5 episodes

Talking to interesting and thoughtful people around the world.

Ryan Chern Podcast Ryan Chern

    • Business
    • 5.0 • 3 Ratings

Talking to interesting and thoughtful people around the world.

    5. Bryan Caplan: Education, Dating Markets, and Intellectual Curiosity

    5. Bryan Caplan: Education, Dating Markets, and Intellectual Curiosity

    We chat about:

    -why professors with tenure are not very controversial

    -marketing as an underrated tool in all facets of life

    -“ugly truths” as an arbitrage opportunity



    Bryan Caplan is a Professor of Economics at George Mason University and a research fellow at the Mercatus Center. Known for his unconventional viewpoints, he's the author of several influential books, including “The Myth of the Rational Voter”, “Selfish Reasons to Have More Kids”, and “The Case Against Education”. Bryan is an outspoken individual with strong, sometimes controversial viewpoints on some of the most important issues of our times including education, immigration, and economics.

    • 42 min
    4. Dwarkesh Patel: Intellectual Liquidity Providers, The Lunar Society, and Verbal Intelligence

    4. Dwarkesh Patel: Intellectual Liquidity Providers, The Lunar Society, and Verbal Intelligence

    We chat about:

    -the future of intellectual liquidity providers with AI aggregators

    -reflecting on his guests on The Lunar Society

    -the relative value of verbal intelligence and charisma in the coming years



    Dwarkesh Patel is a recent college graduate and the host of his podcast and Substack called The Lunar Society. In his podcast, he interviews scientists, historians, economists, and intellectuals across disciplines – some of his guests include Marc Andreessen, Nat Friedman, Tyler Cowen, and Will MacAskill. In his interviews and his writing, Dwarkesh explores and discusses some of the most relevant ideas to modern society including the heritability of intelligence, the tradeoffs between different immigration policies, and the first and second-order impacts of AI.

    • 36 min
    3. Tyler Cowen: Second-Order Economics, Talent, and Straussianism

    3. Tyler Cowen: Second-Order Economics, Talent, and Straussianism

    We chat about:

    -AIs trading crypto + the broader role of crypto/CBDCs

    -the impact of AI on real interest rates (Cowen’s Third Law)

    -the replenishing of low-hanging fruit



    Tyler Cowen is a professor of economics at George Mason University and Director of the Mercatus Center. He needs little introduction given his widespread online footprint. Tyler writes regularly on his blog Marginal Revolution, hosts his podcast Conversations with Tyler, and is the author of a column on Bloomberg.



    Tyler is an avid traveler, the author of books including The Great Stagnation and Talent, and a food connoisseur of many cuisines.

    • 27 min
    2. Neal Koblitz: Cryptography, Cryptocurrencies, and Geopolitics

    2. Neal Koblitz: Cryptography, Cryptocurrencies, and Geopolitics

    We chat about:

    -his journey into cryptography
    -his thoughts about Ethereum as an early cryptographic advisor in 2014
    -geopolitical relations vis a vis Russia, the US, and Vietnam



    Neal Koblitz is a Professor of Mathematics at the University of Washington as well as an Adjunct Professor at the Center for Applied Cryptographic Research at the University of Waterloo. Koblitz received his undergraduate degree from Harvard University and received his PhD from Princeton University under Nicholas Katz. He is a world-renown mathematician best known for having co-created elliptic curve cryptography (or ECC) in 1985, a technology that underpins many of the information systems that exist today including Bitcoin and Ethereum. He was recently awarded the Levchin Prize in Real World Cryptography in 2021 for his work on ECC. He, along with his wife, runs the Kovalevskaia Fund, a foundation that encourages and aids women in science and technology in developing countries.

    • 41 min
    1. Haseeb Qureshi: Poker, Crypto Markets, and Effective Altruism

    1. Haseeb Qureshi: Poker, Crypto Markets, and Effective Altruism

    We chat about:

    -his early days playing poker         
    -insurance markets         
    -FTX and crypto governance going forward         
    -the equilibrium number of crypto venture firms         
    -disagreeableness as the common trait among crypto founders



    Haseeb Qureshi is a Managing Partner at Dragonfly, a crypto and web3 focused venture firm founded in 2018. Haseeb's path towards becoming a VC today was anything but straightforward: at age 19, he dropped out of college to play poker full-time and became one of the strongest No-Limit Hold 'Em players in the world. Following his poker career, Haseeb discovered Effective Altruism, gave away the vast majority of his poker winnings, and went back to college to pursue tech startups. He ultimately found his way into the anti-fraud team at Airbnb but was quickly red-pilled into the crypto industry, working full time in the space starting in 2017 at Earn.com, which was acquired by Coinbase, and later at MetaStable Capital.

    • 28 min

Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5
3 Ratings

3 Ratings

Seb🌻 ,

Awesome Podcast🚀

Great questions, really enjoyed listening to it. I can tell there’s a clear outline for the questions, which is fantastic; I personally think I’ll enjoy it even more if you can have some free flow of conversations with the guest in between your questions. Sometimes having only the prepared questions can be a tiny bit rigid, looking forward to seeing how your thoughts can interact with the guests opinions in future episodes. 🫡

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