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Rapid Idea Improvement

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").

  1. 174

    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

  2. 173

    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

  3. 172

    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)

  4. 171

    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.

  5. 170

    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

  6. 169

    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

  7. 168

    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.

  8. 167

    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

  9. 166

    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.

  10. 165

    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 ?")

  11. 164

    Episode 165: The myth of the Keynesian multiplier

    Can we get out of recessions through government spending ?

  12. 163

    Episode 164: Philosophy of science : Karl Popper’s Critical Rationalism

    Key concepts of Critical Rationalism: All knowledge is conjectural Realism Conjecture and refutation Fallibilism

  13. 162

    Episode 163: SSIA a problem solving based sales approach

    What is the SSIA approach ? Why that approach and not some other ?

  14. 161

    Episode 162: selling is a creative, problem solving process

    To sell is to create knowledge about what actions influence your prospect's subjective valuation most optimally

  15. 160

    Episode 161: Philosophy of science : empiricism

    Empiricism in the philosophy of science emphasizes evidence, especially as discovered in experiments.  It is a fundamental part of the scientific method that all hypotheses and theories must be tested against observations of the natural world, rather than resting solely on a periori reasoning, intuition or revelation

  16. 159

    Episode 160: Philosophy of science : induction and the problem of induction

    What is induction ? The process of going from a set of observations to a generalisation See multiple objects with a characteristic X, all such objects have characteristic X The sun rose every morning already (every observed morning had the characteristic that the sun rose) … so the sun will rise every morning, so tomorrow the sun will rise again  “The future will behave like the past”

  17. 158

    Episode 159: Philosophy of science : instrumentalism (and why it is bad)

    In the philosophy of science, instrumentalism is the view that concepts and theories are merely useful instruments whose worth is measured not by whether the concepts and theories are true or false (or correctly depict reality), but by how effective they are in explaining and predicting phenomena.

  18. 157

    Episode 158: Why knowing how the customer thinks is not enough

    Suppose you are a sales perons, and have a product that allows the customer to be 3% more efficient in his operations Why is just tranferring that knowledge to the customer not enough to make him buy your product ? You may be wrong There may be conflicting ideas still in the mind of the customer Knowledge needs to grow in the mind before it can be enacted upon

  19. 156

    Episode 157: The only problem a salesperson has to solve

    What problem ? “What can I do to influence the subjective valuation of my product by the prospect?” Why that problem ? You only sell something if the customer values your product more than its price (and more than alternatives)

  20. 155

    Episode 156: Epistemology, the most important subject nobody is talking about

    Why is epistemology so important ? And why is it not talked about ?

  21. 154

    Episode 155: How to let ideas "compete" ?

    3 concrete tips: Express ideas as explanations Say how an action will transform a situation or capability, and why that action NOT : subjective opinion about importance (loose actions / goals) Avoid positive arguments Arguments appeal to authority Encourage alternative ideas What other actions could lead to the same goal What other better goals can be achieved via these actions ?

  22. 153

    Episode 154: What is the fastest way to grow knowledge ? 

    “The fastest way to grow knowledge is to set up a "competition" between *multiple* ideas, all vying to solve the *same* problem”

  23. 152

    Episode 153: “Our strategy needs to be clear so we can all be on the same page “ (and why that’s wrong)

    Mistaken for multiple reasons: - You cannot be 100% clear about ideas - It's coercive - It's good that we have conflicts of ideas: only those lead to improvement of ideas

  24. 151

    Episode 152: We need to make sales more fun again ! (but we’re doing the opposite)

    Sales is not easy, and all things not easy can be made fun. More on that later What is not fun about sales now Inherently disappointing : getting so many no’s for 1 yes’ We make it dull or frustrating in two ways by the typical KPI management  Discussions about numbers By throwing vague ideas around Customer is key / our products have value Can say that about everything at all times, it does not solve any problem By justifying “the right way” all the time “You should just sell like this and the business will grow” If it doesn’t work, it is frustrating to having to repeat that all the time It does not allow for alternative trials/ suggestions What do we do to compensate, but what does not make it more fun Coaching Often analysis of who you are and what you should do to improve At the level of your personhood, not ideas to can help you sell more Also quite generic, simple tests, simple ideas (be more self conscious, we are all in this together) What can actually make sales more fun ? Approach it as a problem solving exercise The problem of what to do or say so that the subjective valuation of your product by the customer goes up You need a theory About the valuation  About what to say or do You need to improve your theory Find better ways to convey You can do that together with other sales people Not as just sharing opinions But really testing the theory “what is we did A instead of B, what would happen, and why ?” Creativity ! new ideas / improved theories ! The role of data: to point to an issue / not something you derive conclusions about All actions are a test of your theory. They provide useful information to change it or improve it. Don’t just celebrate succes, but more importantly learn from mistakes ! There is an objectively best theory about what to do to persuade a customer, it’s fun trying to seek it out, by throwing out ideas that don’t work and replacing them with ideas that might work

