Yuval Noah Harari on Stories, Suffering, and Silicon Minds

Yuval Noah Harari on Stories, Suffering, and Silicon Minds

Historian Yuval Noah Harari sits down with Lex Fridman for a sweeping conversation about the stories that hold civilizations together, the difference between intelligence and consciousness, and what happens when artificial minds learn to write the myths we live by.

This visual guide distills nearly three hours of dense, wide-ranging dialogue into an illustrated reading experience with infographics, diagrams, and structured frameworks you can absorb in under thirty minutes.

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Eric Weinstein on a World Running Out of Road

Eric Weinstein on a World Running Out of Road

Eric Weinstein joins Triggernometry for a sweeping diagnosis of why the world feels like it's losing grip. He argues that our institutions aren't just failing, they're structurally incapable of honesty. And with AI poised to dissolve the capital-labour relationship, the reckoning may arrive before anyone is ready.

This visual guide breaks down Weinstein's dense but rewarding ideas into navigable sections, from the mechanics of institutional capture to a timeline of economic stagnation, and the two phases of AI disruption.

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Naval Ravikant on Wealth, Happiness, and the Meaning of Life

Naval Ravikant on Wealth, Happiness, and the Meaning of Life

Naval Ravikant sat down with Joe Rogan in June 2019 and spent over two hours dismantling conventional wisdom about wealth, work, and happiness. His formula is deceptively simple — specific knowledge, multiplied by accountability, multiplied by leverage — but the implications run deep.

This visual breakdown maps every major idea from the conversation, including the three types of leverage (and why code and media are the only ones worth chasing), the lion work model, the happiness framework, and the one unlock that ties it all together: permissionless.

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Stephen Fry on the Future of Humanity and Technology

Stephen Fry on the Future of Humanity and Technology

What if every technological revolution follows the same pattern: a box opened, a gift received, and a price paid?

In this infographic essay, we trace Stephen Fry's sweeping argument from his 2017 Shannon Luminary Lecture at Bell Labs: that from Gutenberg's press to the internet, humanity has always greeted transformative technology with awe, then alarm, then adaptation.

The question he leaves us with isn't whether to open the box — it never was — but whether we can hold onto hope long enough to find what's waiting at the bottom.

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