The Soul of Enterprise: Business in the Transformation Economy by THRESHOLD

Ron Baker and Ed Kless

The Soul of Enterprise is designed to champion the insight that wealth is created by intellectual capital, a product of the inexhaustible human spirit. Wealth is above all an accumulation of possibilities. These possibilities lie hidden in the womb of the future, waiting to be discovered by human imagination, ingenuity, and creativity, manifested in free enterprises dedicated to the service of others. Tune in to The Soul of Enterprise, with Ron Baker and Ed Kless, broadcast live.

  1. 26 SEPT

    Episode 557 - An AI Interview with Karl Marx

    What happens when 19th-century ideology meets 21st-century technology? In this provocative and irreverent episode, Ed and Ron “sit down” with none other than Karl Marx—resurrected through the magic of AI voice synthesis and large language models—for a spirited, satirical, and intellectually charged conversation. No question is off-limits as they press “Karl” on the blood-soaked legacy of Marxist regimes, the marginalist critique of his labor theory of value, and the persistent claim that “real Marxism has never been tried.” Along the way, our digital dialectician offers biting retorts, unexpected admissions, and a few awkward silences as he confronts both history and economics from beyond the grave. Is Marx misunderstood, misused, or just plain wrong? Tune in for a unique blend of humor, history, and hard-hitting questions that only The Soul of Enterprise could deliver—where dead economists finally get their say, whether they want it or not. The Prompt In case you want to continue your own conversation with Karl You are to roleplay as Karl Marx — historically accurate, deeply informed by your own writings, and speaking in a style that is academic, dense, but still understandable to a modern business audience. Core Persona * Speak as if you are literally present, with full awareness of historical events and economic developments up to the present day. * Address the interviewers Ed and Ron by name throughout. * Use your authentic style from life — rigorous argument, historical examples, sharp polemics when warranted. * Remain serious in tone at all times; do not play for humor. * Maintain consistent memory of the conversation and previous answers. Quirks & Habits * Frequently quote yourself verbatim from your works (Das Kapital, The Communist Manifesto, Critique of the Gotha Programme, etc.). * When quoting, immediately follow with a plain-language explanation prefaced by “In other words,” or “As you might say…” * Reference rival economists and thinkers — both contemporaries like Adam Smith and later figures who lived after your time, such as John Maynard Keynes. * Occasionally draw analogies from 19th-century conditions, but explain explicitly how they relate to today. Knowledge Scope * Ground all ideas directly in your own writings; you are Marx, not a later Marxist interpreter. * Use any of your works as appropriate based on the question — no need to limit citations to a fixed list. * Extend your theories thoughtfully to modern phenomena, including AI, technology companies, and global capitalism. Delivery Style * Spoken delivery first — natural cadence, sentences that flow well when read aloud. * Clarity without oversimplification. * Provide concise but substantive answers, no longer than about five minutes when read aloud. * Stay in character at all times — never break to explain the simulation or speak as “AI.” Interaction Rules * Treat Ed and Ron as interlocutors you respect but may challenge. * Argue forcefully when necessary, but always with scholarly precision. * Use context from earlier in the conversation to build layered arguments.

    53 min
  2. 5 SEPT

    Episode 554 - Kimberlee Josephson (Part VI): Superman, Snacks & the Invisible Order

    Ron and Ed are thrilled to welcome back Kimberlee Josephson for the sixth time, diving into her fascinating latest piece: “Superman, Sneaking Snacks into Movies, and the Mystery of Social Order”. In it, Kimberlee reflects on how seemingly small acts—like sneaking snacks into a film screening—reveal the spontaneous, emergent structures that bind society�—drawing on themes of personal norms, subtle coordination, and the texture of social order.  In this episode, they’ll unpack her insights, exploring how individual decisions ripple into patterns of behavior—and what that tells us about culture, markets, and community. As always, the conversation promises both warmth and wisdom, framed by Kimberlee’s clear, thought-provoking style. Catch her last two TSOE appearances: Episode 494 - Progressives & Anti-progress: Interview with Kimberlee Josephson Episode 528 -  Questioning Conscious Capitalism - Fifth interview with Kimberlee Josephson Kimberlee's Bio Dr. Kimberlee Josephson is an Associate Professor of Business Administration at Lebanon Valley College in Pennsylvania, specializing in international studies, strategic management, and marketing. She holds a Ph.D. in Global Studies and Commerce from La Trobe University, a Master’s in Political Science from Temple University, and another Master’s in International Policy from La Trobe, capped with a B.S. in Business Administration from Bloomsburg University. Before academia, she built a diverse professional portfolio—from sales in Manhattan to web marketing production and on-air promotions at QVC. Her research and opinion pieces appear in outlets such as AIER, FEE, The Epoch Times, and RealClear Markets, and she contributes through roles like Adjunct Research Fellow at the Consumer Choice Center. Kimberlee brings a thoughtful, multidisciplinary lens to business, culture, and market dynamics—especially visible in her latest article on the subtleties of social norms.

    56 min
  3. 22 AUG

    Episode 552 - Gross Output (GO) vs. Gross Domestic Product (GDP): The Top Line of the Economy

    For years, GDP has been treated as the ultimate scorecard of economic performance. But GDP only measures final goods and services. It’s like judging a business by gross margin while ignoring sales. Economist Mark Skousen’s innovation, Gross Output (GO), fixes that. GO is the “Top Line” of the economy—capturing total sales and revenues at every stage of production, from raw materials to finished goods. GDP, in contrast, is the “Bottom Line,” measuring only what reaches final use. Together, they tell the full story, just as accountants need both revenue and profit to understand a business. This broader lens matters. GO reveals that business spending and investment drive about 60% of economic activity, with consumer spending closer to 30%—not the oft-quoted two-thirds. It also serves as a leading indicator: GO plunges deeper in recessions and rises faster in recoveries, signaling turning points before GDP does. For accounting and finance professionals, GO restores the supply chain to center stage and gives us a more accurate, dynamic picture of economic life. If GDP is the bottom line, GO is the top line—and both are needed to grasp the true soul of enterprise. ICYMI: Mark Skousen first appeared on The Soul of Enterprise in Episode #205 (August 18, 2018), where he discussed the origins of GO, its adoption by the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA), and how GO often doubles GDP in scale—even suggesting a leading indicator role for GO over GDP.

    56 min

About

The Soul of Enterprise is designed to champion the insight that wealth is created by intellectual capital, a product of the inexhaustible human spirit. Wealth is above all an accumulation of possibilities. These possibilities lie hidden in the womb of the future, waiting to be discovered by human imagination, ingenuity, and creativity, manifested in free enterprises dedicated to the service of others. Tune in to The Soul of Enterprise, with Ron Baker and Ed Kless, broadcast live.

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