Audience of One

Spencer Kier
Audience of One

Exploring my curiosity through conversations with leading thinkers and builders. We talk about philosophy, learning, tech, parenting, entrepreneurship, health, and more. Follow Spencer on Twitter (twitter.com/SP1NS1R) and Substack (spencerkier.substack.com)

  1. 13 JUNE

    #057 - John Koenig on Sorrow, Identity, Contradiction, & The Human Experience

    John Koenig is the author of The New York Times' Best Seller Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows, a dictionary of made-up words for emotions that we all feel but don't have the words to express. We talk about his book, identity and individuality, contradiction, writing, the human experience, fatherhood, and more. — (00:44) Why use "sorrows"? (02:51) Did he ever expect the dictionary to be what it is now? (05:48) Existential wonderment and loss (08:50) Truth, internal dialogue, and contradiction (14:00) Contradiction of definitions (17:02) Is introspection valuable? Can you know who you are? (20:43) Not focusing on the present (24:18) Self-actualization vs. contentment (30:26) How you perceive people vs. how they really are (35:57) Next book: Sonder (39:03) Does sensitivity make life more difficult? (41:54) Career identity & pigeonholing (44:24) Writing vs. video (47:32) How fatherhood changes work & focus take on his work; finding meaning in community & ritual (51:25) Where does meaning reside? (53:27) Creative process takeaways for kids; self-expression and art (55:15) John's final questions for listeners — John’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/obscuresorrows Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows (Amazon): https://www.amazon.com/Dictionary-Obscure-Sorrows-John-Koenig/dp/1501153641 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/obscuresorrows Spencer’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/SP1NS1R Spencer’s Blog: https://spencerkier.substack.com/

    57 min
  2. #053 - Joscha Bach on Modeling Reality & Self-Organizing Software

    7 FEB

    #053 - Joscha Bach on Modeling Reality & Self-Organizing Software

    Joscha Bach is a cognitive scientist and AI researcher. We talk about our relationship with & models of reality, creativity and curiosity, animism and self-organizing software, stages of development, and more. — (01:25) The dream world; how we interact with & perceive reality (03:49) Fear (05:16) Self, consciousness, & awareness (08:10) We're a coarse pattern on top of base reality (11:13) Presence & perceptual windows (12:16) Is this model mechanistic & reductionist? (13:50) Life exists to minimize free energy (16:47) What makes us different from other sentient beings & structures (20:35) Creativity: self-transformative exploration (23:40) Curiosity as uncertainty reduction (29:20) Exploration vs. exploitation (32:45) Combating social norms & conditioning; being a nerd (35:18) Knowing which models to update (37:56) Being a creator; being able to build & maintain (43:21) Everything can be understood (44:13) Animism; everything is self-organizing “software” (48:48) Natural vs. human-created “software” (50:57) AGI vs. natural intelligence (55:15) Limited by the locality of our sensory inputs (56:33) Stages of lucidity & development (01:03:35) Convergence of global traditions (01:09:40) Issue with Buddhism (01:14:16) Where does the animism and software arise from? (01:17:58) Building a coherent world, together — Joscha’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/Plinz Joscha's Substack: https://joscha.substack.com/ Personal Site: http://bach.ai/ Spencer’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/SP1NS1R Spencer’s Blog: https://spencerkier.substack.com

    1h 19m
  3. #050 - Billy Oppenheimer on Writing, Research, Boredom, & Putting in The Work

    18 JAN

    #050 - Billy Oppenheimer on Writing, Research, Boredom, & Putting in The Work

    Billy Oppenheimer writes the Six at 6 newsletter, and has been a writing and research assistant for Ryan Holiday, Robert Greene, and Rick Rubin. We talk about research, naive optimism, working for legendary writers and creatives, boredom, his newsletter, curation and creation, how “the work is the win”, and his first book. — (00:52) Naive optimism & turning what you're already doing into a job (03:31) Researching is where he gets his dopamine (05:30) Combine timeless works with popular ones; triangulate stories (10:48) His note taking system (adapted from Ryan Holiday & Robert Greene) (15:19) The evolution of Six at 6; finding your niche & learning the wrong lessons from role models (23:10) Reading to find excerpts (26:01) Curation & creation (31:03) Seeing a mirror in others’ ideas (34:10) Living in the present (37:26) Combining a known and unknown (39:34) Six at 6 themes: deconstructing creativity & putting in the work (43:06) Balancing the art & audience feedback (45:15) Don't “step into the character” (50:02) Taking the next step & writing his first book (55:45) The work is the win (58:13) Fear of not finding the right stories & concepts (01:00:02) Working with Rick Rubin (01:07:34) Orson Welles & ignorance; Paul Graham & not putting up with BS; authenticity (01:13:24) Qualities of a good research & writing assistant; get excited by what others find boring (01:20:50) Doing it because it’s a compulsion (01:24:10) Find your boredom dopamine — Billy’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/bpoppenheimer Six at 6: https://billyoppenheimer.com/newsletter/ Spencer’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/SP1NS1R Spencer’s Blog: https://spencerkier.substack.com

    1h 25m

About

Exploring my curiosity through conversations with leading thinkers and builders. We talk about philosophy, learning, tech, parenting, entrepreneurship, health, and more. Follow Spencer on Twitter (twitter.com/SP1NS1R) and Substack (spencerkier.substack.com)

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