Great simplification pulsing lines

Ep 129  |  Jonathan Rowson

Jonathan Rowson: “The Flip, the Formation, and the Fun: A Metamodern Framework for Human Futures”

Check out this podcast

TGS129 Jonathan Rowson The Great Simplification

Show Summary

Engaging with the human predicament requires new ways of understanding the world – novel perspectives that are rooted in a more holistic and interdependent mindset than those dominant in the industrialized society of the past few centuries. 

Today’s conversation with philosopher and social scientist Jonathan Rowson dives into the emerging ways of being that could serve us as we move toward a post-growth world, including what he has found particularly helpful in his decades of work studying the metacrisis.

In a world of (often siloed) hyper-specific experts, how would valuing the role of the “expert generalist” both change the face of academia and help us understand the world from a more holistic systems perspective? How does metamodernism merge the best of modernism and postmodernism to create a more comprehensive and constructive view of reality? How do we find and embrace our calling in the context of the metacrisis in order to take purposeful action forward? 

About Jonathan Rowson

Jonathan Rowson is the Co-Founder and Chief Executive of Perspectiva, a publishing house and praxis collective based primarily in London. Perspectiva describes itself as an urgent one-hundred-year project to improve the relationship between systems, souls, and society in theory and practice. Jonathan is a philosopher and social scientist by academic training and has degrees from Oxford, Harvard and Bristol Universities. He has written extensively on the idea of metacrisis as our multifaceted delusion, and he is increasingly focused on experiments in community and spiritual praxis to help shift socio-economic immunity to change. He is an Open Society Fellow and a Fellow at The Centre for the Understanding of Sustainable Prosperity at the University of Surrey. In his prior role as Director of the Social Brain Centre at the Royal Society of Arts he authored influential research reports including A New Agenda on Climate Change, Money Talks, and Spiritualise. He is also a Chess Grandmaster and three-time British Champion (2004–6) and views the game as a continuing source of insight and inspiration. His book, The Moves that Matter – A Grandmaster on the Game of Life was published by Bloomsbury in 2019.

In French, we have a motto that says that a simple drawing is often better than a long explanation. Jean-Marc Jancovici Carbone 4 President

That’s very understandable because with left atmosphere thinking, one of the problems is that you see everything as a series of problems that must have solutions. Iain McGilchrist Neuroscientist and Philosopher

We can’t have hundreds and hundreds of real relationships that are healthy because that requires time and effort and full attention and awareness of being in real relationship and conversation with the other human. Nate Hagens Director of ISEOF

This is the crux of the whole problem. Individual parts of nature are more valuable than the biocomplexity of nature. Thomas Crowther Founder Restor

Show Notes & Links to Learn More

Download transcript

00:00 – Jonathan Rowson works + info, Perspectiva and Perspectiva’s Substack

02:05 – Tasting the Pickle: Ten flavours of meta-crisis and the appetite for a new civilisation

05:34 – Tomas Bjorkman, TGS Episode

05:53 – Perspectiva Press, The Matter with Things by Iain McGilchrist + McGilchrist on TGS

06:50 – Realisation Festival

07:55 – Academic Specialization

15:09 – Metacrisis vs polycrisis

16:50 – The links between education, healthcare, and economics

18:38 – History of the prefix meta-

25:08 – Rowson twitter, Grandmaster, chess rating

25:40 – The Moves that Matter

28:04 – Relativism

29:37 – What is Metamodernism

30:11 – Metamodernism and the Perception of Context

30:19 – Modernism, Postmodernism

30:26 – Habermas

31:04 – Pre-modernism

34:20 – Umberto Eco

38:46 – Don’t Look Up

40:41 – Jason Josephson StormMetamodernism: The Future of Theory

44:15 – Constellations therapy

47:15 – Anti-debate

48:20 – Thomas K. MetzingerSpirituality and Intellectual Honesty

51:30 – Daniel Schmachtenberger and Consilience Project

55:30 – Collective Individuation, Carl Jung, Elinor Ostrom

56:28 – Carl Rogers

56:45 – Moloch, Collective action problems, Game Theory

1:03:09 – Marc Gafni, Zak Stein, Post-tragic

1:10:24 – Third Horizon

1:12:04 – Robert Pirsig

1:12:46 – Frankly Series, 7 Thought Experiments for Earth Day | Frankly #62

1:14:16 – Ivo Mensch

1:15:22 – The 17 Things I Am 100% Certain About | Frankly #60

1:17:35 – Perspectiva in 10 premises

1:17:41 – Education in a Time Between Worlds

1:19:45 – The Flip, The Formation, and The Fun

1:20:07 – The Flip, Jeffrey Kripal

1:23:34 – Peter Svidler

1:27:55 – Bonnitta Roy – C-Labs | LinkedIn

1:28:59 – Margaret Mead, Culture and Commitment: A Study of the Generation Gap

1:29:15 – Prefigurative Culture

1:29:34 – Francis Fukuyama

1:34:11 – Animal Industry

Back to episodes
Will We Artificially Cool the Planet?With Ted ParsonThe Great SimplificationEp 200 | Ted Parson

In this episode, Nate interviews Professor Ted Parson about solar geoengineering (specifically stratospheric aerosol injection) as a potential response to severe climate risks. They explore why humanity may need to consider deliberately cooling Earth by spraying reflective particles in the upper atmosphere, how the technology would work, as well as the risks and enormous governance challenges involved. Ted emphasizes the importance of having these difficult conversations now, so that we’re prepared for the wide range of climate possibilities in the future.

Watch nowNov 12, 2025
Terror Management TheoryWith Sheldon SolomonThe Great SimplificationEp 199 | Sheldon Solomon

Many of us wrestle with the unsettling truth that everyone – including ourselves and those we love – will one day die. Though this awareness is uncomfortable, research suggests that the human capacity to contemplate death is a byproduct of consciousness itself. In fact, our efforts to cope with mortality are at the core of culture, religion, the desire for wealth, and even many of today’s societal crises. How might a deeper understanding of our implicit reactions to mortality help us turn towards responses that are more supportive of our species and planet?

Watch nowOct 29, 2025
Challenging Monopoly PowerWith Stacy MitchellThe Great SimplificationEp 198 | Stacy Mitchell

Monopolistic business practices have been illegal in the United States for more than a century. Yet, monopoly power continues to accelerate in our modern commercial landscape. Large, powerful corporations edge out smaller businesses, often citing scale, “efficiency”, and lower costs as their reasons for success. But looking more closely reveals a reality that is far different. Small businesses are more cost-effective and deliver better results to the people they serve than giant corporations. Furthermore, they form the backbone of engaged and connected communities. So what is actually preventing small businesses (and communities) from flourishing, and what can individuals do today to build economic power in their communities? 

Watch nowOct 22, 2025

Subscribe to our Substack

The Institute for the Study of Energy and Our Future (ISEOF) is a 501(c)(3) non-profit corporation, founded in 2008, that conducts research and educates the public about energy issues and their impact on society.

Support our work
Get in touch
x