This is a reflection on some episodes from 2018. The themes I have chosen looks at growing up in the Great Depression and what to expect in the future with AR and AI, as well as Institutions, Individualism, Cooperation and Reciprocity.
Featured episodes are:
123 Vernon Smith on his early childhood years during the Great Depression and how they survived by moving to live on a farm before losing it all, his mother as a socialist and who she voted for in the Presidential elections in 1919 when women were first given the right to vote in the US.
162 Jennifer Burns on Ayn Rand's views on Capitalism, Communism and Christianity and why the individual is better that the collective, the virtues of selfishness, hippies in the 1960s, Objectivism, Existentialism and Nietzche.
147 Ngaio Hotte on Elinor Ostrom’s work on collective action and cooperation to reach mutually beneficial outcomes and how this can relate to natural resource problems as well as Ostrom’s observation of reciprocity in Game Theory.
135 David Zetland on group cooperation to protecting public goods such as the water supply and the environment and how cooperation rewards and benefits groups.
168 Harry Markowitz on growing up with the family grocery store during the Great Depression in an upper middle-class area, using the museums and libraries of Chicago as a teen, Darwin’s ‘Origin of Species’ as an influence and how reading the great philosophers and his self-study of the physical sciences helped with his placement at the University of Chicago.
125 Eugene Fama on his early academic year to the development of the Efficient Market Hypothesis as well as the Benoit Madlebrot's discovery of Louis Bachelier's paper 167 James Kenneth Galbraith on the influences of his father John Kenneth Galbraith on his own academic work in economics and the significance or lack of significance of economics in academia today.
136 Abby Hall on the growth of big government since 9/11 and the militarisation of the domestic police force in the US from the creation of the first US SWAT team during the US occupation of the Philippines in 1898.
149 Soumaya Keynes on why trade should not be blamed for the loss of jobs, the Economic Consequences of Our Grandchildren by Soumaya’s great grand uncle John Maynard Keynes, trade blocs in the 1930s compared to todays global trading systems to remove barriers and maintain peace.
156 Peter Boettke on how F. A. Hayek developed his interest in economics through the Viennese culture and the intellectual hubs which were based on law, philosophy and politics and the mentors he encountered as well as Hayek’s observations of the nature of macro volatility, the growth of government, technology and inhumanity during his life.
163 Kevin Kelly on technology of the future such as AI and AR to help to quantify and track our movements and expressions to help with our decision-making.
135: David Zetland Bonus Episode
134: Edward Castronova on the Economy of Virtual Worlds
133: David Zetland on Climate Change and Water Civilization
132: Eric Lonergan on the Philosophy of Money Part 2
131: Vernon Smith Previously Unreleased Bonus Episode
130: Eric Lonergan on the Philosophy of Money (Part 1)
129: Sarah Skwire on the Sensibility of Literature for Economic Thinking
128: Sarah Smith on the Economics of Charitable Giving and Gender Roles in Economics
127: Barry Eichengreen on the Importance of Economic History, the IMF and Reserve Currencies
126: Jeffrey Miron on Libertarianism, Drug Legalization and Genghis Khan
125: Eugene Fama on the Efficient Market Hypothesis, the Federal Funds Rate, Bitcoin and Daily Routines
124: Emily Oster on Diabetes and Diet, Disease and Vaccinations and Debunking Pregnancy Myths
123: Vernon Smith on Life During the Great Depression and World War II, Overcoming Adversity and Life as an Economist
122: Robin Hanson on The Elephant in the Brain: Hidden Motives in Everyday Life
121: Doug McKee and Edward O'Neill on Teach Better and Using Technology in the Classroom
120: Best of 2016 Part 2
119: Best of 2016 Part 1
118: Zachary Feinstein on Systemic Risk and Economics in Star Wars and Harry Potter
117: Courtney Conrad on Broadway Economics and What We Can Learn Through Musicals
116: Brian O'Roark on The Economics of Superheroes and The Hunger Games
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