Home Podcasts The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss
The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss

The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss

Lawrence M. Krauss 152 Episodes Jun 9, 2026

The Origins Podcast with Lawrence Krauss features in-depth conversations with interesting people from science, arts, and journalism. Host Lawrence M. Krauss, a theoretical physicist and author, explores topics that reflect the full range of human experience. The podcast aims to entertain, educate, and inspire through discussions on science and culture.

Episodes

What's New in Science | Cosmic Surprises, Newton Supreme, A New Collider, and Feynman Dines Out? Jun 9, 2026 4322 I think this was one of my most enjoyable dialogues in our What’s new series. Maybe Sabine and I are getting more used to each other’s cadence and interests or maybe it was the subject matter. Either way, I think you will find this to be a fascinating and provocative discussion of science at the forefront, and at the not-so-forefront, because that science is interesting too!We began our discussi
Alvin Roth: Moral Economics, from Prostitution to Kidney Transplant Markets May 12, 2026 6108 Alvin Roth is a Nobel Prizewinning Economist whose work on designing markets has had real world impacts that may have saved thousands of lives around the world, while arousing strong emotions both for and against the programs he has helped put in place. Clearly not one to shy away from controversy, he represents the best of what The Origins Project is trying to promote: applying science and reaso
What's New in Science With Sabine and Lawrence | Ghost Murmers, New Wires, Cosmic Questions, And AI cures? Apr 24, 2026 4053 I’m back with my friend and colleague Sabine Hossenfelder for another episode of “What’s New in Science”. Spending time with Sabine was a nice chance to step away from my physics lecture series for a bit. I know many of you have been enjoying the lectures, so don’t worry, they’ll be back soon.In this episode, we covered an incredibly wide range of science topics. Sabine opened with reported clai
Physics for Everyone, Lecture 3: Motion, from Galileo to Dark Mysteries Apr 14, 2026 3801 We usually begin the study of physics with a discussion of motion, not because it is easy, or because the modern understanding of motion began with Galileo hundreds of years ago. Rather, Galileo’s groundbreaking work provides a paradigm to understand how physics is done today. Extracting out the fundamental essence of motion from all the distractions associated with what turn out to be irrelevan
Katie Herzog: The Science Behind Drinking To Get Sober Mar 23, 2026 7853 Alcoholism is a scourge on modern society. Every year, 178,000 American die from alcohol abuse, and it has been estimated that over 200 billion dollars is lost from the US economy due to alcoholism, includingcosts of health care, lost productivity, and costs of crime enforcement. Given this immense social cost, it is equally amazing that there is no widely accepted cure. Rather, alcoholics are
What's New in Science With Sabine and Lawrence | Fusion Dark Matter, String Theory in Biology, and Rapid Evolution Feb 13, 2026 3505 I’m back with my friend and colleague Sabine Hossenfelder for another episode of “What’s New in Science”. I think this is one of my favorite dialogues that we have had. Spending time with Sabine was a nice chance to step away from my physics lecture series for a bit. I know many of you have been enjoying the lectures, so don’t worry, they’ll be back soon. In this episode, we covered the kind of
Physics for Everyone, Lecture 2: The Gestalt of Physics, Tools for Seeing Jan 22, 2026 3382 Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, as Arthur C. Clarke put it. In that spirit, the way we get closest to “magic” in physics is not by memorizing more facts or equations, but by learning a few mental tools that help us see through the illusion of complexity by extracting the wheat from the chaff. They are all simple at heart, but nevertheless quite powerful, and
What's New in Science With Sabine and Lawrence| New Year's Edition: Big ideas, precision measurements, and prebiotic molecules. Dec 31, 2025 3216 New Year’s Eve always comes with that familiar urge to clean the slate, toss out what didn’t hold up, and keep what actually earned its place. That’s basically the spirit of our latest “What’s New in Science” episode with Sabine Hossenfelder.We began with the season’s favorite shiny object: wormholes. The headlines have been everywhere, but we talked through why most of these stories quietly slide
The Like Button, and the Strange Power of Tiny Ideas | Martin Reeves Dec 22, 2025 8723 On this week’s episode of The Origins Podcast, I ended up in a place I genuinely never expected to go: the humble “like” button. When the idea first landed in my inbox, my reaction was basically, why on Earth would anyone write a whole book about that? Then I spoke with Martin Reeves, and I discovered that the history of this tiny icon is a surprisingly rich window into innovation, entrepreneurshi
Polarization, Powerlessness, and what We can Actually Do Nov 29, 2025 7947 On this week’s episode of The Origins Podcast, I am excited to release a conversation that has been sitting in our archives for more than a year. When we first recorded this discussion with conflict mediator and systems thinker Diana McLain Smith, political polarization was already a significant national and international problem. It has only gotten worse.The world seems more tribal than ever, an
Announcing our new 12-part series: A dozen Lessons on Physics and Reality Nov 23, 2025 3818 I am thrilled to introduce a significant new segment for the Origins Podcast. We are producing a fully fledged 12-part series titled “A Dozen Lessons on Physics and Reality.” Over the coming months, we will release these lectures to provide a comprehensive guide to how physicists think about the world. I’m particularly excited to share the wonder and insights that are often lost in standard textbo
(Rebroadcast) Noam Chomsky | Prescient Predictions? | Trump, Brazil, and American Fear Nov 15, 2025 7494 This week, I’m excited to share a special rebroadcast from the Origins Podcast archives: my original Origins Podcast conversation with Noam Chomsky.We recorded this dialog over six years ago, as an update to a conversation we’d held three years prior , before the political upheavals of Trump and Brexit.Listening back now, it’s striking how much of what Noam said remains relevant, and in many cases

Recommended