#TRAP (The Rhythms And Perturbations) --- SynTalk

#TRAP (The Rhythms And Perturbations) --- SynTalk

From SynTalk by SynTalk

December 6, 2025 · 1h 15m

About this episode

The episode explores the connections between rhythms in nature, markets, and human physiology through the lenses of neuroscience, econophysics, and philosophy.

Are our brains log-normal? Why is breathing rhythmic? Why is there a hum in the universe? Do our hearts beat chaotically? Are the (stock) markets random and ‘unbounded’? What is a market? How is Mercury perturbed? What has sleep-wake cycles? Must you go up and down with the sun? What causes whirlpools in a smooth flowing river? Where do rhythms reside? Is there an equivalent of homeostasis in the markets? What is your sigh rate just now? Are you depressed? Could you move fast, vocalize, eat and breathe at the same time? Why do we hyperventilate when we are anxious? Is there phase lock-in between (say) moving and (quantized) breathing? What role do feedback loops or self organization play in regulating complex systems? Do risks become more systemic in a complex & connected world? Why are flight transportation systems more easily perturbed than bio-physical systems? In general, are emergent systems less easily perturbed? How is degeneracy different from redundancy? How do certain monks (?) go without breathing for a few hours? Do order and disorder lie on the same continuum? &, must we always build bottom-up? SynTalk thinks about these & more questions using ideas from neuroscience…

People in this episode

Guests: Prof. Anirban Chakraborti, Dr. Sufyan Ashhad, Rev. Fr. Dr. Mathew Chandrankunnel

Topics covered

  • neuroscience
  • econophysics
  • philosophy
  • complex systems
  • rhythms

Keywords

  • log-normal brains
  • rhythmic breathing
  • chaotic heartbeats
  • market randomness
  • feedback loops

Mentioned in this episode

Places: Mercury, Bangalore, New Delhi, Kolkata

More episodes of SynTalk

Explore listener stats, chart rankings, contacts and more on the SynTalk podcast page.