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  • Welcome to Foresight Institute Radio
    2025/06/11

    This feed is now Foresight Institute Radio—your place for standout talks on frontier technology: from AI and neurotech to nanotech, longevity, and space. You’ll hear highlights from Foresight’s global conferences and seminars featuring top scientists and builders.


    For long-form interviews, follow our sister show: The Existential Hope Podcast, with guests like David Baker, Steven Pinker, and David Deutsch.


    Want the slides? Subscribe on YouTube and follow us on X @ForesightInst.

    🎤 Featuring: Allison Duettmann, CEO of Foresight Institute

    🎥 Slides + videos: YouTube.com/ForesightInstitute

    🐦 Updates: X.com/ForesightInst

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 分
  • Jonathan Anomaly | Embryo selection for health, longevity and intelligence
    2025/06/11

    What happens when parents can choose their children's genetic traits, and which selections benefit society versus harm it? In this talk, Jonathan Anomaly explores the emerging field of embryo selection for intelligence, disease prevention, and longevity. He covers how polygenic risk scores work to predict complex traits and why most diseases involve thousands of genetic variants rather than single genes.


    Jonathan Anomaly is a former professor who spent 15 years studying the intersection of game theory and ethics, focusing on collective action problems. He recently co-founded a stealth company that will be among the first to offer embryo selection for intelligence and disease prevention.


    This talk was recorded at Vision Weekend Puerto Rico 2025. To see the slides and more talks from the event, please visit our Youtube channel.



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    11 分
  • Mary Lou Jepsen | The handheld hospital
    2025/06/11

    What if you could diagnose stroke, treat cancer, and cure depression with a smartphone-sized device that costs $1,000 instead of millions? In this talk, Mary Lou Jepsen demonstrates her revolutionary handheld medical devices that use ultrasound and infrared light to selectively target diseased cells while leaving healthy tissue unharmed. She covers how her team achieved 100% remission in deadly glioblastoma cancer in mice, moved nearly half of treatment-resistant depression patients into remission, and why making all 68 patents open source could democratize healthcare globally while reducing medical device costs by 93%.


    Mary Lou Jepsen is a serial hardtech entrepreneur and former MIT professor with a PhD in physics from Brown University. She previously founded multiple multi-billion dollar companies, left Facebook to start her current venture, and recently raised $54 million to bring these breakthrough medical technologies to market as open-source solutions.


    This talk was recorded at Vision Weekend US 2024. To see the slides and more talks from the event, please visit our Youtube channel.



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    10 分
  • Jean Hebert | ARPA-H: Accelerate better health outcomes for everyone
    2025/06/11

    What if a government agency could fund transformative health research with $200 million budgets and no bureaucratic committees? In this talk, Jean Hebert explores ARPA-H's – a research funding agency – unique mission to accelerate health breakthroughs, from 3D-printed organs to functional eye transplants. He covers how ARPA-H operates differently from traditional government funding through autonomous program managers, why it presents exceptional opportunities for longevity researchers, and how both established scientists and entrepreneurs can engage with this well-funded agency that's aligned with life extension goals.


    Jean Hebert is a professor of genetics and neuroscience, and the author of "Replacing Aging". He currently serves as a Program Manager at ARPA-H. His personal mission remains unchanged: to beat aging, which he believes is achievable through replacement therapies and transformative approaches to life extension.


    This talk was recorded at Vision Weekend US 2024. To see the slides and more talks from the event, please visit our Youtube channel.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    9 分
  • Irina Rish | AI & Scale
    2025/06/11

    How has the history of AI been shaped by the "bitter lesson" that simple scaling beats complex algorithms, and what comes next? In this talk, Irina Rish traces AI's evolution from rule-based systems to today's foundation models, exploring how scaling laws predicted performance improvements and recent shifts toward more efficient approaches. She covers the progression from GPT scaling laws to Chinchilla's compute-optimal training, the rise of inference-time computation with models like OpenAI's o1, and why we might need to move beyond transformers to truly brain-inspired dynamical systems.


    Irina Rish is a professor at the University of Montreal and Mila Quebec AI Institute. She also co-founded a startup focused on developing more efficient foundation models and recently released a suite of open-source compressed models.


    This talk was recorded at Vision Weekend Puerto Rico 2025. To see the slides and more talks from the event, please visit our YouTube channel.



    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    12 分
  • What history can teach us about doing better science – Eric Gilliam
    2025/05/29

    Eric Gilliam studies how organizations like Bell Labs, early MIT, and the Rockefeller Foundation helped drive scientific progress — and what made them unusually effective.

    In this conversation, we explore how those models worked, why many of them disappeared, and what it would take to bring them back. Eric explains why fast-moving, engineering-driven labs like BBN (which built the first nodes of the internet) may be essential to accelerating progress in fields like AI, biotech, and beyond.

    We also cover:

    • Why most funders underuse applied history
    • How systems engineers at Bell Labs identified billion-dollar problems
    • What a $100M research organization should do differently
    • What makes Eric hopeful about the future of meta-science

    Eric runs FreakTakes, a Substack focused on the organizational infrastructure of scientific progress. He’s a fellow at the Good Science Project and works with ARIA UK and Renaissance Philanthropy to support new models for R&D.


    Full transcript, list of resources, and art piece: https://www.existentialhope.com/podcasts


    Existential Hope was created to collect positive and possible scenarios for the future so that we can have more people commit to creating a brighter future, and to begin mapping out the main developments and challenges that need to be navigated to reach it. Existential Hope is a Foresight Institute project.


    Hosted by Allison Duettmann and Beatrice Erkers


    Follow Us: Twitter | Facebook | LinkedIn | Existential Hope Instagram


    Explore every word spoken on this podcast through Fathom.fm.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 時間 7 分
  • Existential Hope Podcast: Glen Weyl | Can we use AI to build a fairer society?
    2025/05/23

    Most AI discussions focus on its risks to democracy – disinformation, surveillance, centralization of power. But what if AI could make governance better?


    Glen Weyl, political economist at Microsoft Research and founder of RadicalxChange, argues that AI could be used to create more participatory, decentralized, and democratic systems, if we design it right. In this interview, he explores what AI governance could look like if we tried to use it for real pluralism.


    This interview is a guest lecture in our online course about shaping positive futures with AI. The course is free, and available here: https://www.udemy.com/course/worldbuilding-hopeful-futures-with-ai/

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    26 分
  • Existential Hope Podcast: Ada Palmer | The Storytelling Tools You Need for Worldbuilding
    2025/05/16

    How can storytelling shape our visions of the future? Ada Palmer—historian, science fiction writer, and futurist—brings a unique perspective on how worldbuilding can be a powerful tool for exploring complex ideas. In this conversation with Beatrice Erkers, she shares her perspective on worldbuilding and storytelling, and her recommendations for how we can think in new ways about the future.


    This interview is a guest lecture in our new online course about shaping positive futures with AI. The course is free, and available here: https://www.udemy.com/course/worldbuilding-hopeful-futures-with-ai/

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    43 分