  25. 150

    Episode 151: How does knowledge grow ?

    Ideas/ knowledge can only change in 3 ways: Preventing them from changing: you secure them from changing by justifying their truth, by adding arguments to them that say why they are true, e.g. appeal to authority arguments. Subjectively adding parts to them (without critically investigating) that you feel are missing / or throwing out parts that you feel are not needed Actually improving them: you find flaws in them and try to correct them

  26. 149

    Episode 150: It is not people who solve problems, it’s ideas that solve problems

    About the (intuitive) misconception: it’s people who solve problems, not really ideas

  27. 148

    Episode 149 : The common flaw in both “hard” and “soft” management methods

    "Hard" management methods: Focused on measurements (deviation between a target/ forecast and actuals), setting up authority (hierarchy, roles & responsibilities), predictions (visions, targets, goals, …), providing "clarity", ... "Soft" management methods: Focused on putting “people” central, with the idea that performance follows when people feel good

  28. 147

    Episode 148 : There is something fishy about the “blue” color type in the Insights Discovery people assessment

    Sharing a quibble I have with the "blue" people characteristic in the Insights Disovery people assessment method.

  29. 146

    Episode 147 : The 2 very different types of answers to “why?” questions

    The same question "why?" about some phenomenon in reality can have 2 very different types of answers: (i) the proposal of a causal explanation and (ii) the justification of the truth of the phenomenon

  30. 145

    Episode 146 : Forget “result-driven/ action-driven”, try to become “explanation-driven”

    An explanation is a consistent mental model of a transformation/ task/ change, and it contains: The result or goal you want to achieve The actions required to achieve that goal The arguments why (why that particular goal (and not some other), why will those particular actions lead to the goal (and not some others))

  31. 144

    Episode 145 : Why is epistemology relevant and important ?

    Epistemology is relevant when explaining *any* human activity, as it is a better/ deeper explanation than explanations at the level of behaviours (actions) or personality (assessments of persons as a whole)

  32. 143

    Episode 144 : on the use of KPIs

    Key aspects discussed related to how companies typically use KPIs Start from the KPI and not from the problem and solution (for which the KPI was supposed to be an indicator) Corrective actions are parochial and without causal power Corrective actions that have causal power are corrective explanations and contain not only an action but also a goal and argument for how the action will cause the goal, but the corrective explanation is disconnected from the original explanation, i.e. does not serve to improve either one of both or both KPI focus leads to the idea that only KPIs are a relevant source to criticise a solution. Whereas *any* creative argument can serve as good criticism to improve a solution (think about the aspects of a solution that are still not measurable because too early stage for example)

  33. 142

    Episode 143: There is no problem solving method (and that is a good thing !) 

    There are no "problem solving methods". Reason being that if there were such a method, we would be able to automatically crank out solutions by simply following it. The same goes for the "scientific method" (science is also problem solving). For example, Einstein had 2 miracle years (1905 and 1915), but followed "the scientific method" every day of his 40+ year career. If there was a valid scientific method, his output would have been much more smooth over that entire period. Solutions to problems come from creativity, and improvement in solutions comes from correcting mistakes in the solutions. Both creativity (having ideas) and error-correction can not be prescribed by a method. Which is a good thing ! It allows novelty, progress, improvement, ... By the way, there is a method for "problem definition" though: the steps to take to define a problem, i.e. the AS-IS vs the TO-BE, the obstacles in between, the root causes of them, ... But defining a problem is still independent from the idea that will solve it.

  34. 141

    Episode 142: The austrian economics argument for why money creation cannot increase wealth in society

    Does money printing create wealth ? Austrian economics says no and with a very simple but powerful logical argument.

