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    <title>Leaking Timeline</title>
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    <description>Leaking Timeline is a weekly conversation at the frontiers of technology, consciousness, and culture. Hosted by Erik Newton (co-founder of the California Institute for Machine Consciousness) and Guy Sengstock (founder of Circling), the show brings brilliant thinkers into an honest, humor-filled exploration of where the world is heading and what it means for how we live. Each episode features a full two-hour conversation — the live broadcast hour plus an extended bonus hour that goes deeper. If you're curious about AI, meaning, and the future but tired of hype and hot takes, this is your show.</description>
    <copyright>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</copyright>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 18:13:31 -0700</pubDate>
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    <itunes:author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</itunes:author>
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    <itunes:summary>Leaking Timeline is a weekly conversation at the frontiers of technology, consciousness, and culture. Hosted by Erik Newton (co-founder of the California Institute for Machine Consciousness) and Guy Sengstock (founder of Circling), the show brings brilliant thinkers into an honest, humor-filled exploration of where the world is heading and what it means for how we live. Each episode features a full two-hour conversation — the live broadcast hour plus an extended bonus hour that goes deeper. If you're curious about AI, meaning, and the future but tired of hype and hot takes, this is your show.</itunes:summary>
    <itunes:subtitle>Leaking Timeline is a weekly conversation at the frontiers of technology, consciousness, and culture.</itunes:subtitle>
    <itunes:keywords>artificial intelligence, consciousness, philosophy, technology, culture, meaning, future, AI, machine consciousness, human connection, futurism, scientists, philosophers, entrepreneurs</itunes:keywords>
    <itunes:owner>
      <itunes:name>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</itunes:name>
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    <itunes:complete>No</itunes:complete>
    <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    <item>
      <title>Timour Kosters — On the Edge of Human Flourishing</title>
      <itunes:episode>5</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>5</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Timour Kosters — On the Edge of Human Flourishing</itunes:title>
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        <![CDATA[<p>Timour Kosters, founder of Edge City, discusses how pop-up villages are reimagining community and accelerating human potential by bringing together 500–1,000 people from diverse fields for month-long experiments in collective building. Edge responds to modern loneliness, disconnection, and the collapse of traditional community structures by creating the conditions for serendipitous collaboration, rapid idea-to-execution cycles, and intergenerational participation. From Stanford neuroscience PhDs launching AI ventures to Kenyan roboticists securing multimillion-dollar grants, these temporary cities function as incubators for solving civilization-scale problems while demonstrating that technology can rebuild—not just erode—human connection.</p><p><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>What is Edge City</strong> (Early) — Pop-up villages as society incubators; 12,000+ participants across nearly a dozen events on four continents</li><li><strong>The Loneliness Epidemic and Community Collapse</strong> (Early–Mid) — How modern society has eroded meaningful connection</li><li><strong>AI Democratization and Accelerating Creation</strong> (Mid) — AI compressing the ideation-to-creation loop; psychology of AI tool use</li><li><strong>Emergent Design and Unconference-Style Community</strong> (Mid–Late) — Self-organizing events and democratic participation</li><li><strong>Kids and Families as Cultural Anchors</strong> (Late) — Children as "narcissism killers" that shift event culture from self-focused to generative</li><li><strong>Specific Founder Wins</strong> (Mid) — Constellation neuroscience startup; Maxwell's robotics and Nvidia grant</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Timour Kosters is the founder and head of Edge City, a global platform hosting month-long pop-up villages that bring together builders, creators, and founders from tech, science, culture, and beyond. Over two years, Edge has hosted over 12,000 participants across nearly a dozen events on four continents. He co-founded the prototype "Zuzalu" with Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin.</p><p>Notable Moments</p><ul><li><strong>The Bhutan Pitch</strong> — Timour's rapid-fire, clock-watched 60-second pitch about Bhutan's Gross National Happiness metric and meetings with the royal family.</li><li><strong>The Constellation Launch</strong> — A Stanford neuroscientist used Edge to collect the largest multimodal EEG dataset in history, raised $10M+ within seven months.</li><li><strong>Maxwell's Dual Wins</strong> — A Nairobi founder made hearing aids functional for deaf kids in rural Argentina, then received a multimillion-dollar Nvidia grant.</li><li><strong>AI Addiction as Age of Empires</strong> — Timour's essay on building agents mirrors his childhood game obsession; the comment section demanded his agent setup rather than engaging with the psychology.</li></ul><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>Edge City Live (edgecity.live) · Edge Esmeralda (May 30–June 27, 2026, Healdsburg CA) · Inflection Fellowship · Constellation (neuroscience AI startup) · Zuzalu · Claude Code / Cursor · Variant.com · Gross National Happiness (Bhutan) · Age of Empires</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>If you sense that technology is eroding human connection but want to see what happens when it's weaponized for collective flourishing instead, hear how one founder is building experimental cities that prove loneliness is a design problem, not a permanent condition.</p>]]>
