at something like there's a region
in North America called Baja California and it runs into the United States and it runs down
into Mexico as well. So the same topology but two different jurisdictions. In the US,
we very heavily manage forest fires. We're trying to manage nature effectively.
Whereas in Mexico, it's much more unregulated.
It just, when wildfires spring up,
they let them burn off.
North America, when wildfires spring up,
we're actually extinguishing them.
So we're constantly trying to dampen
the short run volatility of these small brush fires.
Whereas in Mexico, we just let them burn.
We let nature do its thing.
Yeah.
The consequence of this is that the wildfires still occur eventually, but they're
much larger and much more devastating in North America where human intervention has occurred.
Because it is dampening nature's natural corrective mechanism of clearing this underbrush with
these more frequent and smaller fires at the cost of
much larger fires. So again, we're delaying short-term volatility and exacerbating long
unvalatility. And in Mexico, it's the opposite, right? Just these wildfires burn much smaller
and more continuously over time. The further effect of that in North America is that the fires can
get so big and so hot that it burns away the top swill. So it actually destroys the fertility of the swill itself. So the point of this is that human intervention, right,
even the intention behind North American authorities managing that forest fire is to create less
destruction. That is the intention. But the intention is divergent from the outcome.
But the intention is divergent from the outcome. So in telebian speak, you would say that human intervention moves us from mediaocrysthan
into extremist tan.
So mediaocrysthan would be something much more like nature where, for instance, you can't
double your body weight in a day.
Probably can't even do it in a year, right?
But in extremist tan, which is something much more information-based, you can double
or send your net worth to zero in a single trade
in the single moment, right?
So when we try and intervene with natural biological systems
that have these feedback loops,
we actually start to push the system more
to behave more like an extremist-and-system
That has you know less short-run volatility, but but more extreme long-run volatility So the but the question is where you look at capitalism or communism for example
And by the way, yes, I will talk to somebody who's a Marxist or a communist the Gritio Wolf is a pretty eloquent defender of these ideas, because it's always good
to really understand ideas,
as opposed to just reject them offhand.
When you look at the system of capitalism
or the system of communism,
there's ideals, and a lot of people argue
in this perfect form would actually be good for the world.
The question is, how
resilient are they to the corruption of human nature? And I mean, you're saying that there's
not a, there's never been a free market. It's a very true statement. The question is,
how resilient is capitalism or whatever implementation of capitalism we had up to this point to human nature
where one person will become successful through legitimate means, then starts to try to manipulate
the system that takes it away from a free market or takes it away from the things that gave
him the riches in the first place and then tried to through corruption, get more, get
this the thing you said, the lazy human ways. Now try to figure out how to get something
for nothing. That's right. So how resilient do you think is capitalism to that?
Well, the best implementation we've had of it really has been the United States, I think, up until this point, but it's still the
central banking itself.
This was in the 1848 manifesto of the Communist Party, measure number five reads an exclusive
statement obli and centralized control over cash and credit.
So the central bank is a Marxist or communist institution. It is
antithetical to the free market principles on which the United States was
founded. And indeed, the United States resisted the implementation of a central bank.
I think it was Andrew Jackson. I know there was the first national bank, the
second national bank, were both disbanded. And then Andrew Jackson, which is my favorite
Tennessee, and he has some famous quotes about routing out the bankers,
like a dinner viper's, I think he punched one
of the central bankers in the face.
Back when our leaders were a bit more badass,
I can't even say.
And finally in 1913, the Federal Reserve was implemented.
And it's been kind of all downhill from there.
So what is a commute?
Oh, second.
I was just going to say that communism and capitalism is also a matter of scale.
You know, the ideal behind communism is from each according to their ability to each
according to their need.
Sounds beautiful, right?
Sounds like a great, peaceful, harmonious way
to organize ourselves.
The problem is, and by the way, I am a communist
in my family, in my home, right?
I bet.
Very small of the scales.
Yes, and you're very small circles of trust.
You're much more likely to behave selflessly
towards one another.
By the way, I look forward to the Bitcoin community
clipping out that part, saying that
Robert Breedlove is a communist
and it ideals of communism are beautiful.
Yeah, context matters people.
So I go ahead.
But to your point, it does not scale, right?
As we move into this larger system of socioeconomic cooperation, which
is necessary to deepen the division of labor, to generate more wealth, right? We need to
interact with one another and much larger scales than this communist utopian ideal. We get
into the realm of capitalism where we need really sound rules, hard rules,
consensus, verifiability, and frankly, prices.
Because the other thing in Soviet Russia is they tried to replace the profit motive or
the price signal with this devotion to this nationalistic faith and devotion, where it's
like you don't need self-interest anymore.
You don't need prices or profits.
You can just protect Mother Russia and serve Mother Russia, and that would create wealth.
And what happened?
They destroyed price signals.
There were shortages.
There were famines.
There's all levels of corruption. Because to your point, it's once you,
people have to run this system no matter what.
So when people are always pursuing something for nothing,
and you put someone in a seat of much closer to absolute power,
where they're making all the pricing decisions,
they own all of the productive factors in the economy,
they're not beholden to any market force.
There's no market check on their action
that that institution tends to become more corrupt.
Further, it's an inferior resource strategy.
I alluded to this earlier where the other way to think about
free market versus central planning is
its decentralized or distributed computing versus centralized computing.
So each one of us, I think that the number is 120 bits per second of active awareness.
So we can take in, clearly we process a lot more than that, but our active awareness, I
think is 120 bits per second.
In a centralized planning body like in Soviet Russia, they had the pricing czar.
Maybe they had 10,000, 20,000 people deciding the price is for the entire country.
You're only getting that much data throughput, right?
20,000 people times 120 bits per second.
Whereas in a free market, if everyone is free to interact with deep capital markets based
on an accurate price, you're getting the data throughput of 120 bits per second times
the entire economy.
All right, so you're getting, it's a more efficient means for disseminating knowledge effectively.
And then again, knowledge is just the more knowledge a socio-economic structure can contain the more wealthy it is
Right prices tools all these things are just knowledge. So
in that respect that's
Why something like capitalism even in its
marginalized form state capitalism out competes
Communism it's a it a distributed computing versus centralized computing.
You know, we kind of brought up religion and Joseph Camel and myth and the propagation of ideas.
And kind of before I forget, I wanted to ask your thoughts about this.
You know, Jordan Peterson, I haven't really understood exactly, like, be able to pin him down exactly
what he sees as the role of religion in human society.
But it feels like he's describing it as having value for us.
The ideas of myth are valuable. They're valuable mechanisms toward, I think you mentioned,
kind of directing us in this world as a human society.
Do you think about myth? Do you think about religion?
What's the use of it in this construct of markets
and this framework of where ideas are ultimately the fundamental thing that
makes societies work.
Yeah, I think Jordan Peterson, who I'm a huge fan of, he's been very influential in my thinking
and influential on my own religious views as well. I think his position would be,
and he said this before that he acts as if God exists. And I've had some arguments about this
before, but to me that points towards the preeminence of action and how important action is versus
your cognitive beliefs necessarily.
And I think there is a lot of utility in that that if you follow the moral code of something
like the Bible, you do reap benefits from that, society reaps benefits from that.
And this is not, and sometimes I bring up this point and people
are like, oh my god, are you kidding me? Have you read the Old Testament? They're
clobbering people with rocks when they do the wrong thing. The Bible doesn't
claim to be this like do everything that was done in the Bible. It's more like
charting this moral progression where we came from this very barbaric society
into something more like the New Testament, where we're
honoring individual sovereignty above the state and things like that.
So I think that mythology itself is another form of data compression.
If you look at these stories, you know, can't enable a good example, or Peterson makes
the point, it's a tiny story.
It's a paragraph ish long, but it contains so many layers
of meaning in regards to violence, to evil, betrayal,
work, the divergence between intention and result.
Because I think Cain is actually making the effort
to sacrifice for God, but the sacrifices he's making the effort to sacrifice for God, but the sacrifices he's making are not, God
doesn't find them useful, right?
And so he sort of rejects them.
For a, again, we're organized by these useful fictions, right?
These, these, uh, Herarian imagined orders.
I think mythology is kind of the original version of that, where we were learning to organize
ourselves around stories to best coordinate our action across space and time.
And so I think it's very foundational.
And back to what we're saying in the beginning, that if value truly is fundamental,
I think it's interesting that all these stories point towards often common moral values. They're
not perfectly aligned. But it does speak to just the evolutionary importance of morality and
the subjectivity of morality, where morality sort of evolves over time based on
You know, frankly the capital stock we've accumulated the more capital stock we've accumulated the easier life is the less barbaric
We have to be whereas if we're living in conditions of true scarcity
Then we tend to be a bit more barbaric towards one another
And that too to dovetail this into something largely unrelated, but I think it's really
important, is inflation.
Inflation by artificially increasing the prices of goods and services in the world, right,
we're injecting more dollars chasing the same level of goods and services.
We are artificially increasing scarcity.
Perceived scarcity, right? When you increase perceived scarcity, you are amplifying divisiveness.
This natural, the natural state of man is when everything is scarce and you really have to
fight hard just to eat or drink water
that day. So it's decivilizing in a way by artificially amplifying the perceived scarcity
in the world. Can you elaborate how does inflation increase the perceived scarcity in the world?
So we could think the price itself is an indication, it's a data packet, if you will.
The price is a data packet on supply and demand, right?
It's telling you how much supply there is
of something in the world relative to the demand.
So when you print money and artificially increase
that price, it's diverging away from supply and demand.
It's becoming just a more of a product of policy
than it is of free market fundamentals. Right.
Right.
The more expensive something is, that is a signal to the marketplace and to market
actors that it is scarce.
Right.
Right.
That's why Leonardo painting might sell for $16 million.
There's only one.
There's a lot of demand for it.
Maybe my numbers are off, but you get the point.
It's the reason
mask spiked in price after the COVID announcement, right? There was not a lot of
supply, yeah, toilet paper, et cetera, et cetera. So inflation, and by inflation,
I specifically mean arbitrary fiat currency supply inflation by legal monopoly,
not inflations are commonly misunderstood word.
That is amplifying the perception of scarcity among market actors in the world.
And I would argue that it actually amplifies divisiveness.
I think this is the key, maybe to looking at the connection between the monopolization
of money and things like cancel culture because
it's increasing our natural predilection to be combative with one another because we
think there's more scarcity in the world than there actually is.
Versus in a world where you're not increasing the money supply, prices are declining every
year.
As prices decline, this is a signal to market actors in the market
that scarcity is declining. There's less need to fight over things. And all of this ties
back into the old Bastia saying that if goods don't cross borders, soldiers will. So if
we're not trading with one another, if we're not acting interdependently and we're not
Becoming more intelligent as a market and
That that increased intelligence or increased knowledge is reflected in decreased prices
because prices are just
the exchange ratios of things so the smarter we can solve problems the better we can solve problems the less prices would be
So it induces more cooperation. I love how you tie inflation and cancel culture together as essentially artificial
creation of increase of conflict, increasing artificial increasing scarcity and thereby
artificial increasing conflict.
That's really fascinating.
You're short circuiting my brain many times throughout this conversation.
Okay, I'm struggling, this robot is struggling to keep up.
Okay, maybe this step back at the useful fictions
or pragmatic truths.
Let me ask the question that you've answered in many ways already, but
let's explicitly look at what is money. Oh, as you know, that's my favorite question.
Is the name of the show I just launched to the what is money show? Clearly, the, we could say,
the Bitcoin rabbit hole is what's led me to explore a lot of these ideas in depth.
And I think as we've demonstrated today, it goes well beyond just the economic sphere when
you start to think about things like exchange and morality and time preference and civilization.
So I love the question, what is money? I think it is the key to
accepting a deeper understanding of the world into people that if you actually
just start to ask the seemingly simple question, it un, it services more and more
layers of truth. And I recently, I just wrote a piece. I think I have 30 something answers to this question.
So there's, so in some sense it's actually a more systematic way of asking the question
of what is the meaning of life.
You know, there's some questions that are almost unanswerable, but in their asking,
allow you to deeply understand, get closer to truth,
deeply understand the nature of our human existence.
And the meaning of life is almost like this initial philosopher's striving towards that.
If money is indeed as fundamental as you've described, especially in the context of value being fundamental,
then that is a really,
that's a more, let's say,
a 21st century way of asking the same question
about what is the meaning of life.
You mentioned that it's a meta-property
out of the list of many ways to answer that question.
How would you help people to think about that?
Yeah, the first most serious answer comes from the School of Austrian Economics, and it
defines money as a universal medium of exchange.
So this would be any good that is used, held and used purely for purposes of facilitating
exchange.
So, in the configuration of demand for any particular asset,
it's bifurcated between its utility,
which is something a service that it can render to you in real time,
whether it's, you know, if it's water, your thirsty,
that's the utility of water is that it
can quench your thirst.
Whereas the marketability would be the expectation of future exchange that other people would
want this asset in the future to trade it for whatever they may have.
Money is just going to be the good and any trading economy that has the highest proportion
of marketability relative to utility.
So today, that would be gold. Gold has utility, it's used in electronics, it's used in dental
dentistry and whatnot. But it's largely used as a store of value across time. And that's what it's
been used for for 5,000 years. So if we say gold has a $10 trillion market cap,
maybe $2 trillion of that is its utility value,
or it's actually demand for use in computers and industry,
and an 8 trillion of that is demand for its use
as a store of value.
Money, the marketability aspects of money,
boils down to five services that money can render.
Money needs to be divisible and needs to be durable,
needs to be recognizable, needs to be portable,
and needs to be scarce.
So I'll gloss over a lot of history with this
and just say that historically,
money's always been a technology,
still is a technology or a tool.
I use these terms interchangeably
and you think of a technology as just a more sophisticated tool effectively.
Of to best satisfy those properties, monetary metals were determined to be the most satisfactory
tool, the most divisible, most durable, most recognized, almost portable tool in the marketplace.
Of the monetary metals, gold was the most scarce. As quantified by
either it's stock to flow ratio or it's inflation resistance. So, simple way to say this
is that people always prefer the money most resistant to inflation.
