A podcast about the theory of knowledge applied to all fields that interest me (management, economics, physics, ...). My attempt at understanding & applying the ideas of Karl Popper (and his epistemology "Critical Rationalism") and David Deutsch (author of "The fabric of reality" and "The beginning of infinity").
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November 10, 202515 min
Episode 174: 7 reasons why money printing is bad
Quick tour of 7 negative effects of money printing1) Purchasing power declines, we get poorer2) Focus on the now instead of investing for the future3) Boom-bust cycles4) Picking winners and losers arbitrarily (cantillon)5)Increases inequality6) Finances the government deficits too easily7) Favors industrial policy to be set by government instead of left to the market process
October 20, 20258 min
Episode 173: Why I never fill out customer satisfaction surveys
Some thoughts about the use of Customer Satisfaction surveys. Plus an alternative.Also check us out at: https://rapidideaimprovement.com
August 27, 202522 min
Commercial and central banking - What I learned from Bob Murphy
My attempt at summarising Bob Murphy's great episode on banking (mainly from the Human Action podcast)
July 25, 202512 min
Episode 172: Debating socialism versus capitalism
Some ideas on how the typical debates about capitalism versus socialism go, and what to potentially improve about them.
June 22, 202520 min
Episode 171: Why the Chicago School of economics can not conclude that central banking is bad
How the Chicago School of economics will not arrive at the conclusion that central banking may be bad
February 26, 202519 min
Episode 170: The concept of a malinvestment in the Austrian Business Cycle Theory
How malinvestments (investments that go against the time preference of consumers but are undertaken nevertheless) are caused by monetary policy and how they cause in return a transition from boom to bust in the economic cycle
February 8, 202518 min
Episode 169: Is decarbonisation an effective strategy?
Decarbonisation can (and should) be evaluated in terms of how effectively it reaches its goal, or in other words, how well it solves the problem it purports to solve.
December 26, 202418 min
Episode 168: Why it is irrational to not even consider looking into Austrian Economics
In the science of economics, there are different schools of thought, they all give different answers to economic problems how is prosperity caused in a society, under conditions of scarcity.
Some schools will emphasize the role of government more than others, … Each school has a position on the relative importance of production versus consumptions to generate prosperity, .. also they have positions on how consumers behave (rational / contextual behavioural/ choosing means to satisfy ends, ….)
Now you can compare all the different positions of each school and then make up your mind what school to follow
But there is a more fundamental criterion if you want to figure out what schools are really relevant and which ones are less so, and that criterion is the methodology
Austrian Economics is different from all other schools in terms of methodology
October 19, 202410 min
Episode 167: Monotony, politics or problem solving: 3 states of experiencing work
We can experience different "states" when working. I distinguish 3 of them here: monotony, politics and problem solving. I argue that only the latter is fun (e.g. allows the experience of Flow to arise) and has the potential to cause progress.
August 18, 202431 min
Episode 166: On climate: philosophy of climate science, climate science and morality
Connecting 3 things: philosophy of (climate) science, the actual climate science and the morality of it (i.e. "What should we do about it ?")
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