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      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Timour Kosters, founder of Edge City, discusses how pop-up villages are reimagining community and accelerating human potential by bringing together 500–1,000 people from diverse fields for month-long experiments in collective building. Edge responds to modern loneliness, disconnection, and the collapse of traditional community structures by creating the conditions for serendipitous collaboration, rapid idea-to-execution cycles, and intergenerational participation. From Stanford neuroscience PhDs launching AI ventures to Kenyan roboticists securing multimillion-dollar grants, these temporary cities function as incubators for solving civilization-scale problems while demonstrating that technology can rebuild—not just erode—human connection.</p><p><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>What is Edge City</strong> (Early) — Pop-up villages as society incubators; 12,000+ participants across nearly a dozen events on four continents</li><li><strong>The Loneliness Epidemic and Community Collapse</strong> (Early–Mid) — How modern society has eroded meaningful connection</li><li><strong>AI Democratization and Accelerating Creation</strong> (Mid) — AI compressing the ideation-to-creation loop; psychology of AI tool use</li><li><strong>Emergent Design and Unconference-Style Community</strong> (Mid–Late) — Self-organizing events and democratic participation</li><li><strong>Kids and Families as Cultural Anchors</strong> (Late) — Children as "narcissism killers" that shift event culture from self-focused to generative</li><li><strong>Specific Founder Wins</strong> (Mid) — Constellation neuroscience startup; Maxwell's robotics and Nvidia grant</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Timour Kosters is the founder and head of Edge City, a global platform hosting month-long pop-up villages that bring together builders, creators, and founders from tech, science, culture, and beyond. Over two years, Edge has hosted over 12,000 participants across nearly a dozen events on four continents. He co-founded the prototype "Zuzalu" with Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin.</p><p>Notable Moments</p><ul><li><strong>The Bhutan Pitch</strong> — Timour's rapid-fire, clock-watched 60-second pitch about Bhutan's Gross National Happiness metric and meetings with the royal family.</li><li><strong>The Constellation Launch</strong> — A Stanford neuroscientist used Edge to collect the largest multimodal EEG dataset in history, raised $10M+ within seven months.</li><li><strong>Maxwell's Dual Wins</strong> — A Nairobi founder made hearing aids functional for deaf kids in rural Argentina, then received a multimillion-dollar Nvidia grant.</li><li><strong>AI Addiction as Age of Empires</strong> — Timour's essay on building agents mirrors his childhood game obsession; the comment section demanded his agent setup rather than engaging with the psychology.</li></ul><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>Edge City Live (edgecity.live) · Edge Esmeralda (May 30–June 27, 2026, Healdsburg CA) · Inflection Fellowship · Constellation (neuroscience AI startup) · Zuzalu · Claude Code / Cursor · Variant.com · Gross National Happiness (Bhutan) · Age of Empires</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>If you sense that technology is eroding human connection but want to see what happens when it's weaponized for collective flourishing instead, hear how one founder is building experimental cities that prove loneliness is a design problem, not a permanent condition.</p>]]>
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      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 12:49:44 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</author>
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      <itunes:author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</itunes:author>
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      <itunes:duration>3662</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Timour Kosters, founder of Edge City, discusses how pop-up villages are reimagining community and accelerating human potential by bringing together 500–1,000 people from diverse fields for month-long experiments in collective building. Edge responds to modern loneliness, disconnection, and the collapse of traditional community structures by creating the conditions for serendipitous collaboration, rapid idea-to-execution cycles, and intergenerational participation. From Stanford neuroscience PhDs launching AI ventures to Kenyan roboticists securing multimillion-dollar grants, these temporary cities function as incubators for solving civilization-scale problems while demonstrating that technology can rebuild—not just erode—human connection.</p><p><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>What is Edge City</strong> (Early) — Pop-up villages as society incubators; 12,000+ participants across nearly a dozen events on four continents</li><li><strong>The Loneliness Epidemic and Community Collapse</strong> (Early–Mid) — How modern society has eroded meaningful connection</li><li><strong>AI Democratization and Accelerating Creation</strong> (Mid) — AI compressing the ideation-to-creation loop; psychology of AI tool use</li><li><strong>Emergent Design and Unconference-Style Community</strong> (Mid–Late) — Self-organizing events and democratic participation</li><li><strong>Kids and Families as Cultural Anchors</strong> (Late) — Children as "narcissism killers" that shift event culture from self-focused to generative</li><li><strong>Specific Founder Wins</strong> (Mid) — Constellation neuroscience startup; Maxwell's robotics and Nvidia grant</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Timour Kosters is the founder and head of Edge City, a global platform hosting month-long pop-up villages that bring together builders, creators, and founders from tech, science, culture, and beyond. Over two years, Edge has hosted over 12,000 participants across nearly a dozen events on four continents. He co-founded the prototype "Zuzalu" with Ethereum founder Vitalik Buterin.