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The Do It Podcast

The Do It Podcast

Von: Edwin Do It
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Explanations and How-To’s covering Productivity, Problem-Solving and Philosophy.Edwin Do It Persönliche Entwicklung Persönlicher Erfolg
  • The Fun Criterion, Inner Conflicts, and How the Self Resolves Them — David Deutsch
    Jan 24 2026

    David Deutsch—physicist, pioneer of quantum computation, and author of The Beginning of Infinity and The Fabric of Reality—joins me to discuss fun, learning, and how minds create knowledge. We explore the Fun Criterion: why a sense of “no fun” is best treated as criticism, a signal that something needs improvement, rather than a stop rule or a feeling to chase. Deutsch unpacks conflicts between explicit, inexplicit, and unconscious ideas, and how problems get worked on through conjecture and criticism across different modes of thought and learning. We then zoom out to how ideas “evolve together” inside a mind and why biological evolution is less understood than people often assume. The discussion also touches on focus and attention—whether they’re better seen as a trainable skill, a resource constraint, or both. Finally, we unpack the self as the collective term for the institutions of consent among the multiple strands of creativity and criticism that constitute a mind.

    📚 Mentioned Resources

    The Beginning of Infinity — David Deutsch
    The Fabric of Reality — David Deutsch
    My upcoming book — The 4 Acts

    ⏱️ Timestamps

    00:00 — Intro
    01:21 — Can we measure Fun?
    04:31 — Thwarting creativity
    06:01 — Can mundanity be Fun?
    07:58 — What does “follow the Fun” mean?
    10:28 — Fun and inner alignment
    12:20 — Resolving conflicts
    15:47 — Must ideas align?
    17:39 — Are all thoughts creative?
    21:25 — Different modes of creativity & learning
    28:22 — Evolution of ideas in the mind
    33:58 — How (poorly) we understand biological evolution
    37:41 — Creating knowledge vs. learning knowledge
    40:42 — Knowledge is information with causal power
    43:06 — The Self and how the parts of the mind are organized
    51:15 — Focus and attention
    53:37 — The roots of inexplicit knowledge
    57:15 — Physical sensations vs. emotions
    01:00:36 — David's upcoming book
    01:02:29 — Outro

    🧠 More from me

    Book
    Website
    Newsletter
    Productivity blog
    X

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    1 Std. und 4 Min.
  • Discipline and Fun, Compression and Creativity, Emotion and Consciousness — Dirk Meulenbelt
    Jan 6 2026
    Dirk Meulenbelt, AI graduate, co-founder of based.guide, digital nomad, and organizer of CR events—joins me for a wide-ranging conversation at the edges of critical rationalism. We explore discipline and the Fun Criterion, creativity as compression, the construction of emotion, and the role of consciousness in grounding agency and judgment. Along the way, we dig into epistemology: the distinctions between explicit and inexplicit knowledge, expressible versus inexpressible understanding, and what it really means for knowledge to be explanatory.📚 Mentioned ResourcesLisa Feldman Barrett - How Emotions Are Made - https://amzn.to/3Lcq8bG James Russell's Circumplex Model of Affect -https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotion...What is the 'Fun Criterion'? - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=idvGl...Edwin's essay on Fun - https://edwindoit.com/funBrett Hall on the unknowns in evolution - https://bretthall.substack.com/p/know...Surely You’re Joking, Mr. Feynman - https://amzn.to/4jolfstDavid Chalmer's hard and easy problem of consciousness - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hard_pr... Lobotomy - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LobotomyDescartes' Error by Antonio Damasio featuring the story of "Elliot" - https://amzn.to/4psBdmZRichard Byrne, ‘Imitation as Behaviour Parsing’ - https://pages.ucsd.edu/~johnson/COGS2...Range by David Epstein - https://amzn.to/3MVzOIdIndustry challenge board https://www.innocentive.com/⏱️ Timestamps 00:00 Intro01:08 Emotions11:10 Discipline25:30 Open-questions with the Fun Criterion31:31 The role of constraints in knowledge-creation38:08 Non-randomness of creativity42:27 Explanatory, explicit and inexplicit knowledge01:06:59 Proto-creativity01:28:17 Invention & functional ignorance01:36:59 Consciousness: the easy vs. hard problem01:50:59 Critical rationalism events01:55:10 Outro🧠 More from meBook: https://edwindoit.com/4actsWebsite: https://edwindoit.comNewsletter: https://edwindoit.substack.comProductivity blog: https://medium.com/@edwindoitX: https://x.com/Edwindoit
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    1 Std. und 56 Min.
  • The Usefulness of Factual vs Explanatory Knowledge — Drawing from David Deutsch
    Oct 7 2025
    In today's video we explore two kinds of knowledge: factual knowledge—rules of thumb that seem to work but don’t explain why—and explanatory knowledge, which reveals how and why things work. Drawing on David Deutsch’s idea that humans are universal explainers, I show why explanations lead to better decisions, fewer mistakes, and more adaptable thinking. We look at why explanations are more accurate and versatile, how they scale far better than memorizing endless facts, and how an explanatory worldview helps you filter information, reason from first principles, and adjust your approach when new knowledge arrives. Timestamps00:00 Intro00:58 Differences between Facts and Explanations01:23 Qualitative differences01:51 1. Accuracy02:30 2. Improvability03:52 3. Range of applicability05:00 Differences in Efficiency05:32 1. Error-rate05:52 2. Storage08:00 Benefits of an Explanatory Worldview08:11 1. Filtering information09:10 2. First-principle thinking10:27 3. Making adjustments11:57 OutroFeatured linksConjecture Institute: https://www.conjectureinstitute.org/My upcoming book: https://edwindoit.com/4actsMore from meBook: https://edwindoit.com/4actsWebsite: https://edwindoit.comNewsletter: https://edwindoit.substack.comProductivity blog: / edwindoit X: https://x.com/Edwindoit
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    13 Min.
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