TrueLife - The Mathematics of Spirit, The Spirit of Mathematics
Episode Date: November 25, 2025One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USThe Lila Code: https://orcid.org/0009-00...08-4612-3942🚨🚨Curious about the future of psychedelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/The Mathematics of Spirit, The Spirit of Mathematics“Welcome to the show”Tonight we’re sitting with two architects who have each built a closed-loop system that routes something ancient through the present with almost zero loss.Hamilton Souther, pioneering maestro vegetalista and founder of Blue Morpho, who has guided more than fifteen thousand ayahuasca ceremonies across two decades in the Amazon.And Noah Healy, nuclear engineer who entered the University of Virginia as a high-school junior, mathematician with thirty-five years in the field, and inventor of Coordinated Discovery MarketsOne serves living biological intelligence.The other serves living mathematical intelligence.Tonight we explore energy, memory, coherence, and the hidden geometry that may connect them both.Hamilton SoutherHamilton Souther | Ancient Wisdom Meets TechnologyNoah HealyCoordisc – Coordinated Discovery Markets (CDM) One on One Video call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USCheck out our YouTube:https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPzfOaFtA1hF8UhnuvOQnTgKcIYPI9Ni9&si=Jgg9ATGwzhzdmjkg
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Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, sun ripped away, her health bereft.
I roar at the void.
This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate.
The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel.
Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights.
The scars my key, hermetic and stark.
To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark.
fumbling, furious through ruins maze, lights my war cry, born from the blaze.
The poem is Angels with Rifles, The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Codex Serafini.
Check out the entire song at the end of the cast.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to the True Live podcast.
I hope everybody's having a beautiful day.
Hope the sun is shining.
Birds are singing.
Welcome to this episode.
Tonight we're sitting with two architects who have each built a closed-loop system
that routes something ancient through the present with almost zero loss.
Hamilton Suther, pioneering maestro, vegetalista, and founder of Blue Morpho,
who has guided more than 15,000 ayahuasca ceremonies across the world.
two decades in the Amazon and Noah Healy, nuclear engineer, and entered the University of
Virginia as a high school junior, mathematician with 35 years in the field, an inventor of
coordinated discovery markets. One serves living biological intelligence. The other serves
living mathematical intelligence. Tonight, we're going to explore energy, memory, coherence,
and the hidden geometry that may connect them both. Noah and Hamilton, thanks for being here
today. I appreciate it. And before we begin, I'd love each of you to just
take two or three minutes and tell us in your own words what intelligence you feel you've been
serving with your life's work hamilton i'll start with you appreciate that i feel like the
intelligence i've been serving is intelligence itself i think of intelligence from a holistic
point of view that somehow this planet here in this cosmos birth the kind of intelligence
that we get to be a part of with the intelligence to come up with the word intelligence so
it's a bit of a snake eating its tail to get to its own head or it's a bit of an infinity feeding
back loop on itself, but it's what we use to understand and identify how we're having this
conversation. And the nature of that, I think, comes directly from the earth. And we can study
the earth from our sciences. And beautifully, we still have mysteries that are unknown. So there's
something to still discover, to create and to invent in this beautiful space that we know of as the
earth. And so I just serve all intelligence. And I'm grateful to be here today with two very
intelligent people.
Nice.
No, same question, my friend.
Well, for me, I guess I'm team people.
My point of view is that we've developed these rather more impressive inanimate objects
that can do these things that are incredibly valuable as control structures
and figuring out how to put them in our lives in ways that's valuable.
is a kind of similar challenge to the development of furniture
and the other more traditional types of inanimate objects
to figure out how to get them to be useful.
So that's where I come at it from.
Very nice.
So I guess one of the things that I've been thinking about quite often lately
is just this idea of spirituality.
And I feel like maybe both of you come from different points.
of view over there. No, when I say spirituality, what comes to your mind?
I'd say the primary experience of the supernatural.
Yeah, that's well said. Hamilton, what's your opinion?
I agree. I think there's something essential to the universe, and I like to think of it as a perspective
of something supernatural, and we have some way to tap into it, and I hope everybody in their
lifetime gets to really have a deep essence of that.
and come to their own understandings.
I think often spirituality gets presented as a set of belief systems,
like a solution set or problem set of beliefs.
And I think that's kind of missing the point.
I like to think of it as spirituality is what gives us the capacity for beliefs.
And so anything that helps us better understand the supernatural.
Yeah, I like that.
In a previous conversation,
No one and I were having a big discussion about change
and what's happening in the world and the way to do it.
And I had brought up this idea of maybe there's something to do with, like, religion or there's something to do with, like, the mysteries.
But Noah had mentioned, like, it has to be real.
Do you remember that conversation? Noah, can you break that down a little bit?
Do I have that right?
Yeah, I think that's fair enough.
So there's a lot of room for deception and are sort of meta thoughts, if you will.
So there's a story in Richard Feynman's autobiography where he was getting heavy into hallucinating.
And he was afraid of LSD, so he was doing sensory deprivation tanks.
And he's in a tank one day, and he suddenly realizes that he's foundationally solved one of the fundamental problems of quantum physics.
And he's really happy about that.
So he gets out and, you know, because, like, he can't, he can't just, like, get out that the timer has to go.
So he's in there, like, you know, feeding on the idea for a while.
He gets out and he gets to the chalkboard and he just starts realizing that this is just completely insane nonsense, that everything that he's just done was entirely meaningless.
And that's when he gave it up.
It is perhaps unfortunate that that became a apparently fairly strong trend among the theoretical physics set.
The mind expansion, consciousness expansion is a new phase of theory formation and not so much time at the blackboard.
but yeah it's it's fairly easy to convince our things of stuff that turns out to be false
and we have deep historical evidence of this because there are dozens of places across you know
we define entire historical epics by societies discovering their foundational assumptions
about the nature of cosmology or morality or anything was just wrong.
There's a science fiction author, Bryn, David Brin, who calls them out-of-context problems
and writes an entire genre of science fiction problems where, you know, you think you've
completely solved things and then you just.
that your basis of reality was just false, and he has this kind of story about, you know,
you live in the society and it's basically peaceful and it's basically prosperous and everything
pretty much works. The way you think it's supposed to in one day, a boat that's larger than
your village that's made out of some kind of shiny material you've never seen before,
you know, horks in to the little fishing harbor you live in, and people you've never seen
before get out with stuff you've never seen before and it's all over now like you just you just
didn't know what game you were playing and and the real game has just been introduced to you
hamilton what do you what do you think of when you hear that
i think that you know we need to ask ourselves now especially at this time of great
emergent technology what is the game and where we're headed understanding that up until now
there hasn't been an epic and human history where we've gotten it right which is a pretty like
rough playing field to start from that if we're thinking that we might not have it right right now
either and that if we go deep into our theoretical physics there's still mysteries and you know
questions around origin story and the nature of our cosmos to begin with that we it's a good
question from a mystical perspective to think, well, what do we have wrong and what do we have
right? And how can we start to bring realism to it? I think that we've been evolving first through
a series of ideologies and mythologies over, you know, 400,000,000 years as Femusapian.
And we're now coming out of a great time of great religion. And we're just in a few hundred
years of science using the scientific method as a way to try to explore and discover. And
poke holes and some of our greater mythologies.