  35. 140

    Episode 141: On David Deutsch’ “Knowledge is information with causal power”

    Some thoughts on David Deutsch” definition of knowledge as ‘information with causal power” Also some ideas on how to use this in organisations

  36. 139

    Episode 140: The problem with problem solving

    It is not contested that managers rely on their teams to get problems solved. However, in practise this turns out less easy than stated here. I go into some of the reasons why it is not trivial and concrete ways for improving this.

  37. 138

    Episode 139 - The austrian business cycle theory

    What is a business cycle ? The role of money. The unhampered economy. The hampered economy

  38. 137
  39. 136

    Episode 137 - A critique of the Lencioni pyramid in teamwork

    The natural state of any relationship is that fact that ideas differ. That is not “a shame” … or a proof that there is distrust. It is just the natural starting position. If it were a proof of distrust, then the first step would indeed have to be to start developing trust Instead, trust emerges, but is not a methodological primary step to achieve The moral process and the knowledge creation process run in parallel. Moral: being open, not lying, not being opportunistic, listening …. Knowledge creation : the correction of errors on both sides

  40. 135

    Episode 136 - A criticism of and alternative to the DMAIC method in continuous improvement

    DMAIC: Define the problem (Set the goal, ...) Measure the problem (AS IS, ...) Analyse (Root cause analysis, ...) Implement (Find solutions test and implement) Control (Monitor and sustain improvements, ...) Popper’s method: Problem definition ( "What to do next ?" Given the ... Root cause analysis, AS-IS / TO-BE, ...) Tentative Solution (Tentative answer to the what to do next question, i.e. a guess for what to do to solve the problem) Error-correction (Using not only data but also argument) New Problem

  41. 134

    Episode 135 - Problem solving methods: the crucial ingredient they don’t mention

    Illustrating what methods don't mention via the DMAIC problem solving method

  42. 133

    Episode 134 - Two radically different approaches to problem solving

    Comparing the Popperian method to problem solving to it's alternative

  43. 132

    Episode 133 - The problem with ESG as a vehicle for moral progress in companies

    Thoughts on why I think ESG is not a good vehicle for moral progress in companies

  44. 131

    Episode 132 - How I got into Austrian Economics

    Some thoughts on why and how I took up an interest in Austrian Economics

  45. 130

    Episode 131 - A new brainstorming format and procedure

    Start from a problem (incl. scope, conditions for good solutions, …) Generate ideas  with idea owners Separate session on criticism in group (NOT adaptations) Idea owner’s free choice to adapt idea or not

  46. 129

    Episode 130 - Management, just like science, is "explanation based", and not "evidence based"

    Knowledge creation is "evidence based" when it starts from evidence, and "explanation based" when it starts from a problem and a (guessed) explanation for how to solve it

  47. 128

    Episode 129 - Why all plans are wrong and why that is a positive thing

    All plans are wrong for 2 main categories of reasons The goal is wrong: What you really get when you execute the steps may not correspond to the stated goal. Or the goal conflicts with another goal you want to achieve The steps are wrong: you need different steps to achieve the goal you said to achieve There are 2 ways to deal with this: The bad way: seeking positive arguments The good way: seeking criticisms and improve the plan

  48. 127

    Episode 128 - Two opposite conceptions about what science is: the inductive method versus Karl Popper's explanation

    Covering two opposite conceptions about what science is: the inductive method versus Popper's method Also briefly covering what the relevance of this is to all our "other" types of knowledge (e.g. sociological, political, moral, ...)

  49. 126

    Episode 127 - Why do we like personality tests so much ?

    We seek answers to the question "Who am i ?" But is that possible ? What is the alternative ?

  50. 125

    Episode 126 - The role of goals and goal setting in a companies

    What you can not use a goal for: Derive what you should do next What you should not use a goal for: As an infallible prophecy of the future that cannot be wrong What you can use a goal for: Challenge your plans - eliminate things from your plan that will NOT get you to the goal Only one of the many ways to improve your plans, not the only one !

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

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").

HOSTED BY

Bart Vanderhaegen

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Rapid Idea Improvement currently has 50 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Rapid Idea Improvement about?

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...

How often does Rapid Idea Improvement release new episodes?

Rapid Idea Improvement has 50 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

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You can listen to Rapid Idea Improvement on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Rapid Idea Improvement?

Rapid Idea Improvement is created and hosted by Bart Vanderhaegen.
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