Long Now: Conversations at The Interval
A podcast by The Long Now Foundation
Categories:
66 Episodes
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Time Poverty Amidst Digital Abundance: Judy Wajcman
Published: 5/21/2019 -
Growing Up Ape: The Long-term Science of Studying Our Closest Living Relatives: Elizabeth Lonsdorf
Published: 5/14/2019 -
Can Nationalism be a Resource for Democracy?: Maya Tudor
Published: 5/6/2019 -
Siberia: A Journey to the Mammoth Steppe: Stewart Brand, Kevin Kelly, Alexander Rose
Published: 4/30/2019 -
The Evolving Science of Behavior Change: Christopher Bryan
Published: 4/18/2019 -
The Spirit Singularity: Science and the Afterlife at the Turn of the 20th Century: Hannu Rajaniemi
Published: 4/10/2019 -
The Science of Climate Fiction: Can Stories Lead to Social Action?: James Holland Jones
Published: 4/4/2019 -
Charting the High Frontier of Space: Ed Lu
Published: 3/26/2019 -
Facts, Feelings and Stories: How to Motivate Action on Climate Change: Shahzeen Attari
Published: 8/15/2018 -
The Organized Pursuit of Knowledge: Margaret Levi
Published: 4/18/2018 -
Our Future in Algorithm Farming: Mike Kuniavsky
Published: 3/1/2018 -
Humanity and the Deep Ocean: James Nestor
Published: 2/1/2018 -
The New Deal You Don't Know: Louis Hyman
Published: 1/2/2018 -
Can Democracy Survive the Internet?: Nathaniel Persily
Published: 12/7/2017 -
Ideology in our Genes: The Biological Basis for Political Traits: Rose McDermott
Published: 12/1/2017 -
The Web In An Eye Blink: Jason Scott
Published: 11/1/2017 -
Thinking Long-term About the Evolving Global Challenge: The Refugee Reality
Published: 10/1/2017 -
Envisioning Deep Time: Jonathon Keats
Published: 9/1/2017 -
How Climate Will Evolve Government and Society: Kim Stanley Robinson
Published: 8/1/2017 -
Transforming Perception, One Sense at a Time: Kara Platoni
Published: 7/3/2017
A long-term thinking lecture series from The Long Now Foundation: these hour long talks are recorded live at The Interval, our bar / cafe / museum in San Francisco. Since 02014 this series has presented artists, authors, entrepreneurs, scientists (and more) taking a long-term perspective on subjects like art, design, history, nature, technology, and time. You can learn more about The Interval and this series at theinterval.org, where we have full videos of the talks on this podcast.