And it leaves us with a great question, which is, you know, what is real now and how can we bring
that? And it's interesting to me, the idea of an emergent kind of philosophy that could
be both mystical and its nature or spiritual of the supernatural, but also fundamentally rooted
in facts. And that those facts could be scientific laws and they could be added to as we
discover more and maybe we could grow more to a place where the game is even larger than
earth and we understand it in a more fundamental way yeah it's really well said we got a
ghosta coming in over here what's up ghosta thank you for being here i appreciate it he says
that is the problem that is occurring right now the truth is out and it permeates the whole
information field already i would push back on the idea of truth like i'm not sure that we
fundamentally understand what truth we're dealing with here, especially when it comes to
different ideologies or different parts of the world. Like, you know, there's grand priest who
talks about the liar's paradox. Like, how do we even define truth in these times? That's kind of
a epistemological question, but what are you guys' thoughts on that? Yeah. You want to take that one
first? I want first last one. Yeah, that's a big question. Okay. Yeah, I've got well-developed
thoughts on this one.
So I see the three great breakthroughs of the early 20th century as quantum physics
relativity and Turing's computational understanding.
And what they did was fundamentally break truth at a deep level, which we haven't repaired
yet. So you were talking about the scientific mode of being the basis of truth. The Enlightenment
philosophers essentially did a bunch of work to claim that logic was strong enough to provide
morality. They definitely had some internal pushback on that, but more or less everybody was
on board with something close-ish to that proposition.
position. And that's just not going to fly because between incompleteness and
computability, logic is not powerful enough. We understand how that works. And so what I see
having happened over the last, call it a century, is that nihilists, those that at whatever
level, usually every conceivable level, reject the proposition of truth as
a thing, are generally speaking winning the arguments because on a technical basis, they are
correct.
They are, of course, absolutely wrong because reality is real and the truth would have to
actually be out there.
But any attempt to defend any common belief that presently exists is doomed to failure
because we know with absolutely no possibility of doubt that that's wrong.
We've got quantum physics, which does a very good job of explaining measurements that we take of mostly small things.
We have relativity, which does a similarly good job of describing fast and heavy things that we measure.
We know that they can't, that they're foundationally incompatible with each other.
So that's a major problem.
So we don't have a cosmography right now because the two explanations we have disagree.
And then we have general computation, which minds holes in our very imagination and reason.
And it identifies only a tiny handful of them, but it says that there have to be that it has to be mostly holes.
most of what we imagine is just us lying to ourselves where we think that we can imagine those
things. But if we come to grips with a computer, we will discover much as, as Feynman did
when he got to the chalkboard, that our imaginations are just, you know, producing some
ludicrous nonsense that we weren't smart enough or disciplined enough to figure out. And so truth,
Truth is going to be very hard.
I think it always has been.
And it's up to us whether or not we want the discipline to pursue that.
I think that more or less has to be a matter of faith.
I think that's somewhere where spirituality can take a hand.
But without that, I'm quite convinced that the systems that we have,
will disintegrate, are falling apart because when everybody's in charge of anything got there
by either lying or claiming that everyone was a liar, then they're not going to be good at
doing anything. And indeed, that's what we see all around us constantly these days.
Yeah. Hamilton, what are your thoughts on the imagination is producing lucrative nonsense?
I think that's the role of the imagination.
You know, until the imagination is somehow disciplined with practice to be, you know, mirroring facts and awarenesses and understandings,
you're in a hallucination of your own creation.
You can call it imagination or fantasy.
It's just how you think.
It could be the formation of awareness.
and understanding that gives you context.
But as of right now, I think it stated incredibly well
that between relativity and physics,
and especially quantum physics,
there's this great disparity and individuality,
and we're not of a collective mind
or collective imagination anymore,
and there's a great reward for creating fantasy or illusion
and presenting it as if it were fact.
And that's what I call this, you know,
a great mirage of beliefs that are being, you know, presented.
And we don't have a society that yet emphasizes the necessity for things to be rooted.
In fact, we're still willing to be in a relativistic play of opinion and ideas.
And until then, I think individuals will continue to be rewarded for this, you know, state of mild to maximum hallucination and illusory state of imagination.
how does that fit in though with like the mystical experience because people could claim that like the mystical experience is just an illusion it is just sort of this mirage of ideas that come to you in an altered state i think the best example i could have of that you know it goes back to the float tank description and the opportunity in my early 20s to sit with you know fundamentally real mystics in the forest
And those mystics were not interested in illusion.
So I think of them as, you know, original scientists.
They're interested only in facts and efficacy.
And they described in ayahuasca, if you can imagine,
under the influence of Harmine and Harmaline and DMT,
that if you were hallucinating,
you had yet learned how to center your consciousness
or center yourself.
And that you're supposed to move beyond a hallucinism,
state or an imaginative state into something else.
And that something else is purely mystical.
It's transcendent of the mind that we typically use,
the one that I was schooled in growing up,
but it is a transcendental space to that kind of mirage of nonsense.
And fundamentally, if you think about the role of that person in their society,
they had a fundamental role to support the individuals
in every kind of need that a tribal society.
society would have to be able to thrive.
And so, you know, some fall into the distortions of illusion, but my lineage was focused entirely
on trying to discern fact from fiction.
Noah, what do you thoughts?
Yeah, well, I don't have those sorts of present-day experiences, but again, I think that's
a pretty obvious historical thing as well.
There's a sharp distinction between sort of madmen and mystics.
and in myth there's a there's a cost associated with getting it wrong that's societal
when when like the Hebrews reject Samuel that's the end of the that branch of the monarchy and David takes over
or when the Trojans aren't paying attention to Cassandra,
who is, you know, canonically plugged into the universe
and knows exactly what's going to happen,
but is never believed.
It tragedy after tragedy befalls them as they sort of blindly walk into
these things that they could have just been like, oh, yeah, well, that's, that's dumb.
Let's just not do that.
So, yeah, I'd say that ethical and moral systems are philosophical and metaphysical, and
metaphysical, and therefore they require external axioms, and those external axioms would
have to be supernaturally available.
And so in the absence of a true supernatural
to which human experience has access,
which again, religion, history strongly suggests
that most people who have ever lived believe
that that is a true proposition, then we will not
be able to create a moral system that
functions. And I'd say that's an accurate description of the modern day.
Yeah, it's interesting. I've kind of been going back and forth with some people on X.
Actually, one of the founders of the X Prize. And I see this giant push towards this idea of
anti-aging and longevity. But it seems to speak of what you're talking about right now. It seems like,
and I'm curious to get you guys opinion on this, this whole move towards anti-aging and longevity.
It doesn't seem anybody's talking about the moral or the ethical implications of that.
Like, what about the idea of inherited power?
What about the accumulation of resources?
What are you guys' thoughts on this whole longevity movement?
Well, the people who are pushing that are also from what little studies that exist
out of a class of human beings with the lowest life satisfaction,
like there is almost everybody that studies really highly successful people figures out that they're effectively highly driven
and they're doing they do what they do because they're seeking after something that isn't where they're looking
and so they keep they keep going you know everything's in the last place you look because you're
stop looking right after you find what you're looking for.
So these people just never stop.
The tap is all open all the time, and that's why they get so far.
Having that experience last forever is hell, isn't it?
I mean, am I wrong?
What do you think, Hamilton?
there's a fundamental fear in our society about transition and we talk about going back in the past
associated with you know our systems and this idea of youth worship in our societies that don't
recognize any more the fundamental role of aging as a positive expression of who we are
and what we are and the accumulation of wisdom that comes through that process
and it seems like there's a natural dissociation from the idea that ourselves are our aging bodies.
And so, you know, I don't know if there's a mythological desire to be Peter Pan in this situation and stay, you know, unevolved forever in a pursuit of whatever is the personal desire.
I think personally that, you know, coming from a unique lens of looking into the unknown.
