PODCAST
The Long Now Foundation
by The Long Now Foundation
The Long Now Foundation was established in 01996* to encourage and foster long-term thinking and responsibility through a variety of projects including a clock designed to last 10,000 years (now being constructed in Texas), a monthly seminar series about long-term thinking, and the Rosetta Project which documents and preserves the diversity of human languages. Find out more at http://longnow.orgLong Now’s founders and board of directors include pioneering scientists, writers, technologists, artists and futurists such as Brian Eno, Danny Hillis, David Eagleman, David Rumsey, Douglas Carlston, Esther Dyson, Katherine Fulton, Kevin Kelly, Kim Polese, Michael Keller, Paul Saffo, Peter Schwartz, Ping Fu and Stewart Brand. The Long Now Foundation is headquartered in San Francisco’s Fort Mason Center. Projects of the Long Now Foundation include: The 10,000 year clock: http://longnow.org/clock/ The Interval at Long Now: https://theinterval.org The Rosetta Project: http://roset
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341
Eric Ries - Incorruptible by Design
What if we redefined “profit” as maximizing human flourishing? Eric Ries has seen the corrosive effects of shareholder primacy at every company he’s worked with. Mission-driven companies, however, are the outliers: demonstrating stronger profits, better talent, and deeper loyalty. So why don't we build differently? In the long arc of economic history, our current definitions of profit and value are relatively new, held in place by normative consensus. But we can flip the script. By using what Ries calls “mission transmission,” we can build companies around a coherent set of values, where profit becomes the natural extension of those values, rather than the only goal. “Start with the thing you have the most agency over," he said. "You can decide the purpose of your work.” We built this system, Ries urged, so we can rebuild it better. Eric’s new book, "Incorruptible: Why Good Companies Go Bad…and How Great Companies Stay Great," is available worldwide on May 26, 02026. This talk was presented April 7, 02026 at the Cowell Theater in San Francisco. Episode notes: https://longnow.org/talks/02026-ries/ The event livestream is here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MptHy1KZnI This talk is part of Long Now Talks. Launched by Stewart Brand in 02003, Long Now Talks has invited more than 400 leading thinkers to share their civilization-scale ideas with a live audience and millions around the globe tuning in to our podcast and videos. Long Now Talks are brought to you by The Long Now Foundation, which has spent the last 25 years igniting cultural imagination around long-term thinking. By inspiring thought and conversation about how we've been shaped by the last 10,000 years and what might be in store for us over the next 10,000 years, Long Now Talks seek to expand our collective sense of the present moment. Long Now Talks cover futurism and speculative fiction; time, nature, and contemplative practices; the intersection of the humanities and sciences; the evolution of counterculture to cyberculture; cultural imagination, land art and public monuments; and of course, long-term thinking and being a good ancestor. In our age of compounding crises, The Long Now Foundation is a counterweight. We are a force that imagines new possibilities, thinks critically, and takes action over the long term. We believe that when we all come together, bound by commitment and curiosity, audacious things become possible. Will you join us? https://longnow.org/join
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340
Melody Jue - Ocean Memory
The ocean is not empty. It is a vast storage facility of memory agents. Ocean organisms use the chemical signatures of seawater for memory and intelligence in ways we can barely imagine. In her Talk, Melody Jue said our struggle to understand ocean memory comes from our terrestrial bias. This bias shapes what we try to protect and the technologies we develop. We must, she said, “deterritorialize the sensorium.” To better translate the ocean's memories, Jue worked with interdisciplinary artists, musicians, divers, and researchers to develop soundscapes that help us “smell” with our ears, remapping chemosensation through synesthesia. Don’t miss the moment in the Talk where she plays two original music pieces that use the density and flow of sound to mimic chemical gradients of seawater. “The ocean teaches us humility,” Jue concluded. “It makes us confront our preconceptions about the planet and sensation.” This talk was presented March 18, 02026 at the Cowell Theater in San Francisco. Episode notes: https://longnow.org/talks/02026-jue/ The event livestream is here: https://youtube.com/live/rVruWwO4hZg This talk is part of Long Now Talks. Launched by Stewart Brand in 02003, Long Now Talks has invited more than 400 leading thinkers to share their civilization-scale ideas with a live audience and millions around the globe tuning in to our podcast and videos. Long Now Talks are brought to you by The Long Now Foundation, which has spent the last 25 years igniting cultural imagination around long-term thinking. By inspiring thought and conversation about how we've been shaped by the last 10,000 years and what might be in store for us over the next 10,000 years, Long Now Talks seek to expand our collective sense of the present moment. Long Now Talks cover futurism and speculative fiction; time, nature, and contemplative practices; the intersection of the humanities and sciences; the evolution of counterculture to cyberculture; cultural imagination, land art and public monuments; and of course, long-term thinking and being a good ancestor. In our age of compounding crises, The Long Now Foundation is a counterweight. We are a force that imagines new possibilities, thinks critically, and takes action over the long term. We believe that when we all come together, bound by commitment and curiosity, audacious things become possible. Will you join us? https://longnow.org/join
