Intellectual Prestige Team

Philosophy, Mathematics and Economics major from 3 European Universities turned entrepreneur who takes obscure and difficult intellectual history and turns it into insightful and actionable prose.

Why Being a Perfectionist is Actually Irrational (According to a Nobel Prize Winner)

Why Being a “Perfectionist” is Actually Irrational (According to a Nobel Prize Winner)

There is a particular kind of pride people take in calling themselves perfectionists. They say it in job interviews. They whisper it like a confession that is actually a brag. “I just care too much about quality.” It sounds noble. It sounds like the mark of someone who refuses to settle. But Herbert Simon, a […]

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Your Brain is a Bottleneck- Why Learning More is a Waste of Time

Your Brain is a Bottleneck: Why “Learning More” is a Waste of Time

You have access to more information right now than every human who lived before 1900 combined. You carry a device in your pocket that connects you to the sum total of recorded knowledge. You can learn quantum physics at breakfast and Renaissance art history over lunch. And yet you are not meaningfully smarter than your

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Blood, Not Ink- Why Treaties Are Only as Strong as the Army Behind Them

Blood, Not Ink: Why Treaties Are Only as Strong as the Army Behind Them

There is a certain comfort in watching diplomats sign documents. The pens are expensive. The tables are long and polished. Everyone wears serious faces and shakes hands for the cameras. And then, somewhere between the champagne toast and the morning news cycle, the document starts to decay. Not physically. Physically it will be preserved in

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Stop Trying to Save the World- The Radical Ethics of Minding Your Own Business

Stop Trying to Save the World: The Radical Ethics of Minding Your Own Business

There is a particular kind of person who wakes up every morning burdened by the weight of problems that are not theirs. They scroll through the news, absorb the suffering of strangers in distant countries, and feel personally responsible for fixing all of it. They post about injustice. They sign petitions. They argue at dinner

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The Policy Factory- Why Laws Are Manufactured Exactly Like Sausages

The Policy Factory: Why Laws Are Manufactured Exactly Like Sausages

There is an old line, usually attributed to Bismarck but probably older than him, that laws are like sausages. You should never watch either one being made. Most people hear this and chuckle. George Stigler, the Nobel laureate economist from the University of Chicago, heard it and thought: actually, let us watch. Let us watch

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Can Philosophy Pay the Bills? Russell's Defense of Useless Arts

Can Philosophy Pay the Bills? Russell’s Defense of “Useless” Arts

There is a particular kind of silence that falls over a dinner table when someone announces they are studying philosophy. It is the same silence that follows a bad joke, except nobody is sure whether to laugh or offer condolences. The parents exchange a glance. An uncle clears his throat. Someone, inevitably, asks the question

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