My Struggle: Book 2 by Karl Ove KnausgaardĢ:40 – What Tyler considers his compounding advantage.ĥ:56 – Why being born as an intelligent person is not as important as developing knowledge.Ĩ:23 – How Tyler maximizes the value of his consumption and minimizes the drawbacks.ĩ:19 – What draws Tyler to the people he likes spending time with, and what he likes best about their friendship.ġ2:33 – Why Tyler feels that the way he has lived his life has meant has not given anything up.ġ5:35 – How the fundamentals of productivity came intuitively to Tyler.ġ7:41 – Why Tyler writes in his particular style not by choice, but by necessity.Ģ2:19 – Why the things in Tyler’s life that bind his output aren’t what you think.Ģ4:06 – How to develop new ideas while staying focused on the subject and not getting tangled.Ģ7:36 – Why Tyler sees art as one of the most important and beneficial things you can spend your time and money on.ģ2:41 – What writers can learn about inspiration and consistency from musicians and visual artists.ģ7:16 – Why Peter Thiel has impacted Tyler so deeply and why Tyler believes he’s one of the greatest thinkers of our time.Ĥ0:30 – How Tyler is able to extract more from his reading than other people do.Ĥ5:44 – How understanding most other people’s intelligence is higher than his in most fields gave Tyler an edge over other thinkers.Ĥ9:00 – Why Tyler sees a new visibility of talent in people and how he is using this visibility.ĥ5:24 – How Tyler constructs his interviews to maximize the freedom of his guests to speak freely on what they love.ġ:00:03 – How to develop skills as a teacher and where Tyler believes the strengths of a good teacher lie.ġ:03:34 – Why the novelty and beauty of visiting other cultures excites Tyler so much.ġ:07:18 – How Tyler makes the most out of his travels.ġ:13:32 – Why sitting in a suboptimal seat at a concert may give you worse sound but a better understanding of the music.ġ:16:55 – Why knowledge workers are often not motivated to improve their skills.ġ:20:48 – Why Tyler still responds to every email and loves it. My Struggle: Book 1 by Karl Ove Knausgaard Find Tyler Online:Įssays in Biography by John Maynard Keynes Later in the podcast, we discussed Tyler’s process for choosing friends, why he would travel across the world to visit a new country for just ten hours, and what he’s learned from high-powered people like Peter Thiel and Patrick Collison.Įnter your email to receive information about every new podcast.Įmails will include links, quotes, videos, and exclusive behind-the-scenes features. Then, we moved to Tyler’s process for writing, such as choosing article topics and editing his work. But this time, I’m asking Tyler. We started by talking about why there aren’t more Tyler Cowens in the world. How do you get so much done? What’s the secret sauce of all that you’ve accomplished? This episode is entirely devoted to that question. Tyler ends every episode of his podcast asking about other people’s production function. He’s published a new post every day for the past 17 years on his blog called Marginal Revolution, where he writes about economics, arts, culture, food, and globalization. Beyond that, he also writes for Bloomberg and hosts his own podcast called Conversations with Tyler. He runs the Mercatus Center, which bridges the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems. Tyler Cowen is an economics professor at George Mason University. LISTEN HERE: ITUNES | POCKET CASTS | OVERCAST | SPOTIFY
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