
Shane Parrish
Founder of Farnam Street, host of The Knowledge Project podcast, author of Clear Thinking, and CEO of Syrus Partners; his public work focuses on decision-making, mental models, and practical wisdom for business and life.
Second-Order Effects Shape Gurley’s View of AI, Stablecoins, and Venture Capital
Benchmark veteran Bill Gurley argues that the same habits shaped his investing career and his current view of AI, crypto, payments and venture capital: understand the foundations of a field, stay close to its bleeding edge, and think in systems rather than single-variable causes. In a Knowledge Project interview with Shane Parrish, Gurley says founders and investors misread opportunities when they ignore second- and third-order effects, whether in startup burn rates, AI regulation, tokenized markets or stablecoin adoption.
Winning Products Copy Proven Behavior and Isolate What Is Actually New
Mark Pincus, the Zynga founder behind FarmVille and Words With Friends, argues that founders are usually right about the human need they sense and wrong about the first product they build around it. In a conversation with Shane Parrish, Pincus lays out a product doctrine built around copying what is already proven, isolating the genuinely new risk, and testing for “heat” before teams spend months building respectable products nobody wants.
Compute Allocation Is Becoming AI’s Central Strategic Question
OpenAI co-founder Greg Brockman argues that compute has become the central bottleneck in AI, turning data centers into a strategic advantage and a public allocation problem. In a Knowledge Project interview with Shane Parrish, Brockman says the question is no longer just how powerful AI systems become, but where scarce capacity should go — consumer access, business productivity, scientific discovery or problems such as cancer research — and how the benefits can be felt broadly rather than concentrated.
Identity and Environment Design Beat Willpower in Habit Formation
James Clear, author of Atomic Habits, argues that lasting behavior change depends less on willpower than on identity and environment. In a clip from Shane Parrish’s interview, Clear says repeated actions serve as evidence for the kind of person someone believes they are, while well-designed surroundings make desired behaviors easier to repeat. His practical advice is to stop treating discipline as the main variable and instead make good habits obvious, accessible, and aligned with the identity a person wants to reinforce.
AI Will Commoditize Legal Work Product, Not Legal Judgment
Harvey co-founder and chief executive Winston Weinberg argues that AI will commoditize much of the routine work product in law while increasing the value of judgment at the point where legal decisions are made. In a Knowledge Project interview with Shane Parrish, Weinberg describes how Harvey grew from a GPT-3 test on landlord-tenant questions into an $11bn legal AI company, and explains the operating discipline behind it: faster decisions, sharper prioritization, and a team built to withstand repeated failure.