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  • Alyssa Gilbert is Director of Undaunted which is a community of creative, proactive people exploring how innovation can help humans tackle climate change. She is also the Director of Innovation at the Grantham Institute which was established in 2007 to provide a vital global centre of excellence for research and education on climate change. Today, the Grantham Institute is established as a leading authority on climate and environmental science. She is an all round expert on environmental and climate change policy and science having worked in the field in numerous roles and several countries for over 20 years.

    In this conversation we talked about:

    Building open innovation Infrastructure for the climate ecosystem Finding and scaling silver bullets and business models for climate innovation Cities and places as serendipity engines Where could and should climate leadership come from?

    Highlights include:

    Why she is not getting angry about the net zero backtracking where the object is to divide people and the solution is not to be divided. The role of place in driving climate innovation as part of a global supercluster of talent and technology. That it's great to care but you cannot take the world upon your shoulders - everyone has a role to play in addressing the climate emergency.

    This podcast was produced by Liminal - a collective intelligence community. Thanks to all of our community members, clients, partners and patrons. Here are links to some of the things we discussed.

    Undaunted https://undaunted-hq.org/ Grantham https://www.imperial.ac.uk/grantham/ Climate Tech Supercluster https://www.climatetechsupercluster.com/ Conception X https://www.conceptionx.org/ Liminal https://www.weareliminal.co/ RethinkX https://www.rethinkx.com/ Notpla https://www.notpla.com/ Ministry for the future https://store.orbit-books.co.uk/products/the-ministry-for-the-future

    Thanks for listening. Check out and buy the On The Edge book here.

  • Welcome to On The Edge, a podcast and now also a book, about making unexpected connections everywhere and anywhere.

    Why should you embrace uncertainty as an opportunity not a threat?
    How can you connect people and ideas to engineer serendipity?
    Where should you start when embarking on a transition to something new?

    On The Edge will be your guide to navigating uncertainty based upon the experiences of a diverse group of creative and entrepreneurial people and organizations who have learned how to survive and thrive in our increasingly connected world, and is available to buy now as a book or ebook. What are you on the edge of right now?
    In this episode I read Chapter 3 called Into the Unknown. Enjoy.
    If you enjoy it then please consider buying a copy and giving both the book and the podcast a good review or rating, as that really helps get it out to new people. Others have described the book as:
    “A beautiful little book.” Tessy Britton
    “Succinct and insightful.” Dave Snowden
    “Realistic and wise.” Margaret Heffernan
    "A thoughtful meditation on how to navigate uncertain futures.” Anab Jain
    “An inspiring and orienting tapestry.” Cassie Robinson
    “Inspirational from the very first page.” Johnnie Moore
    “This is a great little book.” Jon Alexander
    “It’s wonderful! I have goosebumps." Noelle Dye
    “Read this book and take its insights to heart.” Rob Poynton
    "An inspiring and practical guide.” Ella Goldner
    This podcast was brought to you by Liminal. To find out more please visit www.weareliminal.co/ontheedge.

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  • Welcome to On The Edge, a podcast and now also a book, about making unexpected connections everywhere and anywhere.

    Why should you embrace uncertainty as an opportunity not a threat?
    How can you connect people and ideas to engineer serendipity?
    Where should you start when embarking on a transition to something new?

    On The Edge will be your guide to navigating uncertainty based upon the experiences of a diverse group of creative and entrepreneurial people and organizations who have learned how to survive and thrive in our increasingly connected world, and is available to buy now as a book or ebook. What are you on the edge of right now?
    In this episode I read Chapter 2 called This is Happening. Enjoy.
    If you enjoy it then please consider buying a copy and giving both the book and the podcast a good review or rating, as that really helps get it out to new people. Others have described the book as:
    “A beautiful little book.” Tessy Britton
    “Succinct and insightful.” Dave Snowden
    “Realistic and wise.” Margaret Heffernan
    "A thoughtful meditation on how to navigate uncertain futures.” Anab Jain
    “An inspiring and orienting tapestry.” Cassie Robinson
    “Inspirational from the very first page.” Johnnie Moore
    “This is a great little book.” Jon Alexander
    “It’s wonderful! I have goosebumps." Noelle Dye
    “Read this book and take its insights to heart.” Rob Poynton
    "An inspiring and practical guide.” Ella Goldner
    This podcast was brought to you by Liminal. To find out more please visit www.weareliminal.co/ontheedge.

