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Notes from the Field

Notes from the Field

Written by: Alex S
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A working notebook in audio form: short, Dialogue episodes about whatever has my attention this week. Geopolitics, political economy, media theory, evolutionary biology, books, ideas. Sources are curated by hand; the conversations are made with NotebookLM. New episodes drop ad hoc.

Economics
Episodes
  • The Architect of Autonomy: Chasing the First AI Unicorn
    May 5 2026

    This dialogue explores the transition of artificial intelligence from a mere task assistant to an autonomous business operator capable of building billion-dollar enterprises. The speaker argues that the primary barrier to an AI-driven unicorn is not a lack of cognitive power, but rather the institutional and legal barriers that require human accountability for banking, contracts, and regulation. The text outlines a four-stage evolution of AI integration, moving from narrow tool usage to a future where agents function as principal decision-makers. While technical reliability is rapidly improving, the discussion highlights that human-centric commerce is structurally designed to require a person to hold legal responsibility. Ultimately, the source predicts that the first AI-led unicorn will likely be fronted by a small team of humans who serve as the legal interface for an underlying autonomous system. The overarching lesson is to distinguish between an AI's raw intelligence and its operational capability within the existing global market.

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    19 mins
  • The Agency Loop: Engineering Independence in Childhood
    Apr 30 2026

    This podcast transcript explores the development of high agency in children, defined as the ingrained habit of taking initiative to solve problems rather than waiting for external help. The discussion highlights a core feedback loop where a child identifies a challenge, takes action, and observes a tangible change in their environment. The authors argue that modern parenting often stifles this growth through over-scheduling and a rescue reflex that prevents children from experiencing productive struggle. To counter this, they propose several principles, such as assigning real responsibilities with actual consequences and allowing children to negotiate using reason. Ultimately, the text suggests that fostering independence requires parents to manage their own anxieties and model agentic behavior themselves. The goal is to move beyond mere academic or social optimization to ensure children enter adulthood with the confidence to act on the world.

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    24 mins
  • The Principal-Agent Problem: Why Systems Fail Individuals
    Apr 29 2026

    This dialogue explores the principal-agent problem, a political and economic framework explaining why large organizations often make self-destructive decisions. The text argues that a principal, such as a nation or a group of shareholders, suffers when the agents making decisions prioritize their own personal incentives over the collective good. Real-world examples like the Vietnam War, the Iraq invasion, and corporate mergers illustrate how individuals rationally choose paths that lead to catastrophic outcomes for the institutions they represent. To combat this misalignment, the source suggests strategies like incentive alignment, rigorous oversight, and robust institutional design based on checks and balances. Ultimately, the discussion posits that institutional failure is often a structural issue rather than a lack of intelligence among leaders. By identifying where incentives diverge, observers can better understand why systems consistently produce results that seem irrational from the outside.

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    21 mins
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