

Conjecture Institute
conjectureinstitute
A podcast all about https://www.conjectureinstitute.org/ with approximately bi-monthly interviews with the Fellows
Episodes
Mentioned books

Nov 26, 2025 • 1h 33min
Ep 11: Maria Violaris
Maria is fellow of Conjecture Institute https://www.conjectureinstitute.org/ and physicist with her own Youtube Channel where she takes deep dives into many aspects of quantum theory - especially quantum computation. Subscribe to her channel here: / @maria_violaris

Nov 22, 2025 • 1h 4min
Ep 10: Vlatko Vedral
Oxford physicist Vlatko Vedral speaks with Conjecture Institute President Logan Chipkin about quantum information theory, testing whether or not gravity is classical, whether spacetime is fundamental or emergent, and more.
Get Vlatko's new book, Portals to a New Reality: Five Pathways to the Future of Physics: https://a.co/d/cqCIK8x
Learn more about Vlatko's work: https://www.vlatkovedral.com
Learn more about Conjecture Institute: https://www.conjectureinstitute.org

Oct 9, 2025 • 1h 41min
Ep 9: Eric Denton
Eric is a freelance writer and host of The Falsifiable Podcast, a show in which Eric explores both current events and evergreen topics in science, culture, and politics through a Popperian lens. He is currently working on a book that serves as a one-stop shop for anyone interested in epistemology in general—and Popperian epistemology in particular. Eric's podcast can be found here: https://youtube.com/@thefalsifiablepodcast?si=uG3KUkUsUU6jif-Y And his writing here: https://thefalsifiablenewsletter.substack.com

5 snips
Sep 5, 2025 • 1h 35min
Ep 8: David Deutsch. How to reverse academia's stagnation.
David Deutsch, a pioneering physicist and author, tackles the stagnation in academia, sharing his journey into physics and the obstacles today’s researchers face. He critiques bureaucratic funding that stifles creativity, proposing a flexible model that fosters innovative ideas through the Conjecture Institute. Deutsch also discusses the urgent need for revised quantum mechanics education and challenges prevalent pessimistic narratives in science. Throughout, he emphasizes optimism and the transformative power of intellectual freedom in research and academia.

Aug 10, 2025 • 1h 17min
Ep 7: Questions with Paul Raymond-Robichaud
Mathematician Paul Raymond-Robichaud answers questions posed on Twitter/X. Note: there were some connection issues so at times the audio is a bit "lossy" or patchy. But the substance is all still there.
Timestamps as follow: 00:00 Introduction 00:55 Hugo Graw wants to know about Paul’s background and intellectual inspirations and the future of mathematics given AI. 07:16 People Paul wishes to thank 17:16 Extended discussion about mathematics as proxy for high IQ or intelligence and the usefulness of mathematics examinations in gauging creativity, etc. 30:41 Thibault wants to know about the big ideas in mathematics and interdisciplinary thinking. 34:37 Lu wants to know if Paul can make the case for voluntarily learning mathematics 38:34 The pseudoscience in “education”. 39:54 Sam asks several questions (1) What is your favourite branch of mathematics (if you have one) and why do you consider it important? 41:33 (2) How did you become interested in quantum theory? 44:36 (3) What do you consider the most impactful use of mathematics in physics? That is, how does better, more rigorous mathematics help is do phyiscs better? 46:26 Nivi asks if Paul has any extensions, improvements, criticisms of David Deutsch’s theories of mathematics. 48:07 Anders asks for an intro to spaced repetition and thoughts on how it intersects with the fun criterion alongside what stoicism can add to CR? 54:09 Guillem asks if we can define purely mathematically the forgetting process? 55:00 Erik asks in what ways can mathematics be considered a language, and in what ways not? 56:21 Josh asks about Imre Lakatos. 56:40 Hemant asks what Paul you thinks is the biggest misconception humans have about the nature of mathematics itself? And if you had to choose one concept from which all of mathematics could be rebuilt, what would it be? 1:00:50 Aziz asks about Category Theory 1:03:01 Ariya asks about Paul’s favourite books and why information helps to understand quantum mechanics. 1:08:02 Cory asks about the connection between entropy in information theory and entropy in thermodynamics? 1:08:45 Josh asks how Paul approaches criticizing explanations (or parts of them) mathematically. 1:10:13 Hemant asks what role do you think pure mathematics and abstract reasoning play in solving complex real-world problems like AI alignment or the control of advanced technologies? 1:13:10 Šmingvin asks about there claim that “no one understands quantum mechanics”.

Aug 5, 2025 • 1h 11min
Ep 6: Paul Raymond-Robichaud
Mathematician Paul Raymond-Robichaud (@PaulRaymond-Robichaud on Youtube and @PaulRRobichaud on @X) joins Brett Hall for a discussion about the foundations of mathematics, physics, education and philosophy. Paul works in quantum foundations. He developed a mathematical theory of local realism that generalizes the notion beyond the frameworks of existing theories. In particular, he formally proved that quantum theory itself is locally realistic. This result settles an important scientific question that once troubled luminaries such as Einstein. Beyond his work in physics, Paul is passionate about Stoic philosophy and is exploring ways to merge it with critical rationalism. He is also investigating how physics, computing, and critical rationalism might be brought together to improve the foundations of mathematics.

Jul 1, 2025 • 1h 37min
Ep 5: Carlos De La Guardia
Conjecture Institute Fellow Carlos De la Guardia speaks with Brett Hall about his AGI research. We compare and contrast approaches to artificial intelligence with a focus on what makes Carlos' approach unique. Support Carlos by visiting https://www.conjectureinstitute.org/

Jun 2, 2025 • 1h 18min
Ep 4: Tom Hyde
Tom Hyde is a philosopher and polymath interested in the relationship between epistemology and aesthetics. He is developing Wonderism, a bold new book aiming to reconcile Enlightenment rationality with Romanticist sentiment. To wonder, both to think and to feel, to question and to marvel, lies at the heart of all human action. Wonderism explains both sides of this balance and sheds light on the relationships between knowledge and experience, reason and feeling, science and art. Tom has degrees in science and can be found on X at https://x.com/tomhyde_ and on Substack at https://tomhyde.substack.com/

May 24, 2025 • 1h 24min
Ep 3: Arjun Khemani
Arjun Khemani, an 18-year-old content creator and Conjecture Institute fellow who makes a documentary on David Deutsch's theory of knowledge. He discusses making the film, spreading optimism against doomerism, debates AI and LLM limits, recounts leaving school and AirChat work, and explains why privacy-focused crypto and Dubai fit his vision for freedom and progress.

May 24, 2025 • 1h 52min
Ep 2: Sam Kuypers
Sam Kuypers is a theoretical physicist who works on quantum information among other things and is a fellow of Conjecture Institute. To learn more about Sam's work see his blog https://substack.com/@samuelkuypers or scroll down to find Sam here at https://www.conjectureinstitute.org/