  • Welcome to On The Edge, a podcast and now also a book, about making unexpected connections everywhere and anywhere.

    Why should you embrace uncertainty as an opportunity not a threat?
    How can you connect people and ideas to engineer serendipity?
    Where should you start when embarking on a transition to something new?

    On The Edge will be your guide to navigating uncertainty based upon the experiences of a diverse group of creative and entrepreneurial people and organizations who have learned how to survive and thrive in our increasingly connected world, and is available to buy now as a book or ebook. What are you on the edge of right now?
    In this episode I read Chapter 1 called Start at the End. Enjoy.
    If you enjoy it then please consider buying a copy and giving both the book and the podcast a good review or rating, as that really helps get it out to new people. Others have described the book as:
    “A beautiful little book.” Tessy Britton
    “Succinct and insightful.” Dave Snowden
    “Realistic and wise.” Margaret Heffernan
    "A thoughtful meditation on how to navigate uncertain futures.” Anab Jain
    “An inspiring and orienting tapestry.” Cassie Robinson
    “Inspirational from the very first page.” Johnnie Moore
    “This is a great little book.” Jon Alexander
    “It’s wonderful! I have goosebumps." Noelle Dye
    “Read this book and take its insights to heart.” Rob Poynton
    "An inspiring and practical guide.” Ella Goldner
    This podcast was brought to you by Liminal. To find out more please visit www.weareliminal.co/ontheedge.

  • Welcome to On The Edge, a podcast and now also a book, about making unexpected connections everywhere and anywhere. 

    Why should you embrace uncertainty as an opportunity not a threat? 

    How can you connect people and ideas to engineer serendipity? 

    Where should you start when embarking on a transition to something new? 

    On The Edge will be your guide to navigating uncertainty based upon the experiences of a diverse group of creative and entrepreneurial people and organizations who have learned how to survive and thrive in our increasingly connected world, and is available to buy now as a book or ebook. What are you on the edge of right now? 

    In this episode I read the Introduction called The Future is Fluid. Enjoy. If you enjoy it then please consider buying a copy and giving both the book and the podcast a good review or rating, as that really helps get it out to new people. Others have described the book as: 

    “A beautiful little book.” Tessy Britton 

    “Succinct and insightful.” Dave Snowden 

    “Realistic and wise.” Margaret Heffernan 

    "A thoughtful meditation on how to navigate uncertain futures.” Anab Jain 

    “An inspiring and orienting tapestry.” Cassie Robinson 

    “Inspirational from the very first page.” Johnnie Moore 

    “This is a great little book.” Jon Alexander 

    “It’s wonderful! I have goosebumps." Noelle Dye 

    “Read this book and take its insights to heart.” Rob Poynton 

    "An inspiring and practical guide.” Ella Goldner 

    This podcast was brought to you by Liminal. To find out more please visit www.weareliminal.co/ontheedge.

  • Welcome to On The Edge, a podcast and now also a book, about making unexpected connections everywhere and anywhere. 

    Why should you embrace uncertainty as an opportunity not a threat?  How can you connect people and ideas to engineer serendipity?  Where should you start when embarking on a transition to something new? 

