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Finding Genius Podcast

On Superorganisms and the Theory of Collective Intelligence—J Scott Turner—Physiologist, Professor, and Author

Finding Genius Podcast

Richard Jacobs

Medicine, Health & Fitness

4.41K Ratings

🗓️ 3 April 2019

⏱️ 49 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

"The fascinating thing about the [termite] mound is that…it's not just this big pile of dirt; it has complex architecture, it's differentiated in structure…and it has a function—it serves to capture wind energy in the environment, and that helps power the gas exchange needs of the termite colony located underground, so it's literally a lung made from soil," says J Scott Turner, explaining one of his well-known discoveries that contributed to the theory of collective intelligence. His discoveries not only led to a greater understanding of a South African species of termite and their enormous mounds which pepper the Cape Town landscape, but opened the door to many more questions which would influence the direction of his career moving forward.


As a physiologist, professor, and author, J Scott Turner has made it his life's work to understand where and in what way physiology, adaptation, ecology, evolution and philosophy intersect. He joins the podcast to discuss what he's learned over the years, including the different ways in which organisms construct and adapt to their environments in ways that resemble superorganism assemblage, animal architecture as expressions of physiological needs, the ways in which human gut flora interact with their environment, the cellular cooperation and mutual accommodation that's present in the development of malignant cancers, and the fluid relationship between hereditary memory and function.


Tune in for all the details, and learn more about his work by visiting jscottturner.com or reaching out with questions via jsturner@syr.edu.

Transcript

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0:00.0

You're listening to the Future Tech Podcast with Richard Jacobs.

0:09.0

Future Technologies such as Artificial Intelligence,

0:11.8

Stem Cells, 3D printing, gene editing,

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Bitcoin, blockchain, the microbiome, quantum computing, virtual reality, and exploring space

0:21.0

are much closer than you might think.

0:23.0

In fact, many early versions of these technologies are in play right now,

0:27.0

and the companies that are using these technologies for the focus of this podcast.

0:31.0

My goal for you, the listener, is to learn from these

0:34.4

podcasts. You may very well learn something that may change the course of your life

0:38.2

for the better, steer you towards a new career, or give you insight into

0:42.4

addressing a thorny medical problem.

0:44.4

Remember, this podcast and this content is informational and nature only. No medical,

0:49.2

tax, legal, financial, or psychological advice is being given.

0:53.0

If you've enjoyed the podcast, please listen, subscribe, like,

0:56.8

and tell your friends about it.

0:58.2

Thank you.

0:59.2

Hello, this is Richard Jacobs with the Future Tech Podcast, and I have Jay Scott Turner.

1:09.0

He's an American physiologist who's contributed to the theory of collective intelligence do some field work in

1:16.1

with me a South African species of a termite, macro termies, Michael Coney, and discovering things such as these termites and other species

1:26.2

seem to act in concert as a superorganism if I have it right to create things like

1:31.0

termite nouns that not only benefit the community in certain ways,

1:36.0

but literally, physically act as a bridge to the community to create a superorganism.

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