Eastern Metaphor Podcasts Integration
Location: ~/Public/convergence-protocol/assets/podcasts/
The Challenge
We have ~20 podcast episodes using Eastern metaphors and stories that Western listeners may be unfamiliar with. The content is powerful but requires cultural context to be fully understood.
Example: βCovering Your Ears to Steal the Bellβ (ζ©θ³ηι) β A Chinese idiom about confirmation bias. Without knowing the story, the title is confusing.
Current Status
| Episode | Transcribed | Linked to Bias | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Covering Your Ears to Steal the Bell | β | β³ | Maps to Confirmation Bias |
| Anchoring Bias Chestnut Trap | β | β³ | Title suggests Anchoring Bias |
| Black Swans Antifragile Mindset | β | β³ | Black Swan + Antifragility |
| Counter Hacking the Singularity Dopamine Circus | β | β³ | Wireheading/Superstimuli? |
| β¦and 16 more | β | β³ | Various topics |
Integration Strategy
Option 1: Enhanced Bias Notes
Add podcast embeds to existing Obsidian bias notes with context:
## Eastern Metaphor
**Chinese Idiom:** ζ©θ³ηι (YΗn Δr dΓ o lΓng)
**Literal:** Covering ears to steal a bell
**Meaning:** Self-deception; ignoring obvious problems
### The Story
A thief covers his own ears while stealing a bell, thinking others won't hear it.
### Podcast Episode
![[Covering Your Ears to Steal the Bell.m4a]]
### Connection to Confirmation Bias
This is confirmation bias in action β filtering out contradictory evidence...Option 2: Standalone Metaphor Pages
Create new note type for Eastern metaphors:
Knowledge/
βββ Biases/ (existing)
βββ Metaphors/ (new)
β βββ Covering Your Ears to Steal the Bell.md
β βββ Chestnut Trap.md
β βββ ...
βββ Podcasts/ (index)
Option 3: Hybrid Approach (Recommended)
- Keep bias notes as primary
- Add βEastern Metaphorβ section to relevant biases
- Create cross-linked metaphor pages for deep dives
- Generate transcripts with cultural context
Transcript Enhancement
Current transcripts are raw. Enhance with:
-
Cultural Context Box
- Origin of the metaphor
- Historical background
- Literal vs figurative meaning
-
Bias Connection
- Which cognitive bias(es) it illustrates
- Modern examples
- Why the metaphor works
-
Key Quotes
- Pull out memorable lines
- Link to specific bias concepts
-
Discussion Questions
- For study/reflection
Implementation Plan
Phase 1: Map Episodes to Biases
- Listen/review each episode
- Identify primary bias/concept
- Create mapping document
Phase 2: Transcribe Remaining
- Batch transcribe remaining 19 episodes
- Store in
assets/podcasts/transcripts/
Phase 3: Enhance with Context
- Add cultural context to each transcript
- Link to relevant bias notes
- Create embeddable audio players
Phase 4: Update Obsidian
- Add podcast sections to bias notes
- Create metaphor index
- Link everything together
Proposed File Structure
~/Public/convergence-protocol/
βββ assets/
β βββ podcasts/
β βββ *.m4a # Audio files
β βββ transcripts/
β β βββ *.json # Raw transcripts
β β βββ enhanced/ # Context-enriched
β β βββ *.md
β βββ index.html # Podcast browser
βββ experiences/
β βββ ... # Bias experiences
βββ guidebook/
βββ metaphors/ # Deep dive pages
βββ *.html
LanceDB Integration
Add to database for semantic search:
{
"title": "Covering Your Ears to Steal the Bell",
"type": "podcast",
"metaphor_origin": "Chinese idiom",
"bias": "Confirmation Bias",
"transcript": "...",
"cultural_context": "...",
"audio_path": "...",
"transcript_path": "..."
}Search: βChinese story about ignoring problemsβ β Finds this episode
Next Steps
- Confirm approach β Enhanced bias notes vs standalone pages?
- Batch transcribe β Remaining 19 episodes
- Create template β For consistent formatting
- Start with 3-5 β Pilot before doing all 20
Part of AI Data Stack β multimodal learning content