Daniel Schmachtenberger: Steering Civilization Away from Self-Destruction
Core Takeaways
Schmachtenberger argues that humanity's self-destructive behaviors might prevent it from surviving its technological adolescence.
▶ 5:00
Why it matters
This perspective suggests that without significant behavioral change, humanity could face extinction.
Mimetic theory suggests human desires are largely imitative, leading to societal conflict when individuals covet what others have.
▶ 20:00
Why it matters
Understanding mimetic desire can help address root causes of conflict and create more harmonious societies.
The Bretton Woods system, while successful for decades, now faces challenges in addressing diverse catastrophic risks.
▶ 1:15:00
Why it matters
The system's inability to adapt to new risks could lead to global instability and potential collapse.
Exponential technology exacerbates global fragility, as seen with COVID-19's cascading effects on interconnected supply chains.
▶ 1:30:00
Why it matters
The fragility underscores the need for resilient systems to manage global crises effectively.
Humans, unlike other apex predators, use technology to modify environments, leading to unique predatory capabilities.
▶ 2:10:00
Why it matters
Human technological prowess can lead to environmental degradation and species extinction if unchecked.
Ask this episode Deep
A preview of how Deep chat answers, grounded in this episode with citations and timestamps:
Cite this episode
For papers, blog posts, anywhere.
Related episodes
Where to go next from this conversation.
More on these ideas
AI-generated summary · last refreshed 2026-06-06 20:47:16 · how we make these
Quotes are matched verbatim against the source transcript; references are checked to resolve to real URLs. Even so, AI can misread structure or attribute claims imperfectly. If you spot an error, please let us know.