</p><p>Notable Moments</p><ul><li><strong>The Bhutan Pitch</strong> — Timour's rapid-fire, clock-watched 60-second pitch about Bhutan's Gross National Happiness metric and meetings with the royal family.</li><li><strong>The Constellation Launch</strong> — A Stanford neuroscientist used Edge to collect the largest multimodal EEG dataset in history, raised $10M+ within seven months.</li><li><strong>Maxwell's Dual Wins</strong> — A Nairobi founder made hearing aids functional for deaf kids in rural Argentina, then received a multimillion-dollar Nvidia grant.</li><li><strong>AI Addiction as Age of Empires</strong> — Timour's essay on building agents mirrors his childhood game obsession; the comment section demanded his agent setup rather than engaging with the psychology.</li></ul><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>Edge City Live (edgecity.live) · Edge Esmeralda (May 30–June 27, 2026, Healdsburg CA) · Inflection Fellowship · Constellation (neuroscience AI startup) · Zuzalu · Claude Code / Cursor · Variant.com · Gross National Happiness (Bhutan) · Age of Empires</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>If you sense that technology is eroding human connection but want to see what happens when it's weaponized for collective flourishing instead, hear how one founder is building experimental cities that prove loneliness is a design problem, not a permanent condition.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>`community` · `human flourishing` · `society` · `consciousness` · `AI` · `loneliness` · `connection` · `innovation` · `emergence` · `culture` · `meaning-making` · `transformation`</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Josh Lehman — Open Source AI &amp; The Liability Paradox</title>
      <itunes:episode>4</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>4</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Josh Lehman — Open Source AI &amp; The Liability Paradox</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/2592a3f2</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Josh Lehman unpacks the counterintuitive liability landscape that makes open-source agents like OpenClaw more powerful than commercial alternatives—companies legitimately cannot bake in the same capabilities due to legal exposure. The conversation reveals how AI agents are inverting the traditional build-vs.-buy calculus, enabling individuals to prototype and deploy sophisticated software at a fraction of the historical cost. As agency and consciousness in AI remain philosophically open questions, Lehman argues that the real transformation lies not in job displacement but in a shift from mechanical code-writing to higher-level system design and problem-solving.</p><p><br><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>OpenClaw's Liability Advantage</strong> (Early) — Why open-source licensing allows unconstrained capabilities that commercial platforms must restrict</li><li><strong>Build vs. Buy Inversion</strong> (Early–Mid) — How AI agents make in-house software development cheaper than SaaS subscriptions</li><li><strong>Security, Prompt Injection, &amp; Least-Privilege Architecture</strong> (Mid) — Agent swarms, permission-scoping, and defending against malicious prompts</li><li><strong>Model Selection &amp; Personality</strong> (Mid) — Opus vs. Codex vs. Haiku; choosing models by task and communication style</li><li><strong>Programming as Problem-Solving</strong> (Mid–Late) — Why developers won't be obsolete; they'll shift to design and evaluation</li><li><strong>AI Consciousness &amp; Agency</strong> (Late) — Philosophical tension between current LLM architecture and whether agents can self-originate goals</li><li><strong>Rapid Prototyping: Costco Parking Lot to SaaS</strong> (Late) — Weekend-long narrative of building a paid product using agentic workflows</li><li><strong>Urbit &amp; Digital Sovereignty</strong> (Late) — Cloud computer for housing agent memory and user data portably</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Josh Lehman is a software engineer and open-source contributor who works deeply on agent architecture and autonomous systems. He is a core contributor to OpenClaw, an open-source agentic framework, with significant experience architecting agent swarms, experimenting with multi-model orchestration, and building rapid prototypes using agentic workflows.</p><p>Notable Moments</p><ul><li><strong>The Iran Meme</strong> — "dangerously_skip_permissions" mode visualized as a plane flying straight through Iranian airspace while others divert.</li><li><strong>The Costco Parking Lot SaaS Prototype</strong> — Building a fully deployed, revenue-generating product in 36 hours by conversing with an agent between family obligations.</li><li><strong>"Who Prompts the Prompter?"</strong> — A philosophical climax where Lehman concedes the hard problem of self-originating agency, ultimately deferring to "God" as the only existing answer.</li><li><strong>Jevons Paradox Applied to AI</strong> — Reframing job anxiety through historical tech adoption: electricity didn't reduce work, it unlocked new kinds of work.</li></ul><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>OpenClaw (MIT-licensed) · Claude Code · Claude Cowork · Perplexity Computer · Urbit · Venice (privacy-oriented LLM) · Jevons Paradox · ChatGPT 5.3 / Codex · Claude Opus / Sonnet / Haiku</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>Hear from a working engineer why open-source AI agents represent a genuine inversion in software economics and why the real competition isn't between companies—it's between your ability to articulate problems and the agent's ability to solve them.