![]() ![]() He is the host of the top-rated podcast “Conversations with Tyler”.Ĭowen’s latest book is Talent: How to Identify Energizers, Creatives, and Winners Around the World. He is the coauthor – with Alex Tabarock – of the economics blog Marginal Revolution (the #1 economics blog in the world) and the co-founder of Marginal Revolution University. Tyler Cowen is an economics professor at George Mason University and he’s the faculty director of the Mercatus Center. A big factor in his optimism is the revolution in artificial intelligence that we’re about to live through. Today’s guest is surprisingly upbeat about the world. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. In this conversation, Tyler and David discuss ways in which Orthodox Christianity is not so millenarian, how theological patience shapes the polities of Orthodox Christian nations, how Heidegger deepened his understanding of Christian Orthodoxy, who played left field for the Baltimore Orioles in 1970, the simplest way to explain how Orthodoxy diverges from Catholicism, the future of the American Orthodox Church, what he thinks of the Book of Mormon, whether theological arguments are ultimately based on reason or faith, what he makes of reincarnation and near-death experiences, gnosticism in movies and TV, why he dislikes Sarah Ruden’s translation of the New Testament, the most difficult word to translate, a tally of the 15+ languages he knows, what he’ll work on next, and more. * Email Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here.ĭavid Bentley Hart is an American writer, philosopher, religious scholar, critic, and theologian who has authored over 1,000 essays and 19 books, including a very well-known translation of the New Testament and several volumes of fiction. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. They also talk about how 9/11 got Noam into trouble, his early career in music, the most underrated guitarist, why live music is dead in NYC, and what his plans are for expansion. Tyler sat down at Comedy Cellar with owner Noam Dworman to talk about the ever-changing stand-up comedy scene, including the perfect room temperature for stand-up, whether comedy can still shock us, the effect on YouTube and TikTok, the transformation of jokes into bits, the importance of tight seating, why he doesn’t charge higher prices for his shows, the differences between the LA and NYC scenes, whether good looks are an obstacle to success, the oldest comic act he still finds funny, how comedians have changed since he started running the Comedy Cellar in 2003, and what government regulations drive him crazy. * Email us: Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Janovsky sat in court in a bulletproof vest, listening to family members talk about Arik Matson's struggle to relearn how to eat, speak and walk.Tyler and Y Combinator co-founder Paul Graham sat down at his home in the English countryside to discuss what areas of talent judgment his co-founder and wife Jessica Livingston is better at, whether young founders have gotten rarer, whether he still takes a dim view of solo founders, how to 2x ambition in the developed world, on the minute past which a Y Combinator interviewer is unlikely to change their mind, what YC learned after rejecting companies, how he got over his fear of flying, Florentine history, why almost all good artists are underrated, what's gone wrong in art, why new homes and neighborhoods are ugly, why he wants to visit the Dark Ages, why he's optimistic about Britain and San Fransisco, the challenges of regulating AI, whether we're underinvesting in high-cost interruption activities, walking, soundproofing, fame, and more. Some of the only movements we saw were him choking on a feeding tube, or squeezing our hand in pain as tears ran down his face," Jared Matson said. "Our family endured weeks of watching our loved one lie motionless in a hospital bed. The police officer and the intruder were both lying on our driveway wounded," homeowner Jack Williams said.Īmong the people who spoke was the victim's brother. Timothy Schroeder said in court.įrom the officers who worked alongside Matson, to the couple whose home that night became a crime scene, many people offered victim impact statements prior to Janovsky's sentencing. I blamed myself for that night, for what happened to Arik," Matson's partner Sgt. "I blamed myself for the defendant's actions. RELATED: After His First Week At Home, Wife Of Waseca Officer Arik Matson Thanks Community For Support ![]()
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