Curious by Design

Jason Hardwick

Curious by Design is a podcast about how things get built, and why they end up the way they do. Every product, city, system, and business is the result of a series of choices. Some intentional. Some accidental. Some brilliant. Some… less so. Hosted by Jason Hardwick, this show explores the thinking behind the work: the history, the tradeoffs, the constraints, and the invisible decisions that shape the world around us. From design and engineering to culture, technology, and everyday systems we take for granted, each episode pulls on a single thread and follows it deeper than expected. This isn’t a how-to podcast. It’s a why-did-they-do-that podcast. If you’ve ever looked at something and wondered how it came to be—or how it could’ve been designed better, you’re in the right place. Welcome to Curious by Design.

  1. 6D AGO

    Why We Believe in Luck

    Why We Believe in Luck Good luck. Bad luck. A lucky break. We talk about luck constantly. Finding a perfect parking spot, catching a green light, landing the right job at the right moment. But what do we actually mean when we say something was lucky? In this episode of Curious by Design, we explore why humans believe in luck—and what’s really happening beneath that idea. For most of history, people used luck to explain events that felt meaningful but unpredictable. Long before probability theory existed, luck helped fill the gap between randomness and understanding. Our brains are wired to search for patterns, even when none exist, which is why people develop lucky rituals, believe in streaks, and assume chance events should “balance out.” We’ll explore the psychology behind these beliefs, from the illusion of control to the gambler’s fallacy, and why cultures around the world created symbols like four-leaf clovers and horseshoes to represent good fortune. But the story of luck gets even more interesting. Research shows that people who believe they’re lucky often behave differently—they notice opportunities more often, take more risks, and stay optimistic after setbacks. In other words, luck may not be a mysterious force controlling events. But the belief in luck can still change how people act—and sometimes that makes all the difference. Because what we call luck is often something else entirely: chance meeting preparation. That’s Curious by Design. Support the show

    14 min
  2. MAR 5

    Why Paper Money Looks the Way It Does

    It’s thin. A little rough. And you trust it without thinking. In this episode of Curious by Design, we explore why paper money looks the way it does, and how every detail, from the cluttered layout to the cotton-linen texture, was engineered to manufacture trust. Gold coins once carried value in their weight. Paper didn’t. When currency shifted from metal to ink, governments faced a psychological problem: how do you make something intrinsically worthless feel real? The answer wasn’t beauty. It was authority. Dense text. Seals. Signatures. Portraits. Repetition. Complexity as credibility. From the National Banking Act during the Civil War to the gold standard under President William McKinley, to Franklin D. Roosevelt’s gold recall and the construction of Fort Knox, American money evolved alongside shifting definitions of trust. When the United States left the gold standard in 1971 under President Richard Nixon, the structure changed, but the design barely did. Familiarity anchored belief. This episode looks at fiat currency, cognitive anchoring, path dependency, and why U.S. bills remain visually conservative even as the financial system underneath them transformed completely. Paper money doesn’t need intrinsic value. It needs confidence. The next time you hold a dollar bill and don’t question it, notice that absence of doubt. That’s not habit. That’s design, refined over centuries to disappear into trust. That’s Curious by Design. Support the show

    14 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
2 Ratings

About

Curious by Design is a podcast about how things get built, and why they end up the way they do. Every product, city, system, and business is the result of a series of choices. Some intentional. Some accidental. Some brilliant. Some… less so. Hosted by Jason Hardwick, this show explores the thinking behind the work: the history, the tradeoffs, the constraints, and the invisible decisions that shape the world around us. From design and engineering to culture, technology, and everyday systems we take for granted, each episode pulls on a single thread and follows it deeper than expected. This isn’t a how-to podcast. It’s a why-did-they-do-that podcast. If you’ve ever looked at something and wondered how it came to be—or how it could’ve been designed better, you’re in the right place. Welcome to Curious by Design.