    On The Edge will be your guide to navigating uncertainty based upon the experiences of a diverse group of creative and entrepreneurial people and organizations who have learned how to survive and thrive in our increasingly connected world, and is available to buy now as a book or ebook. 

    www.weareliminal.co/ontheedge

    In this episode I read the Preface called Gradually, Then Suddenly. If you enjoy it then please consider buying a copy and giving both the book and the podcast a good review or rating, as that really helps get it out to new people. Others have described the book as: 

    “A beautiful little book.” Tessy Britton 

    “Succinct and insightful.” Dave Snowden 

    “Realistic and wise.” Margaret Heffernan 

    "A thoughtful meditation on how to navigate uncertain futures.” Anab Jain 

    “An inspiring and orienting tapestry.” Cassie Robinson 

    “Inspirational from the very first page.” Johnnie Moore 

    “This is a great little book.” Jon Alexander 

    “It’s wonderful! I have goosebumps." Noelle Dye 

    “Read this book and take its insights to heart.” Rob Poynton

    "An inspiring and practical guide.” Ella Goldner

    What are you on the edge of right now? 

  • In this conversation I connected with Ella Goldner. Ella is a co-founder of Zinc - a fund that backs entrepreneurs, pre-team and pre-idea, to build new tech-enabled & mission-driven commercial ventures. She is also the co-founder of Alma Angels, a network that brings together new and existing angel investors who are committed to actively supporting female founders.In this conversation we talked about: The Zinc venture builder missions and how/why the best way to foster entrepreneurship in response to social challenges? How to mitigate the challenges of co-founder relationships, especially given that some people say that too much or too little co-founder conflict is the #1 cause of start up failure. A deep dive into the latest Zinc environment mission which just went live - to mobilise the climate innovation ecosystem through cross-sector collaboration and scale up capital, and shifting narrative from climate being (only) a big problem to (also) a huge opportunity. OpenCo/newCo?So I started out by asking her, What is a venture builder mission and who is it for? Enjoy!"The core components (of Zinc) are; can we get the talent to do that if we give them the right missions, can we build an ecosystem around them, an army of people who care about what they do and help them, and can we make that really powerful by underpinning with good research.""Every moment you hear the news (about climate) there is a reason to feel despair, so how do you turn that around and remind people of the opportunities and the covid an industry-led vaccine task force is a really good example of how to do that.""We want (Zinc) to be the best place in the world for anybody who wants to experiment and have impact at scale... if you are really talented and ambitious."https://www.zinc.vc/https://apply.workable.com/zinc-ventures-limited/j/D79DBD1FC7/https://www.zinc.vc/missions/environment/https://gosupercritical.com/https://www.imdb.com/title/tt1172206/https://newco.co/https://www.channel4.com/programmes/jabbed-inside-britains-vaccine-triumphhttps://www.weareliminal.co/

  • “How do you change the system to take longer term decisions without forcing people and using a government to do that, and the answer is you set up cooperatives and mutuals.” Shiv Malik

    In this conversation I connected with Shiv Malik who is a technologist, broadcaster, author, former Guardian investigative journalist and co-founder of the Intergenerational Foundation think tank. He is also author of several books - The Messenger and Jilted Generation. He joined the Web3 space in 2017 with Golem and then Streamr. In 2021 he co-founded Pool and currently leads the organization on its mission to bring Data Unions to the world and ensure people have control of their data and a genuine stake in the digital economy.

    In this conversation we talked about web3 and data unions and why are they are important, building upon his background as an investigative journalist.

    "We all need to have that stake in the future and be able to leverage that."

    https://www.pooldata.io/

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiv_Malik

    https://www.faber.co.uk/author/shiv-malik/

    https://www.theguardian.com/profile/shiv-malik

    https://www.weareliminal.co/

  • In this conversation I connected with Sonja Blignaut. 

    Originally a meteorologist, Sonja now partners with people who need to navigate, make sense of, and lead in uncertainty. She spans the boundaries of leadership, organisational development & change, strategy, risk, innovation, and marketing. In short, she works wherever there is complexity, which nowadays is more or less everywhere. 

