Explorez tous les épisodes du podcast Information Theory
| Titre | Date | Durée | |
|---|---|---|---|
| How to Learn New Languages as an Adult – Luca Lampariello | 22 Dec 2025 | 00:40:42 | |
Luca Lampariello grew up monolingual in Rome. At 10, his teacher told him he simply wasn't cut out for language learning. Today, he speaks 15 languages – 10 of them fluently – and runs one of the largest polyglot YouTube channels in the world.In this conversation, we cover: why he was bad at Italian before he was good at anything else, the role his 90-year-old grandmother played in shaping his curiosity, how watching American movies transformed his English in months, what he thinks about the "critical period" hypothesis, his 70/20/10 rule for language acquisition, and why he believes the biggest barrier to accent mastery is psychological, not biological.0:46 Luca's Monolingual Childhood and Grandmother's Influence2:43 "I Was Actually Pretty Poor at My Native Language"5:52 "I Wanted to Be Like an American" – How Luca Learned English11:55 Can Anyone Learn a Foreign Language to Fluency?16:35 A Concrete Learning Plan: The American in Italy20:16 The 70/20/10 Rule for Input, Output, and Grammar21:41 The Critical Period Hypothesis – Can Adults Sound Like Natives?25:36 Why Some Immigrants Never Lose Their Accent29:51 Luca's Journey Through German, Spanish, Dutch, and Russian34:42 "Japanese Rejected Me – But I'm Going Back With a Vengeance"37:32 What Are The Most Beautiful Languages? Greek, German, Russian
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| Mathematics, Intuition, and Curiosity – David Bessis | 18 Dec 2025 | 01:27:49 | |
David Bessis is a mathematician and the author of Mathematica: A Secret World of Intuition and Curiosity. In this conversation, we explore David's provocative claim that mathematical ability is not genetically determined — and what that means for how we teach, learn, and think about intelligence itself. David explains why math books aren't meant to be read, why conference talks often aren't meant to be understood, and how fear is the number one inhibitor of mathematical progress at every level — from primary school to research departments. He introduces the concept of "secret math": the oral tradition of metacognitive tricks and intuitions passed between mathematicians but rarely written down or taught explicitly. We discuss Bill Thurston's extraordinary visualization abilities (developed through childhood exercises to compensate for a vision impairment), Terence Tao's superhuman mathematical speed, and David's own trajectory — from failing his first PhD to experiencing weeks of what he calls "hyperlucidity," where decades of mathematical progress compressed into days. David shares practical insights on how he's teaching his own children, what schools get wrong about math education, and the three specific changes he'd make to how mathematics is taught. Throughout, he challenges the assumption that extreme talent gaps must have genetic explanations, arguing instead that idiosyncratic cognitive development and self-reinforcing feedback loops create the massive inequalities we observe. Outline 00:00 Introduction 01:32 Why Math Books Are Not Meant to Be Read 05:10 The Secret Math That's Never Written Down 11:31 The Metacognitive Skill of Asking Stupid Questions 17:57 Fear is the Number One Inhibitor of Mathematics 25:44 How Idiosyncratic Development Shapes Math Talent 39:06 Why Terry Tao Can't Be Explained by Genetics 54:43 Raising Children to Be 1000x Better at Math 1:04:08 Hyperlucidity: How I Proved a 30-Year-Old Conjecture 1:18:18 Three Small Changes That Could Transform Math Education 1:24:39 Advice for Aspiring Math Students | |||
| David Moser – Why Chinese is So Damn Hard | 23 Sep 2025 | 01:38:46 | |
David Moser is a scholar of linguistics at Capital Normal University in Beijing and the author of A Billion Voices: China’s Search for a Common Language. 0:00 Introduction 5:28 The Challenge of Translating Gödel, Escher, Bach 21:14 Cultural and Economic Changes in China in the 1980s 31:37 Why Chinese is So Damn Hard 38:56 The Core of Language is not the Writing System 44:04 The Political Fiction of a Unified Chinese Language 54:20 Can We Just Get Rid of the Chinese Characters? 1:02:27 "Character Amnesia" and the Future of Language Input 1:07:25 Comparing the Educational Systems of China vs. America 1:16:07 How David Learned Mandarin 1:28:32 Reflections | |||
| Avi Loeb — Is there Scientific Evidence for Extraterrestrial Life? | 30 May 2025 | 01:17:52 | |
Professor Avi Loeb is a theoretical physicist who was the longest-serving chair of Harvard University's Department of Astronomy.In this episode, we talk about the possible extraterrestrial origins of Oumuamua, the eventual fate of our solar system, and how mainstream academia suppresses risk-taking and innovation. 0:00 Introduction 1:46 The Discovery of Oumuamua 8:05 Light Sails and Space Trash: An Artificial Origin for Oumuamua? 12:53 Do Extraordinary Claims require Extraordinary Evidence? 21:11 Why the Oumuamua Hypothesis generated so much Pushback 26:14 How Academia Suppresses Risk-Taking and Innovation 30:27 Advice for Young Scientists 37:14 What Percentage of Astrophysics Research is Worthless? 45:07 The Discovery of the First Interstellar Meteor 52:16 What the US Government secretly knows about UAPs 1:04:42 The Fermi Paradox and the Dark Forest hypothesis 1:12:11 Conclusion "On the Possibility of an Artificial Origin for `Oumuamua" https://arxiv.org/pdf/2110.15213 | |||
| Stephen Hsu — Education of a Theoretical Physicist | 18 Dec 2024 | 01:18:30 | |
Stephen Hsu is a theoretical physicist, technology entrepreneur, blogger, and podcaster. We talk about his education as a physicist, how research funding decisions are made in academia, and the replication crisis in science. | |||
| Life Among the Pirahã — Daniel Everett | 10 Dec 2024 | 01:04:28 | |
Daniel Everett is a linguist and anthropologist whose work has challenged long-standing beliefs about human language and cognition. In 1977, Dan journeyed deep into the Amazon rainforest as a Christian missionary to live among an indigenous tribe of hunter-gatherers known as the Pirahã. He is the author of several acclaimed books, including "Don't Sleep, There are Snakes" and "How Language Began". Outline 0:00 Episode highlight1:43 First arrival in the Amazon 4:00 Unique attributes of the Pirahã language 6:53 Noam Chomsky's influence on Linguistics 12:05 Lessons from raising Children in the Jungle 24:31 The Failure of Missionary Work 36:53 Everett's most controversial paper 49:51 How UG took over Linguistics 57:44 The Future of the Pirahã | |||