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.

Keynes the Elitist- Why He Didn't Trust the Public to Manage Their Own Money

Keynes the Elitist: Why He Didn’t Trust the Public to Manage Their Own Money

John Maynard Keynes thought you were bad with money. Not you specifically. Everyone. The whole public. He believed that ordinary people, left to their own devices, would make financial decisions so poor that entire economies would collapse. And the frustrating part is that he was mostly right. This is the story of one of the […]

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Why Jean Baptiste Say Is the Most Radical Man in the History of Money

Why Jean Baptiste Say Is the Most Radical Man in the History of Money

When people think of radical economic thinkers, they tend to reach for the obvious names. Marx, with his barricades and manifestos. Keynes, with his cocktail party brilliance and government spending programs. Maybe Milton Friedman, cigar in hand, telling everyone that inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon. Almost nobody reaches for Jean Baptiste Say.

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Why Intellectuals Hate Capitalism, According to Schumpeter

Why Intellectuals Hate Capitalism, According to Schumpeter

There is something deeply strange about the fact that the people who benefit most from capitalism are often its loudest critics. University professors with tenure, writers with publishing deals, journalists at major outlets, artists funded by grants or wealthy patrons. These are not the wretched of the earth. They are, by any historical standard, among

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Why Innovation is Not a Process, It's a Way of Seeing

Why Innovation is Not a Process, It’s a Way of Seeing

Walk into any corporate innovation lab and you’ll find the same artifacts. Whiteboards covered in sticky notes. Design thinking frameworks printed on foam boards. Stage gates mapped out like subway lines. Innovation consultants will sell you a five-step process. Business schools will teach you the funnel. Everyone promises that if you follow the recipe, breakthrough

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Why Our Brains View Disruption as a Predator

Why Our Brains View Disruption as a Predator (Innovation)

The executive team sits around a polished table, reviewing a proposal for digital transformation. Heart rates spike. Palms sweat. Cortisol floods bloodstreams. To an outside observer, you’d think they were being chased by a lion rather than discussing a software upgrade. They’re not irrational. They’re human. Our brains come equipped with machinery designed for a

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The Founder's Guide to Thinking Like an Epistemologist

The Founder’s Guide to Thinking Like an Epistemologist

You’re building a company on a foundation of beliefs. You believe your product will work. You believe the market exists. You believe your team can execute. But here’s the uncomfortable question: how do you know what you know? Most founders treat certainty like a virtue. They project confidence to investors, employees, and customers. And they

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Why I Told You So Is the Most Expensive Sentence in Your Innovating Company

Why “I Told You So” Is the Most Expensive Sentence in Your Innovating Company

The meeting room falls silent. Someone’s bold idea just crashed into reality. And then you hear it. Those four words that feel like victory but cost you everything: “I told you so.” This sentence shows up in companies everywhere. It arrives after failed product launches, after ignored warnings, after expensive mistakes. The person who says

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The Medici Effect 2.0- How to Force a Creative Breakthrough

The Medici Effect 2.0: How to Force a Creative Innovation

Innovation has a geography problem. And it’s not what you think. Walk into companies and you’ll find the marketing team on the third floor and engineering in the basement. Everyone stays in their lane. Marketing talks about customer personas. Engineers debate system architecture. Designers obsess over user experience. They might as well be speaking different

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The Ego Epistemology- Why Founders Confuse Their Identity with Their Ideas

The Ego Epistemology: Why Founders Confuse Their Identity with Their Ideas

There’s a particular species of founder who, when you critique their product, looks at you like you just insulted their mother. Their jaw tightens. Their eyes narrow. The temperature in the room drops three degrees. You weren’t attacking them personally, but they can’t tell the difference anymore. To them, you might as well have been.

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