    Sonja is internationally recognised as an expert on Complexity, the Cynefin Framework, Waysfinding, and Complexity Fitness. She is certified in various individual and systemic coaching methods and a sought-after speaker, with experience at various conferences locally and internationally, including TedX. 

    In this conversation we talked about crossing thresholds and the skills, capabilities, rituals, and mindsets are required to navigate transitions well?- inspired by this blog post that she shared recently that I’ll link to in the show notes. That post starts with the following quote by John O’Donohue:  

    “At any time you can ask yourself: At which threshold am I now standing? At this time in my life, what am I leaving? Where am I about to enter? What is preventing me from crossing my next threshold? What gift would enable me to do it?” 

    So I started out by asking her, at what threshold she is now standing and how it makes her feel? Enjoy! 

    ____ 

    - The space of not knowing is where the growth happens 

    - The hardest conversations we are avoiding the most are the ones with ourselves 

    - The value of rituals in transitions and the need for containment  

    - How much of my own life am I putting off until someday? 

    - The time has come to cross - don’t let your life flow by without noticing 

    https://complexityfit.com/sonja-blignaut/ 

    https://sonjablignaut.medium.com/crossing-thresholds-a109d1b2d392 

    https://www.weareliminal.co

  • In this conversation I connected with Nick Hare, founder of Aleph Insights - an analytics consultancy that specialises in supporting strategic decision-making for both business and government in defence, security, intelligence and international affairs.

    Prior to establishing Aleph Insights, he worked in various roles across the Ministry of Defence, the Cabinet Office and the intelligence community, most recently within Defence Intelligence, where he was responsible for professionalising intelligence analysis."

    I first met Nick via an old school friend and have gone on to work with him a few times over the last decade.

    In this conversation - recorded on 1st April 2022 - we talked about the current war in Ukraine. In particular we talked about: What can we learn about analysis and decision making from such turbulent times? And is there a new world order emerging, and if so are are some of the possible future scenarios?

    So I started out by asking him, how has the war in Ukraine affected him personally, and also whether he agrees that we are past a point of no return? Enjoy!

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/nick-hare-a7b12161/ 

    https://alephinsights.com/

    https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/cognitive-engineering/id1142986387

    https://twitter.com/AlephInsights

    https://www.weareliminal.co/

  • In this conversation I connected with Jon Alexander who is the author of a new book called Citizens. 

    Jon started his career working in the advertising industry, selling some of the world's biggest brands, and winning plenty of awards along the way. Then he realised he was caught up in a story he didn't believe in: The Consumer Story.

    So in 2014, Jon co-founded the New Citizenship Project. Their mission was to figure out how to use their skills not just to sell stuff to Consumers, but to involve people in the decisions that affect their lives as Citizens, working with the likes of the Co-op, Body Shop, National Trust, BBC, and European Central Bank.

    In this conversation we talked about:

    A brief history of humanity from people as subjects to consumers to citizens. How the citizen story is different to some of the progressive stories and ideas that have preceded it? How the pandemic has shifted the role and power of people, governments and corporations? How we can’t have paradigm shift without a paradigm to shift to. The story of vTaiwan and Taiwan in 2014. The idea of social acupuncture.

    So I started out by asking him, what is the citizen story, and why is it important right now? Enjoy!

    https://www.jonalexander.net/

    https://www.newcitizenship.org.uk/

    https://www.weareliminal.co/

    http://www.participatorycity.org/

    https://anchor.fm/weareliminal/episodes/004-Participatory-Cities---Tessy-Britton-e57bok

    https://info.vtaiwan.tw/

    Please Note: In this conversation we talked about several examples including Participatory Cities (of which I am a trustee) and Tessy Britton (who I interviewed way back in episode 4 of this podcast) - links above. Also Jon and I were introduced recently thanks to Francine Bennet so many thanks to Fran for the introduction.

