HORIZON Webinars

HORIZON Webinars

di The Age of Culture Project
Stagione 1
The Horizon Settlement with D. Paul Schafer
In the closing episode, Michael Frugtniet is joined by D. Paul Schafer to draw together the central arguments of the season and ask what now becomes possible. This is not a conclusion in the conventional sense, but a first settlement of the terrain: what the series has clarified, where tensions remain, and what kind of cultural framework may be needed for the age ahead. Returning to the question of culture as a governing layer, the conversation reflects on systems, value, technology, education and human continuity — and begins to define the basis for a more formal Horizon view.
The Automation of the Human with Dr. Jayfus Doswell and Mallika Auplish
In this episode, Michael Frugtniet is joined by Dr. Jayfus Doswell and Mallika Auplish to examine AI not simply as a technological tool, but as a new form of intelligence infrastructure shaping judgment, learning, communication, evidence, health systems, markets and public decision-making. The conversation moves beyond panic or blind optimism to ask what happens when human attention, memory, discipline and agency are increasingly mediated by algorithmic systems. It argues that AI governance cannot be separated from cultural maturity, institutional accountability and the protection of human judgment.
Culture Has Been Domesticated with Peter Mousaferiadis
In this episode, Michael Frugtniet is joined by Peter Mousaferiadis to examine why culture is so often celebrated in public language while remaining structurally weak in policy, education, technology and civic life. The conversation asks how culture has been narrowed into manageable categories — arts, heritage, identity, tourism, creative industries or community programming — and what is lost when it is treated as symbolic rather than foundational. Moving from cultural policy to intercultural confluence and neuroscience, the episode explores what it would mean for culture to become civic infrastructure: a living system through which societies build trust, belonging, imagination and shared meaning.
The System is Functioning. Society is Not, with Dr. Mira Sartika and Prof Nancy Duxbury
This episode asks whether modern society’s deepest failures are really failures of execution — or signs that our systems are succeeding according to the wrong assumptions. Michael Frugtniet leads a conversation alongside Dr. Mira Sartika and Professor Nancy Duxbury on the widening gap between institutional performance and lived human coherence: economies may grow, policies may be implemented, technologies may advance, yet communities still experience fragmentation, distrust, anxiety and loss of belonging. The episode positions culture as a source of repair, wisdom and collective wellbeing, asking what it would mean to design systems around human continuity rather than efficiency alone.
The Fiction of Value with Dr. Diane Dodd and Dr. Thomas Legrand
This episode examines how modern societies define value — and what becomes invisible when value is reduced to price, productivity or growth. Through a conversation grounded in food systems, ecology, craft, place and public meaning, Michael Frugtniet, Dr. Diane Dodd and Dr. Thomas Legrand explore how market language often fails to recognise the things that hold communities together: care, memory, biodiversity, local knowledge and cultural continuity. The episode asks whether a Cultural Age requires a broader public vocabulary of value, one capable of protecting what cannot easily be measured but should not be lost.
The Cultural Age with D. Paul Schafer
This foundational episode opens the series by returning to the intellectual roots of The Age of Culture Project. In conversation with Michael Frugtniet, D. Paul Schafer reflects on the journey from the Economic Age to the possibility of a Cultural Age, asking whether economics, while one of humanity’s great organising achievements, is now too narrow a framework to guide the future. The episode explores culture not as a sector or leisure activity, but as the “complex whole” through which societies understand meaning, value, wellbeing, responsibility and continuity.
Michael's Monologue
Michael Frugtniet opens the series with a direct reflection on the condition of contemporary society: systems are becoming more efficient, yet public trust, social coherence, meaning and continuity feel increasingly fragile. The monologue frames culture as the missing operating system beneath economics, technology, education and governance — not a decorative layer, but the deeper structure through which societies interpret value, hold memory, form judgment and decide what kind of future is worth building. It sets the central proposition for the season: that the crisis of the present is cultural before it is merely economic or technological.