I would prefer and trust the unknown more than I would
an extended lifetime here of Earth.
I think that I relate to the idea
that it would be hellish in some way
to try to upset a natural evolutionary flow
in this continuous churn of life that we get to be a part of.
And I think it makes life that much more miraculous
and special for the amount of time that we get it.
And I like to think in a much larger scale of time
that when you do that,
This time that for us seems so slowed down and drawn out, breath by breath, thought by thought is actually just a flash for the universe.
You know, this is going to continue for billions of more years or even trillions of years or even more or this cosmos is part of a multiverse.
We have an opportunity to recognize something so much greater than just the desire to live longer as this body.
And so, you know, I understand people's interest in that and that, of course, it'll be a huge.
industry but i would rather from a personal perspective transcend the fear of aging and death
and fully embrace what is the natural evolutionary course of life yeah that is really well said
we got my cassant no i'm sorry i almost said cassander because we were talking about who we have
over here uh what did that go sonia sonia delgado from phoenix thanks for being here i hope
your day's going beautiful she asked the question at what point does preparing for the
become avoiding the present?
Knowing you want to take down one first?
That's pretty tricky.
Well, because, you know, there's the conflict of whether or not the present even exists.
This is, this goes way, way back.
You know, Aristotle pointed out that the past is essentially indefinite and huge, except, of course, it's not real.
and the future is also indefinite and possibly even larger,
but also it's not real, it's not here.
And the present, therefore, is this kind of effervescent film
between these two vast, you know, trans finite sets.
So that creates a real problem with what you do with the present.
My essential idea for how to make markets function better is by making actions in the present all be the natural and reasonable outcomes of correct plans for the future.
In that sense, I believe that it is only through planning for the future that we can create a decision tree around what we're doing now in ways that can help us.
I'd say the hard part is how to get from here where you are to there where you're going.
And that's something that we need societies help with all the time because there's not one of us that can do what all of us need done.
And so finding a way to make that connection is the challenge.
To some extent, all efforts not put towards those things are simply wasted.
So if you're in the unfortunate position, which I believe almost all of us are,
that there is no connection between sort of what you're doing and where you would like to go,
there's no present to waste under those circumstances, which is horrifying.
but again, I think fairly real.
Yeah, agreed.
Hamilton, what are your thoughts on that?
I love the framing of time that's presented here.
You know, because the nature of the present is so ephemeral to understand.
Our mind dances in the frame of time.
So I like to just think for a person who's orienting this for themselves, to ask themselves what they're creating, to ask themselves what they're doing right now and why.
And what's the purpose of the use of the time that they have, regardless of how they think about it?
And we live in a society that plans for the future.
So we must embrace the nature of that philosophical framing, whether or not we identify with it or not.
And if you have a mass of people that are part of a social collective that agree to 401Ks and pension plans and you advance in your age,
you don't have a solution for that completely independent of that 401k pension plan, you'll find yourself out of a cultural framework, not out of a physics, philosophical understanding of time.
And so the practical nature of it is to orient to asking yourself what you're doing.
now and how that's going to affect who you are in the future you know and so if you you know
friends that really simply had bought bitcoin in 2010 and just held it and shoved it in a safe you'd have
a very different future now than if you didn't right just you didn't know it was going to happen
just you just planned for the future by buying something that you know is a lottery ticket at
that moment you would have won the lottery uh in that sense from cryptocurrency and so i think
you just orient time to yourself and what you're doing. And I think we look at that from a
sociocultural perspective, you run into fear that most people are driven by fear of the future to
plan for now, like the idea of like your prepper or something like that. And I just wouldn't do it
that way. I would look at it from a perspective of solidarity and trust in the future and trust in the
universe, but also understanding our culture and understanding the direction that we're heading.
and I love the idea of like this indefiniteness of the past and the future
and embracing for that in a beautiful way like with openness and acceptance
you know that way you'll find that you don't have to be in a state of fear today thinking
about the future you're in a state of calm and you're creating the future that you'd
like to be part of yeah I'd pick a bone with living in a culture that plans for the future
if I may.
Particularly when you're talking about things like 401K and investment,
one of the sort of fundamental issues underlying the general financial instability that we're experiencing
is that the boomers didn't save for retirement, and it's not a close-run thing.
If you sort of take a very simple model of retirement, of essentially sort of being able to save by some asset that will then be bought back off of you for liquid capital in the future, a fairly critical part of investing and saving for the future is building a wealthy new generation that can afford
to take over possession of the assets that you are accumulating.
And that's aside from the fact that the raw dollar values
just aren't even remotely close to where they would have to be
for the kinds of retirement that we seem to believe
we've set ourselves up for to be remotely physically possible,
the absolute cliff of future asset acquisition means that there's no reasonable valuation of existing asset savings.
And so a lot of the more questionable decisions like CDOs that now move to push private equity into the public sphere and other
things are attempts by the financial system to paper over this radically large gap between what people
think is going to look like the next quarter century and how much money is actually in the bank
to pay for that. And I would say that we live in societies that have declined from societies
that planned for the future.
But I don't think that's a thing
that is within most human lifetimes
and certainly not the majority of living humans
have never lived in a society
that had a plan for the future.
And it's one of my little hobby horses.
I think the current plan is to have a dark age.
And it's a very bad plan.
The only potentially bright point
is that it will absolutely take out the people
that are driving that plan,
that the people on top of society
do not survive its collapse,
but I would very much like
there to be another path available.
Yeah.
Hamilton, do you see collapse on the horizon?
I agree with the statement
that their agenda
and then the nature of those agendas,
a fundamental dark age is an opportunity.
I would like to think that there's other forces at play
in a greater context that might be able to nudge things
in another direction.
I would prefer that not be an inevitability,
but I have heard those agendas.
And, you know, you hear them in the notion of population decline
and spreading of disease.
A lot of conspiracy theories are,
out there trying to describe the nature of that agenda.
Many people are also interested in the collapse of the current systems, you know,
and there's talk about that online.
You know, I think that it's our responsibility to do something to ensure a greater
probability of success that we don't go into a dark age.
I don't think that serves anyone's children or future generations.
So I think of that as like a poor orientation to our future and that, you know, it's the
responsibility of those that see that
pending doom to ally
and decide to do something about it.
I've thought about that in different
occurrences that, you know, in a
collapsing society, it opens
up a lot of room for emergent society
to happen. And so
that becomes an opportunity for new
cultural creation. And
I would like to see that occur.
Great. I would
strongly agree with that sentiment.
Yeah, it's interesting.
If I look at it from like a really, really big picture, you know, if you look at like
the demographic cliff, like there's 25 million boomers that are knocking on heaven's door
in the next 15 years.
Maybe all of this stuff that we're seeing is a collective fear of death.
Like it would make sense that like all this sort of chaos and stuff we're seeing is similar
to the body's response to like an adrenaline rush or an anxiety rush.
And of course you see all these people wanting to live forever.
or you see these financial markets beginning to fail.
It's the same thing with the collapse of ideas.
And if the large part of our world is dying,
like 25 million people in the next 15 years,
maybe what we're seeing is sort of that effect on the planet.
What are your thoughts on that?
Well, I mean, that's definitely a major issue for us in America.
