Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar and 17 years of interest (PIRSA Content): Difference between revisions

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|title=Gauge Theory and Inflation: Enlarging the Wu-Yang Dictionary to a unifying Rosetta Stone for Geometry in Application
|title=Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar (and 17 years of interest): What happens in the marketplace of ideas when the endless frontier meets the efficient frontier?
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|host=[[Eric Weinstein]]
|host=[[Eric Weinstein]]
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|length=01:02:01
|releasedate=24 May 2006
|releasedate=11 September 2008
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|link1title=YouTube
|link1title=Perimeter Institute Recorded Seminar Archive
|link1=[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h5gnATQMtPg Watch]
|link1=[http://pirsa.org/08090036/ Watch]
|link2title=Blog Post
|link2title=Blog Post
|link2=[https://theportal.group/gauge-theory-and-inflation-enlarging-the-wu-yang-dictionary-to-a-unifying-rosetta-stone-for-geometry-in-application/ Read]
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|prev=Content by Eric Weinstein#Guest Appearances
|prev=Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar and 17 years of interest (YouTube Content)
|next=Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar and 17 years of interest (YouTube Content)
|next=Panel Discussion: Nouriel Roubini, Nassim Taleb, Richard Freeman, Eric Weinstein (YouTube Content)
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'''Gauge Theory and Inflation: Enlarging the Wu-Yang Dictionary''' was a presentation by [[Eric Weinstein]] at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics.
'''Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar (and 17 years of interest): What happens in the marketplace of ideas when the endless frontier meets the efficient frontier?''' was a presentation by [[Eric Weinstein]] at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics.


== Description ==
== Description ==
Title: Gauge Theory and Inflation: Enlarging the Wu-Yang Dictionary to a unifying Rosetta Stone for Geometry in Application
Title: Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar (and 17 years of interest): What happens in the marketplace of ideas when the endless frontier meets the efficient frontier?


Speaker: Eric Weinstein
Speaker: Eric Weinstein


Abstract: The close relationship between geometry and fundamental physics can be seen from surveying the basic equations underlying the known forces of nature. What has made these repeated appearances of gauge fields and curvature tensors particularly striking in recent years is lack of any comparable applications outside of the Standard Model and General Relativity. In this talk we will pose the question of whether Yang-Mills theory is simply a unifying principle with application well beyond its current use by exhibiting unreasonably effective applications of Gauge Theory beyond those familiar in the Natural Sciences. Armed with these examples, we will then revisit the question about what is most truly special about the Standard Model and Relativity.
Abstract: The emergence of novel funding structures in science may be seen as paralleling developments in financial engineering over the past 25 years. In this comparison, entities like FQXi, Perimeter Institute, CMI, Howard Hughes, the Gates Foundation and other funding agencies are emerging as \'intellectual hedge funds\' in response to perceived inefficiencies of more traditional agents, which play the role of mutual funds. Unfortunately, this experiment may prove less successful in the absence of instruments specifically tailored to hedge the uncertainties inherent in research which is both risky and potentially disruptive. Markets are said to be incomplete or inefficiently structured when they fail in the allocation of scarce resources to optimally digest the views held by market participants. Time permitting, this talk will explore possible opportunities stemming from inefficiencies in the scientific marketplace of ideas: *The risks of Injunctive Peer Review vs. Non-Invasive Short Selling *Synthetic Tenure vs. Traditional Tenure *Correlation Risks: Critical Mass vs. Diversification *Managing Bleed from \'Long Volatility\' Investing *Self-Policing Fiefdoms: Balancing the benefits of expertise and specialization against counterparty risk, \'moral hazard\', \'adverse selection\' and \'rent-seeking\' behavior. *Risks from media mediation of scientific disputes and the economic roots of character attack. *Costs and benefits from Immigration and the free flow of neurons across borders. *Traditional One-to-One Advising vs. Eusocial Training *Markets as systems of selective pressures: The riddle of successful adaptive valley crossers in recent scientific history.


Date: 24/05/2006 - 2:00 pm
Date: 11/09/2008 - 11:00 am


Location: Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
Location: Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics
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[[Category:Eric Weinstein Content]]
[[Category:Eric Weinstein Content]]
[[Category:Guest Appearances]]
[[Category:Guest Appearances]]
[[Category:YouTube]]
[[Category:Video]]
[[Category:Video]]

Revision as of 17:33, 2 March 2021

Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar (and 17 years of interest): What happens in the marketplace of ideas when the endless frontier meets the efficient frontier?
Information
Host(s) Eric Weinstein
Length 01:02:01
Release Date 11 September 2008
Links
Perimeter Institute Recorded Seminar Archive Watch
All Appearances


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Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar (and 17 years of interest): What happens in the marketplace of ideas when the endless frontier meets the efficient frontier? was a presentation by Eric Weinstein at the Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics.

Description

Title: Sheldon Glashow Owes me a Dollar (and 17 years of interest): What happens in the marketplace of ideas when the endless frontier meets the efficient frontier?

Speaker: Eric Weinstein

Abstract: The emergence of novel funding structures in science may be seen as paralleling developments in financial engineering over the past 25 years. In this comparison, entities like FQXi, Perimeter Institute, CMI, Howard Hughes, the Gates Foundation and other funding agencies are emerging as \'intellectual hedge funds\' in response to perceived inefficiencies of more traditional agents, which play the role of mutual funds. Unfortunately, this experiment may prove less successful in the absence of instruments specifically tailored to hedge the uncertainties inherent in research which is both risky and potentially disruptive. Markets are said to be incomplete or inefficiently structured when they fail in the allocation of scarce resources to optimally digest the views held by market participants. Time permitting, this talk will explore possible opportunities stemming from inefficiencies in the scientific marketplace of ideas: *The risks of Injunctive Peer Review vs. Non-Invasive Short Selling *Synthetic Tenure vs. Traditional Tenure *Correlation Risks: Critical Mass vs. Diversification *Managing Bleed from \'Long Volatility\' Investing *Self-Policing Fiefdoms: Balancing the benefits of expertise and specialization against counterparty risk, \'moral hazard\', \'adverse selection\' and \'rent-seeking\' behavior. *Risks from media mediation of scientific disputes and the economic roots of character attack. *Costs and benefits from Immigration and the free flow of neurons across borders. *Traditional One-to-One Advising vs. Eusocial Training *Markets as systems of selective pressures: The riddle of successful adaptive valley crossers in recent scientific history.

Date: 11/09/2008 - 11:00 am

Location: Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics

Transcript

Transcripts to be Made