
Questions that will profoundly impact the way we think about disease, about longevity, and about free will. But what does it mean? Arguably the most significant scientific discovery of the new century, the mapping of the twenty-three pairs of chromosomes that make up the human genome raises almost as many questions as it answers.
The book The Origins of Virtue, helped Naval take a game-theoretical framework towards virtues and ethics.The genome's been mapped. “Which helped me realize that it was rational to be optimistic, because of the technological and scientific advancement that we’ve had as human species since we first came across the stone ax and basic tools.” – Naval Ravikant. Naval then read The Red Queen, which laid out the age-old competition between bacteria, viruses, and humans. Naval’s Relationship With Matt Ridley’s Books Matt Ridley ( is the author of The Red Queen and, recently, How Innovation Works. California attracts entrepreneurs.” – Naval Ravikant “California doesn’t create entrepreneurs. You need to have a body of innovators around you, which means there has to be a place where they can all gather, whether it’s online or offline.” – Naval Ravikant “Innovation happens by taking the body of innovators that surround you one step further, engaging in lots of trials and then having error and feedback from customers and the economy. “I wouldn’t be surprised if the next Silicon Valley moves to the cloud.” – Naval Ravikant. The next booming geographical city could be in the cloud:. The first version of a new technology looks surprisingly like the last version of an old technology.” – Naval Ravikant but at the time it’s surprisingly gradual. “It looks disruptive when you’re looking backwards. Most of the time innovation is an incremental process:. “It helped me define what life is, how it works, why it’s important, and placed evolution as a binding principle in the center of my worldview.”. I must have six or seven dog-eared copies of it lying around in various boxes.” – Naval Ravikant His first book that I read was called Genome. “Matt had a bigger influence on pulling me into science, and a love of science, than almost any other author.
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