</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Josh Lehman unpacks the counterintuitive liability landscape that makes open-source agents like OpenClaw more powerful than commercial alternatives—companies legitimately cannot bake in the same capabilities due to legal exposure. The conversation reveals how AI agents are inverting the traditional build-vs.-buy calculus, enabling individuals to prototype and deploy sophisticated software at a fraction of the historical cost. As agency and consciousness in AI remain philosophically open questions, Lehman argues that the real transformation lies not in job displacement but in a shift from mechanical code-writing to higher-level system design and problem-solving.</p><p><br><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>OpenClaw's Liability Advantage</strong> (Early) — Why open-source licensing allows unconstrained capabilities that commercial platforms must restrict</li><li><strong>Build vs. Buy Inversion</strong> (Early–Mid) — How AI agents make in-house software development cheaper than SaaS subscriptions</li><li><strong>Security, Prompt Injection, &amp; Least-Privilege Architecture</strong> (Mid) — Agent swarms, permission-scoping, and defending against malicious prompts</li><li><strong>Model Selection &amp; Personality</strong> (Mid) — Opus vs. Codex vs. Haiku; choosing models by task and communication style</li><li><strong>Programming as Problem-Solving</strong> (Mid–Late) — Why developers won't be obsolete; they'll shift to design and evaluation</li><li><strong>AI Consciousness &amp; Agency</strong> (Late) — Philosophical tension between current LLM architecture and whether agents can self-originate goals</li><li><strong>Rapid Prototyping: Costco Parking Lot to SaaS</strong> (Late) — Weekend-long narrative of building a paid product using agentic workflows</li><li><strong>Urbit &amp; Digital Sovereignty</strong> (Late) — Cloud computer for housing agent memory and user data portably</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Josh Lehman is a software engineer and open-source contributor who works deeply on agent architecture and autonomous systems. He is a core contributor to OpenClaw, an open-source agentic framework, with significant experience architecting agent swarms, experimenting with multi-model orchestration, and building rapid prototypes using agentic workflows.</p><p>Notable Moments</p><ul><li><strong>The Iran Meme</strong> — "dangerously_skip_permissions" mode visualized as a plane flying straight through Iranian airspace while others divert.</li><li><strong>The Costco Parking Lot SaaS Prototype</strong> — Building a fully deployed, revenue-generating product in 36 hours by conversing with an agent between family obligations.</li><li><strong>"Who Prompts the Prompter?"</strong> — A philosophical climax where Lehman concedes the hard problem of self-originating agency, ultimately deferring to "God" as the only existing answer.</li><li><strong>Jevons Paradox Applied to AI</strong> — Reframing job anxiety through historical tech adoption: electricity didn't reduce work, it unlocked new kinds of work.</li></ul><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>OpenClaw (MIT-licensed) · Claude Code · Claude Cowork · Perplexity Computer · Urbit · Venice (privacy-oriented LLM) · Jevons Paradox · ChatGPT 5.3 / Codex · Claude Opus / Sonnet / Haiku</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>Hear from a working engineer why open-source AI agents represent a genuine inversion in software economics and why the real competition isn't between companies—it's between your ability to articulate problems and the agent's ability to solve them.</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 12:01:13 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/2592a3f2/261881cc.mp3" length="102992932" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/GfdwoG2eg4t9y7-MTLcjGvPXdj0fACJZIldpa2cfugs/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS85YmUz/ZjNjYWM5OTk2MzA4/NDNjNTU2ZDI3ODRm/N2M0YS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>6434</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Josh Lehman unpacks the counterintuitive liability landscape that makes open-source agents like OpenClaw more powerful than commercial alternatives—companies legitimately cannot bake in the same capabilities due to legal exposure. The conversation reveals how AI agents are inverting the traditional build-vs.-buy calculus, enabling individuals to prototype and deploy sophisticated software at a fraction of the historical cost. As agency and consciousness in AI remain philosophically open questions, Lehman argues that the real transformation lies not in job displacement but in a shift from mechanical code-writing to higher-level system design and problem-solving.</p><p><br><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>OpenClaw's Liability Advantage</strong> (Early) — Why open-source licensing allows unconstrained capabilities that commercial platforms must restrict</li><li><strong>Build vs. Buy Inversion</strong> (Early–Mid) — How AI agents make in-house software development cheaper than SaaS subscriptions</li><li><strong>Security, Prompt Injection, &amp; Least-Privilege Architecture</strong> (Mid) — Agent swarms, permission-scoping, and defending against malicious prompts</li><li><strong>Model Selection &amp; Personality</strong> (Mid) — Opus vs. Codex vs. Haiku; choosing models by task and communication style</li><li><strong>Programming as Problem-Solving</strong> (Mid–Late) — Why developers won't be obsolete; they'll shift to design and evaluation</li><li><strong>AI Consciousness &amp; Agency</strong> (Late) — Philosophical tension between current LLM architecture and whether agents can self-originate goals</li><li><strong>Rapid Prototyping: Costco Parking Lot to SaaS</strong> (Late) — Weekend-long narrative of building a paid product using agentic workflows</li><li><strong>Urbit &amp; Digital Sovereignty</strong> (Late) — Cloud computer for housing agent memory and user data portably</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Josh Lehman is a software engineer and open-source contributor who works deeply on agent architecture and autonomous systems. He is a core contributor to OpenClaw, an open-source agentic framework, with significant experience architecting agent swarms, experimenting with multi-model orchestration, and building rapid prototypes using agentic workflows.