That's a nice definition of scarcity in the context. The money is if you were to measure
the resistance to inflation. So how hard is it to our to measure the resistance to inflation.
So how hard is it to artificial increases supply?
That's the problem.
That is the hardness of money.
And that's why gold is hard money.
Because the Alchemy is hard.
That's right.
Because no one correct the Alchemy.
So gold became money.
So that's such a nice clean explanation of what is money
with the five elements and gold ultimately won out because of the last piece of scarcity.
That's right.
And to get to maybe dig a little deeper there.
So scarcity, we commonly think of scarcity as strictly a supply property, where there's
not much of something that it's scarce, but it's not actually true.
Scarsity occurs when demand exceeds supply.
So when there's more demand than the supply can justify,
the thing becomes an economic good,
and it establishes itself a market price.
So there's more demand for the thing
than the supply can satisfy.
The unique thing about money money as a concept at least
is that demand always exceeds supply. There's never enough money to satisfy everyone, right?
Because another definition for money, it's the most marketable good. So it can be traded
it can be traded for any other good service piece of knowledge in the marketplace. So
be humans being what we are, we're never satisfied, right?
We always want more of something, whatever it may be.
So money as the ultimate token of obtaining that something is always scarce as a concept.
But the problem with money is that if you can, as you alluded to, easily increase its supply,
then all of a sudden you can compromise the scarcity of it over time.
And you can rob people through inflation.
So that's why the market settled on gold as money.
And robbing is reallocating the value that I, so essentially, the one property, like Y Scarcity, is important, is, it adds a lot more friction to the reallocation
like through essentially violence or implied violence.
Well, it prevents it through cost of extraction, too. So if you want to go out and dilute gold holders today,
you have to go out into the world and
mine gold. It's a very expensive process. That process tends to find equilibrium, where production
cost equals a market value of gold. So, if market value is $2,000 an ounce today of gold,
its production cost is going to be around there. That's the natural market equilibrium. So,
that way gold miners cannot just dilute people over time.
Whereas if you look at something like Fiat currency, which might we're jumping ahead a little bit,
but its production cost is zero. So there's a reason the market value of Fiat currency historically
has always converged to zero because its production cost is near zero. So the extension to that question
might be how did we get from gold to paper currency?
And again, this is rooted in the properties of money.
As good as monetary metals were and as good as gold is as money at holding value across
time, it's rather limited in terms of portability.
It is not as useful for moving value across space.
This is another definition of money, by the way, a social device for moving value across space. This is another definition of money, by the way, a social
device for moving value across space and time. So to rectify this technological shortcoming of gold,
we introduced, first of all, the custody of gold was gradually centralized into more, into fewer
and fewer warehousing operations. This is because there are economies of scale associated
with using gold as money. And that if you centralize the custody, the warehouse owner can then issue a
paper receipt, call the warehouse receipt for that gold. And then market participants can trade that
paper as if it's good as gold. And everyone has an option at any time to go and redeem real gold from the warehouse.
So that system works until the problem with it
is that it introduces the need to trust the custodian.
So it's introducing counterparty risk
in the form of the custodian.
And now should that warehouse choose to increase
the supply of paper notes to gold beyond its supply.
So if it's got three tons of gold and it issues six tons worth of paper notes to gold beyond its supply. So if it's got three tons of gold
and it issues six tons worth of paper receipts,
all of a sudden it's participating in a fraud.
It's basically lying.
It's representing that it has more gold
than it actually does.
And this is, that is the pathway
that we got into banking and central banking.
Is we needed a convenience mechanism
to rectify the portability shortcomings of gold.
We needed to be able to move value across space, right?
Gold was doing a great job
and moving value over time, but not space.
Paper currency gave us the ability
to move value across space,
but it introduced this attack vector
for warehouse operators, which became banks,
which became central banks
to modify the supply to suit their own political agendas.
Out of this snooze button.
That allows you to do a little fraud first.
To get something for nothing.
Something just a little bit at first.
Yeah.
Just this one morning, just a little bit.
I mean, I don't know if you can speak to
the birth of the recurrency. Is there some interesting characteristics to that, those early steps that created it?
Like, could it have been averted or is this the natural progression of governments. You know what's funny is that central banking was initially designed to be the custodian
of gold, right?
So they were going to custody the gold issue paper on top of it and then they would maintain
you could trust the public stamp effectively.
You could trust that the central bank had as much gold on reserve as they said they had,
and they were supposed to be the trust
for the institution.
So we went from placing our trust
in a free market game theoretic process
or trust in gold,
and we began trusting this institution instead.
This, that institution would not have a risen
if the portability of gold was really high.
If we could have somehow sent gold across a telecommunications channel, there would have
been no need for a central bank.
Everyone could have custodyed their gold in any information bearing medium, frankly, and
they could beam it around the world at any time. So this whole institution itself is rooted in a technological
shortcoming of gold. So I think it's another way to think about that is maybe had there been
all the gold in the world today, fills two Olympic-sized swimming pools, all the gold
mind throughout all of human history. So there's not a lot. Right. Mm-hmm. What if there had been just way more,
there'd just been, I don't know,
20,000 Olympic swimming pools worth?
Portability wouldn't have been as much of an issue.
Right, we could have,
and this is to say, assuming gold
is still the most scarce metal in all these things,
Portability would have been less of an issue,
we would have had less dependence
or need for
a central bank.
So I think it's kind of idiosyncratic and that we just happened to end up here on this
planet with a certain amount of gold.
It best satisfied the properties of money.
And a certain amount of humans, a geographical dispersed such that portability had certain properties
that you want to achieve for humans in a geographical space to be able to be a
Exchange value became more of an issue as we globalized
Yeah, as we became more of a global society. We needed
Money that could move across space really fast, right? So we could trade in international capital markets
so that drove
The central bank to become the dominant institution of the world. And if you follow the flows of gold throughout history,
you know, I've been watching this documentary on World War One and World War Two on Netflix.
I think it's called World War Two in color.
Oh, yeah, this is really good. So good.
When I say gold has been the governor of governments or gold is geopolitical money,
like it is the base layer operating system has been the base layer operating system for analog
society.
It's always been about who controls the gold.
This who makes the rules.
In that context, this is why Bitcoin is so interesting because it is the disruptor to this base level operating system
that's function for all of human history. I think this is a good place to ask. We ask
the what is money question. What is Bitcoin? That's a question as complicated as what is money.
That's a question that's complicated as what is money. I think if you get a general understanding of money from a number of angles that we could
say Bitcoin is the most superior monetary technology that has ever existed.
So one of the most superior implementation of the ideas of money that you talked about you talk about money a speech
You talk about money as an idea
We talked about a money a sovereignty. Yeah, so we're attaching the concept of money to your point
to whatever tool best satisfies
those
Properties of money or best renders those services we need for money.
And as you said, you're using the word tool and technology interchangeably.
Yes. Yes. And another thing to think about here is that we think often in terms of goods or services,
but actually everything is a service. So it's not the physical properties of this pen that I find valuable.
It's the services that it renders to me.
I want to write a letter.
This gives, this serves me by allowing me to lay ink on paper and communicate information.
So, value, humans attach value, as we alluded to earlier, two services, not goods.
So the properties or the services that money renders that human beings value are those
five properties, visibility, durability, recognizability, portability, scarcity.
Metals best satisfied those services historically, but Bitcoin as the most superior monetary
technology in human history essentially perfects them.
It's as close to perfection as we've ever been.
So in terms of divisibility, each Bitcoin can be broken down into 100 million subunits
called a Satoshi.
It could, if that divisibility were ever a problem, which actually, there was a question
that came up recently.
If you divide the world population by the total supply of Bitcoin,
you end up at like 0.3 Bitcoin per person,
call it 300,000 Satoshi's per person.
What if that was not enough to facilitate economic activity?
And the answer to that is Bitcoin can soft fork
into further divisibility.
So if Bitcoin ate all the money in the world
and the average Bitcoin or wealth
was say 300,000 to the touches each,
but that wasn't divisible enough,
maybe to buy coffee and do all these day-to-day transactions,
what would happen while we would increase its divisibility?
So, Bitcoin's perfected divisibility,
the divisibility of money,
lets us transact across scales.
We can buy coffee, or we can buy a house.
Durability is an interesting one.
So clearly something like gold is very durable,
it's resistant to degradation over time.
Bitcoin is just pure information,
but it's stored in a distributed format.
So information stored in a distributed fashion tends to be virtually
infinitely durable. The example I give here is something like the Bible. The Bible is
just distributed information. It's stored everywhere and nowhere, so to speak. And for that
reason, it has outlasted empires. And Bitcoin's similar, right? You can't make changes to it unilaterally.
But to make explicit, the ways in which it is not durable
is the fact that it relies on computing infrastructure.
Like it needs computers.
So if you were to destroy all the computers in the world,
yes, it needs mechanisms that store and transfer information.
That's right.
And so you could attack it.
I mean, you could attack gold in the same kind of way, supposed to the physics,
but it's probably easier to destroy all the computers in the world than it is
to destroy all the gold in the world.
Maybe not.
I don't know.
Anyway, yeah, you're right.
Maybe I'm not sure which one would be harder to destroy,
but the other thing is there's a dynamic incentive. So every time you just you destroy Bitcoin miners,
you're creating incentives for anyone else with access to electricity to mine,
because you're making the algorithm easier. Yeah, so the destruction is difficult because of the
decentralized nature, the whole thing.
And the difficulty adjustment.
Yeah.
So you're going to have to use nuclear weapons and cover the whole globe.
But anyway.
Yeah.
And by then, we've got much bigger problems than money, right?
That's right.
So, okay.
So that's durability.
So portability, Bitcoin's peer information, it can move at the speed of light, can't get
much faster than that. Recognizability refers to the ability to verify
the veracity of the money or its authenticity.
So you can actually, when we used to transact gold,
there were time-honored techniques for verifying
that it was gold and not gold-plated lead, for instance.
This is where we get the term sound money.
A gold coin made a very particular sound
when dropped from certain height.
You've seen people biting coins.
These are all techniques for testing
the authenticity of gold.
And with Bitcoin, we have something unique in that,
if you're running a full node,
you can verify that the Bitcoin is Bitcoin, right?
It cannot be tampered with, it cannot be faked.
And in addition to that, as a note operator,
you can audit the total supply of Bitcoin at any time,
which is unlike any money in history.
So you know with full certainty,
if you're holding 1,000 Bitcoin,
you have 1,000 out of a possible 21 million forever.
You have a guaranteed fraction of the total supply.
Yeah, so full note contains information
about every transaction that's ever been
has so you can figure out, yeah, I mean, all the truth of this money is all right there.
Yeah, it's like a fractal constituent of the whole network, right?
The whole Bitcoin blockchain is comprised and a node too.
Not the proof of work piece, but the entire transaction history.
And so that's unique as well.
And that's what makes Bitcoin the ultimate store of value, is that you know with certainty
what the total supply is and will ever be.
And you know that your share of that supply is fixed.
It cannot change.
It can only improve, actually.
If someone loses, you know, if the Satoshi stash is truly gone forever, the million bitcoin never moves,
then we're talking about a thousand bitcoin out of 20 million instead.
And so on and so forth. As more people lose access to their bitcoin,
they're basically making a contribution to everyone else, anti-dilutive.
And there are certain properties of bitcoin that are a little bit more into the details that ensure that the full nodes,
like the size of all the transactions that ever happened, at least currently, can be stored
in a single computer, for example. So it doesn't blow up too quickly.
That's right.
But there's arguments that that's not necessary. You can make arguments for that to be a very
nice property, but you can also say that there's like drawbacks to it.
That's hence the block size debates and all those kinds of things.
Yeah, that was the Bitcoin cash civil war, right?
Was that particular piece?
Yeah.
And you know, ostensibly they were saying,
oh, we need more transaction throughput to buy more coffee
and do more transactions. But what they were
actually doing was increasing the size, computing power necessary to run a full node, which
would have theoretically compromised decentralization.
So, yeah, but it would, in theory, in theory, it would allow you to have much more transactions.
That's right.
But the drawback, it would, because of,
no longer it can be stored in a single computer,
personal computer, then it naturally leads to the centralization.
Yes.
And kind of thing we see with gold.
Which would have compromised its survivability.
Right.
So, what else is that?
The last one, which leads straight into this one, actually, is the most important one of
money, which is scarcity, and that you need to know the supply is fixed and safeguarded
from counter-fitting and inflation, which counter-fitting and inflation are the same thing, by
the way.
Counter-fitting is criminalized inflation.
Inflation is legalized counter-fitting.
So central banks today, when they say they're printing money,
they're not.
They're counter-fitting currency.
That's a very important part.
And Bitcoin, as I've argued in some of my writing,
is more than just an invention.
It's actually the discovery of absolute scarcity and that we have
unveiled a property of money that we will only discover once. And it's got really major ramifications
for the world at large. So with gold, for instance, as we've covered, it became money because it was
the most relatively scarce monetary
metal, right?
Its supply was hardest to increase over time.
However, if we could somehow flip a switch today and make everyone in the world go out
and start mining gold, we could increase the supply much more quickly.
We could, you know, it's historic inflation rates about 2%.
We could double that pretty quickly.
Bitcoin, with Bitcoin, it is not possible.
No matter how much effort and energy and capital and
operational expenditure we pour into the mining network,
we cannot deviate from its fixed and
diminishing supply curve from between now and
the last Bitcoin being mined in 2040 because of
the difficulty adjustments.
Constantly, it's adapting to human action, actually.
So the harder we pursue it, the more that it proceeds, and then the less we pursue it,
the more available it makes itself.
And this is, it's a real major breakthrough because it's the closest thing to perfect
information we've ever had in an economy. And perfect information is
this, it's a theoretical but unattainable state of the market where all market actors
have all the relevant information about everything so that they can compete as efficiently as
possible. And in the state of pure information, we have, I'm sorry,
perfect information, we have perfect competition. And in perfect competition, we maximize wealth
generation. So we're competing as freely as possible from chorus of an violent impediments.
And so I think Bitcoin in that sense is going to pull the world closer to a state, a perfect competition than we've
ever been before, which would increase wealth generation to an extent we've never seen before.
