Audio

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Economist E. Glen Weyl has invented a market-driven voting system that he believes is much fairer and more democratic than one-vote-per-person majority rule.  It's called Quadratic Voting and it starts with giving everyone a bunch of tokens, or chips, along with a simple mathematical formula for voting.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Lee Smolin tells Steve Paulson about the debate in the blogosphere about string theory's failure to advance the field of physics beyond the accepted model.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Duke University neuroscientist Miguel Nicolelis talks about the possibility of upgrading our brains with computer chips.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Joshua Blu Buhs is an independent scholar and the author of "Bigfoot: The Life and Times of a Legend." But he tells Steve Paulson he doesn't really think the creature exists.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Video game designer Jason Rohrer tells Anne Strainchamps about his game "Passage," which is about mortality, not just an adrenalin rush.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Max Decharne can tell you lots of things no one will understand any more.  He's a "solid pigeon" and "a bit of a fly thing," as he tells Steve Paulson.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Philipp Blom tells Anne Strainchamps about some of history's great pack-rats, and what purposes their collections served.

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Jon Katz’ latest book is “The New Work of Dogs.”  Katz says that Americans are forgetting their pets’ true natures and shouldn’t expect them to be children with fur.

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