Difference between revisions of "Palo Alto Prize - Eric Weinstein (YouTube Content)"

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(Created page with "{{subst::Economic Thinking In A Fallible World (YouTube Content)}}")
 
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|title=Economic Thinking In A Fallible World
|title=To 120 and Beyond: Exploring Homeostatic Capacity with the Palo Alto Longevity Prize
|image=
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|host=Marshall Auerback
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|guests=[[Eric Weinstein]]
|guests=[[Eric Weinstein]]
|length=00:16:42
|length=00:19:17
|releasedate=22 June 2014
|releasedate=10 November 2014
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|link1title=YouTube
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|link1=[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrZmq1Ti3Po Watch]
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|link2=[https://theportal.group/eric-weinstein-economic-thinking-in-a-fallible-world/ Read]
|link2=[https://theportal.group/eric-weinstein-economic-thinking-in-a-fallible-world/ Read]
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|prev=The Economics of Radical Uncertainty (YouTube Content)
|prev=Economic Thinking In A Fallible World (YouTube Content)
|next=Economic Thinking In A Fallible World (YouTube Content)
|next=TEDxYouth@Hillsborough: A radical take on education (YouTube Content)
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'''Economic Thinking In A Fallible World''' was an interview with [[Eric Weinstein]] by Marshall Auerback of the Institute for New Economic Thinking.
'''Palo Alto Prize - Eric Weinstein''' was a presentation by [[Eric Weinstein]] for the Palo Alto Longevity Prize..


{{#widget:YouTube|id=TrZmq1Ti3Po}}
{{#widget:YouTube|id=c_DV_hLlVIY}}


== Description ==
== Description ==
By Marshall Auerback
http://paloaltoprize.com​


The philosopher Karl Popper argued that we cannot know empirical truths with absolute certainty.
(c) Palo Alto Prize
 
According to Popper, even scientific laws can't be verified beyond a shadow of a doubt. They can only be falsified by testing. One failed test is enough to falsify, but no amount of conforming instances are sufficient to verify. Scientific laws are hypothetical in character and their truth remains subject to testing. Ideologies that claim to be in possession of the ultimate truth are making a false claim; therefore, they can be imposed on society only by force. 
 
This concept creates particular challenges for economists, who like to think of themselves as "scientists" subject to the disciplines of rigorous empirical truths. But economics and economic policy don't work that way because empirical economic truths typically are open to interpretation.
 
The reality is far more complicated. In situations with thinking participants, the participants' view of the world is always partial and distorted. So our view of the world by necessity is fallible and incomplete. In addition, these distorted views can influence the situation to which they relate because false views lead to inappropriate actions, as we've seen in many different spheres, such as policy making, central banking practices, and investment decisions.
 
Eric Weinstein of Thiel Capital, a mathematician, physicist, and economist, explains these issues and their potential consequences in the interview.


== Transcript ==
== Transcript ==

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