
Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life
Summary, books mentioned, transcript quotes, and timestamps for Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life on The Ezra Klein Show.
Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life mentions What We Owe the Future by Will McCaskill, The Precipice by Toby Ord, Model Capital by Christopher Leslie Brown, and The Scout Mindset by Julia Galef with timestamps, quotes, and episode context.
I asked Will McCaskill, a philosopher at Oxford University, a founder of the effective altruism movement, and the author of the forthcoming book, Wha…
I certainly couldn't not mention it.
It's just the single best book that I know of on interpretation of the abolitionist campaign for the end of slavery.
Jump between the book moments.
The host mentions 'What We Owe the Future' as a crucial resource for understanding the worldview of long-termism, whi…
The host mentions 'The Precipice' by Toby Ord as a crucial resource for understanding the existential risks humanity…
The host mentions 'Model Capital' as a significant resource for understanding the abolitionist campaign against slave…
The host mentions 'The Scout Mindset' as a valuable resource for understanding a more exploratory approach to reasoni…
The host mentions 'The Alignment Problem' as a resource for listeners who want to explore the complexities of AI risk…
The host references 'What We Are the Future' to challenge the notion that the only way to impact the long-term future…
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What is Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life about?
Summary, books mentioned, transcript quotes, and timestamps for Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life on The Ezra Klein Show.
What are the main takeaways from Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life?
These are the strongest takeaways surfaced by the transcript, summary copy, and linked mentions for Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life.
- The conversation centers on AI Risk.
- A second recurring theme is effective altruism and donations.
- Referenced books include What We Owe the Future by Will McCaskill and The Precipice by Toby Ord.
- The strongest audience signal points to Individuals interested in philosophy, ethics, and future-oriented thinking and Individuals interested in existential risks and effective altruism.
Which books are mentioned in Three Sentences That Could Change the World — and Your Life?
What We Owe the Future by Will McCaskill, The Precipice by Toby Ord, and Model Capital by Christopher Leslie Brown are the clearest linked books in this episode, each tied back to transcript timestamps and quote cards.
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Books Mentioned
The full list below is ranked by how useful each mention is to a listener: stronger recommendation language, clearer quote context, and better timestamp support rise first.

“Will McCaskill, a philosopher at Oxford University, discusses his forthcoming book, which is probably the best single book distillation of long-termism you'll find.”
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“Details in incredible detail the existential risks that we face, including from bio and AI and great power war.”
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“The single best book that I know of on interpretation of the abolitionist campaign for the end of slavery.”
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“A wonderful book for expressing a kind of mode of reasoning that really resonates with me.”
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“A really great book on the subject of AI Risk.”
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“In chapter seven of What We Are the Future, I talk about stagnation. The idea that maybe growth wouldn't just slow, but actually even come to a halt.”
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The host mentions 'What We Owe the Future' as a crucial resource for understanding the worldview of long-termism, which emphasizes the importance o…

The host mentions 'The Precipice' by Toby Ord as a crucial resource for understanding the existential risks humanity faces. He emphasizes its detai…

The host mentions 'Model Capital' as a significant resource for understanding the abolitionist campaign against slavery. He emphasizes its importan…
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