  • In this conversation I connected with Anab Jain who is a designer, futurist, filmmaker and educator.
    As Co-founder and Director of Superflux - the multi-award winning design agency - they translate future uncertainty into present day choices
    Over the last 15 years, Anab has gained international recognition for her work and commentary on design, innovation, emerging technologies and complex futures. She is the recipient of many, many awards.
    She has delivered talks and keynotes at several conferences including TED, MIT Media Lab and MOMA’s to name but three.
    In addition, Anab was appointed Professor at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna in 2016, where she leads the Design Investigations (ID2) Program.
    In this conversation we talked about how and why we think about the future is all wrong. In particular we talked about:
    1. Who or what gives you hope for the future?
    2. How do you translate future uncertainty into present day choices?
    3. What is human exceptionalism, and why are you calling time on it?
    So I started out by asking her, why do you not like to make predictions about the future? Enjoy!

    https://superflux.in/
    https://twitter.com/anabjain
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PYjWLqE_cfE
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4tf7T2TySG0
    https://www.dezeen.com/awards/2021/winners/superflux/
    https://designinvestigations.at/
    https://www.weareliminal.co/

  • In this conversation I connected with Dilbagh Gill who is CEO of the Mahindra Formula E Racing team since the sports inaugural season in 2014.
    Formula E is the is a single-seater motorsport championship for electric cars.
    As one of ten founding teams – and the only Indian team – Dilbagh has built his team from the ground up which has led to multiple race victories and podiums.
    He’s always been a motorsport and mechanical enthusiast. From repairing motorbikes while studying at college before going on to be an amateur rally driver.
    He also has a background working for a start up that developed software used in FIFA World Cup and the World Cup of Motorsport.
    In this conversation we talked about a Formula E and a different kind of race. The race to net zero emissions. In particular we talked about:

    The role that collaboration within teams and cooperation across teams, plays in the development of the sport?
    What are some of the plans/predictions for innovations that you are developing and their potential future impact?
    Last year was said to be a make or break year for the climate emergency (COP26 etc). What are you learning that others (citizens, governments, OEM’s) can learn from?

    So I started out by asking him what is Formula E and how and why did it start?
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/dilbaghgill/
    https://www.mahindraracing.com/
    https://www.fiaformulae.com/
    https://www.weareliminal.co/

  • "What gives me hope is that people are getting involved with climate action, not just politicians and businesses. There is a strong show of human demand for change and that’s what we’ve always needed." Gurjit Singh Lalli

    In this conversation I connected with Gurjit Singh Lalli, who is one of the best connected people in Glasgow, and with the eyes of the world on the City due to the United Nations COP26 Climate Change Conference summit, I caught him on a very busy day yesterday, in-between meetings in a cafe, a short distance from the main summit event.

    Born in England, raised in Scotland, educated in Sweden, having lived in Mexico & Middle East, with a wife from Hong Kong, and parents from India, he has been back in Glasgow and since 2010 and is the Founding Curator TEDxGlasgow.

    They have had hosted numerous events in Glasgow and over 14 million views of the talks we put online. 

    He is the founder of several companies is also winner of the Business Man of the Year award at the Scottish Asian Business Awards. 

    So I started out by asking him. How does it feel to be in and from Glasgow right now?

    https://tedxglasgow.com/

    https://ukcop26.org/

    https://www.linkedin.com/in/gurjitsinghlalli/

    "If we can bail out banks then lets bail out humanity."

    "There are two types of activism I’m seeing. One on the street and one in the boardroom."

    "Climate action is not something we should be competing on it’s something we should be collaborating on."