Many of the things you said about Bitcoin also holds for other cryptocurrency technologies that followed after. Can you say something to why you think Bitcoin is the superior technology
from a pragmatic truth perspective, then say Ethereum,
but also other cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin cash,
like other hard forks of Bitcoin,
and maybe things that might yet to be invent,
tools yet to be invented.
Yeah, so this is a good point of argument
because a lot of people have countered me
and said Bitcoin cannot be absolute scarcity
because you can fork it and create something
with the same properties as Bitcoin
or potentially even better properties, right? Create something with the same properties as Bitcoin, or potentially
even better properties, right? You create something with a deflationary monetary policy.
That's what Bitcoin cash was actually. It forked Bitcoin with all of the same properties,
except for the block size that we alluded to earlier. The problem is that money is valued.
Again, it's the good with a configuration of demand that is predominantly market
ability. So it is valued based on its liquidity. That is how many other trading partners are
there in that monetary network. So it is a network valued because of its liquidity and network
effects. So any new entrant into the market for money will always incentivize to always choose
The money with the deepest liquidity and the most network effects. This is why money has tended to be a winner-take-all market
Because it's essentially a single-purpose tool, right? It is a tool for
If we consider that tools are time-saving
devices, the shovel that you dig more holes per man hour
than you can with your bare hands, money is a tool.
You have another definition of money that lets us calculate,
negotiate, and execute trades more quickly.
So that function tends to coalesce towards one solution.
And so the short answer would be that for the same reasons,
quantifiable reasons, right, like inflation resistance
and liquidity and network effects,
that we have one analog gold,
we're only likely to have one digital gold.
And I think the Bitcoin cash fork proves that out empirically.
It's a good case study because-
Well, it's for case study, right?
But okay, so that's really well put.
So like gold was sticky.
Once it was accepted, the network affects the winner take all
to cover.
And here's a fundamentally different kind of like analog
versus digital is a leap technologies.
That's right.
In your suggesting that there may not be, there's unlikely to be other leaps of that kind
into a whole nother kind of space of technologies.
I would argue that Bitcoin is kind of like the ideological synthesis of gold taking the monetary properties of gold and combining them
with the internet itself. Right. And in doing so, it has essentially
perfected the properties of money, right? You can't get more divisible, durable,
recognizable, portable or scarce than Bitcoin. So Satoshi has kind of, he left
no design space for his superior technology to intercede
and out-compete Bitcoin at this point, now that it's established liquidity in the network.
Far superior technology, right?
Yeah, but it's a combination of the tech itself and the social layer.
And the social layer.
That is cool.
You can't separate those two out.
That's right.
They're all connected and then the political as well.
I mean, but the portability, for example, that's the,
another way to phrase that is the, what is it, the scaling?
So the number of transactions, that's the limitation for Bitcoin
that many argues a feature, many argues a bug.
You have, you have a bunch of cryptocurrency technologies that are able to achieve
much higher, much faster
frequency of transactions, much more transactions, you know, all that kind of stuff.
What are your thoughts on that? You know, the low level of transactions is possible with Bitcoin.
Do you think that's a feature? Do you think that's a bug?
Necessary for security actually.
And even these other crypto assets
that settle more quickly,
they settle with less assurance of finality.
So Nick Carter has a great piece on this actually called,
it's the settlement assurance is stupid.
It's really good where the gist of it is that
there is more work being done in each block of Bitcoin that it can't, it is
less vulnerable to reversion. So it's giving you higher degrees of assurance that your settlement
or your trade has occurred with finality, or as other blockchains are much more vulnerable.
And again, with Bitcoin, the evolutionary path of money with gold is that it was first used as
a collectible. It then became used as a store value. After it had stored enough value, it became
being, it began to be used as a medium of exchange. And then finally, when it was used widely enough
as a medium of exchange, it becomes a unit of account. We actually start to think in the money.
Bitcoin's following a similar path.
So, started out as kind of a collectible. Today, I would argue it's a store value, one of the most
effective store value we've ever seen. So, that evolutionary path that Bitcoin's following is
similar to gold. First, a collectible. Today's store value. To be an effective store value, it has
store value to be an effective store value, it has to optimize for supply cap. That has to be the first, and this is all Bitcoin really needs to do to be successful, by the way.
Exactly what it's been doing for 12 years, virtually flawlessly, which is keep creating
a block every 10 minutes and keep enforcing a supply cap of 21 million. As long as those two things hold, it is a sound money, the
ultimate sound money, the most inflation-resistant money there's ever been. It's actually completely
immune. It's taken unexpected inflation to zero percent. We know with perfect certainty
what Bitcoin supply will ever be. For it to be used more broadly as a medium of exchange,
it can't make trade-offs at the base layer
to increase its portability, for instance.
Even though it's portability is maybe kind of a misnomer
because Bitcoin has extremely high portability,
just doesn't have extremely high transaction throughput.
So we could say you can move it pretty quickly
anywhere in the world as long as you're willing to bid up for the block space, but you can't
satisfy all the world's economic volume. You can't do 300 million transactions per
second like you can on a centralized database like Visa. But Bitcoin needs to be this, it has to be a store value first
before it can be a medium of exchange.
So it has to protect the supply cap first
before making any trade-offs for that.
And I would argue that that's why Bitcoin is so rigid
is that it's optimized for survivability
and optimized for that supply cap.
And it's pushing experimentation
and other features that would increase its
transaction throughput to higher layers.
So I think Lightning Network is something that's very interesting.
It's still early, but there's a lot of throughput already being used on the Lightning Network.
And it makes some slight trade-offs in terms of the trust minimization of Bitcoin, you
end up trusting these smart contracts instead to move the Bitcoin. It makes some slight trade-offs in terms of the trust minimization of Bitcoin, you end
up trusting these smart contracts instead to move the Bitcoin, but you pick up nearly unlimited
transaction through it.
So that's how biology evolves.
That's how the internet evolves and evolves in layers.
So I think Bitcoin, you can sort of conceive of it as the latest layer to the internet,
and it's one that preserves this store value property better than
any asset we've ever had. Let me ask sort of a critical question of if you're wrong about your
statements about Bitcoin, you find out years from now that you were wrong, what would that look like?
What would be the things that make you realize you were wrong?
Likely ideas or crazy out there ideas?
Do you think about this kind of stuff all the time?
Because you speak very confidently about Bitcoin
and one of the things, let me put it this way,
I think certainty, I feel like that's like a stoic statement, certainty leads to ruin,
something like that.
Like certainty, I think, is an antithesis to progress often.
And especially in your writing, but this is true for the Bitcoin community, there's a
certainty about the Bitcoin.
And that makes me very skeptical, no matter how good the ideas are.
Whenever things are good, this might be the Russian and me.
I think like, what are the ways this is going to go wrong?
So what do you think are the ways this might go wrong or you're wrong in your conception
of what Bitcoin is. Yeah, so science evolves via negativa, meaning that we're not proving
hypotheses, and that's what becomes the body of science. Science is whatever is left over
as we disprove hypotheses, right? Whatever we can empirically through experimentation, disprove, gets discarded and whatever remains
Whatever theory remains it hasn't been disproven is
science effectively
This process
is similar to
Market actors zeroing in on a store value. Right, they're experimenting with different forms
of storing wealth across time.
Some do better than others,
and eventually everyone ends up on the one that is best.
That's what gold was.
In terms of understanding Bitcoin,
I look at it as a similar approach,
and then I'm actually, that is the main question
I'm asking myself is how do you stop this thing? How do you turn it off? How do you end it? If you're a nation state,
particularly, who has the most to lose in this transition, what is the attack vector by which
they neutralize Bitcoin? I mean, that is the $250 trillion question. And,
you know, I've spent five years thinking about this thing very deeply.
I've read everything I'm monitoring history.
I can get my hands on.
The general thought of how it is stopped.
And this is the snag point that a lot of people get to in their explorations down the rabbit
hole is they just say the government will never allow it.
And that becomes kind of their bottom. It's like, all right, Bitcoin's interesting. It's superior money, blah, blah, they just say the government will never allow it. And that becomes kind of their bottom. It's like, all right, Bitcoin's interesting.
It's superior money, blah, blah, blah, but the government will never allow it.
And they said, was Ray Dalio? Did he say that?
Dalio was currently stuck there. Yeah.
So Ray Dalio said that Bitcoin seems to be too promising.
If it is in fact as promising as it looks,
If it is in fact as promising as it looks,
governments are going to, I don't know if we get with the exact quote, but not about Bennett.
Yeah.
Governments will benefit.
So how do you get Redalia unstuck from your perspective?
Well, and how do you get unstuck from that idea,
that governments, will governments,
how do you prevent governments from stopping a thing that threatens centralized power?
Well, Bitcoin is an idea.
So governments that are really good at fighting centralized threats to their power, whether
that's a currency counterfeitor
or a competing nation state or business they don't like
or an individual they don't like, you know,
they can kill them, they can throw them in jail,
they can use any number of course of a violent tactics
to suppress it.
But how do you point a gun at an idea?
How do you, how do you course an idea? And that's, you know, there's some there is some
anecdotal history here where there's the PGP case, which in the United States, the court was
trying to classify it as munitions when we were shipping this pretty good privacy software
overseas. Government wanted to classify it as munitions and we're shipping this pretty good privacy software overseas, government wanted to classify it as munitions and restrict that exportation. But, and this was a circuit court case
precedent when the PGP attorneys actually printed out the source code on paper and presented it
as evidence in the court, all of a sudden it became protected under freedom of speech,
as evidence in the court, all of a sudden it became protected under freedom of speech,
and that it's just code is speech, code is language, and therefore at least in the United States, it's protected under the First Amendment. I think a government ban would be largely
unenforceable, frankly, on Bitcoin. Being that it's pure information,
if you suppress market actors from using it
in one jurisdiction, you're just creating incentives
for them to go elsewhere.
And you're actually increasing the incentive
for other jurisdictions to be favorable towards it.
Because then they can create,
they get to benefit from the tax revenue
and the businesses and the innovation. That's occurring in and around Bitcoin as a result. So you don't think if a particular central
bank like in Europe or United States, bands that not maybe using those terms, but in some kind of way,
you think there's a that provides a really strong incentive for the other big players to enable it.
That's right.
And that they're more likely, and governments know this, by the way, too.
The other thing that causes the government to shoot itself on the foot is that if they ban something,
they draw a lot of attention to it.
People are smart. I mean, people ask why? Why would government ban it? Why cannot I use this?
So this kind of typically be the the last arrow in their quiver
They may try to ban it if Bitcoin
You know really starts to monetize very quickly and this the power structures that they impose today start to dissolve
Faster than I you know others might think they will then they might try and ban it. But I think that ban will be large and enforceable.
They're more likely to tax it, which they already do tax it.
They're likely to increase taxation of it.
They're likely to try and make it more white market,
but actually tracing Bitcoin, seeing who has it,
attaching identities to Bitcoin ownership,
and making sure that they're getting their
pound of flush on all the transactions in Results Un.
But I don't think the other thing about this is so we saw the internet outcompete intranets
in that we could say that open source networks send out compete closed source networks.
And there's a really good reason for this.
And it's because in a closed source network,
there are costs associated with defending the network itself.
So you have to,
the network owners, the owners of the closed source network
have to expend resources protecting it from competitors,
and they have to expend resources imposing its rules
because people, they're not voluntarily adopted rules.
So you actually have to impose these rule sets.
Whereas an open source network,
which is something much more akin to capitalism,
pure sense, these are voluntarily adopted rules.
So all market participants have agreed
and consented to this rule set. So there's no enforcement cost and there's no turf protection because anyone can freely enter or exit the open network.
For that energetic reason, I think open networks out compete close networks typically.
And in the digital age, that's why I think opens that's why internet out, out compete's internet, and that's why open source networks are
going to eat closed source networks. So what Bitcoin would be
in that lens is the ultimate open source monetary network,
devouring closed source central bank monetary networks. And I,
I just don't see how there's no possibility of unilaterally
stopping Bitcoin or destroying it. So then
they're more likely to regulate or tax it. And again, the other fallacy here is that a
lot of people tend to think of governments as these singular, indivisible entities,
like, they just move under one plan. But in reality, it's a lot of people, right? And a
lot of people with loosely coupled interest
and agendas and whatnot.
Regulators and others,
whether wearing their citizen hat,
they're gonna see this in monetizing,
they're gonna be on the front lines
of trying to regulate it, trying to control it.
And I think what's likely to happen
is they're gonna start to adopt it
to buy some of it
even as an individual or possibly even ultimately as a central banker sovereign wealth fund level
as an insurance policy against its success.
And once you start to acquire something and then you have a vested economic interest in its
monetization, I think it kind of dissolves any of the power structures
that are arrayed against it from the inside.
So I've written a lot about this
in a new series called Sovereignism,
which is based loosely on a book called The Sovereign
Individual.
And that's the general thesis is that
micro-processing technology would devour
our organizational models,
the most important
of which is the nation state.
So I think we're going into this world where coercion and violence is just much less rewarding.
You can't, the economics of violence are declining because of the low cost of protecting property. You can now protect your monetary property in Bitcoin
at orders of magnitude less cost
than is necessary to run a banking network.
So it changes the way we organize ourselves.
And again, if we zoom back to gold
as kind of the original governor to governments,
or if they manipulated the money,
gold would leave their country.
That's why governments have
taken relatively concerted action
to go off of the gold standard.
There's a great book on this called The Gold Wars
that outlines how governments have been waging
a cold war against gold for the past 50 years.
Bitcoin sort
of renews hope for that free market governor of governments and that it's this digital
gold that governments cannot stop or co-opt. So I think it's something, that's why I think
it's such a big deal, is that it is changing, it's a new useful fiction, you might say.
A useful fiction that's superordinate to the mythology of the nation-state and government
as the dominant institution in the world.
Well, I hope you're right that all forms of centralized power start breaking apart, naturally.
So governments, the more and more power is going to the individual, whatever
the technology is, and Bitcoin seems to be a promising technology that empowers that
enables that. That seems to be the trend. And that's a promising trend, from a, at least
from a perspective of somebody who values this particular biological meatbag that's
full of consciousness.
