Nature of Intelligence, Ep. 6: AI’s changing seasons (00:44:01)
Guest: Melanie Mitchell, Resident Professor, Santa Fe InstituteHosts: Abha Eli PhobooProducer: Katherine MoncurePodcast theme music by: Mitch MignanoFollow us on:Twitter • YouTube • Facebook • Instagr...
Nature of Intelligence, Ep. 5: How do we assess intelligence? (00:48:12)
Guests: Erica Cartmill, Professor, Anthropology and Cognitive Science, Indiana University BloomingtonEllie Pavlick, Assistant Professor, Computer Science and Linguistics, Brown UniversityHosts: Abha E...
Nature of Intelligence, Ep. 4: Babies vs Machines (00:38:37)
Guests: Linda Smith, Distinguished Professor and Chancellor's Professor, Psychological and Brain Sciences, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University BloomingtonMichael Frank, ...
Nature of Intelligence, Ep. 3: What kind of intelligence is an LLM? (00:45:05)
Guests: Tomer Ullman, Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, Harvard UniversityMurray Shanahan, Professor of Cognitive Robotics, Department of Computing, Imperial College London; Principal Res...
Nature of Intelligence, Ep. 2: The relationship between language and thought (00:37:44)
Guests: Evelina Fedorenko, Associate Professor, Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, and Investigator, McGovern Institute for Brain Research, MITSteve Piantadosi, Professor of Psychology and Ne...
Nature of Intelligence, Ep. 1: What is Intelligence (00:43:28)
Guests: Alison Gopnik, SFI External Faculty; Professor of Psychology and Affiliate Professor of Philosophy at University of California, Berkeley; Member of Berkeley AI Research GroupJohn Krakauer, SFI...
Trailer for The Nature of Intelligence (00:03:25)
Right now, AI is having a moment — and it’s not the first time grand predictions about the potential of machines are being made. But, what does it really mean to say something like ChatGPT is “intelli...
Physics of Life, Ep 6: Multiple worlds, containing multitudes (00:40:48)
Guests: Heather Graham, Research Associate at NASA Goddard Space Flight CenterHosts: Abha Eli Phoboo & Chris KempesProducer: Katherine MoncurePodcast theme music by: Mitch MignanoAdditional sound cred...
Physics of Life, Ep 5: How human history shapes scientific inquiry (00:33:53)
Guests: David Krakauer, President and William H. Miller Professor of Complex Systems at the Santa Fe InstituteSean Carroll, External Professor and Fractal Faculty at the Santa Fe Institute, Homewood P...
Physics of Life, Ep 4: The physics of collectives (00:33:58)
Guests: Melanie Moses, External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute, Professor of Computer Science and Associate Professor of Biology at University of New MexicoHyejin Youn, External Professor at the ...
Physics of Life, Ep 3: Why is life so diverse? (00:29:22)
Guests: Brian Enquist, External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at University of ArizonaPablo Marquet, External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute, ...
Physics of Life, Ep 2: How do we identify life? (00:33:50)
Guests: Ricard Solé, External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute, Head of the Complex Systems Lab at Universitat Pompeu FabraSara Walker, External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute, Associate Direc...
Physics of Life, Ep 1: What can physics tell us about ourselves? (00:34:55)
Guests: Vijay Balasubramanian, External Professor at the Santa Fe Institute, Cathy and Marc Lasry Professor of Physics at the University of PennsylvaniaGeoffrey West, Shannan Distinguished Professor a...
Trailer for Physics of Life (00:03:08)
Trailer for Complexity: Physics of Life, from the Santa Fe Institute
Michael Garfield & David Krakauer on Evolution, Information, and Jurassic Park (01:39:24)
Episode Title and Show Notes:106 - Michael Garfield & David Krakauer on Evolution, Information, and Jurassic ParkWelcome to Complexity, the official podcast of the Santa Fe Institute. I'm Michael Garf...
Mason Porter on Community Detection and Data Topology (01:22:19)
One way of looking at the world reveals it as an interference pattern of dynamic, ever-changing links — relationships that grow and break in nested groups of multilayer networks. Identity can be defin...
Andrea Wulf on Magnificent Rebels: The First Romantics and The Invention of The Self (01:06:49)
For centuries, Medieval life in Europe meant a world determined and prescribed by church and royalty. The social sphere was very much a pyramid, and everybody had to answer to and fit within the schem...
Carlos Gershenson on Balance, Criticality, Antifragility, and The Philosophy of Complex Systems (01:06:41)
How do we get a handle on complex systems thinking? What are the implications of this science for philosophy, and where does philosophical tradition foreshadow findings from the scientific frontier?We...
Complex Conceptions of Time with David Krakauer, Ted Chiang, David Wolpert, & James Gleick (01:00:21)
And now for something completely different! Last October, The Santa Fe Institute held its third InterPlanetary Festival at SITE Santa Fe, celebrating the immensely long time horizon, deep scientific ...
Paul Smaldino & C. Thi Nguyen on Problems with Value Metrics & Governance at Scale (EPE 06) (01:12:36)
There are maps, and there are territories, and humans frequently confuse the two. No matter how insistently this point has been made by cognitive neuroscience, epistemology, economics, and a score of ...
Dani Bassett & Perry Zurn on The Neuroscience & Philosophy of Curious Minds (01:20:46)
This is a podcast by and for the curious — and yet, in over three years, we have pointed curiosity at nearly every topic but itself. What is it, anyway? Are there worse and better frames for understan...
Alison Gopnik on Child Development, Elderhood, Caregiving, and A.I. (01:08:19)
Humans have an unusually long childhood — and an unusually long elderhood past the age of reproductive activity. Why do we spend so much time playing and exploring, caregiving and reflecting, learning...
Ricard Solé on Liquid and Solid Brains and Terraforming The Biosphere (01:13:09)
What does it mean to think? What are the traits of thinking systems that we could use to identify them? Different environmental variables call for different strategies in individual and collective cog...
Glen Weyl & Cris Moore on Plurality, Governance, and Decentralized Society (EPE 05) (01:17:55)
In his foundational 1972 paper “More Is Different,” physicist Phil Anderson made the case that reducing the objects of scientific study to their smallest components does not allow researchers to predi...
John Krakauer Part 2: Learning, Curiosity, and Consciousness (00:49:09)
What makes us human? Over the last several decades, the once-vast island of human exceptionalism has lost significant ground to wave upon wave of research revealing cognition, emotion, problem-solvin...
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