25 million people over 15 years out of a population.
of, you know, 8 billion that expect to get 80 years out of a lifetime, which is a little
optimistic for us, frankly, is 10 million people a year. So that's 25 out of 150 million is just
sort of expectation levels there. So again, you know, we're punching above our weight because
we had a baby boom uh when we did and other people had it at different times um but uh but that's that's
i think that's that's probably real one i think little cultural observation i have about that the boomers
indirect effects is who the hero in movies is um when you watch movies
from like the early 70s through like the 80s the kids are the heroes or the young man and then sort of you know the new dad became the hero coming into the late 80s and the 90s that that age and you know now now the geriatric is the hero of the of the piece and it's it's a little
weird as somebody that's you know generationally younger than that um that you were like yeah like like these these were good
like you know i saw these and i was like hey these protagonists my age were like awesome and then you're like
but there aren't any more young kid awesome stories anymore and then there aren't any more like
young adult, like, it just doesn't, it just, it's just sort of moved as a wave.
So, I think it was, P.J. Rourke claimed that the boomer phenomenon would be over when Vogue did
a story on fashionable funeral homes. And I think, I think that might be in our future still.
That's classic. I got a ton of questions chiming in over here. I see you guys over there.
Let's go. This one says that this one's coming from my friend, Maya. Maya, thanks for being here. I hope your day is awesome. She says, are financial systems reflections of human psychology or distortions of it?
Yes. So the value proposition of the open market is the collection of information from a disparate.
group of people. So the idea is you've got people that are farming grapes all over the planet.
You've got people that are eating grapes all over the planet. How many grape farmers and how
many grape eaters should there really be? When you go into the grocery store and pick up a
cluster, you don't want to care about the 18th generation, you know, Roman-descended farmers.
that are just stick in their hands in the dirt because that's what makes them feel alive.
Versus, you know, some tech pro that just bought Southern Indiana and figured out a way to turn robots into grape farmers.
Like, you want grapes.
Like, you're about to enjoy this sweet snack.
And so there's a vast amount of human psychology because what you're stealing is what people's lives,
what they want out of life, both to build what they're going to build and their achievements
and just food, shelter, clothing. But we can't scale that. It'd be fine if everyone was
totally fine with living in some little tribal village with just the stuff that you build or
grow in your immediate neighborhood and world population was in the tens to hundreds of millions
instead of billions like that's that's a thing that's happened people can do that if nobody can get
together the charisma to you know get a hoard and conquer everybody it functions pretty decently
but the flip side is we're here now and getting from here to there involved
you know eight billion people dying so that's not great um and so we have we have this sort of
higher level psychology is necessary and the markets created a mechanism that allowed human
psychologists to to bridge that gap and then we plugged machines into them and we we completely
broke that and now we're just have you know sky net is telling us what to do and uh that's not
working out well for most of us hamilton jump in on this one what do you think just that
right now humans are products of their own economy and a great you know awareness that i've come up
with over the years is that you can build an economy out of anything that the collective agrees is
important. And so, you know, fundamentally our economy now is in charging large amounts of money
for fulfilling our basic needs. So for most of our history, our basic needs were free to
sustain on very small populations, and it's just not the case anymore. You know, and so as we
continue to develop, psychology becomes a huge part of how the economies form and the economies
are ultimately a reflection of our psychology, both.
Like our psychology is to have a market economy right now.
You hear people all over speaking about the collapse of a market economy
as if it were a terrible thing, you know,
and whoever said a market economy was a good thing to begin with.
I don't know, it just exists.
It's part of what we live with now.
It's what we created as a collective.
And so it's an opportunity really to understand
that once you have a market economy,
psychology is part of that market economy.
There is a market economy of psychology, and that psychology is going to be represented within it.
You see from the nature of technology, I'm here in Silicon Valley and about to launch an AI-based platform.
And the psychology is that technology is driving the future and that we are products of that technology.
And in fact, we're now serving that technology.
Human population is serving our tools, not our tools serving us.
So even there is a morphing of the idea of a market.
market economy, the nature of psychology associated with it, that there could be a flip
in orientation of who serves which toolbase.
And I think it's something to look at and it's, you know, worthy of ultimately evolving.
Yeah, I think so too.
This one comes in for you, Hamilton.
It says, is Western culture seeking healing or absolution?
I think there's a mental health crisis.
and it's only been growing during my lifetime,
and it's a product of our culture.
It's not independent or separate from our culture.
Our culture is enculturating and engendering this mental health crisis.
And as we continue to explore that,
there's a notion of wanting healing,
but there's a deep question about whether or not society
wants the concept of healing or actually wants to heal.
I see a lot of people come to the healing arts looking for a kind of transformation and get stuck in a loop of healing.
And so I like to think of a mental, emotional healing through the plant medicines as a mechanism that could move very quickly, very much like when you get a cut and you get sutured and the sutures are removed within a week and then within another week, your skin has started to heal and then you're left with a thin scar, that that could be very much like our internal awareness of our healing arts.
But instead, there's a culture of people who are, you know, very interested in continuing that process and identifying with that process for a long period of time.
That's very inefficient and not something that's sustainable in a society is like the ones you find in the Amazon.
There's a need for people to heal very quickly and move back into being supportive of the collective tribal identity.
And our society, for whatever reason, now I think is looking for a great scapegoat.
looking for something to blame that we can place the rationale on for that mental health
crisis, for that need for healing in the first place. And there's a huge discrepancy between
our enforcement models and the lack of morality that was discussed earlier. So the lack of
morality is actually driving in that imaginary fantasy more and more and more of the behaviors
that treat legality as a risk profile, not a choice about behavior. And so there's just more
people who are willing to transcend and break the nature of those rules and laws. And it continues
to escalate. So I think it's obvious at this point that the fundamental philosophical nature of
our culture is driving the state that our collectives find themselves in. And we're discussing
the potential of a collapse associated with that. And I've been hearing that for a decade. And I keep
saying the same thing. Well, you know, hey, don't jump off the cliff. If you see everyone jumping off the
cliff, turn left or right, start talking about how to build something sustainable on the
clipped edge. Like, you have a choice here. Noah, what do you think? Yeah, I would concur with
all that. Hamilton, thanks for sort of connecting back to my nihilism thesis. I'd say that
that's probably heavily connected. You know, Charlton's pretending to provide solutions
can be an extremely stable and lucrative way to go,
assuming that you can leave town,
you know, if you can time the angry mob correctly.
I think we're seeing a lot more angry mob behavior
and a lot of desperation to try to figure out
which train gets out of town
when you've done it to the entire planet.
And, yeah, I'm attempting to dig in,
and build an entirely new kind of marketplace
that doesn't have the epistemological
and technical issues that the current markets have.
And I mentioned to you before we got in here,
I'm currently in process of arguing with the Supreme Court
about what status reality has an American law,
because the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit declared that reality is unpersuasive.
And that strikes me as insanely dangerous.
I don't know if the justices will agree or not.
Yeah, I hope that they do.
Let's stay on this thread a little bit.
What are you most excited about?
It seems like you're creating something pretty awesome.
What are you most excited about about building right now in the future?
The thing I'm most excited about is the nature of how artificial intelligence tools amplify
the creative capacity of individuals and that if we understand the nature of the tools as being
not all of them, but most of them being pretty neutral, we have an opportunity to amplify the
power for creativity and what we think of is like for lack of a better word, good.
like the opportunity to actually be smarter and more thoughtful in our presentation of ourselves.
There's obviously a slippery slope there and that it can go the opposite direction.
The tools can be used for rapid acceleration of, you know, other problems.
But I also think this is the first time that, you know, the populace is going to have an opportunity to really participate in the voice that gets created out of the use of these tools.
So our project is called Minty.
and it's really about harnessing collective creativity
and around AI generative platforms
and providing a safe and stable monetization platform for that
so that creators can start to earn genuine revenue
from their creativity.
And there's all sorts of controversy around this subject.