I think Bitcoin is exposing the greatest scam in human history, which is political authority.
Like who gives anyone the right to be politically, have political authority over anyone else.
People should be free to adopt the rules and systems and tools that best suit their needs.
And you know, that arc of history we covered earlier, where as socioeconomic systems have become
more favorable towards individual sovereignty, the more wealthy we have become, the more we
have given the individual, we've maximized individual choice, the more wealth that society has
created, and the more it is out-competed, the systems that have come before it.
The latest would be capitalism,
triumphant over socialism.
Before maybe we eat your in Texas,
you brought over some brisket
before we may be indulged in that.
Let me bring up one quick topic
and then we'll take a break.
And the topic of what some may term
the toxicity of the Bitcoin community, that you've written
that Bitcoin toxicity is tough love.
Do you want to break that apart a little bit, sort of, the idea, the philosophy of the
toxicity that seems to be present in part
in the Bitcoin community.
Yeah, we were talking about this a little bit
before we recorded and I've been through the gauntlet
with Bitcoin toxicity as well.
I came into this space professionally in 2017.
It was originally running a multi-strategy crypto asset
hedge fund and
my initial
Investment thesis on the world was it you know Bitcoin was a big deal
but there were all these other exciting coins and projects and ways the technology was going to be used and
that
view of reality met this
view of reality met this
Immune, I guess you can say as an ideological immune system this Bitcoin toxicity and that it's kind of a filter that's trying to catch
bad or useless or even scamming ideas that this space is very well known for
You know as we've touched on today Bitcoin Bitcoin, in my opinion, is this world shattering innovation,
but it's in a sea of the most scammy stuff ever, right?
People, anybody can go and create a coin.
So you can go and launch one immediately online and you can throw up a website and advisor
page, you know, post a white paper talking about how great your technology is going to be and how it's going to change the world.
And you can raise $30 million in Bitcoin or Ethereum in 30 seconds kind of thing.
So it's drawn in a lot of this scam artistry, you might say.
And I think people living through that, because there is this natural predilection for people.
When they first come into Bitcoin, you're excited about it. Then you get lost in the shit coin universe.
And then just looking at the market success
of Bitcoin versus, and when I use the word shit coin,
I'm just, you say with all the love in the world.
All the love in the world.
I guess you could call me a toxic maximus in some ways.
Although I consider myself a freedom maximus,
not a Bitcoin maximalist.
Yeah, I saw that line at the g, so.
So it's a good line.
Bitcoin tracking the market's success of Bitcoin
versus alternative crypto assets.
The signal is very clear.
The Bitcoin has out competed all of them.
So I think that Bitcoin cultural toxicity has evolved
as an immune response to those bad ideas,
which is actually,
if you think about it, kind of is a tough love, right?
You don't want new entrance to the space to get lost in shit coin jungle and learn the
hard way the way many Bitcoin maximalists have that the real innovation is Bitcoin.
But like an immune system, I think you can also go too far.
And so I think it's useful when it is defending the space from false narratives, we might say, but it becomes detrimental when it's attacking people that are inquiring about Bitcoin,
or people that are approaching Bitcoin with a good spirit and good intention and a desire to learn.
Because then at that point, it's actually impeding the free flow of ideas, which, you
know, the example and your clip that was totally taken out of context.
And then you're literally just saying, I'm here to learn and contribute.
I think I've got some stuff to do.
And then people attack that.
Like that doesn't make any fucking sense.
So you're attacking someone who's approaching it in a good spirit and asking questions. Yeah, and I think sometimes talking about it, the toxicity
in the Bitcoin community as an immune response has a negative effect of giving it a pass
because like it almost says, look, it equates it with the immune, the human immune system,
which seems
to do a really good job.
So you could say that the toxicity has a lot of features in the sea of fraudulent projects
that steal money from people.
It's really useful to make sure that you give people the harsh truth about who
is and isn't a scammer.
You have to take it away from that metaphor of the immune system and look at basic human
nature.
And human nature can go to some dark places, which is it's sad to say that some people, maybe many of us can, enjoy for its own sake the toxicity, the
mockery, the derision. And you stop being part of the immune system that makes a successful
idea propagate and start being a sort of a destructive virus yourself. And that's something I think about,
because I am new to this particular immune system,
but I've explored other immune systems.
And the, I think you understand this world much better than me,
but I tend to prefer sort of love as a mechanism for spreading ideas
to err on the side of love and kindness, and almost like an open-mindedness in a way where you're constantly lowering yourself in the face of other ideas, constantly questioning yourself. But I think I understand
that that might be more applicable in certain contexts, like maybe in a space of science or
something like that. But in the space of Bitcoin, as it currently stands, there's so many people
that are trying to scam others out of their money that the kind of harshness required is different.
Nevertheless, I do
want to put it on people like yourself and others who I know you would consider yourself
this, but you're one of the faces or leaders in this space to call people out a little bit
to inspire them to be more loving, I suppose.
But it's difficult because you want to walk that line carefully.
You don't want to be too loving, you know, open mind.
Otherwise your brain falls out.
I get it.
It's a difficult balance to walk.
It is subtle and it's nuanced and it is difficult to walk.
And I think that that's why I try to say it's tough love because, you love because when we're young, we may have certain ideas
about how the way we want our life to go,
but then maybe our parents are not letting us do certain things.
And we think they're, I know when I was a kid,
I wanted to get my, when I was in fifth grade,
I wanted to get my ear pierced.
My mom wouldn't let me do it.
And I was doing, oh, come on mom, I thought it was so cool.
And then two years later, I'm like, thank you, mom,
for wanting me to get my ear pierced.
I think it comes from a place of good intention
that they are actually,
they have asked themselves that question, right?
That they've been inquiring in why not this crypto asset
or this crypto asset, and they've done the exploration,
they keep coming back to Bitcoin,
and they've seen people being taken advantage of.
But to your point, it's like this tough love can become detrimental, just like the immune
system can become detrimental.
It can overreact and it can actually harm the human body.
So I would say that it's such a tricky and nuanced topic that even biology
hasn't figured it out, right? A lot of people have autoimmune diseases.
And then there's the other thing that we have this natural, I agree with you about love. I think
love is like the deepest value. That's a whole nother philosophical thing, but it's, we're biologically
programmed to pay more attention to things that are adversarial
or harmful, right?
That's part of us protecting the meat suit, so to speak.
So there is some, maybe, better delivery method by being a little bit toxic to really
get the point across, like, hey, don't get lost over here.
These things can hurt you.
Really try to focus on Bitcoin,
but the toxicity of that message,
I guess it increases its ability to penetrate the individual,
but it can also go too far.
So it is interesting.
But I almost to push back a little bit,
the toxicity is a funny word.
I think a text, maybe another way to say it is,
I've brought up like Christopher Hitchens and somebody who,
like, okay, you might say it's toxic or something like that,
because he's basically an intellectual powerhouse
who's also a troll.
So he's constantly, it's a guerrilla warfare
in the space of ideas.
He's very harsh in his disagreements and criticisms,
but is done with incredible grace and skill and poetry.
So we could use more of that.
We could use more of that.
So toxicity just, like,
these are just words.
They can mean a lot of different things,
but disagreement doesn't have to be done with love,
but it should be done with skill if it's to be effective.
So there's a lot of ways to be effective in gorilla warfare,
but you wanna learn how to shoot
or whatever the weapon you're using and to do it well.
Some people do better than others,
and it's worthwhile to learn to do it well.
Again, I prefer love, but even love,
just because you think you're communicating a good idea
which you very well may be.
Does it mean it also doesn't require skill
to do the communication well,
whether it's this agreement and harsh
or more agreement and loving and so on.
Yeah, I think very fundamentally that all of our decisions, we alluded to earlier that
every decision is an expression of value, right?
Reaction we take.
They ultimately come from fear or love.
Fear would be something much more in the biological domain where it's like we're trying to protect
ego, we're trying to behave selfishly. This is the domain of sin, you know,
I don't know all the sins that gluttony greed, sloth, wrath, lust, pride, envy, like these are all selfish behaviors.
Whereas something like love is much, it's more or less superior and that it's more selfless.
I don't know that we can properly define love with words at all, but I would say maybe like selfless action
could be kind of a generalization of it.
And that way it is really hard.
To your point, it's hard to love in a world
that has a lot of conflict that might make you fearful
if you're really focused on your meat suit,
but if you're focused on the bigger picture and you're focused on others and legacy and life that
There is a way to do it and that's why I actually think Christ that is the highest moral aim, right?
He met all of the vitriol in life, you know betrayal
Hate violence. He met it all with love and he met it with compassion
And that's why like regardless of if you believe that he actually lived or any of this,
this he is symbolic of the highest moral consciousness possible.
And you know Carl Young would say that that was a suitable alternative to psychoanalysis was actually setting
your moral aim higher and
striving towards it diligently. So I mean I agree completely we need more of
that in the Bitcoin space. We need more that in the world. And these things
they're all intertwined. You know, we touch on the beginning. All of us get to
decide, but the world does influence kind of if we adopt fear or love.
But it takes, I don't know, it takes good systems and it takes, I guess, good leaders to
set an example.
Yeah, I do believe that there's like individual people can have a ripple effect.
So that's what I try to do sort of embody the, I'm just one aunt. But one of the things I have faith in is,
I'm trying to do that more.
I know this is a podcast, but I'm trying to do less talking
and more doing.
I've been disappointed in myself
if I'm being honest how much talking I've been doing.
As opposed to, like in my own private life I live the thing I talk about, but I also haven't created much, you know, and I believe in the power of individuals that create stuff, like create an
idea. Through those individuals that try to create something new in the world progresses. And hopefully there's more and more more and more of those people. So
you mentioned kind of people who what the Bitcoin community might call scammers.
I have a lot of passions in my life that I focus a lot of my attention to.
You know, Bitcoin doesn't happen to be yet one of them.
Bitcoin and cryptocurrency, you know.
Like I said, yeah.
I'm always looking for things to really fall in love with.
So how is a person like me supposed to figure out,
I also happen to have a platform a little bit, and how am I supposed to figure out, I also have happened to have a platform a little bit and how am I supposed
to figure out who is an interesting set of ideas and what or not.
Because people are financially tied into a lot of the cryptocurrencies that we're talking
about, certainly with Bitcoin, you know, their livelihood, their well-being is tied
up to it.
So it becomes much more emotional, much more personal.
It's no longer purely an exploration of ideas.
It's really almost like a threat on your property.
It's a personal threat.
It makes it very difficult to explore those ideas.
So I understand that, but it makes it very difficult for somebody like me to just walk
in and be curious. So how do I proceed in this difficult world
and exploring this landscape and not give a platform
to ideas that may harm others?
I guess first I'd like to commend your fourth rightness
about this because I don't think many people
try to walk that line necessarily.
People, again, the territorial imperative, they'll put whoever on, they'll help expand their
reach.
I don't say whatever needs to be said to expand their reach.
I think you're coming from a good place.
I'll say that.
There's a great piece written on the topic of scammers and scamming.
I think it was by Goldstein, he wrote a piece called Everyone's a Scamer.
And it's sort of back to this, you know, general human proclivity
to try and get something for nothing, always.
Which again, it can be as positive, it can be innovative,
or it can be negative, it can be trying to steal from people. That might
be, I think that's a useful piece just to kind of see the crypto world do that lens and
that's how bit corners are thinking all the time. They are by nature adversarial thinkers.
So they're trying to minimize the need for trust in any situation and maximize verification. As far as sifting through the ideas, I guess
this is back where the cultural immune system has some utility. Yeah. Because there were times when
I thought this particular crypto asset, you know, auger was one I was really into, that it could
facilitate prediction
markets, prediction markets make, you know, markets more efficient, et cetera, et cetera. But
when that investment thesis basically met the cultural filter or immune system,
it forced me to reevaluate my position, forced me to really look into it more deeply.
And through that exploration, I realized
that it would need to be built on Bitcoin to work, basically. So, it really comes down to
like you doing your homework, but we can't all deeply evaluate every idea out there, right?
Yeah. One of the things I struggle with with Alex Jones, for example, that had to know with him,
Jones, for example, that had dinner with him. I could tell that would be a very fun conversation, but like then I also understand that there's like consequences to that conversation that should
be explored with care. And so you need to take on the responsibility of being a chef of the pufferfish and all those kinds of things
That said just like you said, it's very difficult to know this ahead of time and
I will probably make mistakes and
That's a shitty thing to have to live with
That I'm going to make mistakes and some of them very large like
Yeah, I mean, I can imagine a bunch of different ways.
But all we can do in this world is once we make the mistakes, we acknowledge those mistakes,
learn, and learn.
And also, you know, I have to put this on the rest of us that you don't take one thing
that a person did and then burn them at the stake for it.
That you realize that we all make mistakes, that a particular mistake does not make the
person.
And, you know, this applies to taking stuff out of context over, you know, hundreds
of hours of talking, but it applies to actual, like, in context, big mistake.
Okay. So what if I murdered somebody at some point?
Just give me a break. No, there are some things that are too far, of course.
But in general, we need to give each other a chance.
Yeah, but I'm still, I walk with a heavy heart knowing that I'll probably make a mistake,
especially one that I didn't mean to. That's the one that worries me most.
But this is human nature, like, homartia to miss the mark. That's the root word of
sin. We are sinful by nature. We can't help it. There's no way, again, pain is information,
right? There's no way to learn other than trying failing learning. And then you put yourself in better formation,
right? In formation to better deal with it next time. So I hope I don't get the sense that you're
actually afraid of making a misstep. Like I think you just maybe disappointed a better word. Like
you know, you're going to make them mistakes. Yeah, exactly. That's much's a better word. Like you know you're gonna make them
still be just exactly, that's a much, much better word.
But we have to embrace that.
The only way we can advance
is that we're dealing with an incomprehensible reality.
All we can do is throw spaghetti at the wall
and see what sticks.
Yeah.
And in that process, we're all inherently gonna
hurt ourselves and hurt others
and that's where love and forgiveness come into play. The other thing is that this culture of reducing people down to a label,
whether it's racism or whether you're calling them a scammer or any number of terms,
you're discounting their sovereignty to zero. Are you taking a super complex human
that is vast, contains multitudes, is changing over time?