  • In this conversation I connected with Dr Sue Black who is now a Prof of Computer Science at Durham. She is perhaps best known for her instrumental role in helping to save Bletchley Park, the once the top-secret home of the World War Two Codebreakers, including Alan Turing and 1,000’s others, half of whom were women, that allegedly shortened WW2 by 2-3 years and saved over 20 million lives.
    With bright red hair and relentless enthusiasm, she is a tireless campaigner for the role tech can play in creating positive social change - in particular for women and mums in the tech sector. She left school at 16, was in women’s refuge at 25 with 3 small children, went back to education at 26 got degree in computing in 1993, and PhD in software engineering in 2001 and is now one of the most influential people in computer science in the UK and even appeared on the legendary BBC radio programme Desert Island Discs earlier this year too!
    So I started out by asking her about social mobility through education and asked "are you the exception that proves the rule"? 
    https://sueblack.co.uk/
    https://bletchleypark.org.uk/
    https://techupwomen.org/
    https://cruciblealumni.com/crucibleirl/
    https://techmums.co/
    https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0b3b4m5
    https://www.weareliminal.co

  • In this conversation I connected with Michael Garfield who is a real renaissance man. A talented musician, artist and illustrator, podcaster, palaeontologist! What is the point of polymaths? He is the host of the Future Fossils Podcast and the Complexity Podcast for the Santa Fe Institute.
    Previously he has been as a Community Manager for Long Now Foundation, an In-House Philosopher The Crypto Crew and a Writer and Editor for the Globalish Institute. His online profiles describes him as a Context Provider (rather than a content provider) and a Rift Navigator.
    Our conversation explored the need for generalists in a highly specialised world and interdisciplinarity including the following questions:

    What is the purpose of polymaths?
    Why is neuroplasticity is the best antidote to uncertainty and complexity?
    What is the nature of the technological and evolutionary transition we are in right now?
    Why would we want to live in the future verses the long now?

    So I started out by asking him I started out by asking him - what is the point of polymaths in our society and culture right now? Enjoy.
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lindisfarne_Association
    https://michaelgarfield.medium.com/improvising-out-of-algorithmic-isolation-7ef1a5b94697
    https://www.culture24.org.uk/art/art22070
    https://www.santafe.edu
    https://shows.acast.com/futurefossils
    https://www.andreawulf.com/about-the-invention-of-nature.html
    https://longnow.org
    https://www.weareliminal.co

  • In this conversation I connected with Sharath Jeevan who is an expert on how to practically re-ignite the inner-drive (or intrinsic motivation) in our lives.

    He is the Executive Chairman of Intrinsic Labs, which supports organisations all around the world to solve deep motivational challenges.
    Previously Sharath founded and led STiR Education to re-ignite the motivation of 200,000 teachers, 35,000 schools and 7 million children in emerging countries.
    He was elected an Ashoka Fellow in 2014 and was recognised as one of the UK’s ten leading social entrepreneurs in 2019.
    His first book Intrinsic is available now in trade paperback, audiobook and e-book formats.

    We literally talked about:

    The current crisis of motivation
    How we can best use the 90k hours of our working lives
    The false promise of meritocracy (which also cropped up in episode 29 of this podcast with Jack Du Rose)
    Learning about motivation from the 150th best tennis player in the world
    Who nurtures the nurturers?

    So I started out by asking him why do you get out of bed in the morning? Enjoy.
    https://www.intrinsic-labs.com/
    https://stireducation.org/
    https://www.weareliminal.co

  • In this conversation I connected with Jeremy Lent who describes himself as an author and integrator and “one of the greatest thinkers of our age”, according to George Monbiot.
    Born in the UK and based for many years in the US, and now lives Berkeley California. His previous book The Patterning Instinct was about deeper patterns of political and cultural developments. 
    This conversation was based upon his new book called 'The Web of Meaning' which is all about integrating science and traditional wisdom.
    He is also the founder of the nonprofit Liology Institute. Liology is a word made up from the Chinese word “li,” which means “the organizing principles” and “ology” which is the Greek-derived word for “study.”  So liology means “the study of the organizing principles.”
    We (quite literally) talked about life, the universe and everything, including:

    The difference between eastern and western perspectives, culture, language and thinking
    The important distinction between the scientific method and reductionism
    The fact that meaning is emergent and stems from the interconnection between things (and people)
    The pros and cons of the rise of mindfulness and it’s alter-ego McMindfulness, especially in Silicon Valley
    How we can embed these ideas in tackling the climate emergency

