The section about taking children seriously is glorious (19:24), Good work Mr. Deutsch I get more impressed by this man every time I hear him.
@hacun3jr3 ай бұрын
I’m not sure if they tried criticizing his TCS enough. For example, why didn’t they ask him, “What should I do if my child wants to go out with a pedophile stranger who’s giving candy, but they don’t realize it yet through their conjectures and reasoning of this stranger that he is a pedophile? If I am emotionally bonded to my child and see them at risk of making an error they potentially can’t come back from, should I coerce them into not going if my interaction and guidance isn’t sufficient?”?
@no_360scope9 ай бұрын
Stumbled upon Deutsch's book, just like how I stumbled into naval information. I am 21, but we'll see how much advice I can get and how well it works. So far since 18, it has been beneficial in 3 domains: knowledge, financial, and inner peace wise.
@FoodForestBrad11 ай бұрын
I really hope this is an ongoing series!
@codegallant11 ай бұрын
Yesssss 💯✨ tbh i wasn't waiting for this as i wasn't expecting an another one of david deutsch episode. But i'm truly glad 🌟
@shonufftheshogun11 ай бұрын
I wish Deutch had a few kids. I would be curious if it changed his perspective on Taking Children Seriously.
@Gullinnova11 ай бұрын
So many amazing new concepts and ideas in this series. i really enjoyed all of it.
@El_Diablo_123 ай бұрын
36:30 the relationship between freedom and progress 37:38 kids if free will do what they think is best for them. That will be error prone, but so that’s also true for adults.
@peace_and_blessings111111 ай бұрын
Sir, if you were a medical student into machine learning and using AI to create an impact in healthcare and disrupt the industry, how would you go about it? What path would you suggest a newbie medical student who is really into developing Brain Computer Interface tech and technology like Nexus (Ramez Naam)? Should he look into pursuing engineering/something like that at MIT/Harvard ?
@navjot544511 ай бұрын
You are asking a way too general question... If you really wanna build something useful, go specific into the thing... Wanna disrupt Healthcare with AI/ML, exactly how? Why you, why can't others with years of experience under belt? Are you really deeply interested in the thing or using it as an escape route from the reality?
@peace_and_blessings111111 ай бұрын
@@navjot5445 Really appreciate your response. Thank you for directing me to think more deeply. There is a lot of growth happening in machine learning with respect to pathology and radiology. The majority of health care workers, physicians included are unaware. There has been a growth of large number of companies all the way from Path AI to Galena Health, focusing on this approach. But having a better software wouldn't solve the real issue since the ability to deploy in a common clinical setting is not really accounted for. As for the brain Computer Interfaces part, it is going to be the next VR / AR experience. Even Mark Zuckerberg has publicly stated it in his insta post 3 days ago. Apart from having paralysed people walk, blind people see and make lots of other miracles happen, it is going to be the future of computing. Skill acquisition in the least amount of time and learning at exponential rates with high bandwidth BCI is going to be the future. Ray Kurzweil has predicted this tech to be available by 2033. So this is where I am at. I'm confused in medical school. If the way to really impact a billion lives is by working on these exponential tech, I really don't look forward wasting the next 5 years of my life, just learning enough to be a cog in the machine, another replacement, which is why my question. Naval sir has the uncanny ability to read through and see through stuff (metaphorically) and hoped that he could provide some direction. Ever since I found him, life has never been the same. Every time I find someone who loves to read in college, I give my physical copy of The Almanack of Naval Ravikant book, which I've read over and over. I recommend every friend of mine to read sirs material and a lot of people have benefitted and reached a higher level of awareness and understanding through his work. I apologise for putting such a vague question in the first place and thank you for redirecting me. Peace and Blessings 🙏
@Ozzilaa10 ай бұрын
Do it because you are actually curious not because you want your name to be published and worshipped for the disruption
@JohnChampagne2 ай бұрын
It should be possible for an advanced civilization to create more than one environment that is conducive to the healthy intellectual development of the child. Imagine a school system that provided a menu of experiences and activities that students could choose from. They could plan their week and month according to how much it costs to provide a library or lecture and discussion or music class or sculpture class or field trip. Some students might want to do a little bit of many different things. Others might prefer to engage mostly in quiet study, to save up a budget that enables them to afford an occasional spectacular field trip. If we share natural wealth equally, the money that can rightly be claimed by children could be used to fund such things.
