A.I. Music isn’t coming — it’s here. Summary In this episode, Arjun and Dinesh unpack what happens when the act of making music is no longer entirely human. From the neuroscience of creation — dopamine, oxytocin, and the state of flow — to the platforms banning artists caught between art and automation, this is a conversation about meaning, mastery, and identity. Because maybe the real disruption isn’t that machines can make music. Maybe it’s that they’ve exposed how fragile our busines...
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A.I. Music isn’t coming — it’s here. Summary In this episode, Arjun and Dinesh unpack what happens when the act of making music is no longer entirely human. From the neuroscience of creation — dopamine, oxytocin, and the state of flow — to the platforms banning artists caught between art and automation, this is a conversation about meaning, mastery, and identity. Because maybe the real disruption isn’t that machines can make music. Maybe it’s that they’ve exposed how fragile our busines...
#32 Environmental Law in Action : Turning Snakebites into Policy Reform
Innocence Theory Podcast
51 minutes
4 months ago
#32 Environmental Law in Action : Turning Snakebites into Policy Reform
It is estimated that annually 58000 people die of snakebites in India. The WHO considers snakebite envenoming a neglected tropical disease (NTD). Yet, the issue receives less attention. Meet Shubhra Sotie, an environmental lawyer who was part of the team that helped turn this neglected crisis into action, making snakebite a notifiable disease in Karnataka, a step that later paved the way for national adoption. Through candid stories of exotic pet trade chaos, diluted environmental laws...
Innocence Theory Podcast
A.I. Music isn’t coming — it’s here. Summary In this episode, Arjun and Dinesh unpack what happens when the act of making music is no longer entirely human. From the neuroscience of creation — dopamine, oxytocin, and the state of flow — to the platforms banning artists caught between art and automation, this is a conversation about meaning, mastery, and identity. Because maybe the real disruption isn’t that machines can make music. Maybe it’s that they’ve exposed how fragile our busines...