So, you know, it's quite interesting
in and around copyright law.
And who got trained on
and why it got trained on
and how it got trained on, and, you know, how you pull out who owns what in this world of collective mind share
when great embedding spaces are holding the totality of that mind share and who owns that mind share,
it starts to really tug at these questions inside these market economies.
And what I think was a very loose tapestry of support from the system,
as no one's finding out, sadly, you know, about things that just seem ludicrous or you're completely illogical.
And so in the middle of all of that, I'm excited about what we can do with these tools and what's coming.
And I think maybe, you know, a transition out of the dark age is the amplification of collective intelligence.
And I think that the current model of AI is a very early foundational step to what that could look like in 5, 10, 15 years.
Yeah, so I will say the industrial revolution was,
an exceptional event in human history because it was the first exponential expansion of human
economic capacity. The original WOT steam engines were used to pump water out of the mines that
they were pulling coal out of. And of course, then they were using that coal to power to steam engines.
And that's the basic, like, that's all you need for exponentiation is that when the thing that
you're doing is proportional to the rate that you're growing. And so that happened. But particularly
in the century since then, mathematics and particularly computational mathematics has been
deeply fascinated by much more powerful kinds of operation than exponentiation. And sort of regular
human psychology already isn't particularly great at thinking about exponential systems. But
exploiting computer technology gives us the opportunity to be looking at very hyper-exponential
systems and transformations that could be extraordinarily sudden, extraordinarily general.
And yeah, there's a lot of, there's a lot of sort of fun scraps of things.
George R. Martin has an active case with a few dozen.
other people around suing some of the AI platforms for copyright infringement.
He also released a new and illustrated version of some of his classics, which appears to have used
AI generated art inside of them. So that's a choice, I guess.
the
the commodification of a lot of things
you know like pop music doesn't have to be AI generated
to be soulless
you know we just have the same
five guys writing all of it
and and they do just fine
like they don't need
they don't need a computer to do that for them
so
I remember I saw a scrap in an interview
with, I think it was Branton Marcellus.
It was one of the Marcelluses.
I can't remember which one.
I think it was Branton.
And he was talking about why people didn't buy music anymore.
And he was saying that his son listens to current popular music,
and he never buys any of it.
And he's as a professional musician for his entire life
and from our family professionals, he's totally fine with that because why would you ever listen to any of those songs again after like a week or two?
Whereas he owns, I think it was Wagner's ring cycle, but he was talking about like classical music pieces and he's like he owns these things and he listens to them over and over and over again.
He's been listening for decades and he keeps going back and finding new things.
He's like, that's real.
That's like an intense, meaningful, impressive accomplishment from which, as a professional artist, I can learn and grow.
That's a foundational and important thing, and he owns it.
And he's happy that he does.
And if we can build a lot more things like that, well, the world looks real different than it does right now.
Yeah, I think we're on the cusp of like the greatest explosion of creativity.
Excuse me.
Like all these AI models, they give an individual the opportunity to have the same resources as like a Fortune 500 company, not that long ago.
And if we, and I see it in the people that I talk to, I think we're moving.
And this might be the antidote for consumption is creativity.
Like it's so beautiful.
And you get in that state, you get in that zone.
sort of that observer versus field sort of, you know, um, paradigm where you can,
you can really create, you can channel whatever energy is out there and then create it out
there. I, I see it. I see the antidote to, to consumerism as creativity. I see it on that
with what you're building Hamilton and the same thing with you, Noah, with the coordinated
markets. It's an exciting time. And I think if we can focus on the solutions instead of so
much of the collapse, we can really see a whole new world being born out there. Is that too
optimistic? I don't think so. I mean, I think there's eight billion human beings that want to
wake up tomorrow. Right. And collapse isn't going to make that happen. So, you know, any one of
them. And I don't think, I don't think it's that complicated to get yourself heading down the right
path.
You know,
Hamilton mentioned the importance of sort of telling the truth.
I think it's pretty close to that simple because what's being sort of popularly pumped out
is just so clearly nonsensical and clearly insane that all you have to do is just say so.
He's like, wait a minute, you know, weren't you speaking in a different accent, you know, on this, on this TikTok on my phone, saying the exact opposite of what you just said to a different audience 15 minutes ago? Like, what the hell's going on here?
And just that, you know, a core of honest people that actually start.
building things will make real things, and there will be no competition for that because the
things, the other things we have are Potemkin.
If there's one thing, I'm going to, I'm going to pose this to both of you guys.
If there's one thing that we could begin doing today to fundamentally transform education,
what would it be and why?
I really love the idea of a project we're working on in this space, which is about understanding better what a human is and understanding better how they learn and teaching a person that way, not through a general model of education.
And the nature of the tools that we're talking about, not right now, but just in their next evolution, we'll be able to be hyper-specialized to an individual.
And think about a change in education where not only are you fully understood by your teacher,
your teacher is able to generate a gap analysis for the information that's going to be presented
in a way that has more resonance for you.
And that alone changes the nature of teaching.
And often that level of education was only allowed to our highest elite.
And this very lower level general education was given based on socioeconomic level.
I think the democratization of that would be the biggest impact that I know of right now on education.
I love it.
Yeah, I'd concur.
I always pound the drum for better math education whenever I'm asked the question.
I think that we really ossified our math education thanks to NASA.
This is basically public knowledge.
You know, the Nazis at NASA were asked how we could beat the Soviets now that Sputnik was in the air.
And so they said, okay, this is what you got to do.
You give everybody an IQ test.
You take all the smart kids.
You put them in math class.
You take all the dumb kids.
You put them in dumb kid math class.
And the smart kids go learn how to be rocket scientists.
They, you know, you teach them how to add.
You teach them algebra.
Teach them geometry.
Teach them trigonometry.
Teach them calculus.
Then they go become rocket scientists.
and then we've got rocket scientists.
And the Kennedy administration said,
wait a minute, we're America, we can't say that kids are dumb.
We have to win elections here.
So we'll just put everybody in rocket science class,
and that's just what we'll do.
And there's so much more math than that.
It's like if the way we taught English class was we said,
well, people are supposed to be William Shakespeare.
So the way you do that is you read some Greek poetry and then some Latin poetry and you start writing plays.
And then that's just it.
You just keep writing plays until you're writing Shakespearean plays.
And there's no, you know, there's no fantasy, there's no mystery, there's no historical fiction, like no other genre of books exists.
We just train every view in Shakespeare.
And you would get a lot of very dissatisfied children that, that, that, you know,
hated English class and we have a very, a lot of dissatisfied children that hate math class
that might be really good at geometry or statistics or combinatorics or logic or any one of
the thousands of other subjects in mathematics that are accessible to people who haven't been
through eight years of graduate school already, but that we don't actually show people
until after they go through eight years of graduate school.
So, yeah, I think that'd be a big one.
I love it.
I got to give a shout out to my daughter, Sky, Monty.
I love you so much.
My daughter, she just turned 12.
And at the age of 11, she published her first book on Amazon with the help of, like, AI.
And I thought to myself, like, why can't kids graduate eighth grade with a residual income,
especially with the tools that we have, right?
Maybe they don't have a huge residual, but maybe they have a product.
have a service? Like, do you guys think that that's too forward thinking for schools to begin
adopting? No, I mean, standard apprenticeship, standard apprenticeship for ages, 12's a little
precocious, but early teens, if you got into the blacksmith shop, you, you've made nails
by the time you're 12.
And yeah, yeah, having some actual work product that isn't the scroll that your parents have magnated up on the freezer strikes me as an entirely reasonable outcome for a human being that's 60% of the size of an adult to be.
