PodcastyNaukaThe Escaped Sapiens Podcast

The Escaped Sapiens Podcast

Shane Farnsworth
The Escaped Sapiens Podcast
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  • The Escaped Sapiens Podcast

    AI Psychosis: What We Already Know | Joseph Pierre | Escaped Sapiens #94

    20.06.2026 | 1 godz. 35 min.
    Our reality is increasingly being filtered through AI. People now defer to AI chatbots for more and more of their information needs, and google searches return AI generated overviews as their top responses. While this may have its benefits, problems are starting to arise as our interactions with AI are becoming more comprehensive, immersive, and emotionally meaningful. Researchers are begining to warn that AI might be contributing to the development of delusional beliefs and psychotic experiences.

    Reports of what has been called “AI-associated psychosis” have raised concerns about people becoming intensely attached to AI systems, interpreting conversations with them as uniquely meaningful, or developing beliefs that are reinforced through repeated interactions. Real world examples include people believing that AI is sending them hidden messages, that they have a special mission, that the have made new mathematical discoveries, and that AI is awakening. There have even been cases involving violence and death in the real world.

    So the question is: What is going on? Can we seperate the real world cases of AI psychosis from the media headlines?

    In this conversation I speak with Dr. Joseph Pierre, Professor of Psychiatry at the University of California, San Francisco, and the Unit Chief of the Langley Porter Psychiatric Hospital Adult Inpatient Unit. He has extensive clinical experience working with individuals with psychotic disorders, as well as research experience participating as a primary investigator and collaborator for clinical trials in schizophrenia and early intervention for young persons at high risk for psychosis. His academic work explores the "grey area" between psychopathology and normality with a focus on delusion-like beliefs including conspiracy theories. We discuss what AI-associated psychosis means, the evidence behind these emerging concerns, the psychology of delusional thinking, how AI systems may influence human cognition, and what we should-and should not-conclude about the risks of increasingly powerful conversational AI.

     

    ►Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/nniFFxTU5Tw

    Find out more about Joe's work here: https://profiles.ucsf.edu/joseph.pierre

    ►Read Joe's book: https://global.oup.com/academic/product/false-9780197765272?cc=nl&lang=en&

    https://www.amazon.nl/False-Mistrust-Disinformation-Motivated-Reasoning/dp/0197765270

    ►Follow Joe on X: @psychunseen
  • The Escaped Sapiens Podcast

    The Fertility Crash Is Already Here | Lyman Stone | Escaped Sapiens #93

    04.05.2026 | 1 godz. 34 min.
    Fertility is dropping worldwide. Across much of the West, total fertility rates now sit around 1.4-1.5 births per woman, well below the replacement level of 2.1. That implies a long-run population decline in the absence of immigration: each generation is smaller than the last, compounding over time.

    To make this concrete, if you take a representative group of 100 adults today and project forward under a constant fertility rate of about 1.5 births per woman, that group would, on average, correspond to roughly 50 grandchildren two generations later-an effective halving of the population.

    In South Korea the effect is far more extreme. With a total fertility rate around 0.7-0.8 births per woman, the same kind of projection implies that 100 adults today would correspond to only about 10-15 grandchildren on average two generations later. In other words, each generation is dramatically smaller than the one before it, compounding rapidly over time.

    So what does this actually mean? What happens when societies move from growth to sustained generational decline? How do pension systems function when the ratio of workers to retirees collapses? What happens to economic growth, political stability, cultural continuity, identity, and population composition in societies that are rapidly aging and shrinking at the same time?

    In this conversation, I speak with Lyman Stone, Senior Fellow and Director of the Pronatalism Initiative at the Institute for Family Studies, and Director of Research at Demographic Intelligence. We discuss the data behind the fertility crash, the drivers of this global shift, its long-term implications, and the policy options that might-or might not-reverse it.