And you're trying to put them in a bucket of a word.
And that is just, I think, a cognitive fallacy.
Like, it's not only gonna hurt the person
that you're, you know,
winnowing down to a word,
it's also gonna hurt you.
And it's gonna, in your attempt to de-complexify reality
by assigning this person to a term,
you're actually gonna create bad outcomes for yourself
because you're not gonna understand that person.
I do also think there's a failure of our social media technology
that incentivizes that kind of reduction to a label.
It's just the viral nature of that reduction.
So it's not only do we humans naturally do that,
the our social media platforms make that easier, more fun,
more effective to do that at scale, the mass hysteria.
So I think there's actually technological ways
of adding friction to that.
Yeah, I wonder, I mean, I agree with you that it's social media is an amplifier to our natural
this natural way of dealing with one another, but I wonder, am I thinking of this evolved a lot on
this, that there's something below the way we're treating each other too, right? We could say
civilization sort of advances in the tools we make and the way we treat each
other.
We tend to have better tools, better quality of life, and better morality, better quality
of living and ways of dealing with one another.
And I think that when you corrupt the money, that it really does push us the negative direction,
pushes us away from, again, encouraging or amplifying scarcity artificially
causes us to be more divisive. When things are more divisive, we tend to be less civilized,
less nuanced, more black or white, this or that or you're this label layer, label
B. So I really think, and this is a harder one to unravel, but I think if we can fix the
money, right, which again is the base layer operating system for human moral action in
the world, that it has downstream effects. So we'd actually maybe start to treat each other
a little better on social media
despite the fact that it enables this faster communication. That's interesting. So perhaps fixing
like social media as I've been thinking about is treating the symptom at the cost. Yeah.
That is the Bitcoin rabbit hole in a nutshell. They they say fix the money, fix the world. You keep tracing these different social malays or technological difficulties, lack of
innovation.
Weinstein's entire portal podcast, something went wrong in the early 70s.
We went off the gold standard in 1971.
There's a great website, WTFHapet1971.com, goes through this whole gamut of socioeconomic data
that's completely gone asqueue since the early 70s.
Yeah, you had this whole video,
what do you think about Eric Weinstein and Bitcoin
and the gold standard?
Does he, I actually haven't heard him talk
about his thesis about the 70s in connection to the
Going off of the gold standard
Yeah, what are your thoughts there? What what do you thoughts about his general relationship with the Bitcoin idea and the community?
Yeah, the first exposure I had to Eric was his I think was his first episode with Peter Teal, and they're going through that thesis
that there's been this general institutional rot and suppression of innovation since the
early 70s, and he's trying to identify what it is.
I don't think they ever pinned it on the money on going off the gold standard, but in recent
interactions with Eric, you know, I've interacted with him on Clubhouse.
We recently released an episode of the show I did with Chris Espley and it was titled Dear Eric Weinstein. So we're going through his worldview that he's expressed in the portal and tying
it back to the money in different ways. And he's been, he's engaged. Eric retweeted the show.
We've exchanged some messages. He's been very open-minded.
He's asked some really good questions. So I get the sense that he's approaching this
very wholeheartedly.
He does bring with him his existing worldview and his existing theory that the one that really blew up was gauge theory.
They got really popular. I don't know a lot about gauge theory. Actually,
message Eric and said I want to learn more genuinely because he seems to be serious
that that needs to be considered in the sphere of money. And so I want to learn more about
it. But I think overall, it's great. It's great to see an intellectual heavyweight of his
caliber gravitating towards Bitcoin. Yeah, he has some gauge theoretic conceptions
about the world broadly, but also about economics,
which ultimately boils down to just a set of mathematics,
which allows you to more effectively reason
about the world.
And he has a certain set of views there.
So it's fascinating to see him grapple with it. I think he's also kind of
actually kind of like all of us grappling with the idea of what is Bitcoin in this world. It's a very
young technology and it's unclear exactly how the ideas of the past fit with it and integrate how the two integrate together.
And so it's interesting to explore not just Bitcoin the particular.
So for me, like, what I always saw Bitcoin as from the beginning, from a narrow world view,
is computer science, which is what where I come from.
And so I wasn't almost aware in the social,
political, financial aspects of Bitcoin. But now I see that there's not just power, but
there's fascinating ideas to explore on that side of things, not just the computer science,
not just the technical details, but the political, the socioeconomic, the philosophical.
Yeah, that's where I find all the fascination in the world, frankly.
I would, I would, one other thing about Weinstein and intellectuals more generally that are
skeptical of Bitcoin.
I would challenge them to read the book Human Action, written by Mises. I think
in 1949 he published the English version. It's essentially the Bible of Austrian economics.
And I think Austrian economics is a noticeable gap in most modern intellectuals worldviews.
That it's not taught in school. I mean, I have a master's degree in accounting and finance, you know, studied a lot of economics
in school. There's not one peep of Austrian icon. The list of the
great love talking about all the degrees he has. I was a CPA. But it's it that
curriculum that we get in college is noticeably deficient in Austrian economics.
And I think there's a reason why, right?
It's heavily government influenced.
Again, Master's Green Accounting, they never taught me about what money is or where money
comes from.
All you learn is that the central bank issues money and the central bank takes money away. So it's conceived of in the textbooks quite literally as God, right?
An entity that suffers no opportunity cost that basically is the foundation of the
entire Keynesian worldview that you're taught in economics.
And Austrian economics is the opposite into the spectrum of that, right?
It's actually the culmination which economics is the opposite end of the spectrum of that, right?
It's actually the culmination, which economics is the youngest science in the world, by
the way.
So it is kind of the front, it's the frontiers of science in many ways, like to actually,
when I say praxeology, many people have never even heard of that.
But it's something, it's an a priori study equivalent to something like mathematics that you're
building things from first principles to reason about economic reality. And I think that book,
it's a very difficult book written by me says 1200 pages translated from German the way he
wields English is fascinating and terrifying all at the same time. It probably takes you six months to read it,
if you read it daily, seriously.
Like it's a beast of a book.
But that will plug the gap, I think,
in most, any intellectual that's skeptical about Bitcoin,
I think that will plug the gap.
That's necessary for you to see it in a new light.
Well, I'll take that as a challenge.
Now that we took a little bit of a break,
it's some good Texas brisket.
Thank you for that, by the way. That's an over quite well. Let me ask the ridiculous question.
At the core of the idea of Bitcoin is this guy or this entity named Satoshi Nakamoto. So the
ridiculous question is who is Satoshi Nakamoto? And first of all, is it you? It's not me, I wish. And is this an interesting
question? Or is it just something about our human nature that wants to, that always tends
towards mystery? Well, as we've touched on a bit today, and on mythology, in my opinion,
is something that is intrinsic to how we see the world in a lot of ways like tell.
It's kind of the structure
by which we build these useful fictions.
And so in that way, you could just say that
Satoshi is the godhead of Bitcoin effectively.
And I think a compelling argument can be made that his disappearance is what really solidifies
Bitcoin's decentralization.
Because if there were one individual to personally vilify or denigrate or attack, to disparage
or question the motives of, if he's out on the Hollywood Hills partying, everyone knows he's got
a million Bitcoin, you know, it would just kind of tarnish the entire project a lot
of way, but the fact that on that theme, something for nothing, this guy actually gave humanity
something for nothing.
And it appears that he didn't profit in it anyway.
He, she or they actually heard recently
that he identified as a he and some of his communication.
So it sounds like it is a he.
See what, like his communication is being like studied
like almost like exactly as if he is a religious,
that's right, like a prophet.
You know, it's fascinating to imagine that he's still alive and living in this world.
And it's even more fascinating to imagine that he's participating in the Bitcoin community.
Because I mean, that takes a special human being to how the principal
direct to do to to remain anonymous. That's very much to George Washington. I always wonder
like how many people are like that. There's a cliche that like absolute power corrupts,
absolutely like power corrupts, but it seems like the progress of humanity depends on the people whom power doesn't corrupt.
Mmm.
Interesting.
And it's enough to have just a small selection of those.
Right.
And even if most of us are too weak, we give end to power, if given the chance.
It all takes us a few.
I never thought of it like that, but Marcus Aurelius immediately came to mind.
You know, the guy that he had the keys to the kingdom and he apparently adhered to the
Stoic virtues until the end.
But yeah, I agree with Satoshi.
The other thing that's interesting is he would be by far the most wealthy person in the world on a liquid asset basis,
as he has a million Bitcoin, which is 60 billion liquid net worth at current prices.
So if he is still alive and is operating in the world, he is daily and moment-to-moment resisting massive incentives to go and just be the richest guy in the world.
He's the ultimate hotler.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, it's turning down not just financial success, but also fame.
I mean, fame is another drug.
It's kind of power, but it's in itself is also a drug,
especially in this modern society, in this attention.
And he would have both.
He would have both.
It's fun to imagine who it could be.
It's fascinating if it's somebody like you
or somebody like Elon or somebody like that,
that's fascinating to think about.
I think Elon would be hilarious.
He came out and he was the douchey.
He'd be like, hey guys, I know I'm already the richest guy
in the world, but I'm gonna go ahead
and double my lead here.
What do you make of Elon Musk investing
with Tesla investing in Bitcoin?
And maybe broaden that out in some of these other
big billionaires, but also people tied to major companies investing in Bitcoin.
Yeah, I think Michael Saylor really led the charge on that.
He's the CEO of MicroStrategy that I think they've acquired upwards of $2 billion in Bitcoin now,
sort of acquiring August, maybe 2020. And know, personally bought a lot of it.
He bought a lot as a treasure reserve asset
for his company, micro strategy,
then they leveraged up on a convertible note and bought more.
So he's really gone really leading the charge
in this Bitcoin institutional adoption.
Your conversation with him is a really interesting one.
You're a series of, I mean, series of episodes, I suppose, but it's only a couple of conversations,
I guess.
Yeah, we recorded twice, five and a half hours each.
It was about 11 hours of content.
Yeah, thank you.
It's a lot of people have said that it's the best first principal thing they've ever seen on Bitcoin,
which I take no credit for that at all.
I mean, I just sat down with a guy and unleashed him.
He's just a beast.
Yeah.
But it's fascinating that his long-term vision with it.
I mean, I'm not sure I'm all philosophically bought in, but if he's right,
if this set of ideas are as powerful as
He describes as you describe that this would change the world
Which as you say it's funny that a company like micro strategy
might be
the company that has the the biggest macro effect on our economy and our world.
Yeah. The conversation reshaped my world view a lot too because he framed money as energy,
which I had often thought of money as time. It explored those connections a lot in my writing, but looking at it as energy, and then his supposition that the purpose of life is to basically channel energy across space and
time. So we're just trying to figure out how to channel more energy across space and time
toward the satisfaction of aims. And his definition, or his answer to that question,
what is money? Is it money is the highest form of energy a human being can channel?
So it's a claim to all other forms of energy
we can manifest in the world.
And that just completely reshaped how I see it,
brought in this whole other side
to my intellectual explorations of money.
Can you elaborate in that a little bit?
So I understand money is time,
which in itself a really powerful idea.
But money is energy and channeling energy.
Can you break that apart?
Yeah, so I guess,
definitely have to check out the whole series
to really get his perspective,
but I'll do my best to condense it.
Life itself, all forms of life are, you know,
they're dependent on energy, right?
Energy fuels everything, fuels life and action and motion and all of that.
And we could say that maybe like a plant is harnessing solar energy and then
reallocating that into growth.
So it's aim is to grow towards the sun, right?
So it's allocating energy towards its
goal of harnessing more solar energy kind of thing. So and humans to have evolved to figure out how
to harness energy in different ways to satisfy higher and more complicated aims. So the original energy network that he made,
that he referenced was fire, right?
We actually learned to wield fire as a tool in and of itself.
So not only are we learning to channel energy,
but we actually learned how to isolate energy
as a tool in and of itself.
So we went into that how harnessing fire had changed human beings.
And actually, this is one of the earliest examples to have a co-evolution between tool and
our biology because when we develop fire, we developed cooking.
And cooking is, you can kind of think of it as pre-digestion in a way.
We're liberating these macronutrients or making things that otherwise would not be digestible, edible.
And it increases the efficiency by which we extract nutrients from food.
That's what cooking does.
So when we figured out cooking, we liberated all these digestive resources
that were reallocated towards higher cognitive development.
So there's this evolutionary path between figuring out fire and us becoming smarter, which
was interesting.
Some other early examples he gave, he went into were missiles and hydraulics.
So missiles being, we learn to hunt at a distance, you know, we can't bring down a woolly
mammoth, maybe with spears and up close in personal force, but we could with spears and javelins
and slings and whatnot.
And then he went to how we've used water to channel hydraulic energy.
So we can basically overcome gravity.
We can move, you know.
There's theories that the pyramids were constructed using,
the blocks were moved using hydraulic energy
or using water.
Clearly we use like cargo ships and whatnot
to move things much more efficiently across water
than we could the land.
So this, his whole view is,
I would keep figuring out better ways and more efficient ways
to harness energy and channel it.
And in that perspective, money has always represented a claim on all other forms of energy.
So whatever energy couldn't be channeled towards something useful in the economy historically
would go into gold mining. So gold became this residual, this economic, this token of the excess energy created by the market
economy. And then you could take that token of energy and use it to redeem for any other form of
energy or any other products of energy itself. So I guess that's my best approximation of it and it just really shattered my world view again
because I'd always thought about it as time, like we spend time sacrificing to obtain money that we then
redeem for commencement sacrifices from others, but I'd never considered it purely as energy and
then it also ties back into gold where
There was an energy expenditure necessary to obtain gold so there's a proof of work associated with obtaining gold
That protected its market value
All right, so you had to expend again of market if market value of gold's 2000 an ounce you had to expend
1900 an ounce mining So it kept producers honest in a way
So do you think something like proof of stake that's more about reputation than actual exertion, like energy can work? No. I think proof
of stake is inherently centralizing. It's like the old Matthew principle
from those who have to those who have more will be given
from those who have not everything will be taken.