I like the idea, too, that, you know, what the education will be in the future,
it doesn't have to be an extension of what the American education system was from the 60s, 70s, 80s,
90s, and early 2000s. It just doesn't have to be. We have an opportunity now to transcend whatever
the limitations were in that and start to present education in a new way. And so I think that's
the responsibility of a parent to decide, you know, how they want their child educated.
That's the fundamental formation of their mind itself. I could do the no greater opportunity
for a child. And so I think if a parent has that responsibility, then then they can start to
think on their own, not just give to the government or to give to a private school, the understanding
of what their education could look like or needs to be. And ultimately, in that, they could be
very productive from a very young age. I started my first business at the age of five. I would
like to say, it was that money that I saved from the age of five that led me to ultimately be
an entrepreneur throughout my entire life. And so that was my seed capital. I started curbside
recycling in my neighborhood. I was ultimately put out of business by the state of California when
they mandated it throughout the entirety of the state. But I was taking trash and turning it into money
from the age of five. And I thought it was a great thing to do and organize our entire neighborhood
to just, you know, recycle. So these things are ideas. Obviously,
you know, as no one says, precocious, that's okay, you know, help them be precocious if they can,
right? Just help them be industrious, help them be a solution to our society. Not everybody
has to be precocious because many students, you know, or many children bloom later. Like,
find them in their talent arc and support them, you know, and think about productivity going
forward and help them be innovative for the society we want to create. You know, I think,
like, this is an opportunity that we don't want to have our children recalienable.
create what we know is the collapse.
So if we know we're headed to a collapse,
you've got to teach them something new, guys.
Give them an opportunity.
Give them a shot to be the solution set we need.
You know,
maybe while we're collapsing,
they can figure out another way to outgrow this.
Because when we talk about a collapse,
I think apocalypse comes to most people's minds.
But what if it's just like a slow decay and morphing
into ultimately something else?
Well, I would rather accelerate the morphing decay understanding into the creating something else understanding.
And so if your children, if you're, like for you guys, if you have children and they're learning and they're young,
turn them into the solution, give them an opportunity to think that way, you know,
instead of indoctrinating them in the darkness that we're fearing,
allow them to recognize that they could actually create what the world gets to become.
Yeah, I almost feel like we're drowning in safety.
I talked a while back with Joseph Sestun, and he, you know what I mean?
And he was telling me this story.
He wrote this book called Letters from his family.
And his uncle or his grandfather at the age of 14 is in Europe doing business deals for the family
and writing these incredible letters back and forth and stuff.
But are we drowning in safety?
Well, let's both take that.
Noah, start with it.
Are we drowning in safety?
Well, I think this goes direct to the point you were making a bad.
life extension the the people who are on top of the I mean some of them are
obviously purely delusional maniacs but you know they're they're not
generally speaking complete morons they're they're looking at the abyss
that they dug out and and they understand that there isn't any safety net
there and they very desperately would like one
There was a, this, I saw this five or six years ago at this point.
No, it had been, it was during COVID, so it had been five years ago.
Ray Dalio, who's been sort of banging this drum that his magic trick is that he just understood that the entire financial system is on a sort of lifetime rotation pattern.
and that we had a 70-year climb and now we're going to have the collapse.
And so he had produced this little, like, 10- or 15-minute animated video to explain that that's what's happening,
that that's why everybody that's currently rich, such as himself, is currently rich,
that none of those people have done anything to deserve any of the money they have, including him.
but now that the time has come for all that money to come back and go to the people that it was taken from,
the rest of us now have this opportunity, this great opportunity to be heroic and not take his personal money away from him and just kind of, you know, take the hit on that one.
because while he didn't do any good,
he also might not have done any harm beyond the money
that he took from people for no reason.
He uses very, very different words,
or at least the people he hired used very, very different words.
But that's exactly what it meant.
And so, yeah, I mean, if you got to where you were
by showing those around you to be fools
because they were
and you haven't
actually built anything or helped anybody
and you don't really have any plans
for how that will ever happen
the knives are out
everybody can see what that model looks like
you're going to be pretty easy to knock off
that perch
so you would be very interested
and we see
conservatism
it's a little weird because most of
our systems have sort of built this idea of the revolutionary into themselves at their base,
but they're extraordinarily reactionary, that, you know, that the only thing that matters is the
continuity of the status quo and the status of the quo that have achieved within it to those
systems. And everything is a risk to that. So nothing can be allowed. And that, that, that
That's not a winning proposition.
That's why the youth are checking out of society.
Some of them are checking out through serious mental health crises that are horrifying to see.
Some of them are checking out by basically saying, you know, F you, we're going to, we're going to do something that you find so existentially horrifying that we hope it gives you a stroke and you die.
and we're not going to we're not going to care when it does so you know that's that's something and for your daughter are you familiar with the works of gordon corman because that was his life path actually i think he was 13 when he published a humorous story for for kids and he's been publishing humorous children's literature for the last like 40 years now
I'm also can you pull on that thread and your ideas about are we drowning in safety
what safety I think safety's illusory
you put a child in five point harness suspension and a child car seat face the opposite
direction in a car that the child doesn't need to be in
you don't need a child in a car going 100 miles an hour down the freeway in a safety
seat just as an example like
We didn't really plan for safety in the Industrial Revolution.
And I don't think when the Industrial Revolution came around, there was a lot of safety going around at that point.
So I think this is kind of a new advent, and it's coming from fear, and there's nothing safe in fear.
Fear doesn't give us from a fundamental state in consciousness the right mindset in which to develop safety,
which is to develop systems that are life-affirming instead of life-threatening,
and to develop systems that unilaterally share opportunity,
instead of isolating that for a very few of us here while we're alive.
Having systems that are built on hierarchical instability of economic systems
built on war fundamentally is built on our blood and our death
instead of being built on our life and our collective ingenuity.
And while we're in a competition with each other, I call that big stick.
We've been playing big stick for hundreds of thousands of years.
And my concern with that is that the galaxies are playing
big galaxy while we're playing big stick inside a planet.
We need to be thinking a much larger concern here
about what we're really doing while we're incarnate
and alive.
There's a much bigger picture going on.
So how do you create safety while you're inside a planet
and there's nothing beneath you but space, time,
and a bunch of other galaxies?
You know, like people think they have a better seat,
so they're safer in their better seat.
But fundamentally, that's not the kind of safety
that is existential in its nature.
And so I would like to have us take a deal
for philosophical perspective here and think about how do we create actual safety for each
other and you have to you have to look at it from a different problem set they have to look at it
that we're in this together not individually and that there's a collective that we're a part of so
if we do that i think we can create safety but for right now it's not safety it's a risk profile
that we like to measure and play with and you know right now society are gamblers at heart
and so they're gambling with everything uh yeah i'd like to sort of follow
under that. There was a move in AI. Back before the sort of explosion and popularity, there was a problem
known as AI alignment. And there's a movement, a mostly political movement now called AI safety,
which has largely chewed up the public discourse of alignment. Alignment, to me, is a very
interesting and technical and mathematical and physical problem that we have made virtually no
progress on. AI safety on the other hand sort of assumes that we've solved AI alignment,
which we didn't, and that we should use our godlike powers to control these black boxes that
we don't understand to reaffirm the political and cultural and economic status quo at every turn
because it would be bad if they said things that were unorthodox, which is, again,
And, you know, I think goes right to your point of we're using the word safe and I don't think we understand what it means.
I can see a whole much of memes you guys are just creating right now.
It's going to be like all these people like in five point harnesses in cars, being all over Twitter and stuff like this.