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339
Claire Isabel Webb & Nina Miolane - The Geometry of Consciousness
What is consciousness — and how might we describe it scientifically? Neuroscience can map neural activity with extraordinary detail, yet the relationship between electrical signals and subjective experience remains one of humanity’s most enduring questions. Mathematician and machine learning researcher Nina Miolane approaches this question from an unexpected direction: geometry. In her work, patterns of neural activity can be understood as structures in a mathematical space. In this view, cognition may be described through the geometry of neural representations: patterns that can be measured, compared, and modeled across biological and artificial systems. In conversation with science historian Claire Isabel Webb, Miolane explores how new mathematical frameworks may help illuminate long-standing puzzles in the science of mind. If consciousness arises from structured patterns of activity, what does that imply about intelligence? Could similar patterns arise in machine systems? And what might it mean to study consciousness as a phenomenon that admits formal description? As humanity increasingly shares cognitive labor with machines, a rigorous language for studying the mind would be game-changing. If that language could unlock a deeper understanding of consciousness, it would not only have broad implications for the evolving relationship between human cognition and AI, but for how we as human beings fundamentally understand ourselves. From Aristotle to Descartes, every generation has recast the mystery of consciousness. A geometric and mathematical explanation might lead to a paradigm shift that could affect all of society's pace layers — how we design, govern, and relate to each other in the next 10,000 years and beyond. This talk was presented April 20, 02026 at The Interval in San Francisco. Episode notes: https://longnow.org/talks/02026-webb-miolane/ The event livestream is here: https://youtube.com/live/w6MvOXg9fdw This talk is part of Long Now Talks. Launched by Stewart Brand in 02003, Long Now Talks has invited more than 400 leading thinkers to share their civilization-scale ideas with a live audience and millions around the globe tuning in to our podcast and videos. Long Now Talks are brought to you by The Long Now Foundation, which has spent the last 25 years igniting cultural imagination around long-term thinking. By inspiring thought and conversation about how we've been shaped by the last 10,000 years and what might be in store for us over the next 10,000 years, Long Now Talks seek to expand our collective sense of the present moment. Long Now Talks cover futurism and speculative fiction; time, nature, and contemplative practices; the intersection of the humanities and sciences; the evolution of counterculture to cyberculture; cultural imagination, land art and public monuments; and of course, long-term thinking and being a good ancestor. In our age of compounding crises, The Long Now Foundation is a counterweight. We are a force that imagines new possibilities, thinks critically, and takes action over the long term. We believe that when we all come together, bound by commitment and curiosity, audacious things become possible. Will you join us? https://longnow.org/join
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
The Long Now Foundation was established in 01996* to encourage and foster long-term thinking and responsibility through a variety of projects including a clock designed to last 10,000 years (now being constructed in Texas), a monthly seminar series about long-term thinking, and the Rosetta Project which documents and preserves the diversity of human languages. Find out more at http://longnow.orgLong Now’s founders and board of directors include pioneering scientists, writers, technologists, artists and futurists such as Brian Eno, Danny Hillis, David Eagleman, David Rumsey, Douglas Carlston, Esther Dyson, Katherine Fulton, Kevin Kelly, Kim Polese, Michael Keller, Paul Saffo, Peter Schwartz, Ping Fu and Stewart Brand. The Long Now Foundation is headquartered in San Francisco’s Fort Mason Center. Projects of the Long Now Foundation include: The 10,000 year clock: http://longnow.org/clock/ The Interval at Long Now: https://theinterval.org The Rosetta Project: http://roset
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The Long Now Foundation
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