    I loved what we said about:

    The connection between things are as important if not more so than the things they are connecting
    Life is a 4 billion year rebellion from entropy
    The most dangerous technology in the world is the limited liability company
    We need a universal declaration of natural rights

    To find out more about Jeremy please visit:
    https://www.jeremylent.com/
    http://www.liology.org/
    This podcast was produced by Liminal - a collective inteligence community that builds and scales net-zero ventures. Thanks for all of our community members, patrons and clients without whom this podcast would not be possible. To find out more about us please visit:
    https://www.weareliminal.co/
    Lastly please do like and subscribe to this podcast and share it with others who might enjoy it as well. Thank you.

  • In this conversation I connected with Geoffrey West who is a British theoretical physicist and former president and distinguished professor of the Santa Fe Institute the Santa Fe Institute is the world's leading research center for complex systems science. 

    He is one of the leading scientists working on a scientific model of cities. Among other things, his work states that with the doubling of a city's size, salaries per capita will generally increase by 15%. West became a Stanford faculty member before he joined the particle theory group at New Mexico's Los Alamos National Laboratory. After Los Alamos, he became president of the Santa Fe Institute. 

    He is author of a fantastic book called Scale - The Universal Laws of Life and Death in Organisms, Cities and Companies which formed the basis of this conversation and is highly recommended. West has since been honoured as one of Time magazine's Time 100. 

    A more accurate title for this episode should be something like 'The Emergent Universal Laws and Economies of Scale, of Organisms, Cities, Companies, Countries and Communities - but that isn’t quite as catchy.' 

    “There is regularity and that we are all part of it, in a beautiful and highly interconnected way, to the same sets of laws and principles, it does give a sense of purpose.” Geoffrey West 

    We talked about: 

    1. How are organisms, cities and companies similar and why are they subject to the same principles as they scale? 

    2. Why do organisms and companies die but cities don’t? 

    3. Are social networks the new cities? And what about countries? 

    4. We also discussed the limits of his model of scaling and how it has affected his world view? We I started out by asking him How and why are all organisms similar in the way that they grow and scale? Enjoy.

    https://www.ted.com/talks/geoffrey_west_the_surprising_math_of_cities_and_corporations/transcript 

    https://medium.com/swlh/scale-a-book-summary-3d39d16321ef 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_JUAx445ReU 

    https://www.santafe.edu/people/profile/geoffrey-west 

    https://www.weareliminal.co/ 

    #scale #scaling #growth #organisms #cities #companies #networks #complexity #emergence #connections #interconnected #fractals #universal #laws #principles #physics #biology #science #urban #collectiveintelligence #ontheedge #weareliminal

  • In this conversation I connected with Gemma Mortensen who is a social entrepreneur, who recently launched New Constellations to help people imagine and create a better, more beautiful future.
    Prior to that she was Chief Global Officer at Change.org - a platform where over 200 million people from around the world have start a petition for change
    Prior to that CEO of Crisis Action - which works to protect civilians from armed conflict - and where she helped to create a fantastic handbook for Creative Coalitions.
    She is also Co-Founder and Vice-Chair of More In Common - seeks to address the underlying drivers of polarization, and build more inclusive societies.
    We talked about:

    Creating a space to imaging a more beautiful future and the art of listening
    The Silicon Valley world view and how to take collective responsibility for stewarding technology for good not ill
    The need to reclaim hope and optimism and holding the fertile void where surprise is possible again
    Being on the cusp of being able to tell new stories of the good life

    I started out by asked her “How can we build creative coalitions"? Enjoy!
    https://crisisaction.org/handbook/
    https://www.change.org/
    https://www.moreincommon.com/
    https://newconstellations.co/
    https://skoll.org/contributor/gemma-mortensen/
    www.weareliminal.co