
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
On this episode of Crazy Wisdom, host Stewart Alsop speaks with Michael Jagdeo, a headhunter and founder working with Exponent Labs and The Syndicate, about the cycles of money, power, and technology that shape our world. Their conversation touches on financial history through The Ascent of Money by Niall Ferguson and William Bagehot’s The Money Market, the rise and fall of financial centers from London to New York and the new Texas Stock Exchange, the consolidation of industries and the theory of oligarchical collectivism, the role of AI as both tool and chaos agent, Bitcoin and “quantitative re-centralization,” the dynamics of exponential organizations, and the balance between collectivism and individualism. Jagdeo also shares recruiting philosophies rooted in stories like “stone soup,” frameworks like Yu-Kai Chou’s Octalysis and the User Type Hexad, and book recommendations including Salim Ismail’s Exponential Organizations and Arthur Koestler’s The Act of Creation. Along the way they explore servant leadership, Price’s Law, Linux and open source futures, religion as an operating system, and the cyclical nature of civilizations. You can learn more about Michael Jagdeo or reach out to him directly through Twitter or LinkedIn.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation
Timestamps
00:05 Stewart Alsop introduces Michael Jagdeo, who shares his path from headhunting actuaries and IT talent into launching startups with Exponent Labs and The Syndicate.
00:10 They connect recruiting to financial history, discussing actuaries, The Ascent of Money, and William Bagehot’s The Money Market on the London money market and railways.
00:15 The Rothschilds, institutional knowledge, and Corn Laws lead into questions about New York as a financial center and the quiet launch of the Texas Stock Exchange by Citadel and BlackRock.
00:20 Capital power, George Soros vs. the Bank of England, chaos, paper clips, and Orwell’s oligarchical collectivism frame industry consolidation, syndicates, and stone soup.
00:25 They debate imperial conquest, bourgeoisie leisure, the decline of the middle class, AI as chaos agent, digital twins, Sarah Connor, Godzilla, and nuclear metaphors.
00:30 Conversation turns to Bitcoin, “quantitative re-centralization,” Jack Bogle, index funds, Robinhood micro bailouts, and AI as both entropy and negative entropy.
00:35 Jagdeo discusses Jim Keller, Tenstorrent, RISC-V, Nvidia CUDA, exponential organizations, Price’s Law, bureaucracy, and servant leadership with the parable of stone soup.
00:40 Recruiting as symbiosis, biophilia, trust, Judas, Wilhelm Reich, AI tools, Octalysis gamification, Jordan vs. triangle offense, and the role of laughter in persuasion emerge.
00:45 They explore religion as operating systems, Greek gods, Comte’s stages, Nietzsche, Jung, nostalgia, scientism, and Jordan Peterson’s revival of tradition.
00:50 The episode closes with Linux debates, Ubuntu, Framer laptops, PewDiePie, and Jagdeo’s nod to Liminal Snake on epistemic centers and turning curses into blessings.
Key Insights
4.9
6969 ratings
On this episode of Crazy Wisdom, host Stewart Alsop speaks with Michael Jagdeo, a headhunter and founder working with Exponent Labs and The Syndicate, about the cycles of money, power, and technology that shape our world. Their conversation touches on financial history through The Ascent of Money by Niall Ferguson and William Bagehot’s The Money Market, the rise and fall of financial centers from London to New York and the new Texas Stock Exchange, the consolidation of industries and the theory of oligarchical collectivism, the role of AI as both tool and chaos agent, Bitcoin and “quantitative re-centralization,” the dynamics of exponential organizations, and the balance between collectivism and individualism. Jagdeo also shares recruiting philosophies rooted in stories like “stone soup,” frameworks like Yu-Kai Chou’s Octalysis and the User Type Hexad, and book recommendations including Salim Ismail’s Exponential Organizations and Arthur Koestler’s The Act of Creation. Along the way they explore servant leadership, Price’s Law, Linux and open source futures, religion as an operating system, and the cyclical nature of civilizations. You can learn more about Michael Jagdeo or reach out to him directly through Twitter or LinkedIn.
Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation
Timestamps
00:05 Stewart Alsop introduces Michael Jagdeo, who shares his path from headhunting actuaries and IT talent into launching startups with Exponent Labs and The Syndicate.
00:10 They connect recruiting to financial history, discussing actuaries, The Ascent of Money, and William Bagehot’s The Money Market on the London money market and railways.
00:15 The Rothschilds, institutional knowledge, and Corn Laws lead into questions about New York as a financial center and the quiet launch of the Texas Stock Exchange by Citadel and BlackRock.
00:20 Capital power, George Soros vs. the Bank of England, chaos, paper clips, and Orwell’s oligarchical collectivism frame industry consolidation, syndicates, and stone soup.
00:25 They debate imperial conquest, bourgeoisie leisure, the decline of the middle class, AI as chaos agent, digital twins, Sarah Connor, Godzilla, and nuclear metaphors.
00:30 Conversation turns to Bitcoin, “quantitative re-centralization,” Jack Bogle, index funds, Robinhood micro bailouts, and AI as both entropy and negative entropy.
00:35 Jagdeo discusses Jim Keller, Tenstorrent, RISC-V, Nvidia CUDA, exponential organizations, Price’s Law, bureaucracy, and servant leadership with the parable of stone soup.
00:40 Recruiting as symbiosis, biophilia, trust, Judas, Wilhelm Reich, AI tools, Octalysis gamification, Jordan vs. triangle offense, and the role of laughter in persuasion emerge.
00:45 They explore religion as operating systems, Greek gods, Comte’s stages, Nietzsche, Jung, nostalgia, scientism, and Jordan Peterson’s revival of tradition.
00:50 The episode closes with Linux debates, Ubuntu, Framer laptops, PewDiePie, and Jagdeo’s nod to Liminal Snake on epistemic centers and turning curses into blessings.
Key Insights
11,933 Listeners
10,190 Listeners
3,060 Listeners
397 Listeners
7,814 Listeners
1,302 Listeners
8 Listeners
0 Listeners
391 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners