Can we overcome the polycrisis? | Daron Acemoglu, Steve Koonin, and Genevieve Guenther

Subscribers:
562,000
Published on ● Video Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1fpCHOp_loU



Duration: 0:00
1,621 views
37


Nobel prize-winner Daron Acemoglu, Steve Koonin and Genevieve Guenther clash over potential problems of the language we use when talking about crises.

Is alarmist rhetoric harming climate action? Does the language of emergency cause more problems than it solves?

Watch the full debate at https://iai.tv/video/the-age-of-emergency?utm_source=YouTube

From the cost of living crisis to the climate crisis, the crisis in healthcare to the crisis of migration, we live in a world of seemingly relentless crises. Politicians, commentators and social media typically demand urgent government responses. But there are dangers to the vocabulary of catastrophe. If everything is a crisis there is a risk we take none seriously, or take the wrong threats seriously. 38% of Americans avoid the news because of 'crisis fatigue'. In addition continuous crisis risks paralysing decision making with demands for instant and immediate action. Moreover, critics argue a focus on crisis obscures aspects of culture that are performing well which require focus and attention to deliver their potential. Should we be sceptical of the language of crisis, and see it as a means to generate attention and a form of self-promotion and media hype? Or is it more fundamentally a product of a culture that is in relative decline and dissatisfied with itself? Or should we see the focus on threats and crises necessary to generate the action required to overcome the deep challenges we face?

#climatechange #politics #apocalypse #nobelprize

Daron Acemoglu is the 2024 Nobel Prize winner in economics, an Institute Professor at MIT, and is a regular writer on political economy and the state of liberal society. He was named the most cited economist in 2015 and he was awarded with Prospects 2024 thinker of the year. Genevieve Gunther is a climate activist and author of the book The Language of Climate Politics. She is a founding director of the organisation End Climate Silence. Steve Koonin is a theoretical physicist and the former director of the Centr for Urban Science and Progress at NYU. He served as President Obama's Undersecretary of Science in the Department of Energy and has since researched the science behind political claims about climate change. Hosted by Sophie Scott Brown, a political philosopher at NYU.

The Institute of Art and Ideas features videos and articles from cutting edge thinkers discussing the ideas that are shaping the world, from metaphysics to string theory, technology to democracy, aesthetics to genetics. Subscribe today! https://iai.tv/subscribe?utm_source=YouTube

00:00 Introduction
00:23 Steve Koonin
02:35 Genevieve Guenther
05:41 Daron Acemoglu

For debates and talks: https://iai.tv/
For articles: https://iai.tv/articles
For courses: https://iai.tv/iai-academy/courses




Other Videos By The Institute of Art and Ideas


2024-11-28The complex relationship between fish and pigs | Helen Czerski
2024-11-27Sadiq Khan INTERVIEW: Mayor of London on culture wars, Brexit, and the Trump administration
2024-11-26Why theoretical physics is unique | Avshalom Elitzur
2024-11-25The reproducibility crisis and other problems in science | John Ioannidis
2024-11-24"We live at a special time in the history of the universe" | British astrophysicist Chris Lintott
2024-11-23Activist on why we still need to care about the climate | Recent debate preview
2024-11-22The consciousness test: was Turing wrong? | Hilary Lawson and Yoshua Bengio debate
2024-11-21When other leftists ask me why I support Ukraine | Slavoj Žižek
2024-11-20It's not all evolution: Denis Noble on how consciousness develops from disorder FULL INTERVIEW
2024-11-19Stare your cat in the eyes | Professor Denis Noble on consciousness
2024-11-18Can we overcome the polycrisis? | Daron Acemoglu, Steve Koonin, and Genevieve Guenther
2024-11-17Human voices can go undercover | Psychologist Carol Gilligan
2024-11-16Theoretical physicist Sean Carroll on how the universe will end: "With a whimper, not a bang"
2024-11-14Konstantin Kisin and David Aaronovitch argue about the impact of the pill
2024-11-13Troubling echoes of the Big Bang | Matt O'Dowd, Marika Taylor, and Martín López-Corredoira
2024-11-13Why gene editing won't save us from disease | Professor Denis Noble
2024-11-12The culture wars today | Peter York on a politics of mass deception
2024-11-11John Bercow: Why I am no longer a Tory
2024-11-10The laws of physics are not fixed | João Magueijo
2024-11-10Does Genesis 1 describe the emergence of consciousness? | Joscha Bach
2024-11-08Slavoj Žižek on Shakespeare