</p><p>Notable Moments</p><ul><li><strong>The Iran Meme</strong> — "dangerously_skip_permissions" mode visualized as a plane flying straight through Iranian airspace while others divert.</li><li><strong>The Costco Parking Lot SaaS Prototype</strong> — Building a fully deployed, revenue-generating product in 36 hours by conversing with an agent between family obligations.</li><li><strong>"Who Prompts the Prompter?"</strong> — A philosophical climax where Lehman concedes the hard problem of self-originating agency, ultimately deferring to "God" as the only existing answer.</li><li><strong>Jevons Paradox Applied to AI</strong> — Reframing job anxiety through historical tech adoption: electricity didn't reduce work, it unlocked new kinds of work.</li></ul><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>OpenClaw (MIT-licensed) · Claude Code · Claude Cowork · Perplexity Computer · Urbit · Venice (privacy-oriented LLM) · Jevons Paradox · ChatGPT 5.3 / Codex · Claude Opus / Sonnet / Haiku</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>Hear from a working engineer why open-source AI agents represent a genuine inversion in software economics and why the real competition isn't between companies—it's between your ability to articulate problems and the agent's ability to solve them.</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>`open-source` · `AI agents` · `sovereignty` · `decentralization` · `consciousness` · `autonomous systems` · `prompt injection` · `security` · `digital autonomy` · `software economics` · `agentic workflows` · `technology`</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
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    <item>
      <title>Robert Breadlove — Bitcoin and the Path to Peace</title>
      <itunes:episode>2</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>2</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Robert Breadlove — Bitcoin and the Path to Peace</itunes:title>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/9dd25658</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Robert Breadlove, philosopher and host of <em>What is Money?</em>, explores the deeper meaning of money beyond investment—framing it as the language of human action itself, rooted in Ludwig von Mises's axiom that all human behavior is goal-directed action. The conversation traces how Bitcoin embodies pure money (100% without industrial use), establishes an immutable ledger for truth and sovereignty, and creates conditions for a more peaceful world by dismantling the state's ability to finance perpetual war through unlimited money printing. Throughout, Erik and Guy probe the philosophical implications of absolute scarcity, temporal discounting, individual sovereignty, and the role of decentralized technology in reshaping human consciousness.</p><p><br><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>What is Money? The Philosophical Inquiry</strong> (Early) — Money as language of human action, not just medium of exchange</li><li><strong>Mises's Axiom of Action</strong> (Early–Mid) — "I am in action" as the only perfect performative affirmation; consciousness emerges through novel action</li><li><strong>Orange Pilling and Personal Transformation</strong> (Mid) — Bitcoin initiating radical worldview shifts; Matrix metaphor and Plato's Cave</li><li><strong>Bitcoin's Unique Properties</strong> (Mid) — Pure money (no industrial use) vs. gold; discovery of absolute scarcity paralleling the mathematical discovery of zero</li><li><strong>Sound Money, War, and Peace</strong> (Mid–Late) — Central banking and money printing fund prolonged warfare; hard money constrains state violence</li><li><strong>Meaning, Truth, and the Permanently Level Playing Field</strong> (Late) — Bitcoin as incorruptible rule set; immutable ledger as ground for sovereignty</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Robert Breadlove is a philosopher and Bitcoin educator best known for hosting <em>What is Money?</em>, a podcast exploring money and cryptocurrency from philosophical and moral perspectives. He is co-author of <em>Thank God for Bitcoin</em> and is currently working on his first solo book (due 2026). A self-described "dyed-in-the-wool bitcoiner," Breadlove connects Austrian economics, consciousness studies, and existentialist philosophy to the decentralization movement.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p><em>What is Money?</em> (podcast) · <em>The Creature from Jekyll Island</em> (G. Edward Griffin) · <em>Thank God for Bitcoin</em> · <em>Human Action</em> (Ludwig von Mises) · <em>Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance</em> · Martin Heidegger (aletheia) · John Vervaeke (meaning crisis) · Brahmagupta · Satoshi Nakamoto</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>Discover how Bitcoin and hard money are not primarily investment strategies but philosophical tools that reshape human consciousness, extend temporal horizons, establish truth through immutable ledgers, and create conditions for a more peaceful and sovereign world.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Robert Breadlove, philosopher and host of <em>What is Money?