Episode Details

Back to Episodes
Tyler Cowen: The Prototypic Polymath

Tyler Cowen: The Prototypic Polymath

Published 1 year ago
Description

Audio file, also on Apple and Spotify

Tyler Cowen, Ph.D, is the Holbert L. Harris Professor of Economics at George Mason University. He is the author of 17 books, most recently Talent.: How to Identify Energizers, Creatives, and Winners Around the World. Tyler has been recognized as one of the most influential economists of the past decade. He initiated and directs the philanthropic project Emergent Ventures, writes a blog Marginal Revolution, and a podcast Conversations With Tyler, and also writes columns for The Free Press." He is writing a new book (and perhaps his last) on Mentors.

“Maybe AGI [Artificial General Intelligence] is like porn — I know it when I see it. And I’ve seen it.”—Tyler Cowen

Our conversation on acquiring information, A.I., A.G.I., the NIH, the assault on science, the role of doctors in the A.I. era,, the meaning of life, books of the future, and much more.

Transcript with links

Eric Topol (00:06):

Well, hello. This is Eric Topol with Ground Truths, and I am really thrilled today to have the chance to have a conversation with Tyler Cowen, who is, when you look up polymath in the dictionary, you might see a picture of him. He is into everything. And recently in the Economist magazine 1843, John Phipps wrote a great piece profile, the man who wants to know everything. And actually, I think there's a lot to that.

Tyler Cowen (00:36):

That's why we need longevity work, right?

Eric Topol (00:39):

Right. So he's written a number of books. How many books now, Tyler?

Tyler Cowen:

17, I'm not sure.

Eric Topol:

Only 17? And he also has a blog that's been going on for over 20 years, Marginal Revolution that he does with Alex Tabarrok.

Tyler Cowen (00:57):

Correct.

Eric Topol (00:57):

And yeah, and then Conversations with Tyler, a podcast, which I think an awful lot of people are tuned into that. So with that, I'm just thrilled to get a chance to talk with you because I used to think I read a lot, but then I learned about you.

“Cowen calls himself “hyperlexic”. On a good day, he claims to read four or five

books. Secretly, I timed him at 30 seconds per page reading a dense tract by

Martin Luther. “—John Phipps, The Economist’s 1843

I've been reading more from the AIs lately and less from books. So I'll get one good book and ask the

Listen Now

Love PodBriefly?

If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Support Us