IP Team

Clausewitz the Minimalist- Why the Best Strategy is the One You Can Explain in Three Words

Clausewitz the Minimalist: Why the Best Strategy is the One You Can Explain in Three Words

Carl von Clausewitz wrote a book so dense that most people who quote it have never finished it. “On War” runs over 600 pages of Prussian military theory, nested clauses, and ideas that fold into themselves like origami made of fog. It is, by almost any measure, the opposite of minimalism. And yet the man’s […]

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Why Kant Would Tell You to Stop Finding Your Passion and Start Finding Your Duty

Why Kant Would Tell You to Stop “Finding Your Passion” and Start Finding Your Duty

There is a phrase that floats around self help culture like a benevolent ghost, showing up in graduation speeches, Instagram captions, and the bios of people who sell online courses. That phrase is “follow your passion.” It sounds noble. It sounds liberating. It sounds like the kind of advice that could never steer you wrong.

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The Holy War of Words- Is Political Correctness the New Inquisition?

The Holy War of Words: Is Political Correctness the New Inquisition?

Voltaire never actually said “I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.” That line was written by his biographer, Evelyn Beatrice Hall, summarizing his attitude. Which is fitting, really. We live in an age where misattributed quotes travel faster than verified ones, and where the

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The Billionaire Philosopher- What Voltaire's Wealth Teaches Us About Modern Independence

The Billionaire Philosopher: What Voltaire’s Wealth Teaches Us About Modern Independence

Most people know Voltaire as the sharp tongued French philosopher who mocked the church, irritated monarchs, and wrote Candide. Fewer people know he was also spectacularly rich. Not comfortable. Not well off. Rich in a way that would make modern tech founders pause and do the math. By the time of his death in 1778,

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Why Social Media Is the New Center of Gravity

Why Social Media Is the New Center of Gravity

Carl von Clausewitz died in 1831. He never saw a smartphone, never doom scrolled through Twitter, and never watched a TikTok video of someone explaining geopolitics over a makeup tutorial. Yet his most famous strategic concept, the “center of gravity,” describes the modern social media landscape with an accuracy that should make every living strategist

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Why Your Moral Compass Resets Every Time You Open Instagram

Why Your Moral Compass Resets Every Time You Open Instagram

You woke up this morning as a reasonably decent person. You recycled. You held the door for someone. You even let that car merge in traffic, which practically makes you a saint. Then you opened Instagram, scrolled for eleven minutes, and somehow ended up coveting your neighbor’s kitchen renovation, resenting your best friend’s vacation, and

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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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