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  • "Thesis" is an podcast that delves into the minds of academic researchers as they discuss their groundbreaking papers. This captivating show brings you the latest insights from diverse fields, covering topics ranging from social sciences to technology and beyond. Each episode takes you on an intellectual journey as experts share the how the insights drawn from their research and how their cutting-edge ideas can help you understand the world a little better. Whether you're a curious mind or a fellow researcher, "Thesis" is your passport to the forefront of academic exploration.
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Episodios
  • Sovereign Digital Currencies: Parachute Pants or the Continuing Evolution of Money - Kimberley Houser
    May 7 2023
    In this conversation we delve into the evolution of money and why government(s) finds themselves at a crossroads with how to react to crypto and their potential threat to FIAT currencies.
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    1 h y 12 m
  • Navassa: Property, Sovereignty, and the Law of the Territories - Joseph Blocher & Mitu Gulati
    May 7 2023
    In this episode we will explore a specific slice of the legislative and judicial history of American Imperialism, namely the evolution of the policies under which the US governs it's overseas territories. My guests in this episode are Joseph Blocker, professor of constitutional law at Duke University and Mitu Gulati, professor of law at the University of Virginia.
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    59 m
  • The Bipartisan Case for Labeling as a Content Moderation Method - John Wihbey
    May 7 2023
    When one inquires on what is and is not misinformation, the indirect but fundamental question that is being asked is what is truth? A question so hard to answer that it spawned its very own branch of philosophical study, known as Epistemology. Furthermore, it has been the root cause for potentially the greatest intellectual rivalry in western history, between the rationalist and the empiricist. Today's guest, John Wihbey, who is an associate professor at Northeastern University, an affiliate with Northeastern’s Ethics Institute and the co-author of the paper : “The Bipartisan Case for Labeling as a Content Moderation Method: Findings from a National Survey” attempts to tackle the management of misinformation not by proposing a single unified solution, but instead asks a narrower but still important question about what strategies for mitigating fake news are politically popular and thus in theory democratically possible.
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    53 m
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