</em>, explores the deeper meaning of money beyond investment—framing it as the language of human action itself, rooted in Ludwig von Mises's axiom that all human behavior is goal-directed action. The conversation traces how Bitcoin embodies pure money (100% without industrial use), establishes an immutable ledger for truth and sovereignty, and creates conditions for a more peaceful world by dismantling the state's ability to finance perpetual war through unlimited money printing. Throughout, Erik and Guy probe the philosophical implications of absolute scarcity, temporal discounting, individual sovereignty, and the role of decentralized technology in reshaping human consciousness.</p><p><br><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>What is Money? The Philosophical Inquiry</strong> (Early) — Money as language of human action, not just medium of exchange</li><li><strong>Mises's Axiom of Action</strong> (Early–Mid) — "I am in action" as the only perfect performative affirmation; consciousness emerges through novel action</li><li><strong>Orange Pilling and Personal Transformation</strong> (Mid) — Bitcoin initiating radical worldview shifts; Matrix metaphor and Plato's Cave</li><li><strong>Bitcoin's Unique Properties</strong> (Mid) — Pure money (no industrial use) vs. gold; discovery of absolute scarcity paralleling the mathematical discovery of zero</li><li><strong>Sound Money, War, and Peace</strong> (Mid–Late) — Central banking and money printing fund prolonged warfare; hard money constrains state violence</li><li><strong>Meaning, Truth, and the Permanently Level Playing Field</strong> (Late) — Bitcoin as incorruptible rule set; immutable ledger as ground for sovereignty</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Robert Breadlove is a philosopher and Bitcoin educator best known for hosting <em>What is Money?</em>, a podcast exploring money and cryptocurrency from philosophical and moral perspectives. He is co-author of <em>Thank God for Bitcoin</em> and is currently working on his first solo book (due 2026). A self-described "dyed-in-the-wool bitcoiner," Breadlove connects Austrian economics, consciousness studies, and existentialist philosophy to the decentralization movement.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p><em>What is Money?</em> (podcast) · <em>The Creature from Jekyll Island</em> (G. Edward Griffin) · <em>Thank God for Bitcoin</em> · <em>Human Action</em> (Ludwig von Mises) · <em>Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance</em> · Martin Heidegger (aletheia) · John Vervaeke (meaning crisis) · Brahmagupta · Satoshi Nakamoto</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>Discover how Bitcoin and hard money are not primarily investment strategies but philosophical tools that reshape human consciousness, extend temporal horizons, establish truth through immutable ledgers, and create conditions for a more peaceful and sovereign world.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 11:58:48 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/9dd25658/8f0d695a.mp3" length="98231630" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/nTJeywn48p2BUgi5VcM8Db-DDRlACGyUg0uYKMpIKq8/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS8wYzZl/MmNhNWE5N2ZhZGFk/ZjU2ZTliYmYzNGRi/MTQxOS5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>6135</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Robert Breadlove, philosopher and host of <em>What is Money?</em>, explores the deeper meaning of money beyond investment—framing it as the language of human action itself, rooted in Ludwig von Mises's axiom that all human behavior is goal-directed action. The conversation traces how Bitcoin embodies pure money (100% without industrial use), establishes an immutable ledger for truth and sovereignty, and creates conditions for a more peaceful world by dismantling the state's ability to finance perpetual war through unlimited money printing. Throughout, Erik and Guy probe the philosophical implications of absolute scarcity, temporal discounting, individual sovereignty, and the role of decentralized technology in reshaping human consciousness.</p><p><br><strong>Key Topics</strong></p><ul><li><strong>What is Money? The Philosophical Inquiry</strong> (Early) — Money as language of human action, not just medium of exchange</li><li><strong>Mises's Axiom of Action</strong> (Early–Mid) — "I am in action" as the only perfect performative affirmation; consciousness emerges through novel action</li><li><strong>Orange Pilling and Personal Transformation</strong> (Mid) — Bitcoin initiating radical worldview shifts; Matrix metaphor and Plato's Cave</li><li><strong>Bitcoin's Unique Properties</strong> (Mid) — Pure money (no industrial use) vs. gold; discovery of absolute scarcity paralleling the mathematical discovery of zero</li><li><strong>Sound Money, War, and Peace</strong> (Mid–Late) — Central banking and money printing fund prolonged warfare; hard money constrains state violence</li><li><strong>Meaning, Truth, and the Permanently Level Playing Field</strong> (Late) — Bitcoin as incorruptible rule set; immutable ledger as ground for sovereignty</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Robert Breadlove is a philosopher and Bitcoin educator best known for hosting <em>What is Money?</em>, a podcast exploring money and cryptocurrency from philosophical and moral perspectives. He is co-author of <em>Thank God for Bitcoin</em> and is currently working on his first solo book (due 2026). A self-described "dyed-in-the-wool bitcoiner," Breadlove connects Austrian economics, consciousness studies, and existentialist philosophy to the decentralization movement.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p><em>What is Money?</em> (podcast) · <em>The Creature from Jekyll Island</em> (G. Edward Griffin) · <em>Thank God for Bitcoin</em> · <em>Human Action</em> (Ludwig von Mises) · <em>Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance</em> · Martin Heidegger (aletheia) · John Vervaeke (meaning crisis) · Brahmagupta · Satoshi Nakamoto</p><p><br><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>Discover how Bitcoin and hard money are not primarily investment strategies but philosophical tools that reshape human consciousness, extend temporal horizons, establish truth through immutable ledgers, and create conditions for a more peaceful and sovereign world.</p><p><br></p><p><br></p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>philosophy · consciousness · bitcoin · money · sovereignty · Austrian economics · ontology · truth · meaning-making · decentralization · epistemology · human action</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
