How We Got Here
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About this listen
In Episode 3 of The Clarity Lens, Laura steps back and looks at the bigger picture.
This episode explores how systems of risk, responsibility, insurance, and taxation evolved — from ancient societies to modern, technology-driven life — and how responsibility gradually shifted from institutions to individuals.
Rather than focusing on personal behavior, this conversation centers on structure: how complexity accumulated, how technology changed who carries the burden of understanding, and why overwhelm and avoidance are often logical responses to systems that ask more than they explain.
This episode is more historical and contextual than previous ones, offering a deeper understanding of how we got here — and why clarity today can feel harder than it should.
If you’ve ever felt capable yet overwhelmed, responsible yet unsure, this episode offers context without judgment and perspective without pressure.
Sponsor
This episode is sponsored by Savorista Coffee.
Savorista specializes in premium craft decaf and half-caf coffee made from high-altitude Arabica beans, ethically sourced and roasted in small batches. Their coffee is naturally decaffeinated using water or sugarcane-based processes — no harsh chemicals — making it a thoughtful option for anyone who loves the ritual of coffee but wants more balance.
Listeners of The Clarity Lens can receive 20% off their order using the code CLARITY.
Learn more at: www.savoristacoffee.com
Sources & Further Reading
For listeners who want to explore the ideas discussed in this episode more deeply:
- Bernstein, Peter. Against the Gods: The Remarkable Story of Risk — the historical development of risk, probability, and early insurance systems
- Polanyi, Karl. The Great Transformation — how economic systems became detached from social and communal life
- Hacker, Jacob. The Great Risk Shift — how responsibility for economic risk moved from institutions to individuals in modern policy
- Herd, Pamela & Moynihan, Donald. Administrative Burden — how complexity, paperwork, and compliance shape behavior and access
- Scott, James C. Seeing Like a State — how large systems prioritize legibility and efficiency, often at the cost of human experience
- CAST (Center for Applied Special Technology). Universal Design for Learning — how systems can better account for cognitive diversity and human variability
Support
If this episode resonated and you would like to support The Clarity Lens, you can do so through Buy Me a Coffee. Sharing the podcast and leaving a review also helps more than you might realize. Thank you for being here.