Caleb Watney: Think Tank Founder Accelerates Progress Through Policy

Summary:

In this episode, we speak with Caleb Watney. He is a co-founder of the Institute for Progress (IFP) which aims to accelerate technological, scientific, and industrial progress. On top of that, Caleb holds a Master’s in Economics from George Mason University and has spent the last seven years working in policy in Washington, DC.

Some things we touch on in this episode:

  • What it's like to be a Christian working in policy.

  • Why is policy something Christians who want to be impactful, should be concerned about.

  • Why we should care about improving science research.

  • Less controversial ways to make an impact including how to enhance skilled immigration.

  • Caleb’s career advice for Christians looking to work in policy, particularly neglected areas within policy.

Articles, organizations, and other media discussed in this episode


Episode Highlights:

If we could find small ways of impacting the way in which technology grows...those small ways of tweaking it can have really long run consequences

[00:01:18]“And so through technology policy, if we could find small ways of impacting the way in which technology grows, the way that it is developed or regulated, or what kinds of technology come to market first there's a lot of path dependency. And so kind of those small ways of tweaking it can have really long-run consequences if you really take technological growth seriously.”

Policy is one of the most impactful places that you can be working...Really small changes to the way in which they govern a particular sector can have really large consequences for millions and billions of people

[00:08:12]“Policy is just at a very high level, one of the most impactful places that you can be working. If we think about what are the things that affect the most number of people which is one way of thinking about impact, then certainly public policy, and especially public policy in the United States can have a really large impact...Really small changes to the way in which they govern a particular sector can have really large consequences for millions and billions of people.”

We're supposed to one part of caring for the poor is curing new diseases and all the people who would suffer from a disease

[00:37:12]“We're supposed to one part of caring for the poor is curing new diseases and all the people who would suffer from a disease. And there are a lot of people who die prematurely before they have a chance to sort of engage with the church or engage with the gospel. And so providing better tools to just kind of generically improve the status or the condition of the world I think is a very high level, broad, maybe vague, you could even call it a tool for sort of directly advancing the gospel.”

We have a long tradition of seeing that direct material advances in human conditions when done by the church, actually enable the church to then have a greater spiritual focus or spiritual impact.

[00:38:20]“We have a long tradition of seeing that direct sort of material advances in human conditions when done by the church, actually enable the church to then have a greater spiritual focus or spiritual impact. That connection between spiritual and physical blessing is something I think the church has maybe neglected at times.”

We're certainly called to be in the world, but not of it.

[00:30:56]“So we're certainly called to be in the world, but not of it. But I think there's a very long Christian tradition of sort of being very proactive in the way that we're engaging the world and that involves governance of the world. I mean, there's been a lot of very famous Christian leaders that have been working in sort of politics very effectively. I mean, Martin Luther King Jr. Is just one example who really rallied sort of democratic forces to make changes that I think we'd all agree were really essential for the betterment of society and for bringing the kingdom of God on earth.”

Christians are called to really think about carefully the real-world impact of their actions

[00:31:00]“Insofar as Christians are called to really think about carefully the real-world impact of their actions, I think that means thinking about where can we have the most impact, and kind of as we covered earlier, politics is an enormously impactful way now. You want to be careful and make sure that you're not compromising kind of on your values.

Christians ought to have intellectual humility

[00:33:35]“That's a really interesting idea, this intellectual humility that a Christian ought to have. That is because we are falling, as you mentioned, we are prone to sin and also to make mistakes, cocktail mistakes about what's right, and what's true. That also seems to be a bit different from a lot of Christian messaging sometimes hear, which can put forward this idea that there's only one way or there's let's just say in a political context, right, it's black and white.”.”

I highly recommend starting earlier than later

[01:03:57] “I think especially if you want to have some sort of a writing output eventually like you want to be a researcher or public intellectual or something like that. Getting started on that earlier rather than later is, I think, highly recommended.”



 

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Policy and Politics

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