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What if wasting energy is the most productive thing humanity has ever done? In this episode of Capability Amplifier, Dan Sullivan and I explore the radical idea that conservation holds progress back - and that every breakthrough civilization has ever made came from consuming more energy, not less.
Dan introduces the work of Mark Mills from the Manhattan Institute and his book "The Bottomless," which argues that using energy to create higher forms of energy is the engine of all human advancement. From the laser to nuclear power to Ai, the pattern is the same - massive energy input produces exponential capability output.
We also get into how Ai is already running out of human-generated data to train on and is now producing its own synthetic training data. Mike draws a parallel to drug development, where Ai-powered simulations could eventually compress decades of human trials into hours. Dan connects all of it to his own life - at 81 years old, his biological age tests at 59, which he attributes entirely to regular and comprehensive medical testing over the last two decades.
The conversation also touches on SpaceX's first-principles approach to building rockets, the real state of nuclear energy in 2025, the energy limitations of solar in places like Germany, and two separate moments in history where individual decisions by Soviet officers may have prevented nuclear war.
At the close of the episode, Mike demos a new Ai-powered tool he's been using to compress hours of content into minutes each morning - and explains how anyone can use the same approach to accelerate their own learning.
The core idea running through all of it: you can't build lasers by conserving candles.
In this episode, Dan and I break down:
TIMESTAMPS
00:00 – Introduction to creating a great yesterday
01:11 – The power of simple tools
03:09 – Dan’s 63-day time experiment
05:02 – Focus on today for a better yesterday
06:22 – Creating consciousness in daily activities
08:52 – Nostalgia vs. creative momentum
10:15 – The impact of focusing on the present
12:30 – How Dan's scattered thinking quietly disappeared
14:00 – Why the point system works
16:00 – Tracking conscious actions for momentum
17:30 – How nostalgia limits progress
19:10 – The role of Ai in amplifying creativity
21:00 – Ai as a creative multiplier for entrepreneurs
23:00 – The freedom of time and what it brings
24:45 – Dan’s final thoughts on his experiment and method
Discover More
📘AiAccelerator Book: https://www.MikeKoenigs.com/AiBookFree
🎉 Referral Party: https://www.MikeKoenigs.com/RPFree
🌍 Your Next Act: https://www.MikeKoenigs.com/YNAFree
🚀 Private Experiences: https://www.MikeKoenigs.com/PEFree
🌟 Follow Mike
🎙️ Podcast: http://www.MrBz.com/CA
📺 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/koenigsmike
💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikekoenigs
📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/koenigs
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mikekoenigs
🚀 X: https://X.com/mikekoenigsreal
By Mike Koenigs and Dan Sullivan of Strategic Coach4.8
7272 ratings
What if wasting energy is the most productive thing humanity has ever done? In this episode of Capability Amplifier, Dan Sullivan and I explore the radical idea that conservation holds progress back - and that every breakthrough civilization has ever made came from consuming more energy, not less.
Dan introduces the work of Mark Mills from the Manhattan Institute and his book "The Bottomless," which argues that using energy to create higher forms of energy is the engine of all human advancement. From the laser to nuclear power to Ai, the pattern is the same - massive energy input produces exponential capability output.
We also get into how Ai is already running out of human-generated data to train on and is now producing its own synthetic training data. Mike draws a parallel to drug development, where Ai-powered simulations could eventually compress decades of human trials into hours. Dan connects all of it to his own life - at 81 years old, his biological age tests at 59, which he attributes entirely to regular and comprehensive medical testing over the last two decades.
The conversation also touches on SpaceX's first-principles approach to building rockets, the real state of nuclear energy in 2025, the energy limitations of solar in places like Germany, and two separate moments in history where individual decisions by Soviet officers may have prevented nuclear war.
At the close of the episode, Mike demos a new Ai-powered tool he's been using to compress hours of content into minutes each morning - and explains how anyone can use the same approach to accelerate their own learning.
The core idea running through all of it: you can't build lasers by conserving candles.
In this episode, Dan and I break down:
TIMESTAMPS
00:00 – Introduction to creating a great yesterday
01:11 – The power of simple tools
03:09 – Dan’s 63-day time experiment
05:02 – Focus on today for a better yesterday
06:22 – Creating consciousness in daily activities
08:52 – Nostalgia vs. creative momentum
10:15 – The impact of focusing on the present
12:30 – How Dan's scattered thinking quietly disappeared
14:00 – Why the point system works
16:00 – Tracking conscious actions for momentum
17:30 – How nostalgia limits progress
19:10 – The role of Ai in amplifying creativity
21:00 – Ai as a creative multiplier for entrepreneurs
23:00 – The freedom of time and what it brings
24:45 – Dan’s final thoughts on his experiment and method
Discover More
📘AiAccelerator Book: https://www.MikeKoenigs.com/AiBookFree
🎉 Referral Party: https://www.MikeKoenigs.com/RPFree
🌍 Your Next Act: https://www.MikeKoenigs.com/YNAFree
🚀 Private Experiences: https://www.MikeKoenigs.com/PEFree
🌟 Follow Mike
🎙️ Podcast: http://www.MrBz.com/CA
📺 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/koenigsmike
💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mikekoenigs
📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/koenigs
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mikekoenigs
🚀 X: https://X.com/mikekoenigsreal

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