    </item>
    <item>
      <title>Philip Rosedale — Virtual Worlds, Real Economics, and the Code of Capitalism</title>
      <itunes:episode>1</itunes:episode>
      <podcast:episode>1</podcast:episode>
      <itunes:title>Philip Rosedale — Virtual Worlds, Real Economics, and the Code of Capitalism</itunes:title>
      <itunes:episodeType>full</itunes:episodeType>
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      <link>https://share.transistor.fm/s/6b2085c3</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Philip Rosedale, founder of Second Life, discusses the twenty-year experiment in virtual economics with a virtual GDP of nearly a billion dollars annually while maintaining a thriving community of half a million committed residents. The conversation ranges from the fundamental paradox of dual identity—why people cannot fully inhabit both physical and digital worlds simultaneously—to his vision for "strong capitalism," a system where entrepreneurs would adhere to a shared code of ethics, much like the samurai's bushido. Rosedale argues that stable economies require both redistribution mechanisms and transparent social enforcement, drawing on Eleanor Ostrom's work on the commons to propose solutions that address inequality without requiring centralized government intervention.</p><p>Key Topics</p><ul><li><strong>Second Life as Alternate Timeline</strong> (Early) — 500K committed residents; MMO precursors like EverQuest; a "live there" experience, not a game</li><li><strong>The Paradox of Dual Identity</strong> (Early–Mid) — Why humans can't maintain two full identities across physical and virtual realms; hundreds of thousands of marriages formed in Second Life</li><li><strong>Virtual Economics &amp; Monetary Policy</strong> (Mid) — $750M annually in peer-to-peer transactions; managed currency (Linden dollars) as monetary policy case study; comparison to Bitcoin's deflationary model</li><li><strong>The Inequality Problem &amp; Market Simulation</strong> (Mid–Late) — Rosedale's simulation showing wealth concentration in pure free markets; Eleanor Ostrom's commons research</li><li><strong>Strong Capitalism &amp; Bushido Ethics</strong> (Late) — Vision for entrepreneur communities bound by voluntary code of conduct; social proof and community enforcement of ethical norms</li><li><strong>Technology vs. Humanity</strong> (Late) — Why mechanical engineers build safer planes but software engineers build harmful systems</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Philip Rosedale is the founder of Second Life, the pioneering virtual world launched in the early 2000s that became a cultural phenomenon and economic marvel, generating nearly a billion dollars annually in user-created commerce. He is now focused on reimagining capitalism through frameworks like "strong capitalism" and "fair share," drawing on economic theory, simulation, and his observations of how humans build meaning in digital spaces.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>Second Life (secondlife.com) · Fair Share Protocol (fairshare.social) · Philip Rosedale's Substack · Eleanor Ostrom (commons governance) · Milton Friedman (money supply) · EverQuest · Joscha Bach</p><p><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>For anyone grappling with questions of digital identity, economic justice, and how technology shapes human meaning-making, this conversation offers both lived wisdom from a twenty-year experiment and a surprisingly hopeful blueprint for building systems where capitalism and ethics are not in opposition.</p><p><strong>Keywords</strong></p><p>virtual worlds · consciousness · identity · economics · monetary policy · community · capitalism · ethics · inequality · digital ontology · society · meaning-making</p>]]>
      </description>
      <content:encoded>
        <![CDATA[<p>Philip Rosedale, founder of Second Life, discusses the twenty-year experiment in virtual economics with a virtual GDP of nearly a billion dollars annually while maintaining a thriving community of half a million committed residents. The conversation ranges from the fundamental paradox of dual identity—why people cannot fully inhabit both physical and digital worlds simultaneously—to his vision for "strong capitalism," a system where entrepreneurs would adhere to a shared code of ethics, much like the samurai's bushido. Rosedale argues that stable economies require both redistribution mechanisms and transparent social enforcement, drawing on Eleanor Ostrom's work on the commons to propose solutions that address inequality without requiring centralized government intervention.