Chris Williamson recounts the story about his friend who stopped working at his barber shop.
See full podcast here: https://odysee.com/@ChrisWilliamson:6/jordan-peterson-your-life-is-built-for:a
Gijs Zwartsenberg talks about the LUMOS experiment, and discusses research on high flux reactors and thorium molten salt reactors, Chinese investments into thorium MSR technology, economic implications of thorium and uranium, and implications of the regulatory frameworks on nuclear energy research.
Roger Waters talks about the meaning of the name "This Is Not a Drill" of his tour, and points out that during the Cuban missile crisis, Kennedy and Khrushchev at least talked to each other, while the current class of corrupted politicians and moronic leaders are not even attempting to engage in constructive conversation or negotiation.
Q from Star Trek Voyager reflects on the tendency of the state to take away rights from the individual for the "greater good". From the episode "Death Wish".
Fictional character Patch Adams questions the detachment in medical practice, and argues that doctors should not only fight to prevent death, but to fight against indifference.
Stephen Fry talks about his personal views about life, and objects about the spread of political correctness in recent years.
---
One of the painful things about our time is that those who feel certainty are stupid, and those with any imagination and understanding are filled with doubt and indecision.
Bertrand Russell
Barbara Liskov explains an informal rule she came up with and used in a keynote, which says "A subtype should behave like a supertype as far as you can tell by invoking the supertype's methods", and which, as she years later found out, got named "Liskov substitution principle" by the programming/academic community, and whose precise meaning became a frequent topic of online debates.