We're now staged three on a malaria f exine crisper, against sickl celynemia. And why is it that right now it seems so many biotex successes are turning into reality? They're not just cool articles in the atlantic. Theyre things that are working. It's its kind of the expanded frontiers coupled with n this is what i would say, at least, that's where we come from,. The willingness and the ability to leap, right? So my belief is that we've reached a level of capital, confident, commitment, community - starting words that it takes to get to a critical mass where people are willing to leap.
“The world of innovation is very much one of toggling between survival and then thriving,” says Noubar Afeyan. Co-founder of Moderna and CEO of Flagship Pioneering, the biomedical innovator, philanthropist, and entrepreneur credits his successes to his “paranoid optimism” shaped by his experiences as an Armenian-American. Exceptional achievements like the rapid development of the COVID-19 vaccine, he believes, aren’t usually unpredictable but rather the result of systematic processes that include embracing unreasonable propositions and even unreasonable people.
He joined Tyler to discuss which aspect of entrepreneurship is hardest to teach, his predictions on the future of gene editing and CRISPR technology, why the pharmaceutical field can’t be winner takes all, why “basic research” is a poor term, the secret to Boston’s culture of innovation, the potential of plant biotech, why Montreal is (still) a special place to him, how his classical pianist mother influenced his musical tastes, his discussion-based approach to ethical dilemmas, how thinking future-backward shapes his approach to business and philanthropy, the blessing and curse of Lebanese optimism, the importance of creating a culture where people can say things that are wrong, what we can all learn by being an American by choice, and more.
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Recorded January 6th, 2021 Other ways to connect