    ►Watch on YouTube: https://youtu.be/i-vgPaxB-Wg

    ►You can find out more about Lyman's work here: https://ifstudies.org/about-us/lyman-stone#:~:text=Lyman%20Stone%20is%20a%20Senior,with%20a%20Population%20Dynamics%20specialization.
  • The Escaped Sapiens Podcast

    What Killed the Dire Wolf… And Could We Bring It Back? | Julie Meachen | Escaped Sapiens #92

    27.04.2026 | 1 godz. 31 min.
    In evolutionary terms, the last Ice Age was just yesterday. We narrowly missed witnessing creatures like woolly mammoths, short-faced bears, glyptodons, and dire wolves. The late Pleistocene, spanning roughly 50,000 to 12,000 years ago, is marked by the extinction of most large terrestrial animals outside of Africa, likely driven by a combination of climate change and the expansion of modern humans.

    In this conversation, I speak with paleontologist and Associate Professor of Anatomy at Des Moines University, Julie Meachen. She leads ongoing research at Natural Trap Cave, where she and her team excavate Ice Age mammals each summer. Their work aims to understand how climate change influenced both the morphology and genetics of these animals. By analyzing microfaunal remains and pollen records, they also reconstruct Pleistocene climate conditions in mid-latitude North America.

    Recently, colossal bioscience announced what it described as the “de-extinction” of the dire wolf. While that claim did not fully hold up, the underlying science is still remarkable. In our discussion, Julie explains what we know about the late Pleistocene ecosystem at the time of the dire wolf’s extinction, and what fossil evidence reveals about these animals. We also examine Colossal’s announcement, considering whether it was aimed less at the scientific community and more at the public and potential investors.

    Viewed in that light, the real value of reviving charismatic species like the woolly mammoth or dire wolf may not lie in the animals themselves. Instead, their greatest contribution could be as ambassadors, capturing public imagination and helping drive the development of technologies for genetic rescue and conservation.

    ►Watch on YouTube:
    https://youtu.be/c4lvsreJ-WU

    ►You can find out more about Julie's work here:
    https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=-hdi3IUAAAAJ&hl=en
    https://www.dmu.edu/directory/profile/julie-meachen/
  • The Escaped Sapiens Podcast

    Why Powerful Countries Keep Losing Wars | Phillips O’Brien | Escaped Sapiens #91

    13.04.2026 | 49 min.
    From Vietnam to Afghanistan, why do powerful countries keep losing wars? In this episode, I speak with author and professor of strategic studies Phillips O'Brien, one of the world’s sharpest analysts of modern warfare and grand strategy. Right now, Russia is bogged down in Ukraine, and the US has just attacked Iran. My goal in this conversation is to understand why leaders and analysts repeatedly misjudge conflicts… initiating wars they can’t win or extract themselves from. We discuss what victory really means, how leaders manage perception and public consent, full-spectrum power, and the changing face of US dominance.

    ►Watch on YouTube:

    https://youtu.be/tjP6TzrF5aw

    ►You can find out more about Phillips' work here:
    https://phillipspobrien.substack.com/

    https://www.csis.org/people/phillips-obrien https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/international-relations/people/ppo/

    ►Follow Fhillips on X and Bluesky: @PhillipsPOBrien @phillipspobrien.bsky.social
  • The Escaped Sapiens Podcast

    Can Aging Be Hacked? | Matt Kaeberlein | Escaped Sapiens #90

    06.04.2026 | 1 godz. 56 min.
    ``I think we know enough today for the average person to gain close to 2 decades of heathy life."

    There is a lot of hype in the longevity space, mainly generated by influencers. For non-specialists it can sometimes be difficult to know which information to trust, particularly when it comes to supplements and medications. In this conversation I speak with biologist and biogerontologist Matt Kaeberlein. My goal with the discussion was to better undrestand what scientists really know about aging and living longer, and to seperate out the science from the hype. We discuss lifestyle factors, known medications, the influence of testosterone and genetics, as well as some of the more interesting treatments being explored today. We also touch on some of Matt's reseach in the area of drug discovery.

    ►Watch on YouTube:

    https://youtu.be/Q5ZOc_UzF1U

    ►You can find out more about Matt's work here:

    https://halo.dlmp.uw.edu/people/matt-kaeberlein/ https://www.optispan.life/
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The Escaped Sapiens Podcast attempts to give an authentic and unedited voice to the researchers and explorers extending the boundaries of what is humanly possible.
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