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Ideas Worth Exploring
Mark McDonald
32 episodes
3 weeks ago

Science is the best way we have for understanding how the world works. And you know what makes science better? Puns! This podcast is meant to introduce a variety of scientific topics in a way that is approachable for people without a scientific background and entertaining even for the nerds who think they know everything.

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All content for Ideas Worth Exploring is the property of Mark McDonald and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.

Science is the best way we have for understanding how the world works. And you know what makes science better? Puns! This podcast is meant to introduce a variety of scientific topics in a way that is approachable for people without a scientific background and entertaining even for the nerds who think they know everything.

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Science
Episodes (20/32)
Ideas Worth Exploring
Optimization algorithms and the life lessons they taught me

Optimization is about maximizing or minimizing something. The math behind how you do that has taught me some important life lessons, including: (Gradient descent) Incremental progress with regular course corrections will eventually get you where you want to go. (Soft constraints) Giving yourself some wiggle room can help you avoid black and white thinking. (Local minima) Sometimes things have to get worse before they get better. (Multi-objective optimization) Managing the tradeoffs between multiple conflicting goals can help you reach both goals better. (Overfitting) Optimizing too hard can actually make you worse off, and so it’s important to know when to quit. 

Links: 

Joggling: https://www.designreview.byu.edu/collections/being-the-best-in-the-world-is-easy 

Exchanging money for time: https://www.lesswrong.com/posts/cvDtmPNCyrkpg4d4F/units-of-exchange

https://www.clearerthinking.org/tools/value-of-your-time-calculator 

Russian internet trolls: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_web_brigades 

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9 months ago
31 minutes 3 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
The secret to getting rich is to be boring

I’ve been interested in investing recently, the idea that if you have money then you can use it to make more money. This is a really important topic that I wish my past self had understood better, and so I’m going to break the usual rule of only doing science so that I can dive into this other thing that interests me, which is figuring out what the evidence says is the best way to invest money.

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10 months ago
23 minutes 39 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Climate Change Part 3: The solutions to global warming and what they have to do with cows

If we want the globe to stop warming, then we need to get to net zero greenhouse gas emissions. Methods to reduce emissions include: renewable energy, electric vehicles, feeding seaweed to cows to stop them from burping so much, turning poop into jet fuel, and resurrecting the mammoths. We’re also going to cover what individual people can do to make the most difference in the fight against global warming. 


Also, here are just a couple of the sources I used while researching this:

https://www.carbonbrief.org/guest-post-how-land-use-drives-co2-emissions-around-the-world/ 

https://www.iea.org/energy-system/transport/electric-vehicles 

https://rmi.org/press-release/evs-to-surpass-two-thirds-of-global-car-sales-by-2030-putting-at-risk-nearly-half-of-oil-demand-new-research-finds/ 

https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/four-lifestyle-choices-most-reduce-your-carbon-footprint 

https://clearpath.org/tech-101/steel-101/



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1 year ago
36 minutes 17 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Climate Change Part 2: Blind octopuses and lonely turtles

Climate change will cause droughts, floods, heat waves, and might even make our vegetables less nutritious. In this episode we will talk about some of the consequences global warming will have on animals and humans, and how much of an impact we should expect. This is the second of a 3-part series on climate change. 

A couple sources:

World Economic Forum data https://www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Quantifying_the_Impact_of_Climate_Change_on_Human_Health_2024.pdf 

IPCC Report on Extreme Weather Events https://www.ipcc.ch/report/ar6/wg1/downloads/report/IPCC_AR6_WGI_Chapter11.pdf 

TierZoo video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0hNb0sD7bD8 

Octopus blindness https://www.ucdavis.edu/blog/warming-ocean-could-harm-octopus-vision

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1 year ago
34 minutes 15 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Climate change part 1: Your car is a greenhouse

Cow burps and car emissions are making the atmosphere heat up. This is the greenhouse effect, and it’s the same thing that turns your car into an inferno in the summer, with some nuance added. In this episode, we will discuss the physical science behind global warming. This will be the first of a 3-part series on climate change. 



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1 year ago
38 minutes 1 second

Ideas Worth Exploring
Game Theory part 2: playing chicken with potatoes

If you ever encounter a situation where you think “who’s going to give in first?” it’s probably a game of chicken. This is the dynamic that shaped the arms races of Cold War, much of modern politics, and probably also quite a few of your interactions with other people. The game of chicken can be analyzed using game theory, and we’re going to start that discussion with a Reddit story of a guy who ruined his relationship by pretending not to know what a potato is. 

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1 year ago
32 minutes 51 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Game Theory Part 1: Society is in a prisoner’s dilemma

What do tic-tac-toe, international politics, and animal grooming behaviors have in common? Much more than you might expect. In this episode we’re going to talk about game theory, a field of economics that lets us analyze social interactions by treating them as multiplayer games, and then using math and science to understand the best strategies to win those games. This episode is the first part, where we will focus on four games: cake-cutting, the ultimatum game, coordination games, and the prisoner’s dilemma. 

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1 year ago
32 minutes 54 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Oh no! Polymers are taking over the world!

Polymers are everywhere. There are dozens of types of plastics, but there are also biological polymers such as DNA and proteins, and together, most of the materials you use every day are made of one of the two types of polymer. Even I’m made out of polymers! Let’s talk about what they are and why they’re taking over the world. 