@srghma8 ай бұрын
Naval: is this an argument for spreading your ideas rather than having children David Deutsch: well as David fredman says if the world is worth saving it's worth saving at a profit . and I would generalize it. if the world is worth saving it's worth saving with fun
@softacroaaron11 ай бұрын
P-lease keep these coming. Am super curious about David’s work on his book ‘Irrationality’. Of course David doesn’t want to be pinned down on giving objective advice, which of course would be almost worthless as it lacks application. But I’d love to hear about you, David and Brett go about solving actual problems in the present-day. How are you solving the ‘addictive screen time and fast food’ problem of raising kids, Naval? How are you going about clarifying the problem that AirChat is meant to solve? What is your process of improving the app, when there is no guarantee of its success or need - or is that already a proven case for you? How is David tackling problems in constructor theory? What are current problems he is actively working on? What does his process look like? What are the problems Brett wants to solve after having explained both of David’s book, the work of Chiara and Popper? How does Brett go about monetising his knowledge? He obviously has a deep understanding of physics and epistemology, what is his approach towards wealth? (I am still wondering about that part in my life - how will I make my wealth - while faithfully studying movement efficiency and motor skill learning as these are my main areas of interest, next to understanding fundamental knowledge.) Of course not all of these question might be appropriate, but getting to hear more about how the 3 of you go about solving actual problems in your life would be so insightful.
@craigsips867711 ай бұрын
Not a big fan of the money thing myself or the get rich advice. True wealth is knowledge.
@El_Diablo_1211 ай бұрын
14:50 interesting 15:50 billions of people 16:20 AI owning its own computer 26:30 give kid education. Help them create knowledge themselves 56:20 environmentalists and religions both seem to confuse ‘the world’ with our 1 planet
@bla-dd2zg1cr2b11 ай бұрын
was this recorded asynchronously on airchat?
@c4sare4kiddos11 ай бұрын
Who is naval talking to
@gabrielzinho07_11 ай бұрын
He didn't say that "doing what you like” is bad advice (38:17).
@adcashmo11 ай бұрын
I think the title of this section can also be understood as "DD's reaction to the idea that......do8ng what you like is bad advice"
@Aedonius11 ай бұрын
People need to stop thinking about AGI in terms of today's computers. 30 years from now, the memory and processing power will be close to infinite - that's the point of the singularity. There is so much compute that compute is no longer a problem. Foom can't happen now. Foom can happen when we have 3D processors using alien architectures designed by AI years from now
@gauravrawat.77 ай бұрын
It's great
@pumpperoni725911 ай бұрын
Men are inspired- not by what happened, but by their opinion on what happened
@pranjalsisodia5003Ай бұрын
1:16 4:30 8:06 14:38 52:30 54:25
@faster-than-light-memes2 ай бұрын
Nice
@MotivationWorldCollection10 ай бұрын
🥰🥰🥰
@dot4919011 ай бұрын
👏
@atg831711 ай бұрын
make an India vlog
@okayokay197911 ай бұрын
Is he in india?
@quantum.spectrum11 ай бұрын
Why bro , he's not a travel vlogger
@Sasuke-d8l10 ай бұрын
Are u stoooopid ?
@muhammadpandor85588 ай бұрын
Of the rat temples or the street foods?
@0fffxy6 ай бұрын
You need to give him A LOT more pushback. Most questions he's asked he just misrepresents to the level of his ignorance and builds his arguments against a malformed strawman of the question without any correction or intervention from anyone. Especially with twin studies, but also theories of mind, neuroscience, education, and creativity (which you talk about without defining it first, despite also talking about how difficult it is to have shared definition). Listening to this was - while occasionally thought provoking - largely a waste of time. It's people talking about things outside their field of expertise, seemingly without realising it. Baseless speculations about things that are, largely, already fairly well established facts in their respective fields. I did stop listening 45 minutes in so there's a chance they say "April Fools" at the end, in which case I'm the one with egg on my face.