The term hive mind is now fully thought of as a good term, rather than a concept that strikes fear yhet's a great question. I think the idea of a mind or collective intelligence is it still has the scary downside, and it should, but the positive upside is way too visible for people to ignore. And what flynn and dickens pointed out in their famous paper was that when our environment chan most of us get to choose our own environment as adults, but some of us have our environments as adults forced upon us. The flin effect really does show up in substantive intelligence, not just some sort of nominal intelligence. But what's the key environment? So whatever ireland
Why is Garett Jones willing to write books about risky topics like the case for reducing democratic accountability? Is it the iconoclastic Mason econ culture? Supportive colleagues like Tyler? Those help, but what ultimately gives Garett peace of mind is that he’ll never have to go hungry because he has a broad and deep knowledge of econometric tools. It’s a skillset he recommends to all research economists precisely so they can take bigger risks in their careers—or at least be well-prepared to shape policy in an unelected position at a central bank.
Garett joined Tyler to discuss his book 10% Less Democracy, including why America shouldn’t be run by bondholders, what single reform would most effectively achieve more limited democracy, how markets shape cognitive skills, the three important P’s of the repeated prisoner’s dilemma, why French cuisine is still underrated, Buchanan vs. Tullock, Larry David vs. Seinfeld, the biggest mistake in Twitter macroeconomics, the biggest challenges facing the Mormon church, what studying to be a sommelier taught him about economics, the Garett Jones vision of America, and more.
Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links.
Recorded January 10th, 2020 Other ways to connect