EconTalk
A podcast by Russ Roberts - Mondays
Categories:
951 Episodes
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Kieran Setiya on Midlife
Published: 19/09/2022 -
David McRaney on How Minds Change
Published: 12/09/2022 -
Will MacAskill on Longtermism and What We Owe the Future
Published: 5/09/2022 -
Amor Towles on A Gentleman in Moscow and the Writer's Craft
Published: 29/08/2022 -
Raj Chetty on Economic Mobility
Published: 22/08/2022 -
Tyler Cowen on Talent
Published: 15/08/2022 -
Russ Roberts and Mike Munger on Wild Problems
Published: 8/08/2022 -
Gerd Gigerenzer on How to Stay Smart in a Smart World
Published: 1/08/2022 -
John List on Scale, Uber, and the Voltage Effect
Published: 25/07/2022 -
Vinay Prasad on the Pandemic
Published: 18/07/2022 -
Nassim Nicholas Taleb on the Nations, States, and Scale
Published: 11/07/2022 -
Ran Abramitzky and Leah Boustan on Immigration Then and Now
Published: 4/07/2022 -
A.J. Jacobs on Solving Life's Puzzles
Published: 27/06/2022 -
Roosevelt Montás on Rescuing Socrates
Published: 20/06/2022 -
Sridhar Ramaswamy on Google, Search, and Neeva
Published: 13/06/2022 -
Matti Friedman on Leonard Cohen and the Yom Kippur War
Published: 6/06/2022 -
Ian Leslie on Curiosity
Published: 30/05/2022 -
Diane Coyle on Cogs, Monsters, and Better Economics
Published: 23/05/2022 -
Marc Andreessen on Software, Immortality, and Bitcoin
Published: 16/05/2022 -
Chris Blattman on Why We Fight
Published: 9/05/2022
EconTalk: Conversations for the Curious is an award-winning weekly podcast hosted by Russ Roberts of Shalem College in Jerusalem and Stanford's Hoover Institution. The eclectic guest list includes authors, doctors, psychologists, historians, philosophers, economists, and more. Learn how the health care system really works, the serenity that comes from humility, the challenge of interpreting data, how potato chips are made, what it's like to run an upscale Manhattan restaurant, what caused the 2008 financial crisis, the nature of consciousness, and more. EconTalk has been taking the Monday out of Mondays since 2006. All 900+ episodes are available in the archive. Go to EconTalk.org for transcripts, related resources, and comments.