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1 year ago
31 minutes 3 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Thinking, fast and slow

Gambling, advertising, politics, and household chores. What do these have to do with each other? They’re all areas where your brain can steer you wrong when making decisions, as we’ll see in today’s episode. We’re going to be talking about one of the most influential ideas in the science of judgment and decision making, called dual process theory. This model is explained clearly in the book Thinking Fast and Slow by Nobel Prize winner Daniel Kahneman. The book talks about psychological research on how our intuition and reasoning work, and explains where our brains tend to make mistakes, and how to correct those errors. In this episode, I compare your intuition, your System 1, to a robot doing paperwork, and your reason, your System 2, to a detective. I then talk about six heuristics and biases: anchoring and adjustment, loss aversion, availability, attribute substitution, representativeness, and confirmation bias, and how these affect your decision making. 

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1 year ago
37 minutes 10 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
A brief history of life, the universe, and everything

A walk through the history of the universe, starting with the Big Bang and the creation of the elements in stars, moving through the first molecular replicators, the RNA world hypothesis, and the evolution of life by natural selection. Punctuated equilibrium. The extreme destruction caused by the asteroid that extincted the dinosaurs. The development of animal culture, except for octopuses, which are uncultured cephalopods. Human intelligence, modern civilization, and what lies ahead of us: extinction or spreading throughout the stars. And the possibility of civilization powered by black holes before the universe finally succumbs to heat death. Enjoy! 

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2 years ago
39 minutes 19 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Building a planet, one climate at a time

Pretend you’re making a new planet from scratch, and you want to know how the climate and weather patterns will be affected by each new feature you add. In this episode we will answer the questions: why is it warmer near the equator? Why does going up in elevation make it colder? We’ll also talk about the terms: albedo, the urban heat island effect, and the Coriolis effect. Finally, we’ll talk about El Niño and what we know about it. So let’s start making a planet!

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2 years ago
29 minutes 50 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Evolution through natural selection: “I choose you, Darwin!”

Unlike in Pokemon, evolution in our world happens slowly, over many generations. In this episode, we talk about how all life on earth is part of the same family and arose from a single common ancestor through a branching pattern of evolution, and how this happens through natural selection, or “survival and reproduction of the fittest”. Also, whales have fingers. I thought you ought to know.

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2 years ago
24 minutes 24 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
The Big Bang and the fate of the universe

You may have heard of something called the Big Bang, where all the stuff in the universe spread out from a single point. Did you know that the Big Bang is still happening? Well, it is, and you’re in the middle of it! This episode is about the universe, what it looks like, and how it is changing. Also, dark energy, the mysterious thing that makes up the majority of the stuff in our universe, and several possibilities for how the universe might end: The Big Crunch, The Big Freeze, and The Big Rip. 

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2 years ago
30 minutes 16 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Matter, antimatter, and beyond!

The universe is full of stuff. Big stuff, small stuff, red stuff, blue stuff, normal stuff, ridiculously weird stuff. Most people don’t understand just how weird some of that stuff is. That stuff is called matter. It’s finally time to answer that classic question: what’s the matter. This episode will cover quarks, leptons (including neutrinos), antimatter, and dark matter.

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2 years ago
21 minutes 47 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Brains! Part 2: Memory matters

What is a memory, physically? Do people really only use 10% of their brain? Is my short term memory bad, or is it just my short term memory? Answers to follow! 

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2 years ago
25 minutes 35 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Brains! Part 1: The humble neuron

Brains! Brains are made of neurons that use electrical and chemical signals in a way that somehow gets turned into us thinking and writing podcasts about brains. This episode is about how neurons do math by using salt to power a rollercoaster.

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2 years ago
16 minutes 18 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Eat your nutrients!

Keto, paleo, flexitarian, Mediterranean, it seems like everyone is interested in the newest diet fad. But does eating soy protein puree really make you healthier than eating chocolate covered caramels? Today we’re talking about  nutrients: fats, proteins, carbs, and all the other yummy-sounding molecules. 

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2 years ago
29 minutes 35 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Archimedes’ Principle of Floatiness

How do ducks float? Is it because they’re made of wood? Well, why does wood float? The answer, in a way, has to do with a naked man and a crown. But the real answer is found in the physics of buoyancy. This episode is all about buoyancy, the upward force you feel when floating in fluid. 



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2 years ago
14 minutes 9 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring
Black holes don't suck!

You’re flying through the universe on your spaceship, seeing the sights, having a great time, when all of a sudden you see a black hole! Oh no, it’s sucking you in! Then it touches you and you get spaghettified, and that’s the end of you. That’s how you imagine an encounter with a black hole would be, right? No! It would be so much more interesting than that. Allow me to explain… 

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2 years ago
24 minutes

Ideas Worth Exploring
Microwaves, eyeballs, and why the sky isn't purple

X-rays, gamma rays, microwaves, radio waves, what do they have in common? They’re all colors of light that you can’t see. This episode about electromagnetic radiation, the thing that makes your eyes, your phone, and your oven function as intended.  I hope you find it enlightening!

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2 years ago
22 minutes 30 seconds

Ideas Worth Exploring

Science is the best way we have for understanding how the world works. And you know what makes science better? Puns! This podcast is meant to introduce a variety of scientific topics in a way that is approachable for people without a scientific background and entertaining even for the nerds who think they know everything.