Residential Solar, Achieving Goals, Broken but Not Worthless

Residential Solar, Achieving Goals, Broken but Not Worthless

The Matt Townsend Show - Season 6, Episode 210

  • Sep 4, 2017 6:00 am
  • 2:05:21 mins

State of Residential Solar Power (9:54) Lee Phillips,Ph.D.,  a theoretical physicist, and writer who lives in McLean, Virginia. Solar energy has captivated us from we were children.  From solar powered toys and glow in the dark stars to solar powered calculators.  Although it works on a small scale, how will it look on a bigger scale?  Will it be environmentally sustainable and economically sustainable?   Lee Phillips explains the current state of solar power. Setting and Achieving Goals (52:02) Kaitlin Woo a ley, Ph.D. candidate at the University of Chicago school of Business. She'll be joining the marketing faculty at Cornell University this summer as an assistant professor. The importance of delaying gratification is universally recognized. Being able to forgo immediate benefits in order to achieve larger goals in the future is viewed as a key skill. For example, consider the classic “marshmallow test” experiment: children’s ability to delay eating one marshmallow so that they...

Episode Segments

Setting and Achieving Goals

Sep 4, 2017
41 m

Kaitlin Woo a ley, Ph.D. candidate at the University of Chicago school of Business. She'll be joining the marketing faculty at Cornell University this summer as an assistant professor. The importance of delaying gratification is universally recognized. Being able to forgo immediate benefits in order to achieve larger goals in the future is viewed as a key skill. For example, consider the classic “marshmallow test” experiment: children’s ability to delay eating one marshmallow so that they can get two marshmallows later is linked to a number of positive life outcomes, including academic success and healthy relationships.  Kaitlin Woolley discusses what separates goals we achieve from the ones that we don’t.

Kaitlin Woo a ley, Ph.D. candidate at the University of Chicago school of Business. She'll be joining the marketing faculty at Cornell University this summer as an assistant professor. The importance of delaying gratification is universally recognized. Being able to forgo immediate benefits in order to achieve larger goals in the future is viewed as a key skill. For example, consider the classic “marshmallow test” experiment: children’s ability to delay eating one marshmallow so that they can get two marshmallows later is linked to a number of positive life outcomes, including academic success and healthy relationships.  Kaitlin Woolley discusses what separates goals we achieve from the ones that we don’t.