Noah says this. Hamilton says this.
Like it's so interesting to see the speed of culture.
Well, you said meme, the thing that is flashed in my mind, did you ever see the Tom Cruise movie,
night and day
with Cameron Diaz
he's playing one of his
like you know
super soldier like spy guys
but the
it's sort of a romantic comedy and the main
character is this ordinary girl
who happens to look exactly like Cameron Diaz
who gets sort of
you know caught up in the mix
as it were and
he's trying not to
draw him into this incredibly dangerous
world that he's in but he just
sort of can't he
keeps not being able to.
So he sort of lets her go and warns her that government people are going to roll up
in black SUVs and tell her that they want to keep her safe and she's going to be safe
and she needs to come with them.
And if she gets in the car with them, they're going to kill her.
And so that's like they're going to use that.
They're going to tell you that I'm crazy and she's like,
that's going to be easy to believe.
But yeah, we use these words performatively so much in public.
And they have real meanings.
And if we don't get to reality, like, again, we got to start telling the truth about this stuff.
And once you have access to real facts, real truth, reality,
As the Enlightenment demonstrated, you can build incredibly cool stuff really quickly.
I love that point.
You know, I like to look at images from space and just to gain perspective.
And the Earth at night, you now see it lit up with electricity.
Go research when that happened.
Just that.
And see the transition and how fast the whole world has changed.
know, from an image that you now see from space and the importance of that, that's as fast and
faster as we can now change the world. I think in terms of the exponentiality, we've gone
into an exponential phase where in five years we could have these things solved if we put
collective intention on them. In 10 years, we could have an entire new social system that didn't
require a collapse. And in 20 years, we could have the majority of the human population thriving.
That's just not currently how we're organized. But it's not to say that that's overlaught.
optimistic in terms of a timeline if we could guide and direct the collective human endeavor
to solution-oriented behavior and activity. And that's just a collective use of our intelligence.
And so, you know, I always like to think that the responsibility is on us. We need to do something.
So this is our opportunity. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And that, you know, that night glow, that's, that's, that's a
really great point. It's a great thing to sort of look at and understand like what it means and how much more
there is to do the Kardashev scale like we aren't we aren't even a
Kardashev one society we haven't even figured out the earth and and as you
point out we're sort of like wait a minute we can't we can't do any better
because like we need to preserve what we have like we're not even done with where
we are like you know there's there's vast dark places in the night that we
haven't even figured out yet and you know the Kardashev scale
there's a two like there's so much more even without interstellar travel that that's that's
potentially on deck if we can get out of our way on this stuff yeah and part of I think what we're
dealing with is that the baby boomers are a post-world war generation I love sometimes seeing
these memes on social media that say like you know if you think you had trauma and wonder why
your parents did and then they tell what their grandparents went through
And it was a very difficult time right before World War I, World War I, et cetera, into World War II.
This is a massive time of escalated conflict that people have kind of forgotten.
That is the seed of the stories and the ideas, the sci-fi, the heroes that were mentioned earlier that were coming out, that were popular at a period of time.
And so it's framed in imagination.
We were talking about the collective hallucination earlier.
It's framed in imagination.
And the younger generations have an opportunity to have a different imagination, right?
And if you look at the earth from that perspective of everything that isn't yet developed,
if you bring a new mind to that space, you'll get a different outcome there.
And so I like to propose that question to the youth.
They're like, how would you imagine sustainability and thriving there instead of a spread of, you know,
a collapsing society?
And there's the beginning seat of a solution.
And then we can collectively create it.
We just have to align incentive.
And right now, I think, as we've talked about, those are economic incentives.
We need to align economic incentives and then look at the nature of what we create.
Noah, this brings up a while back, you and I were talking about, I might butcher this, but the
Ackerman Function.
Do you remember telling me about that?
Yes.
So the Ackerman Function was developed in the 1800s to demonstrate that humanity hadn't
actually worked out what.
the limits of computation were yet.
So it was thought at that time that something called simple recursion
could describe all possible computation and that's essentially a process
where you would have a single counter that would count down to zero
and when it got to zero you were done.
The Ackerman function can be thought of as a sequence
where you're combining numbers arithmetically
but in addition to increasing the
numbers for the acumen sequence. So the first one is one plus one. You're also in some sense
incrementing the operator. So the second acriman number is two times two. The third acronym number
is three to the third power. So each time we take a step forward, we not only increase the numbers,
we also increase the way in which the numbers are combined to the repeated version of the previous
combination. So addition is something that we sort of understand is a kind of a short hand for
counting. Multiplication is sort of a shorthand for addition. Exponantiation is a sort of a
shorthand for multiplication. What if there's a fourth operator that is a shorthand for
repeated exponentiation? What if there's a fifth operator that's a shorthanded for repeated,
of exponentiation? What if there is a Googleith operator that is a shorthand for a Google
repeats, a Google minus one repeats of addition? And so the Ackerman numbers get real crazy,
real fast. So the sequence goes 2, 4, 27. And then the fourth number has like many digits,
because four to the fourth power is 256.
Four to the 256 power is a number with around 53 digits in it.
And four to the power of a number with 53 digits in it
is a number that has somewhere in the neighborhood of 110 to the 150 digits.
So a Google times the square root of a Google times 1,000 digits.
And then the fifth number is very difficult.
to even talk about. And of course, that's just the fifth number. There are, there's a sixth and a tenth and
everything else. And there are, there are algorithms that are inverse Ackerman scaling. So if you manage to
plug in, so if you plug in sort of one thing, it takes one unit. If you plug in two to four things,
it takes two units of time or you know effort energy whatever between four and 27 it takes three
between 27 and you know a google to the one and a half power times a thousand um it takes four
if somehow you manage to find something that's larger than that and shove it in it would take five
units unless you you pass that one up um so so constant time is great but inverse Ackerman is
is real, real close to constant time.
And Ackerman, that's chump baby stuff
in the mathematical field of Googleology,
the study of incredibly large numbers.
There are ideas and approaches
that make the Ackerman sequence just meaningless,
where you get to ideas that are literally
beyond your company.
comprehension. And I think it's one of the beautiful exercises of 20th century mathematics to find one of these places where we can visit the frontier of our imagination and sort of poke around a little bit and ultimately fail because, you know, the weight's too great. Like you just can't think about things that are that abstract and that big and that ridiculous. But again, that's there. If we,
figure out how to change the iteration nature of these operations that we're using to
combine our economic or political or cultural objects if we if we figure out how to use
machines inside the machines then then we start getting that hyper-exponential
blow-up and that's that that is a thing that's starting to happen I just I just
sort of was a conference
a couple weeks ago I was
explaining it's
not my paper, Deepseek wrote it
but they worked out a way
to put sort of a
transformer inside their transformer
for their
hopefully their next version of Deepseek
which changes the pattern
from computing
a token sequence to computing
a continuous function
over token vectors
and by
using a token vector of size four they were able to get a 4x speed up in their training time so they were able to create models that took the same amount of effort to produce that were four times larger and models that are four times larger are as we are familiar vastly more capable and so those kinds of those kinds of ideas if they can telescope within that
efficiently, that's a hard problem, but it's one that might be very, very fruitful.
Are we going to see that in Minty, Hamilton?
That's a great question.
I think what's really interesting about the AI space is the nature of how we try to imagine both the math,
and the phenomena that's taking place inside the black box
and how it plays in numbers that for most people are much larger
than they know how to orient or I was just in a conversation recently
at an AI incubator house in San Francisco
where we're at a dinner and just discussing, you know,
how to imagine the dimensionalities.
