Naval Ravikant on Getting Rich Without Getting Lucky
Naval Ravikant spent 3.5 hours with Nivi laying out a first-principles framework for building wealth without relying on luck.
This visual guide distills that sprawling conversation into clear frameworks, comparison tables, and charts that make the crux of Naval's ideas easy to grasp in 25 minutes.
Charlie Munger on the Psychology of Human Misjudgment
Charlie Munger never formally studied psychology, yet he built one of the most practical frameworks for understanding why people make terrible decisions.
This visual guide organizes Munger's 24 causes of misjudgment into clean categories, highlighted takeaways, and real-world examples you can absorb in minutes instead of hours.
Richard Feynman on the Pleasure of Finding Things Out
In 1981, Richard Feynman sat for a BBC Horizon interview that became one of the most celebrated conversations about the scientific mind ever recorded. With most of his life behind him, he reflected on everything from his father's unconventional teaching to the moral weight of the atomic bomb to the pure pleasure of not knowing.
This visual guide distills the full interview into a structured, easy-to-follow journey through Feynman's most powerful ideas, helping you synthesize the key themes and see how they connect.
Tim Minchin’s 9 Life Lessons
Comedian and musician Tim Minchin returned to his alma mater in 2013 to deliver one of the most-watched graduation speeches of all time: a witty, irreverent, and deeply humane set of nine rules for living well.
From the case against grand dreams to why you should judge people by how they treat the powerless, this visual guide distills every lesson into something you can carry with you.
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.