That's what proof of stake is.
You need proof of work to embody skin in the game
in the marketplace such that contributions
are commensurate with consideration received.
That's how systems work.
What's the idea why proof of work
might incentivize decentralization?
Do you worry that as Bitcoin becomes more powerful,
it may become again more centralized?
Well, the decentralization of Bitcoin is largely driven by the nodes actually,
which aren't actually mining. They're just choosing which rule set to implement.
And then the mining network is actually enforcing that rule set.
the mining network is actually enforcing that rule set. So I think the mining network is inherently decentralized
in that really anyone with access to cheap energy can become a minor.
You can freely enter where exit the market or the network at any time,
but maintaining the block size at a manageable level is what's key to maintaining node decentralization.
This is an interesting question. Who do you think has more power? The miners of the nodes.
Because the nodes carry the idea of the protocol, like the specifics. So in some sense,
they have more power. It big coins and idea.
They're kind of mutually indispensable though, because you can't have...
There's no security without the miners.
So without the miners, Bitcoin is just an idea.
And the idea of Bitcoin is maybe existed even before Bitcoin, right?
Just sound money.
We just say sound money is an idea.
But there was no way to root that into thermodynamic reality without Satoshi figuring out
not just proof of work, it's the entire composite
of the difficulty adjustment, proof of work,
one way hashing, et cetera.
So I don't know, that's hard to say.
Hard to disentangle the two.
You've talked about money as morality too. How do you think about moral and immoral action in the context of money? There's this great, great quote by Rothbard, who's a famous Austrian economist and he says, quote, to be moral and act must be free.
Unquote.
And you know, I think morality, it changes over time and it is, it has its roots in
biology.
Jordan Peterson makes the point that even animals have their own sort of pseudo morality
or like with wolf packs for instance, if there's a dispute between the alpha males or I guess
between an alpha male and a incumbent, the two males will have a fight basically. And then when one is decided that one has won, the loser will basically
roll over and give up his neck to the alpha male. And they do this instead of fighting to the death
because in a wolf pack, they need every wolf so they can go out and bring down. You never know
when you're going to need the 20th wolf to bring down the big buffalo the next day or whatever.
So they've developed this less than fight to the death, social morality, to optimize
their effectiveness as a wolf pack.
And similarly for humans, like our morality sort of emerges through competition and play
even.
There are these implicit rules that come into place
based on how we're organizing ourselves over time.
So with money, it's interesting because most tools
we would consider it to be amoral,
as in a hammer can be used to build a house,
which could be seen to be good,
like a good constructive purpose,
or it could be used to bash them on skull,
which could be something evil.
And that the tool itself is amoral,
doesn't have any independent morality of its own.
All of the morality is associated with the wielder
of the tool.
So what's the quote, like any tool can be a weapon if you hold it right?
So what do you think?
But money's maybe a little bit different in that when you monopolize money, it's only
useful as a tool for one thing.
And that's for allocating wealth away
from some and to others. So it is the only utility of monopolized money is theft. There's
no other, you know, there's a lot of propaganda out there that will say, oh, we need to print
money to get out of this disaster or to give to the poor, whatever more realistically camouflaged political aim is being discussed,
the base layer of monopolized money is that it's only useful for taking from someone giving
to others.
So another way to think about this is that money is a paper claim on the savings of society.
So it is just a ticket for redeeming savings, which could be time,
could be capital, could be knowledge from any market actor in the world.
So it's kind of a list of who owns what, if you will, it's a proxy list.
If there's one group that can amend that list and others cannot,
then they're basically able and incentive to modify that list to their own benefit.
And that's effectively what Essential Bank is doing.
So Essential Bank is determining how much money to create.
They're also determining who gets to receive that money first.
And the first recipients of that money are going to be the
beneficiaries in an inflationary regime.
So those that received the money last are the ones being robbed.
Those that receive the money first are the ones that are receiving the stolen proceeds,
let's say.
And this has a really corrosive effect on social morality, because if we consider that people's time horizon,
which the author is called the time preference, the more short term thinking you are, the more
likely you are to engage in selfish behavior, right?
If you know that it's all over tomorrow, you've been working your whole
life to develop, you know, this business or create this reputation or whatever your thing
is, but you just are given the foreknowledge that tomorrow it's all going to end. You're
much more likely to go out and just maybe get drunk and party that night because there's
no more repercussions, right? Whereas if you know that you're going to live for a very
long time, you're much more likely to plan for the future. And money is very, so we just
say that that your time horizons closely related to your morality, right? The longer term
thinking you are, the more moral you would tend to behave, the more you would care about
long term relationship building versus going out and getting wasted.
And money too impinges very closely on our time preference.
And time preference is the Austrian term.
So low time preference means your long-term oriented, high time preference means your
short-term oriented, which can be a little trippy for some people, because it sounds backwards. But if your money constantly loses value, you are incentivized to become more short-term
oriented. You are handicapped in your ability to plan for the future because your money, which is
intended to be, here's another definition of money,
as an insurance policy against uncertainty. So no matter what problems you encounter in the world,
this money will best help you deal with those problems. When that insurance policy against uncertainty
is injected with uncertainty, it's polluted with the uncertainty of inflation, your time horizon
shrinks, your ability to plan long-term shrinks.
And this impinges on social morality.
So, there's a great book on this
called Honest Money by Gary North.
And in that book, he gives the parable of the winemaker.
The winemaker, if you just imagine,
the hypothetical winemaker operating a business
and essentially
paying the economy, and let's say his central bank just doubled the money supply to quote
unquote save the economy, save increase the money supply from one to two trillion dollars.
This wine maker that's accustomed to selling wine at twenty dollars a bottle is now
faced with basically three choices. And an important point here too, before we get into his three choices, are what prices
are themselves.
Prices are the most visible aspect of any service.
So when you increase prices, you are incentivizing your customers to look elsewhere.
They're going to look at your competition.
When you decrease prices, you're incentivizing market actors to look closer at your product,
right?
You're delivering a solution at a lower price.
So this wine maker that's accustomed to selling his wine at a $20 price point, all
of the sudden, because of his central bank has tripled the money supply.
He has three choices.
He can either keep selling his bottle at $20 and all of his inputs will increase due to inflation
by 50%.
So he will lose 50% of his profit margin as a result.
So we can choose to eat that loss.
He can choose to double the selling price of his bottle of wine from $20 to $40 because all of the price of his inputs doubled.
So then he would
maintain his profit margin.
Or the third one is that he could choose to water down his wine or use inferior ingredients.
So he could use cheaper inputs and maintain the output at the same price.
So he could basically start selling his customers an inferior product for the same
price to preserve his profit margin. Now again, case number one, it's not very palatable.
He doesn't want to eat the economic loss. Case number two, it's not very good either,
because he's incentivizing all of his customers to go shop other winemakers if he doubles his
price. So human nature being what it is,
trying to get something for nothing,
inflation actually seeps into other industries
by encouraging producers into option three,
which is to deceive your customer in the short run.
And again, this would be done initially at the margins.
Maybe it's just a few drops of water.
Maybe it's just some cheaper grapes.
But over time, this inflation
is actually inducing producers to weigh their financial well-being against their moral
integrity. So it's forcing them into this dilemma that would not exist in a free market economy. And as they charge more money for wine that is inferior, the buyers of that wine,
also living in a central banked economy are also getting scammed by not only the inflation,
but also the wine. So it becomes this kind of corrosive, contagious moral effect
that propagates throughout an economy. And that's why I've argued in a lot of my writing
that inflation is this infectious moral cancer
on the world.
I think it is tied back to a lot of the social
strangeness we've seen in modern times,
where there seems to be a lot of fake people
and a lot of fake businesses and a lot of fake businesses
and a lot of scams, all of these things.
I think it really is rooted in the money.
And Bitcoin as the first money in history that has a 0% terminal inflation rate or said
differently, zero unexpected inflation.
There's no theft integrated into Bitcoin.
You can only earn it through work or sacrificing resources to obtain it.
It is the antidote to this moral cancer that inflation riddles our society with.
Again, your blow in my mind a little bit to think about the ripple effects of inflation,
the way it seeps through with our interactions. So at the very, the early
ripples is the effect that has on the products, on the dilution of the wine.
But also, you might have ripple effects on the character, on the behavior of
people. That's interesting. Artificial creation of scarcity, creating, having effects on society at the social,
like the social fabric.
Yeah, I guess you're arguing the morality.
It's perverting free market dynamics,
which again, we said free markets generate pragmatic truth.
So inflation distorts price signals,
which means it confuses capital allocation.
Yeah, so we're trying to solve problems,
but all of a sudden, we can't tell if this price increases
a matter of true supply and demand change,
or a matter of policy change.
So it clouds our economic perceptions.
It suppresses innovation,
because now you've exacerbated the boom
and bust business cycle.
People are going to over-borrow and go into projects
that they can't profitably sustain,
so then there will be a huge collapse.
So that actually breaks the market's function
of generating innovation.
And then yeah, I would argue too,
that it pollutes our pursuit of virtue.
Let's say, maybe it's pushing back,
but I don't think so.
It's not as clear to me,
perhaps because Evan thought about it it deeply that money is core
to life and human interaction.
Because there might be other forces, other fraudulent forces, other things in human nature that are creating these effects as well.
So it's clear, I think you're articulating really well that there's these negative effects from inflation.
I wonder if there's other undiscovered,
not undiscovered but ones we're not making explicit now
forces that are creating the, you know,
all the things we're seeing now with,
like you said, cancel culture and all those things,
but also the negative effects on the quality of products
and the excellence of the creativity
and the innovation, all those kinds of things.
I wonder if there's other factors.
It's kind of, listen, it's compelling to think
of the coins at the core of it all.
Like if you fix, I forgot what the phrase was.
Fix the money, fix the world.
Yeah, fix the money, fix the world.
That, again, things that sound good, I'm skeptical
of by nature. So I wonder if there's other things that are beyond money that are somehow
deeply integrated into our human nature. Another one related to money is social cohesion itself.
So very simple anecdote for this was the more you increase the inflation rate,
the social cohesion is inversely proportionate to that. So the extreme example would be hyperinflation,
right, where the money is produced in such excess that it loses all meaning and relevance. So,
today in Venezuela, there is cash clogging the gutters, clogging the streets, clogging the sewer system, because
the cash has lost all relevance.
And so anecdotally, we would suspect that, okay, if there's an inverse relationship between
inflation and social cohesion, if we could then intake inflation to zero, couldn't we
theoretically increase social cohesion to its maximum.
So another way to say that is inflation is a de-civilizing force,
whereas natural price deflation, which would occur in a hard money economy, or there's either a
fixed supply of Bitcoin or relatively scarce supply of gold, for instance, that lays claim to an increasing capital
stock of goods and services.
Prices would naturally decline every year as we became smarter, so the market price becomes
a reflection of our collective knowledge.
So by letting prices decline naturally over time, we can actually induce civilization. But by trying to force
prices higher all the time, be it the central bank, we're creating the opposite effect.
So we talked a little about the Soviet Union and I happened to have lived through the collapse
of the Soviet Union. And so what are the factors that causes in your mind to why the Soviet Union collapsed.
So, you know, definitely a multi-variant situation.
I think there's a lot of factors.
One that jumped out to me recently,
again, from that documentary that I didn't note before,
was that at one point Stalin eliminated,
I think 75% of his intelligence force,
which I think when you're competing with another nation-state, you know, and intelligence and
covert operations are very integral to your survival, I think that was definitely a shot
in the foot, but at a higher level, I would say that capitalism and
communism were each resource strategies of the 20th century nation state.
And they seem, you know, we commonly consider them to be diametrically opposed, but there's
actually a lot of commonality between the two. The difference would be that in Soviet Russia,
as we alluded to earlier,
they tried to completely replace price signals
with this nationalistic faith and devotion.
So it, they removed the economic nerve signal,
which coordinated the allocation of capital over time.
So this inhibited their ability to generate wealth.
Whereas in the United States,
we left most markets open to free enterprise.
So we honored the integrity of price signals
and we allowed people to trade and accumulate wealth.
So in every market, accept the market for money.
Both markets maintained a central bank as we've gotten to.
So, I think in a really big picture standpoint,
that's why capitalism out competes communism
is because it is able to generate more wealth
than communism was,
and therefore was able to put financial pressure
on the USSR until
it reached the point of bankruptcy, essentially.
This similar model, I would argue, is that for the same reasons we saw capitalism out
compete communism, which I think the data that I recall was that the USSR's economy was
valued at close to one third of
its inputs.
So if you just didn't do anything inside the USSR and just sold all the raw materials
that were going into it, it would have been worth three times as much as sending the materials
in, running it through the efforts, and then shipping things back out.
It was valued destructive versus value creative. And I would argue this
is because again, the centralized computing model versus decentralized computing model, it just
became more and more corrupt over time. It got to the point where I think most of the occupations
in USSR towards the end were as informants, right? They were working for the state. Jordan Peterson
makes this point too that at some point it was actually illegal to be sad in Soviet Russia,
because if you were sad, you were contradicting the utopian view of the state. So if you were sad,
you're implying the state's not doing something wrong. But by the way, this does remind me, what
do you know what Jordan Peterson thinks about Bitcoin and about the future
Impact about of Bitcoin on the society
No, I don't actually
We're
Hopefully I'm gonna be talking to him soon about that. We did a
Book club on his book maps of meaning and he engaged with us about it
So we're hoping to deliver the orange pill to Mr. Peterson.
The orange pill.
I think his audience is one of the most important audiences in the world to understand Bitcoin.
These people that are conscientious and responsible.
I think they'll quickly understand Bitcoin's value proposition and help elucidate it to the
world.
I'm trying to remember what he said about it.
Basically, I think his support of Bitcoin is grounded in the kind of people who are
opposing Bitcoin.
So without understanding Bitcoin, he starts to like Bitcoin because of the people who are
opposing it.
You know, you start to, I mean, that's partially why I am interested in Bitcoin. It's like
all the people in power, in all the kind of shady, fraudulent, non-genuine people who are dismissing Bitcoin are making me think, hmm. One of Jordan's definitions of God is, says God is found in the truthful speech that rectifies
pathological hierarchies.
