12 episodes

Thinking Hard or Hardly Thinking is your home for reflections and conversations that explore the tightly-interwoven connections between topics like philosophy, psychology, history, economics, politics, religion, spirituality, systems, entrepreneurship, and more.

It’s a high level view of the dilemmas, tensions, and paradoxes that motivate us to find our place in the world.

Each episode will stimulate you, challenge you, and ultimately leave you inspired and optimistic so you can maximize your success, satisfaction, and enjoyment of life.

Thinking Hard or Hardly Thinking Aaron Marx

    • Business

Thinking Hard or Hardly Thinking is your home for reflections and conversations that explore the tightly-interwoven connections between topics like philosophy, psychology, history, economics, politics, religion, spirituality, systems, entrepreneurship, and more.

It’s a high level view of the dilemmas, tensions, and paradoxes that motivate us to find our place in the world.

Each episode will stimulate you, challenge you, and ultimately leave you inspired and optimistic so you can maximize your success, satisfaction, and enjoyment of life.

    The most popular episodes of season 1/How to get in touch

    The most popular episodes of season 1/How to get in touch

    A bonus episode after Season 1! Thanks for listening. Recapping the most popular episodes of Season 1 and previewing a few of the topics coming up in Season 2. What are your favorite episodes of Season 1? Reach out and let me know! @aaronjmarx https://m.facebook.com/Aaron-Marx-104819877884771/ www.aaronjmarx.com

    • 10 min
    Your Time or God's Time

    Your Time or God's Time

    How do you decide how hard to work, how aggressively to push toward your goals, what projects to start at what times? Are the results of these decisions in our hands at all, or do they spring from an intricate and ever-shifting collaborative dance with the universe? Where do you look to know what to pursue? Is it the needs of the market? Your friends? Trusted coaches and advisors? Trendy industry leaders? Your intuition? Is success in business or creative endeavors a matter of our own free will, or are there barriers against which we will inevitably become stuck if we push too hard, ignoring the flow of the universe, Source, God, whatever you want to call it? When someone honestly tells you they are wildly successful are they ever really able to tell you why, or did they instinctively nail that delicate give-and-take between personal effort and gentle yielding to the essence of all that is? Can anyone who truly finds this balance ever completely communicate its recipe? Does yielding to the flow of life, the universe, and everything guarantee one’s material success, or do we need to be prepared to push through resistance? How do we even know the right impulse at the right time? We’ll be exploring all of that and more today on Thinking Hard, or Hardly Thinking. Learn more about Aaron at www.aaronjmarx.com Read/listen to the Entrepreneurial Manifesto: https://www.aaronjmarx.com/manifesto

    • 23 min
    The American Artform

    The American Artform

    Art is a human instinct. We seek to beautify our existence, our lives, our worlds. We strive to perform actions, produce goods, in such a manner by which they simply become inspiring by the very level of craft and refinement that they reach. For as long as the human spirit has animated our outlook and motivated our choices we have striven for beauty, inspiration, idealism, the purview of artistry. I realized not long ago that the arts we revere have certain origins and are not distributed equally across cultures. If I were to ask you which art is most distinctive in American culture, you might give me a few answers. Jazz, musical theater, cinema, the elusive great American novel. But I think there is an American artform far more pervasive and influential in our modern world than any of those, with all other cultures and nations looking to American for its artistic models and trendsetters, and it’s perhaps something you do not even think of as a form of art. The art is entrepreneurship, and while America is often imitated, its spirit is never duplicated. From the very beginning this was American’s art, and remains so to this day. We don’t stand out in the others nearly to this extent, but entrepreneurship is what America was made for, and that is where we shine. In my opinion, we have elevated entrepreneurship to an art in a way no other nation has, and in a way we have not attained with any other medium.
    We’ll be exploring all of that and more today on Thinking Hard, or Hardly Thinking. Learn more about Aaron at www.aaronjmarx.com Read/listen to the Entrepreneurial Manifesto: https://www.aaronjmarx.com/manifesto