Like if you ask ChatGPT how many dimensions it runs on,
it's going to say 16,000 plus dimensions
and trying to understand imaginary dimensions
in mathematical vector space
compared to like dimension one, dimension two, dimension three,
and like this geometry we'd learn in school.
And I think it rapidly leads to an awareness
of a much larger field of numbers
that fits in a much smaller expression of hardware
and reflects the numbers that we used to see
when we tried to study, you know, the cosmos and then how if you bring those numbers back
to try to understand something in your natural environment, like a question I like to ask people
all the time in around these big numbers is try to imagine the number of electrons that you are
and is the room around you right now. I just try to imagine that and then try to imagine that
accurately like to the exact number of them, right? And this idea of playing on the edges of the
frontier of imagination, especially in the number space that things are fascinating awareness that
we have to try to bring some sensibility to that collective kind of imagination around
realness and how to get the imagination to become real and honest in its nature.
And so, you know, in the idea of Minty, there's an understanding that what we think of as
content, if you go from what it took to create symbols and carve hieroglyphys,
and then what it took to create the printing press and then what it took to create literacy
and then what it took to create a photograph and then what it took to create an image from an
iPhone and then what it'll take to create the equivalent of entertainment and content of any
kind just content of any kind through these systems dramatically exponentially accelerates the
ability complexity and quality of what gets created including the nature of the effect
that that has on the individuals that consume it.
And so Minty plays in the space in and around how do we understand the media space
as it starts to approximate infinity and a question around culture,
which is, you know, compared to other thinkers who've talked about individual content delivery
and you'll hear your favorite song.
But one of the things that made our favorite songs,
our favorite songs was that other friends listened to them too.
So infinity content only meant for you as a kind of echoed.
chamber that might be interesting until you can't talk to anyone about it and can't
fundamentally express a kind of social role. And so in the nature of our project, it's really
about how you maintain a social environment in and around the nature of shared culture
in relationship to these incredible AI creation tools, freeing creativity and democratizing that
to the masses and giving them an opportunity to create in ways that they never could have before
and understanding this incredible relationship to large number.
And the economics, it could be associated with it
for the point of creating abundance
and creating a mechanism for creators and creative people
to find greater economic capacity within this world.
So I deeply appreciate this idea of rapidly expanding numbers.
And when no one was talking about that,
my imagination immediately goes to Big Bang.
It goes to the rapid expansion of the universe.
and the creation of, you know, our story at least, origin creation story for something that goes
from what we think of as a small number to a very large number very quickly in many different
forms. And I think it's sad talking about the concept of mathematical education, which I firmly
agree with. All the math I'm into, they didn't teach in school. And I had to use the rudiments
of what I learned in school to get into the math that I was most interested in. And the math I was
most, most interested in was the high dimensional geometric spaces that you see in ayahuasca
visions. That was fundamentally the math that I was most fascinated by, where you have
rapidly moving shapes in something, we call it light or consciousness, they're geometric
and their origin in nature, and what a thing to try to study. And you know, you don't see them
with your eyes unless you're in vision. I got introduced to it in my early 20s, and I'm grateful for
that. But that math, they didn't teach in school. And, you know, this is a looking glass into
this understanding that if you have that mind in that imagination and you can see that around you,
you have a different scope on how you relate to the world that you're in. And I think it's a
richer one. Yeah, yeah. High dimensional geometry is a wild and very counterintuitive space
where all kinds of things
that people think are
entirely natural based on their
three-dimensional understandings
turn out to be just
wildly false
at higher dimensions.
And the constructions
that are attached to them,
one of my favorite ones is the
story of the inversion of the sphere.
So in
topology,
they talk about
shapes with their properties that all the properties that shapes have that aren't
their shapes and spheres being mathematical object of you know no thickness the
surface of the sphere can freely pass through itself and so the this question
arose of whether or not you could take a mathematical sphere and manipulate it
in a way so that the inside would become the outside and the outside become the
inside without folding it over like like there was a sort of obvious way that you could make this
happen if you could imagine it like a completely deflated basketball and you push it down and so it's
just like a bowl if you could somehow if if the basketball could pass through itself you could just
keep pushing you could push through you could push the bottom of the bowl through through itself
and and create a top but that would create a little kink around the bottom where it would finally have to
sort of passed by itself.
And that was the only construction everybody had.
Everybody knew that it could be done.
And apparently the guy that actually proved the construction
was congenitably blind.
So he'd never seen anything.
And he got very into topology
and got very good at topological proofs.
And he proved that the construction was possible,
but people still didn't actually know how to do it.
So we had, you know, this one blind guy who had explained to all of us that this thing
that doesn't look like it's possible to any of us that can see is possible.
And eventually, with computer graphics and other things, a visualization now exists that
more or less explains it's rather pretty.
you kind of twist the system and so it sort of twists past itself and then that lets you
sort of have this crinkly surface that you can move through itself without without that ridging
problem happening and then you undo the twist once you've got the the bowl kind of through itself and
that that's that's how it works but yeah it's it's this it's this weird space where things that
certainly do not sound like they would be possible um and and in this one case are originally
illuminated by people who have no personal material experience of of of what you're looking at
uh can can sort of show you that yeah actually this is this is how things can work
gentlemen i walk you right up to a minute or a hour and a half and um i got to tell you i feel like
We're just getting warmed up.
So we're going to have to come back and do a part two on this.
But before we finish off right here, I just want to throw it back to each one of you
just to maybe take a little bit of time to explain what you got coming up,
where people can find you and what you're excited about.
I'll start with you, Noah.
So, yeah, you've got my link up there at cordis.com.
My major project is creating marketplaces that are actually intelligent
and actually service humanity's economic needs.
I'm sorry, I can't help you with political, cultural.
or, you know, spiritual problems, but I can solve the economy for you if you want.
I'm currently suing the U.S. government over that.
I have to ask the U.S. Supreme Court.
I referenced that at one point during this.
Whether or not describing reality and mathematical proofs is unpersuasive comes up to the
standards of American jurisprudence or not.
I'm hoping that they're not going to declare that,
the Article III courts are criminal outlaw tyrants that just make shit up whenever they want to.
But we will find out in a few months, probably.
I've got about a month and a half to pull that together.
And how can people support you if they want to read more about this or they want to?
Reach out, connect.
You know, again, it wouldn't take too many guys, knowing guys to, to,
pull together to start building these.
The fundamental technology is pretty simple.
It's just getting user mass that's large enough
and legal is the challenge.
And so, yeah, I'm not much of a salesman.
So if you are or you know one, let's talk with each other.
And if you're just curious and interested, let's let's talk.
Fantastic.
Hamilton, what can people find you?
What do you got coming up?
What are you excited about?
Yeah, find me at hamilton-souther.com.
And you can find me at blue morpho.org.
That's where we do our plant medicine work and our retreat work.
And we also have plant medicine courses there.
So if you're interested in learning the things that we've talked about, I teach, and I'm
a founder of our own academy, first academy in the world that teaches plant medicines in these ways.
And you can also be on the lookout for Minty, minty. fun.
We're in TestNet right now, and it's coming out in mid-December.
It's an exciting launch for us.
Gentlemen, mind-blowing conversation.
I'm so stoked to get to talk to both of you, and thank you very much for your time.
Hang on briefly afterwards to everybody that hung out with us today,
and to the people I didn't get to from Lila, Tarek, Jonas, Nia, Raphael, Emily, Marcus.
I see you guys all over there.
I hope you having a beautiful day.
you guys questions. Ladies and gentlemen, that's all we got. Aloha.
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