Eric Topol
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
They want the ocean without the awful roar of its many waters."
I think that is so rich.
And before we wrap up, I just want to get your overall thoughts.
What haven't we touched on in our brief conversation?
about the topic, about the book that we should before we close today.
Maybe start with you, Bob.
Darrell?
Yeah.
Well, I think what you have put forth in the book will go down and anchoring such an important problem.
It's magnified now more than ever.
People are socially isolated, not just in the pandemic, but post-pandemic.
And the divisiveness is profound.
So hopefully the tips that you've provided, the science behind it, the practical ways to navigate and deal with this will help people as we go forward.
So thank you both for the work you did.
and putting together the book.
And hopefully some of our listeners or viewers will use these tools in the future and we'll have much better exchanges with others who have different views, different what might be considered adversarial perspective, whatever.
So thank you very much for joining today.
Hello, it's Eric Topol with Ground and Truce, and we've got a really hot topic today, the virtual cell, and what I think is an extraordinarily important futuristic paper that recently appeared in the journal Cell.
And the first author, Charlotte Bunn from
EPFL, previously at Computer Science in Stanford.