    • 21 min
    The Source of Value

    The Source of Value

    There is a nickname for the human species that is often invoked in models of exchange and rational decision making. The nickname is “homo economicus”. This implies a simple yet profound truth about the nature of being human and participating in the human experience: we are creatures driven by economic calculations, perhaps at our very deepest and most essential levels. Even if we do not consciously observe this process, or even ever become aware of it, it is always there, working behind the scenes of every interaction we have and decision we make. More fundamental still is the elusive concept of value, the often nebulous but deeply compelling sense of whether things are worth having or experiences worth doing. We are driven by this sense at all times and yet, when you drill down to its essence, its ultimate source and nature becomes elusive, ineffable, protean, and just plain mysterious. And yet, it is always there, forcing evaluations, compromises, monumental decisions at every level. What is it? Where does it come from? How is it created? And what is a definition we can ultimately agree on if indeed this is even possible?
    We’ll be exploring all of that and more today on Thinking Hard, or Hardly Thinking. Learn more about Aaron at www.aaronjmarx.com Read/listen to the Entrepreneurial Manifesto: https://www.aaronjmarx.com/manifesto

    • 23 min
    Zero-Sum Game

    Zero-Sum Game

    If you challenge yourself to truly examine your deeply held and subconscious beliefs about the nature of economics I suspect you will find a tension, perhaps a number of them. And I think these tensions boil down to the competing sense that money, value, currency, compensation, whatever you want to call it, is either abundant and ever-expanding, or limited, scarce and zero-sum. If you are truly able to observe what you actually believe about money in all sorts of situations, and at different levels in your thought patterns, I can almost guarantee you will find scarcity in some places, and abundance in others. The fact is it’s a complicated question, and might have a few twists and turns that you haven’t yet thought about. To me there are few questions more fascinating than whether economics is a matter of abundance or if it’s really just a zero-sum game. Indeed, every conviction hold and prescription we offer about work ethic, policy, and international relations hinges on this very question at their very heart.
    We’ll be exploring all of that and more today on Thinking Hard, or Hardly Thinking. Learn more about Aaron at www.aaronjmarx.com Read/listen to the Entrepreneurial Manifesto: https://www.aaronjmarx.com/manifesto

    • 20 min
    "We All Want the Same Thing"

    "We All Want the Same Thing"

    Certain divisive areas of human life, most especially politics and religion I tend to notice, often create sharply polarized and even tribal divisions between groups of people who seem to desire and pursue highly dissimilar visions of society, culture, morality, economics, character, attitude, and much else. A tension immediately arises between the impulse to unify these disparate and often antagonistic groups around shared values, and the opposing impulse to vilify and denounce the other. The unifying impulse is often associated with and justified by rhetoric resembling some version of “we all ultimately want the same thing”, the implication being that the ultimate vision is the same, whereas the differences lie within the more superficial components of approach and technique, being that if we zoom out far enough we will behold a highly unifying bigger picture of the grand vision we all ultimately seek. But, is this actually true, coherent, or even possible to discern? How vague and abstract a vision must we reduce in order to reconcile this? Does anyone actually know what they want? Are certain political philosophies merely a means to an end which will eventually give way to some kind of utopia that is as practically attained through putting an opposing ideology into practice? Is this a tension we even want resolved, or is the very push and pull that generates so much energy and reactive momentum in politics largely dependent on this dynamic?
    We’ll be exploring all of that and more today on Thinking Hard, or Hardly Thinking. Learn more about Aaron at www.aaronjmarx.com Read/listen to the Entrepreneurial Manifesto: https://www.aaronjmarx.com/manifesto

    • 19 min

Top Podcasts In Business

Žiška Podkast
Žiška
Business Daily
BBC World Service
Biznis Price
Vladimir Stankovic Vladsdigital
TED Business
TED
She Means Business Show
Carrie Green
The Ramsey Show
Ramsey Network