
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In this episode, Xavier Bonilla has a dialogue with Richard Fisher about the long view and our future. They talk about how society started thinking more short-term and not long-term. They discuss the historical aspects of longtermism, positive outlooks for different futures, longtermism and capitalism, and how our politics has become more short-term. They talk about the evolutionary framework for foresight and longtermism, deep time both past and future, climate change, and many more topics.
Richard Fisher is a senior journalist with the BBC-London. He is an Honorary Research Associate at University College, London. He has also been a fellow at MIT. His work covers science, technology history, health, and philosophy. He is the author of the book, The Long View.
Website: https://richardfisher.carrd.co/
Substack: The Long View: A Field Guide
Twitter: @Rifish
By Converging Dialogues4.8
4646 ratings
In this episode, Xavier Bonilla has a dialogue with Richard Fisher about the long view and our future. They talk about how society started thinking more short-term and not long-term. They discuss the historical aspects of longtermism, positive outlooks for different futures, longtermism and capitalism, and how our politics has become more short-term. They talk about the evolutionary framework for foresight and longtermism, deep time both past and future, climate change, and many more topics.
Richard Fisher is a senior journalist with the BBC-London. He is an Honorary Research Associate at University College, London. He has also been a fellow at MIT. His work covers science, technology history, health, and philosophy. He is the author of the book, The Long View.
Website: https://richardfisher.carrd.co/
Substack: The Long View: A Field Guide
Twitter: @Rifish

15,229 Listeners

5,576 Listeners

870 Listeners

2,461 Listeners

1,532 Listeners

316 Listeners

512 Listeners

584 Listeners

941 Listeners

4,167 Listeners

357 Listeners

1,662 Listeners

205 Listeners

290 Listeners

231 Listeners