
The Great Simplification with Nate Hagens Humanity as Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde: The Symptoms, Patterns, and Drivers | Frankly 126
91 snips
Feb 20, 2026 A wide-angle look at how small-group instincts change when societies scale up. Clear distinctions are drawn between visible symptoms like warming and biodiversity loss and deeper systemic patterns. Listens explore recurring dynamics such as power-law concentration, overshoot, arms races, and rebound effects. The conversation ends by questioning how incentives, feedback delays, and excluded nature shape collective responsibility.
AI Snips
Chapters
Transcript
Episode notes
Scale Changes Human Nature
- Human instincts that stabilized small tribes become destabilizing when amplified at global scale.
- Nate Hagens frames this as a species-level phase shift from Dr. Jekyll to Mr. Hyde as populations exceed an inflection point.
Six Repeating System Patterns
- Six recurring systemic patterns (power-law concentration, overshoot, arms races, rebounds, commons breakdown, simplification) appear across societies.
- These patterns co-occur, interact, and explain multiple crises appearing together in 2026.
Maximum Power Principle Drives Growth
- The maximum power principle drives systems to capture more energy and outcompete others regardless of sustainability.
- Nate emphasizes this principle acts like gravity, bending institutions and incentives toward throughput and speed.
