Dwarkesh Podcast

Why Leonardo was a saboteur, Gutenberg went broke, and Florence was weird – Ada Palmer

1259 snips
Mar 6, 2026
Ada Palmer, Renaissance historian, novelist, and composer at the University of Chicago. She explains how Italian city-republics and Roman cosplay shaped politics and learning. She traces printing’s real revolution from books to pamphlets and how distribution made Gutenberg fail. She links libraries, networks, and inquisitorial labs to the rise of shared scientific practices.
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ADVICE

Create Both Books And Networks For New Ideas

  • To foster new disciplines you need both content and networks: build abundant, accessible knowledge plus channels for people to debate and test it.
  • Think beyond literacy rates to book availability, glosses, translations, and circulation systems.
INSIGHT

Failed Resistance Still Protects Future Rights

  • Even when republics fell to dukes, persistent republican traditions constrained tyrants and preserved rights like property through social resistance and institutional memory.
  • The Vasari corridor built for safety detours around an ancestral tower because violating that property risked rebellion.
INSIGHT

Pamphlets Were The Real Information Breakthrough

  • The printing revolution unfolded in waves: books, then fast pamphlets, then newspapers and magazines, each enabling new social phenomena like the Reformation.
  • Pamphlets became hard to censor and cut Wittenberg-to-London transmission to 17 days, fueling rapid coordination.
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