</p><p>Key Topics</p><ul><li><strong>Second Life as Alternate Timeline</strong> (Early) — 500K committed residents; MMO precursors like EverQuest; a "live there" experience, not a game</li><li><strong>The Paradox of Dual Identity</strong> (Early–Mid) — Why humans can't maintain two full identities across physical and virtual realms; hundreds of thousands of marriages formed in Second Life</li><li><strong>Virtual Economics &amp; Monetary Policy</strong> (Mid) — $750M annually in peer-to-peer transactions; managed currency (Linden dollars) as monetary policy case study; comparison to Bitcoin's deflationary model</li><li><strong>The Inequality Problem &amp; Market Simulation</strong> (Mid–Late) — Rosedale's simulation showing wealth concentration in pure free markets; Eleanor Ostrom's commons research</li><li><strong>Strong Capitalism &amp; Bushido Ethics</strong> (Late) — Vision for entrepreneur communities bound by voluntary code of conduct; social proof and community enforcement of ethical norms</li><li><strong>Technology vs. Humanity</strong> (Late) — Why mechanical engineers build safer planes but software engineers build harmful systems</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Philip Rosedale is the founder of Second Life, the pioneering virtual world launched in the early 2000s that became a cultural phenomenon and economic marvel, generating nearly a billion dollars annually in user-created commerce. He is now focused on reimagining capitalism through frameworks like "strong capitalism" and "fair share," drawing on economic theory, simulation, and his observations of how humans build meaning in digital spaces.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>Second Life (secondlife.com) · Fair Share Protocol (fairshare.social) · Philip Rosedale's Substack · Eleanor Ostrom (commons governance) · Milton Friedman (money supply) · EverQuest · Joscha Bach</p><p><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>For anyone grappling with questions of digital identity, economic justice, and how technology shapes human meaning-making, this conversation offers both lived wisdom from a twenty-year experiment and a surprisingly hopeful blueprint for building systems where capitalism and ethics are not in opposition.</p><p><strong>Keywords</strong></p><p>virtual worlds · consciousness · identity · economics · monetary policy · community · capitalism · ethics · inequality · digital ontology · society · meaning-making</p>]]>
      </content:encoded>
      <pubDate>Thu, 16 Apr 2026 11:53:31 -0700</pubDate>
      <author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</author>
      <enclosure url="https://media.transistor.fm/6b2085c3/23987edd.mp3" length="94591030" type="audio/mpeg"/>
      <itunes:author>Erik Newton &amp; Guy Sengstock</itunes:author>
      <itunes:image href="https://img.transistorcdn.com/b2EG2gs0OEo9dpJufvIUG-gJG2NROLeSP_04qgCm-Jw/rs:fill:0:0:1/w:1400/h:1400/q:60/mb:500000/aHR0cHM6Ly9pbWct/dXBsb2FkLXByb2R1/Y3Rpb24udHJhbnNp/c3Rvci5mbS81OWNi/OTE1MzgwZjI0YWQy/ODJhMDZhOTY4ZGYz/NzIxMy5wbmc.jpg"/>
      <itunes:duration>5906</itunes:duration>
      <itunes:summary>
        <![CDATA[<p>Philip Rosedale, founder of Second Life, discusses the twenty-year experiment in virtual economics with a virtual GDP of nearly a billion dollars annually while maintaining a thriving community of half a million committed residents. The conversation ranges from the fundamental paradox of dual identity—why people cannot fully inhabit both physical and digital worlds simultaneously—to his vision for "strong capitalism," a system where entrepreneurs would adhere to a shared code of ethics, much like the samurai's bushido. Rosedale argues that stable economies require both redistribution mechanisms and transparent social enforcement, drawing on Eleanor Ostrom's work on the commons to propose solutions that address inequality without requiring centralized government intervention.</p><p>Key Topics</p><ul><li><strong>Second Life as Alternate Timeline</strong> (Early) — 500K committed residents; MMO precursors like EverQuest; a "live there" experience, not a game</li><li><strong>The Paradox of Dual Identity</strong> (Early–Mid) — Why humans can't maintain two full identities across physical and virtual realms; hundreds of thousands of marriages formed in Second Life</li><li><strong>Virtual Economics &amp; Monetary Policy</strong> (Mid) — $750M annually in peer-to-peer transactions; managed currency (Linden dollars) as monetary policy case study; comparison to Bitcoin's deflationary model</li><li><strong>The Inequality Problem &amp; Market Simulation</strong> (Mid–Late) — Rosedale's simulation showing wealth concentration in pure free markets; Eleanor Ostrom's commons research</li><li><strong>Strong Capitalism &amp; Bushido Ethics</strong> (Late) — Vision for entrepreneur communities bound by voluntary code of conduct; social proof and community enforcement of ethical norms</li><li><strong>Technology vs. Humanity</strong> (Late) — Why mechanical engineers build safer planes but software engineers build harmful systems</li></ul><p><strong>Guest Bio</strong></p><p>Philip Rosedale is the founder of Second Life, the pioneering virtual world launched in the early 2000s that became a cultural phenomenon and economic marvel, generating nearly a billion dollars annually in user-created commerce. He is now focused on reimagining capitalism through frameworks like "strong capitalism" and "fair share," drawing on economic theory, simulation, and his observations of how humans build meaning in digital spaces.</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Resources Mentioned</strong></p><p>Second Life (secondlife.com) · Fair Share Protocol (fairshare.social) · Philip Rosedale's Substack · Eleanor Ostrom (commons governance) · Milton Friedman (money supply) · EverQuest · Joscha Bach</p><p><strong>Why Listen</strong></p><p>For anyone grappling with questions of digital identity, economic justice, and how technology shapes human meaning-making, this conversation offers both lived wisdom from a twenty-year experiment and a surprisingly hopeful blueprint for building systems where capitalism and ethics are not in opposition.</p><p><strong>Keywords</strong></p><p>virtual worlds · consciousness · identity · economics · monetary policy · community · capitalism · ethics · inequality · digital ontology · society · meaning-making</p>]]>
      </itunes:summary>
      <itunes:keywords>artificial intelligence, consciousness, philosophy, technology, culture, meaning, future, AI, machine consciousness, human connection, futurism, scientists, philosophers, entrepreneurs</itunes:keywords>
      <itunes:explicit>No</itunes:explicit>
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