Show overview
Deep Dive launched in 2024 and has put out 13 episodes in the time since. That works out to roughly 4 hours of audio in total. Releases follow a roughly quarterly cadence.
Episodes typically run ten to twenty minutes — most land between 12 min and 24 min — though episode length varies meaningfully from one episode to the next. None of the episodes are flagged explicit by the publisher. It is catalogued as a EN-language Education show.
There hasn’t been a new episode in the last ninety days; the most recent episode landed 7 months ago. Published by Tschäff.
From the publisher
Exploring the intersection between collective psychology, law and the environment. An AI generated podcast created by feeding academic papers into Google’s NotebookLM.
Latest Episodes
Ep 14Luigi Fabbri: Bourgeois Influences on Anarchist Thought and Propaganda
The text, excerpted from Luigi Fabbri’s "Bourgeois Influences on Anarchism" (Influenze borghesi sull'anarchismo), analyses the complex relationship between anarchist movements and the surrounding bourgeois culture, particularly concerning violence and propaganda.
Ep 13Pavlina R. Tcherneva and L. Randall Wray: That Vision Thing: Formulating a Winning Policy Agenda
The 2024 Democratic loss stems from failing to articulate an economic vision for the working class. It analyses voting trends showing Democrats losing their traditional base—lower-income, rural, and non-college-educated voters—while gaining affluent, suburban ones.
Ep 12Mathew Forstater & Geoffrey Ingham: Tax-Driven Money and Credit Theory of Money
Notebook LM generated. The Credit Theory posits that money's essence is not as a physical commodity, but as a social relation representing debt/credit. All participants in a monetary system engage in these relations, settled by transferring abstract value. The Tax Driven Money approach, a specific form of credit theory, argues that the government's power to levy taxes and demand payment in a specific unit of account drives the value and general acceptability of money.
Ep 11Thomas Hobbes: Leviathan
This AI generated podcast delves into Hobbes' classic treatise on liberty, emphasizing that true freedom isn’t an inherent quality but rather the absence of external constraints. An Obama-esque reflection ties these philosophical concepts to the Founding Fathers, showing how such debates continue to shape American political thought by balancing individual rights and government responsibility.
Ep 10Nicholas Kaldor: The Expenditure Tax
Google Notebook LM generated: This document by Nicholas Kaldor provides an overview of the concept of an expenditure tax, as detailed in the Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations' 1974 report. The report examines the historical context, theoretical underpinnings, administrative feasibility, and potential applications of an expenditure tax. This tax, is fundamentally different from an income tax because it taxes what individuals spend rather than what they earn.
Ep 9Max Weber: The Methodenstreit
Google LM generated:This article examines Max Weber's approach to the Methodenstreit, a late 19th-century debate in economics about methodology. It contrasts Weber's integrated method, which combines historical context, empirical evidence, and theoretical models, with the more deductive and ahistorical views of economists like Carl Menger and Ludwig von Mises. Ultimately, we explore the ongoing tension between theory and empirical observation in economics.
Ep 8Chris Hayes: Hip Heterodoxy
An 2007 Nation article by Chris Hayes about the current state of the economics discipline read using the Kokoro AI generated voice.
Ep 6L. Randall Wray: The Value of Money: A Survey of Heterodox Approaches
Google LM generated podcast: This Levy Economics Institute working paper surveys heterodox economic theories of money's value, rejecting orthodox views linking it solely to scarcity or price levels. The paper integrates several heterodox approaches: reinterpretations of Marx's labour theory of value by Graeber and Foley; Keynes's liquidity preference theory as developed by Minsky and Kregel; and MMT perspective on sovereign currency.
Ep 5Jean Baudrillard: Simulacra and Simulation
This excerpt from Jean Baudrillard's Simulacra and Simulation explores the concept of simulation and its impact on reality. Baudrillard argues that simulation has superseded representation, creating a hyperreal where signs no longer refer to a deeper meaning but exist as self-referential systems.
Ep 4David Graeber: Creative Refusal
Google LM generated: David Graeber explores the concept of "culture as creative refusal," arguing that many cultural forms arise not organically but as conscious rejections of other cultures' values. The essay proposes that understanding history requires recognising these acts of cultural rejection and their ongoing influence. The author ultimately suggests that the seemingly disparate elements of Malagasy culture are better understood as a unified, defiant response to external powers.
Ep 3The Dangerous Myth of 'Taxpayer Money'
GoogleLM generated podcast. This article argues that using the phrase "taxpayer money" is harmful because it perpetuates a myth that only certain groups of people contribute to society, particularly wealthy, white, and male individuals. The author contends that the phrase reinforces the idea that taxation is theft, and that government spending is somehow stealing from “taxpayers” rather than utilising public money for the benefit of everyone.
Ep 2Jason Stanley: How Fascism Works
NotebookLM generated podcast: Fascist politics uses nostalgia and fabricated narratives of a glorious past built on “traditional values” to garner support for its authoritarian and hierarchal ideology. T
S1 Ep 1Pavlina Tcherneva: The Case for a Job Guarantee
A Notebook LM podcast: This paper from the Dr. Tcherneva proposes a policy solution to the problem of involuntary unemployment in the United States: the Job Guarantee. This comprehensive policy document explores the concept, objectives, and design features of the JG program, arguing that it is a superior policy option to the current system of unemployment benefits.
