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Notes From The Progress Studies Conference

Astral Codex Ten Podcast

Release Date: 11/12/2024

Links For November 2024 show art Links For November 2024

Astral Codex Ten Podcast

[I haven’t independently verified each link. On average, commenters will end up spotting evidence that around two or three of the links in each links post are wrong or misleading. I correct these as I see them, and will highlight important corrections later, but I can’t guarantee I will have caught them all by the time you read this.]

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Astral Codex Ten Podcast

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Astral Codex Ten Podcast

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Astral Codex Ten Podcast

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Notes From The Progress Studies Conference show art Notes From The Progress Studies Conference

Astral Codex Ten Podcast

Tyler Cowen is an economics professor and blogger at . Patrick Collison is the billionaire founder of the online payments company Stripe. In 2019, they calling for a discipline of Progress Studies, which would figure out what progress was and how to increase it. Later that year, tech entrepreneur Jason Crawford stepped up to spearhead the effort. The immediate reaction was . There were the usual gripes that “progress” was problematic because it could imply that some cultures/times/places/ideas were better than others. But there were also more specific objections: weren’t historians...

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Astral Codex Ten Podcast

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Astral Codex Ten Podcast

Thanks to our local meetup groups for doing this! Quick lookup version: AUSTIN: BOSTON: CHICAGO: LOS ANGELES: NEW YORK CITY: OAKLAND/BERKELEY: PHILADELPHIA: SAN FRANCISCO: SEATTLE: Longer version with commentary:  

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Astral Codex Ten Podcast

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Tyler Cowen is an economics professor and blogger at Marginal Revolution. Patrick Collison is the billionaire founder of the online payments company Stripe. In 2019, they wrote an article calling for a discipline of Progress Studies, which would figure out what progress was and how to increase it. Later that year, tech entrepreneur Jason Crawford stepped up to spearhead the effort.

The immediate reaction was mostly negative. There were the usual gripes that “progress” was problematic because it could imply that some cultures/times/places/ideas were better than others. But there were also more specific objections: weren’t historians already studying progress? Wasn’t business academia already studying innovation? Are you really allowed to just invent a new field every time you think of something it would be cool to study?

It seems like you are. Five years later, Progress Studies has grown enough to hold its first conference. I got to attend, and it was great.

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