And I think that is a beautiful definition of what Bitcoin is doing in the world and that we
have this pathological hierarchy called central banking by which the rich get richer in the
poor get poorer.
That is used as a mechanism for perpetual theft and funding warfare at a global scale.
Like Ron Paul said, it's no coincidence that the 20th century of total war was also the
century of central banking.
When you have an institution of currency counterfeiting, which the central bank is, you are no longer
bounded by your own balance sheet when you go to war.
You don't have to just go to war on your own resources.
You can now pillage the Commonwealth and
Pulfur the savings of society as a whole
Before you go bankrupt and indeed this is what Hitler did right Hitler hyperinflated
and the Y-Maw Republic to fund his war efforts
and frankly every dictator every
World War every internment camp in history was made possible by the weaponization of money in fiat currency.
So I hope I know Jordan Peterson is a huge proponent of free speech.
And I think that's ultimately at its deep assessment, that's what Bitcoin really is, right?
It is just the purest form of monetary speech we've ever had.
And by purifying that primary operating system of human action, I think we can eliminate
this pathological hierarchy that is unfortunately the dominant institution in the world today.
Yeah, I'm definitely especially with these explorations, a Bitcoin. This journey I've been on, I'll revisit some of the aspects of human history that I've
been looking at, like Stalin and Hitler, with a, from a perspective of a monetary perspective.
Like, what are the effects of inflation?
How was it used as a tool in gaining power, in maintaining power, in manipulating
the populace in doing, in inflicting suffering and, I would say, evil onto the world.
It's interesting.
It's interesting.
I'm going to have to sort of go back into the whole.
So I tend to focus more on the human nature, unless about the tools, the human nature leverages
to a fact change, but you're right that in some sense money is a tool which can be effectively used to perform moral and the moral actions depending
on how it's used.
And there's a feedback between the two, right?
There's specifically with money itself. It's the, there's the way I've been posing
illegally. Is it, I actually think, we typically think of people as good or bad or again, trying
to label people all the time, but I think people and their characters are emergent properties
of the incentive structures they inhabit. So, you know, what does Charlie Munger say? Don't show me the incentives.
I'll show you the outcome kind of thing. This is a flawed incentive structure we've been operating
within. Now, I'm not speaking to the intention. People want to argue with me all the time. Like,
Jerome Powell is not a bad guy. He's doing his best at the central bank. He's doing what he thinks
is right. That's fine. Well, that's true or not, it actually doesn't matter.
The intention is divergent from the outcome.
The institution that they are running is premised on deception and theft, and it is
handicapping the productive economy.
So when we're even the terms we use, printing money, you're not creating any new value,
you're not infusing the economy with anything, any new productive factors whatsoever, you're
just harvesting the economic surplus created by entrepreneurs in the marketplace.
It's impossible to add any value to an economy by increasing the paper claims on its savings.
So there's a feedback loop between man and tool, between creator and created.
I think we have to honor the relationship above
either one, right, trying to put the right people in the system or just build the right
system. We need both. Do you think the interesting question or whether the people that are
in control of central banks or in positions of power there, if they're themselves are malevolent, they themselves are
bad actors, or they're simply like leaves floating along the river, sort of just the cog in
the machine, an ant, an ant colony that operates in a certain kind of way.
Like where do you put the blame? Do you put the blame
on the way things are operating onto the individuals or onto the system itself, the idea behind the system
where it is it useful to place the blame somewhere? Because for me, it might be useful to understand
that in order to figure out what the solution is. I tend to not put the blame on the individual. I tend to believe most people are good and
want to see themselves as good. And so in that case, it's very difficult to be truly
malevolent as you would need to be to control, to gain centralized power at the large scale. But I know a lot of conspiracy theory theorists
and just a lot of people think that there is evil humans in the world that seek power,
maintain that power and they use that power for bad purposes.
I think they're just people and they're just trying to get something for nothing like all of us do.
people. And they're just trying to get something for nothing like all of us do. And this framework of thought, the, well, yeah, honestly, yeah. And that's what the central bank is is the ultimate
institution to get something for nothing. You get a perpetual income stream, the ability to acquire
more and more territory in the world through monopolizing the supply of money. And you can literally print
money. You can buy your way out of anything and buy your way into anything in the world. So it is,
I think the most, I don't say the most, but a group of very intelligent people put this thing
together and figured out how to get something for nothing in perpetuity
people put this thing together and figured out how to get something for nothing in perpetuity by clouding people's conception of money.
And if we look at the central bank, it's been around for a while, but the latest implementation
here in the US is the Fed.
It's about a hundred years old.
It's an analog age institution that I think has lost a lot of its relevance in the modern age. And I don't
think it will survive the ever galvanizing gaze of the digital age, just too much sunlight,
too much transparency. Today, ideas move too quickly for something like this to remain relevant.
But there are just people, they are just seeking something for nothing. But I think when you concentrate that much power and that much control, that much wealth into the hands of few, it does change. to be completely powerless, you're really unhappy. If you're totally powerless, you're a slave.
Someone else tells you what to do.
You have no autonomy.
It's miserable.
So there's this, it makes the consolidation of power a learning
and that we want to protect ourselves
from that slave state, let's say.
But like many things, it can be taken too far.
And when you concentrate power into two few hands,
Hayek argues that it actually transforms,
it becomes something much more intoxicating
than it would be if it was held in a more distributed way.
And I think that gets into a lot of these,
you know, I don't know if they call themselves elites
or people call them elites or what are like,
let's say, shareholder's essential banks,
people participating in the world economic form, things like this.
They come, I guess the incentives, right?
The incentive schema they're in is rewarding them constantly, telling them everything they're
doing, saying and thinking is correct, because they just keep getting richer all the time.
And it leads you closer to this definition of evil, which in the book Paradise Lost,
Friedman said, evil is the force
which believes its knowledge is complete.
So these people become more and more convinced
that they have the plan or they have the course of action
that will save the world.
That if everyone would just listen to them,
that they would lead us to the promised land, right? Whether this is Bill Gates saving
us from a climate crisis or any of these other economic policies that are targeted at a certain
outcome, but almost always diverge, almost perfectly from that outcome, creating its opposite
effect. I think that's the problem, that we have this mechanism that can concentrate wealth and
power into the hands of so few that it leads to the proliferation of evil, meaning that
it convinces people that their knowledge is complete.
Whereas something like a Bitcoin almost forces the opposite outcome, it, in a Bitcoin almost forces the opposite outcome. In a Bitcoin-denominated world, a pure free market,
the consumer is sovereign.
So you cannot earn value in the world
unless you are serving your fellow man,
unless they have expressed through their
buy and sell decisions in the marketplace.
You've created a satisfaction of a particular one that they value so much.
They've acquired so much of your good or service that you've become rich.
You can only maintain that position of wealth so long as you continue to serve your fellow
man.
It changes the incentive such that dominance in the world can no longer be paired with coercion.
It has to be paired with competence.
And that's how this, when we say Bitcoin fixes this,
that's what we mean.
Like it restores that skin in the game,
that balance of incentives and disincentives
that help us properly navigate reality.
And it prevents the buildup of systemic rot
like we see with the central bank.
What books people love this question.
And you're exceptionally well read.
You've explored all kinds of ideas.
Is there some books, technical, fiction, philosophical,
coloring books, children's books,
had an impact on your life
and you would maybe
recommend to others that they should read. I think we mentioned a couple of them
here today but I think a really useful triplet of books that have been
recommending recently to get to help diffuse this materialist worldview of
reality where we we still
think in kind of the Newtonian model that it's atoms and cause and effect.
I'd first recommend Jordan Peterson's book, Maps of Meaning. It's a deep dive
into mythology and how it's developed over the course of history and how it's
reflected both in our social structures
and our intraceic nature, really, and how they come to reflect one another in a way, like the way we
think again shapes the world and then the way the world is shaped shapes the way we think.
That's an excellent book. It's very dense and difficult read. Actually, this trilogy is pretty brutal. Probably take you a year to read.
Hours a day. The second one I mentioned earlier was Human Action by Mises.
The ultimate tone on Austrian economics will help
explicate this realm of relevance. I think that economics truly is where
again, there are things and then these things become means or ends once we
channel our purpose through them.
So this realm of non-materialist relevance that I think is really important to grasping
economics at a first principles level, I think that book lays it out tremendously.
And then the last one would be, I think I mentioned
this at the beginning, was that book Lila by Robert Persig, where he's, you know, making the case that
value was fundamental. And all of these books, all the kind of all point to that, actually, they're
pointing back to value being the fundamental thing, values and values express through moral action
as being the fundamental substrate of reality.
So it'll, if you're like me, I grew up quite scientific-minded.
It'll help diffuse some of that and maybe retrain you
to the other side of reality.
So you said these books are difficult.
Maybe you can comment on which aspect is difficult.
Is it just the technical nature?
Is it the length?
Is it the depth of the ideas or how long it takes to integrate them?
And more sort of importantly, is there recommendation advice you can give on how to integrate these ideas? How to read?
How to learn in the space, is there from your own life, like, how do you enjoy taking an ideas and this could be for these books but also
in the Bitcoin world and reading a bunch of different ideas
by others just integrating stuff
I'll even watching podcasts and all those kinds of things. Yeah, I'm a reader. I love to read
One of the most useful things I've ever done was take a speed reading course.
I actually think there's a version of this available on Tim Ferriss's website. It's like a 30-minute
speed reading course. It's all about eye movement. Instead of moving your eye continuously,
line of align, it's more about jumping and your brain. You can train your brain to just
absorb words in their totality versus kind of reading word by word.
And also not, I've haven't fully taken that journey actually, but I remember
taking a few steps on that journey realizing that I'm speaking inside my head.
Yeah. I'm saying the words inside my head and that's actually getting in the way. That's right. So there's a lot of little hacks like that. I may be lazily.
I have to, not that you mentioned, I'll have to revisit this.
But I have convinced myself that I don't need to read faster because that's not ultimately
the bottleneck.
The bottleneck is in the me thinking about stuff.
In fact, I like reading really slowly or so I convinced myself because ultimately it's
not about gaining more information.
It's about time spent thinking deeply.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But maybe that's just me being very lazy because yes, it's true.
It's important to think deeply, but maybe I could speed up the consumption of information.
It's fine.
I like to be dynamic, actually.
So usually speed reading initially, and that diffused that internal dialogue for me
because when I was reading one word at a time I was having that too. You almost get a feedback
in your own head. You're reading the word out loud and shouting your thoughts. If you're speed
reading you can't do that. You're just you're taking in groups of words at a time so you can't
you know internally verbalize it I guess. And then I also am really big on annotating, underlining, writing in the margins.
I prefer a physical book, but I also read the Kindle a lot because it's just so convenient,
you know, anywhere you're waiting in line or every night before bed, I'm reading my Kindle.
And I also advocate rereading a lot. So if you found something that, you know,
struck you at a deep level, found particularly fascinating like you have to
listen to that. That's your I don't know your mind, your spirit, signal that that is something meaningful
to you and you should you know to your point reread it sit with it for a long time write about it
and that that becomes the ultimate triumvirate of synthesizing an idea actually if you can read about it and then write about it and
Then go and talk about it. You get this crystallization of understanding. That's just not possible doing any one of the three or any two of the three
So it definitely highly recommend people to do that and in terms of
highly recommend people to do that. And in terms of how are those books difficult, I mean in every way, they're all long books. In terms of density, I would say Lila is the least
dense, maybe maps of meaning. I don't know, but maps of meaning and human action are
both extremely dense. But they're just, I had to read those books very slow.
You just have to take your time with them.
To give you an idea with Jordan Peterson, he said this a lot with maps of meaning, he
spent three hours a day writing for 15 years to write that book.
It's probably, I think, a 600-page book.
He said, he estimates he rewrote every sentence in the book 50 times, 5-0, to try and get it,
you know, just perfected.
And when you read these sentences, you can tell that he rewrote it 50 times.
I've used the actually ANKIE for space repetition.
It's like a piece of, it's an app.
I'm not sure if you're familiar
with it, but it allows you to load in facts or terms or entire paragraphs. And then it
brings them, you review them every day. And then it brings them up less and less often
over time. As you show yourself being able to remember the thing that
You wanted to memorize and oftentimes when I'm reading what I want to memorize is the key idea
But also like I use it for I'm terrible with names
I'm starting to use it for names to names of people names of
Like people that I want to remember
Yeah, and also throughout history and also my personal life, but also events
You know dates to me are usually not important, but sometimes dates are really important
And so it's really useful. I recommend highly in the ball. I think mentioned
piece of software called read wise or something like that
that
I'm hoping I'm saying that correctly. It's something like that and
What it does is it goes through your highlights from your Kindle or the various places
where you highlight stuff that integrates with good reads.
And it does the same kind of space repetition, but for things you've highlighted.
So it sends an email every day.
It's been really, I recommend it highly because it
It sends like to me an email form a
Selection of the things I've highlighted and previous things ever had and it's like this weird like
Shocked shock to your memory that that spring goes like I'll have a way probably way too much or well in there.
And it just kind of like it brings you back and these ideas are because what you realize
depending on how you highlight, but at least for me, and I think it's probably true for a
lot of people, the things you've highlighted had at that moment and like an emotional impact
on you.
And so like these things are just like hitting you hard again.
It's like, whoa, it might not be meaningful to anyone else except you.
And it's something I recommend.
You never know with these like hacks or tools and so on.
Like what's actually BS and what is amazing and that one is kind of amazing.
So at least for me, it works for me and Naval, I think.
I think it's a read wise you said read wise
Yeah, or something close to that. Yeah, it could be read something else like read wealth or something
The one other thing I
Really like and this is more of a new one is I use to listen to music at the gym
But now I've just because I'm so backlogged on podcast, right? They're just there's so many
I exclusively listen to podcasts. When I'm walking or when I'm at the gym, anytime I'm doing something that I can't,
you know, read basically. And I think there's something really special about exercise and ideation.
I mean, I, I don't know if this happens to everyone, but my creative juices just go ballistic. When
I'm at the gym, like I hit a certain point of,
I guess heart rate and you're sweating enough,
then the idea is to start to flow.
