The Theory of Anything

A podcast by Bruce Nielson and Peter Johansen - Tuesdays

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102 Episodes

  1. Episode 21: Evolution Outside the Genome

    Published: 5/3/2021
  2. Episode 20: Command and Control Business Leadership

    Published: 4/15/2021
  3. Episode 19: Why Don't Businesses Emphasize Error Correction?

    Published: 4/1/2021
  4. Episode 18: Idea Development through Error Correction

    Published: 3/15/2021
  5. Episode 17: Shiri's Scissor: Polarization and Politics

    Published: 3/1/2021
  6. Episode 16: Radical Candor - How to Give Effective Criticism

    Published: 2/15/2021
  7. Episode 15: Radical Candor - Giving Criticism In a Business Environment

    Published: 2/1/2021
  8. Episode 14: Theories of Artificial General Intelligence

    Published: 1/17/2021
  9. Special Edition: Theory of Anything Hosts David Deutsch

    Published: 1/11/2021
  10. Episode 13: Objections to Artificial General Intelligence

    Published: 1/10/2021
  11. Episode 12: Artificial Intelligence vs Artificial General Intelligence

    Published: 1/3/2021
  12. Episode 11: The Turing Principle and Artificial General Intelligence

    Published: 12/27/2020
  13. Episode 10: What Use is Computational Theory?

    Published: 12/20/2020
  14. Episode 9: Introduction to Computational Theory

    Published: 12/13/2020
  15. Episode 8: The Disneyfication of Star Wars

    Published: 10/11/2020
  16. Episode 7: Lies, Damn Lies, and Statistics

    Published: 7/5/2020
  17. Episode 6: Dancing the Ancient Forms

    Published: 6/29/2020
  18. Episode 5: The Avengers, Time Travel, and The Deutsch Proposition

    Published: 6/22/2020
  19. Episode 4: What Makes a Good Explanation?

    Published: 5/9/2020
  20. Episode 3: The Popper-Deutsch Solution

    Published: 4/30/2020

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A podcast that explores intelligence and the search for Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) through the lens of the Popper-Deutsch Theory of Knowledge. David Deutsch has argued that Quantum Mechanics, Darwin's Theory of Evolution, Karl Popper's Theory of Knowledge, and Computational Theory (aka "The Four Strands") represent an early 'theory of everything' be it science, philosophy, computation, politics, or art.