
Thursday Apr 10, 2025
When the Grid Forgot Its Shape - The Deeper Thinking Podcast
When the Grid Forgot Its Shape
The Deeper Thinking Podcast
In 2024, hedge fund founder Ray Dalio warned the World Economic Forum that the global financial system was not merely bending under pressure—it was entering terminal breakdown. He spoke not of corrections or cycles, but of convergence: debt saturation, geopolitical entropy, technological enclosure, and the slow hollowing of democratic form. We don’t usually begin essays with billionaires. But this time, the language of collapse came not from poets or prophets—but from inside the algorithm.
This episode is a meditation on the long emergency. Not just economic unraveling, but epistemic and ontological dislocation. We move from Arrighi’s theory of financial hegemonies to Arendt’s loneliness and totalitarian drift. From Schmitt’s sovereign exception to Baudrillard’s simulation of markets. The logic of order is unraveling—replaced not by chaos, but by recursive contradiction: climate as sovereign, AI as architecture, debt as metaphysics. The old world is dying. The new world cannot yet be born. Now is the time of monsters.
Why Listen?
- Understand the structural recursion behind systemic breakdown
- Explore how thinkers like Arrighi, Arendt, Schmitt, and Baudrillard explain political and financial entropy
- Engage with the idea of collapse not as catastrophe, but as recursion
- Learn how motifs of monstrosity, opacity, and exhaustion define this moment
Further Reading
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- The Long Twentieth Century by Giovanni Arrighi — Financial cycles, hegemonic rise and fall. Amazon link
- The Origins of Totalitarianism by Hannah Arendt — Power, loneliness, and structural violence. Amazon link
- Simulacra and Simulation by Jean Baudrillard — Reality collapse and economic illusion. Amazon link
Listen On:
Bibliography
Arrighi, Giovanni. The Long Twentieth Century: Money, Power and the Origins of Our Times. London: Verso, 1994.
Arendt, Hannah. The Origins of Totalitarianism. New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1951.
Baudrillard, Jean. Simulacra and Simulation. Translated by Sheila Faria Glaser. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1994.
Gramsci, Antonio. Selections from the Prison Notebooks. Edited and translated by Quintin Hoare and Geoffrey Nowell Smith. New York: International Publishers, 1971.
Lazzarato, Maurizio. The Making of the Indebted Man: An Essay on the Neoliberal Condition. Translated by Joshua David Jordan. Los Angeles: Semiotext(e), 2012.
Mbembe, Achille. “Necropolitics.” Public Culture 15, no. 1 (2003): 11–40.
Morton, Timothy. Hyperobjects: Philosophy and Ecology after the End of the World. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2013.
Schmitt, Carl. Political Theology: Four Chapters on the Concept of Sovereignty. Translated by George Schwab. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005.
Zuboff, Shoshana. The Age of Surveillance Capitalism: The Fight for a Human Future at the New Frontier of Power. New York: PublicAffairs, 2019.
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