So I'm basically at the gym now listening to podcasts,
exercising as fast as I can to try to get to that state of,
you know, where you're just straining your extraneous exercise,
I guess you would say.
And then I'm end up typing notes into my phone as fast
as I can with all these ideas that are flowing.
So I've created a lot of good writing out of that.
Yeah, it's kind of work.
So I do running quite a bit.
So running outside.
And I'll listen to it.
I've been, okay, I told myself this has been going on
for a body year.
Is I only listen like the stuff that's either World War II or World War I related.
So Hitler Stalin, like, like difficult historical stuff.
And also listen to brown noise.
So those are the two modes.
So brown noise helps me.
This is like white noise, but like deeper, I guess it helps me remove the world.
And at the gym, there's a lot of distractions. When you're running, there's a lot of distractions.
It helps me remove the world. So one, I'll be listening to difficult
historical ideas. And then when my mind is all of a sudden starting to generate ideas,
I'll listen to brown noise and then force myself to think. It's kind of,
it's meditative in a sense. And your mind wants to be lazy. You want to,
it's hard, man, like running and thinking. In the sense that some of the ideas that come
into your head are pretty heavy. It's about your own life, it's your own demons come in there, but also just
difficult ideas that require you thinking through and persevering through that,
like not letting yourself get lazy and like thinking through it has been really
for me rewarding in the same way that you're saying is it is for you. It's true
that like podcasts and music,
like shallow, funny podcasts, or music
have been a kind of filler distraction.
But informational podcasts, like podcasts
that have some depths of ideas or audiobooks
have been not truly rewarding.
I try to listen less and less to podcasts, they're just fun.
Because I feel like I enjoy it too much and I don't allow my mind to get bored and to think
through stuff to explore ideas. It's so easy to fill the space that usually will be filled with
thought and instead fill it with fun podcasts. There's a bunch of comedy podcasts I really enjoy.
So there's value to that of course,
but you have to realize it's entertainment.
It's not, it's not, you don't get much value
except entertainment.
Right.
And those utility to the boredom too, I think,
where to give your mind the space,
I guess you're subconscious maybe the space
to chew on some of these problems, right?
Where you've imbibed so much knowledge,
you've highlighted and thought about something,
but then you need to stop thinking about it for a while
and let it marinate in the subconscious.
And then these flashes of insight
that people have described.
Sometimes I get them in the middle of the night,
like I just wake up from a dream and have them,
and I gotta write it down,
or sometimes it's in nature taking a walk. But I think that's
very important to you. We can't just brute force our way into understanding. There's this interplay
between kind of the brute force reading intake and then just relaxing, meditating, sleeping, being
bored, letting your subconscious do the heavy lifting.
And you should be aware of the fact
that there's a war for your attention going on.
So there's been better and better and better mechanisms
that are designed to steal your attention.
So I kind of see it as a war zone between my right for boredom
and the internet wanting your attention.
In fact, Clubhouse as an app has been, I'm probably not going to use Clubhouse much anymore.
There's some aspect of my own inner loneliness and whatever it is that pulled me into Clubhouse
a little bit too much to where we're robbed me from that lonely time alone where I sit and
listen to Bruce Springsteen and think about life.
Right?
So I want to...
That's way more important.
It's way...
Well, yeah, at least it's all a balance because there is a clubhouse like a lot of these
social networks when you use right can be a way to discover new ideas and new people.
But the boredom and just being alone with your thoughts is priceless.
Absolutely. And you got to know yourself, right? Like it took me a long time to realize I need solitude.
Like just how I'm wired, how I'm built. I need like an hour-day solitude. So you got to
listen to that part of yourself. You might be compromising something like that where you feel like
you always need to be with your girlfriend or whatever it may be, but I would suggest listening to that voice.
Yeah, I tried to, I tried to remember things that made me feel good over time, like
long-term had positive impact and long-term had negative impact and do more of the former
unless as a ladder.
Yeah.
We don't often think like that.
You know, we talked offline about like carnivore diets, for example, I try to remember that carbs don't make me feel good.
Yeah, that's what I'm talking about.
In the moment it's hard to remember that.
It's hard.
But you have to remember that that's the case.
And in the same way, exercise, it's hard to remember
that exercise makes me feel good.
Like, especially when it's time to go to the gym, especially when it's time to go to the gym, but you should remember that because the kind of person you are without exercise, for me, just like
you've beautifully said, that you have to know yourself, the kind of person I am without
exercise is a less good person, a person I'm less proud of.
The food thing is so hard.
By the way, I still, you know, I can't tell you how many times I've learned the lesson,
like, don't eat that.
But then, you know, you go a few weeks of not eating whatever that is and you're feeling
good.
And then you're, I don't know, something creeps up inside you.
Like, ah, you could just have one or you could just do this.
But for me, it's sugar.
Like sugar just makes me feel terrible. But always, not always, but if it's been a long time, I start to make that exception in
my mind. Like, oh, you can have a little bit. And then I eat it and I feel terrible. So I don't know
how many times I've done that dance, but that's not cool. Well, it depends on how painful it is,
and then you learn the lesson. I haven't actually embraced the fact that I'll never learn the lesson
with vodka. Every time I drink, especially with Russians,
it's like I quit drinking every time.
And then I forget there's like a slow drop off,
it'll be like a two weeks and then.
Nostradovia.
Nostradovia.
Very good.
So it never makes me feel good.
It never results in anything good,
except the beautiful social chaos, which is ultimately
somehow there's value to chaos too.
There's value to that.
Whatever the hell stupid stuff you do when you get trashed, over the top emotion of love
usually or whatever camaraderie, There's value to that too. Like as I get older I realize
because the world, sometimes especially when you get older and the world wants you to be an adult
in order to maintain the youthful spirit, you have to use all the tools you can. Alcohol is one of
them. To do all the stupid shit you can, even if you're like getting old there to lower the inhibitions and lower the against that that taste of uncertainty
That is the sweetness of life right to be able to go out and be a fliner at a party and not really know what you're gonna
Do and it's we we have this draw to the wild side of life
As much as we try and build up order around ourselves. I think there's always going to be an
appetite for that. I've always, most of my life, I've always been a social drinker, but I actually
gave up alcohol a year ago. And I would add that to the idea, the repertoire for dealing with
bigger ideas, because alcohol is fun. It's a me, you know, good times.
It can be analgesic. It can do all of it. You can give you all these benefits if you use
the right amounts, but I got to the point personally where I was trying to wrestle with these
ideas that are just so much bigger than me that I and I have this backlog of books that
was growing faster than I could read them. Did I just reach the point where I decided I wanted to start making sacrifices
toward attaining that? And alcohol was just an easy one. You know, it's you spend
even if you just drink socially on the weekends, you're probably spending
five to ten hours drinking and then maybe another, what, five to ten hours recovering perhaps on the day after.
So it was a difficult transition initially, but once you get through a couple of months,
I feel amazing without it. I sleep better than ever. My workouts are better than ever.
I'm sharper than ever. I'm more lucid. So I'm not trying to be a proponent for like not drinking,
but I just want to get a proponent for sacrifice.
In some, in some moments sacrifice.
Yes.
Is there advice you would give to a young person today?
Curious about Bitcoin, curious about how they succeed
in a world or both career wise and just in life in general?
I mean, the strongest piece of advice I have for...
This is beyond just Bitcoin. This is you managing your own
personal and financial affairs is that you need to invest in knowledge first.
It's not good enough to just follow the crowd and
buy a 6040 portfolio and put it in a Roth R.A.
And plan on social security.
I mean, the world's changing much faster than any existing institution is going to be able to keep up with.
So that's why I mean, that's why I name to show the question, what is money?
Like, I think that to me is the rabbit
that took me down the rabbit hole.
It's like just asking that question,
naturally progressed to these other questions.
Like what is value, what is government,
what is, you know, what is the purpose of society speech?
All of these things.
So I would encourage people to arm yourself with knowledge and study. Like that, that, a lot of
financial people always give you, you know, a line of advice and then say this is not financial advice.
And we're like, this is financial advice. Like study, study, learn, knowledge is power. Yeah,
it's official financial advice. And you're exercising your
your divine trait, which is the logos, right? That we are these animals that can tell and believe
stories. So it's our it's feels like almost a sacred duty to really sharpen that part of ourselves
and use it to create the best world possible.
And then, you know, the second one was the, I think, health and fitness stuff.
I, I was, maybe everyone does this in their 20s.
They just live a little fast and beat themselves up.
Not that I wasn't like I was living well
and, you know, successful by a lot of measures, but I wish I had maybe got my act together a little bit sooner.
I just think wise morality wise.
Yeah, drinking I think morality and eating, you know, I was just was kind of doing whatever I wanted in some ways, let's say. Is there a value to a trajectory that includes a lot of mistakes?
So maybe you're supposed to make the mistakes in your 20s.
That's a great point.
Maybe the 20s are all about the mistakes.
I accumulate the most mistakes possible.
Yeah, I do.
That's quickly.
I don't regret any of it, but now that I'm kind of in this place where I feel good and
I know the value of a good night's sleep and
Just I've a I've more deeply explored my own potential that I feel maybe a little regretful that I didn't do this earlier as all I'm saying so maybe
Just exploring different sides of yourself, right?
See what it's like to go and make a bunch of mistakes and be wild and crazy and then maybe try to walk the straight narrow for a few months and just see what it's like.
There's a there's probably a guy and doing vodka shots right now listening to this podcast
with his buddies and they if you are, please take a shot for us for all the mistakes and
you should make in your 20s. And what about love? We talked about money as ultimately a mechanism by which you can
pave a moral path of life.
You know, to me, one of the purest expressions that is love broadly defined,
the four family, for others, for knowledge, for the world.
It's basically an optimistic open view to the world that embraces all that is beautiful about this world.
So, do you think about love often in a personal sense, romantic family, friendship, and in the broad sense,
about its value in a successful life.
Yeah, of course, I'm blessed to have a two and a half year old daughter.
And love is a word we throw around.
You know, I love these potato chips.
I love you, man.
I love you, my daughter.
It's got so many different intensities, I guess you might say, but I don't know.
My intuition is that it is something very fundamental to the universe.
Like, again, I know words under the justice, but if we just proxy love with selfless action,
the whole damn universe is selflessly acting, right? It's just unfolding.
And it may sound a bit hippy-dippy, but my intuition is just that love is the core of it somehow.
I don't have anything to back that up really. It's just...
In the way you're framing it, it's making me think that love, we're talked about meditation,
is as opposed to thinking from an egocentric perspective of you, the individual operating
in this world, is allowing you to be empathetic towards the world and thereby think of the universe,
think of the world acting through you, almost like accepting
this notion that ideas have you, you don't have ideas. That you're not existing in the universe,
the universe is existing through you. Like that's what selfless in that context means,
is like embracing that thought. And that's a weird thought.
And it's a weird thought that we're just here
for a little bit of time.
These meat vehicles, receptacles,
and this much bigger thing is just using us,
not in a moment, a levelant way,
but just like a river flows,
is using us to create more and more beautiful things? Yes. Yes. Yes more and more beautiful things
We are the universe experiencing itself. Yeah, frankly, right? So that's a trippy thought and yeah
That in some sense the universe created us
Yeah to experience itself and we are the high, you know
One of the highest forms of beauty that nature has high, you know, one of the highest forms
of beauty that nature has created.
If we just think one of the most complex and adaptive
thing, or reflection of nature in,
another thing that comes of mind here is that
Dalio has his quote, which is truth or more accurately,
an accurate depiction of reality is necessary for any good outcome.
So when we think that love or value is primary, I think that to reinforces this thesis that
acting out of love or acting out of proper moral action, you're best reflecting the fundamental nature of reality.
Therefore, you're best creating the best possible outcomes
or the things of the most beauty,
whether that's your artistic expression,
your children, your business, whatever it is.
And Jordan Peterson goes deep into that
where you have to listen to that sense of meaning
in your life,
or you might have some decision on paper
that's so great
this way, but your heart says no, your heart says otherwise.
I've tried to listen to my heart throughout, and I think that creates the best outcomes.
But nevertheless, doesn't make you sad that you, in particular, Robert are gonna be dead pretty soon.
As we talk about scarcity,
one of the certain things that ensure
the scarcity of the human experience
is the fact that you and your consciousness
are gonna be done at a deadline.
Only time and Bitcoin are absolutely scarce.
Only time and Bitcoin are absolutely scarce.
I'm fortunate that when I, I guess I got started on this philosophical journey a bit when I was younger, but I got into Musashi and Sunzu quite a bit who wrote Musashi with a book of five rings.
Sunzu wrote the art of War, and one of the
things that, I mean, these guys were just absolute beasts. They lived and died by the sword,
and they were just very great equanimity about all things in life. I also found this kind of
in the stoic philosophy, where they're are very cool with everything. And one of the
lines there is that the way of the warrior is the resolute acceptance of death. And so I've always
tried to think about that. Like of course I experience fear, I experience, you know, everything that
you do on a meat suit, right? Like anxiety and all the things, but I always try to have that higher order of
you of myself and that it's just a certain experience occurring at a certain level, but
it shouldn't override your kind of highest order self.
That's just resolutely accepted death and that this is your one play in life.
So hopefully that propels me towards proper action. I
Think scarcity cannot help but lead to something good
Just like with this conversation sadly must come to an end
The scarcity of it is what makes it beautiful. So Robert. This was one of my favorite conversations
philosophically and in every other level,
just the ideas and the way you express them around Bitcoin, around morality, around money
has been really inspiring and really educational.
And I'm glad you're out there fighting the good fight.
And I'm glad you were seeing all of this time with me.
It was really fun.
And thank you for coming down to Texas and having some good old brisket together.
This was this was really fun.
Then this was awesome.
Thanks for having me.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Robert breed love.
And thank you to fundraise, Element, Monkpack and Better
Help.
Check them out in the description to support this podcast.
And now let me leave you with some words from the same Nicholas Taleb.
Anti-fragility is beyond resilience and robustness.
The resilient resists shocks and stays the same.
The anti-fragile gets better.
Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.
you