Increasingly, policymakers, investors, and advocates recognize that the neoliberal theory of economic organization – laissez faire – is a failed experiment. However, certain areas of law – particularly antitrust law are still beholden to false econometric notions about how markets operate, which influences legal interpretation, case precedent, and ongoing debates about reviving antitrust’s role in the political economy. Can Multilevel Cultural Evolution provide a new paradigm for anti-trust law, along with the rest of economics?
What Happened to Selfish Genes? with J. Arvid Agren
No Best Way, with Stephen Colarelli and Max Beilby
Atlas Hugged and Our Moment of Choice, with Kurt Johnson
Atlas Hugged and the Nature of Fiction, with Brian Boyd
Atlas Hugged and Catalyzing Positive Change in the Real World, with David Korten
Human Nature at Work, with Andrew O'Keeffe
The Study of Nature in Early America: A Conversation with Lee Dugatkin
Managing the Human Animal, with Nigel Nicholson and Max Beilby
Cultural Evolution with Alex Mesoudi
[BONUS] Robert Kurzban On the Modular Mind
A Tale of Two Evolutionary Processes, with Rita Colwell
Positive Deviance as the Third Way: A Conversation with David K. Hurst
The Third Way of Entrepreneurship with Victor Hwang
Peter J. Richerson: Morality from an Evolutionary Perspective
[BONUS EPISODE] Geoffrey Hodgson on Evolutionary Thinking and Its Policy Implications for Modern Capitalism
Morality from an Evolutionary Perspective with Simon Blackburn
The Nordic Third Way
Ecosystems are Probably Not What You Think: A Conversation with Tom Whitham
Development and the Third Way with Scott Peters
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The Science of Happiness
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