Philip Rosedale, founder of Second Life, discusses the twenty-year experiment in virtual economics with a virtual GDP of nearly a billion dollars annually while maintaining a thriving community of half a million committed residents. The conversation ranges from the fundamental paradox of dual identity—why people cannot fully inhabit both physical and digital worlds simultaneously—to his vision for "strong capitalism," a system where entrepreneurs would adhere to a shared code of ethics, much like the samurai's bushido. Rosedale argues that stable economies require both redistribution mechanisms and transparent social enforcement, drawing on Eleanor Ostrom's work on the commons to propose solutions that address inequality without requiring centralized government intervention.
Key Topics
- Second Life as Alternate Timeline (Early) — 500K committed residents; MMO precursors like EverQuest; a "live there" experience, not a game
- The Paradox of Dual Identity (Early–Mid) — Why humans can't maintain two full identities across physical and virtual realms; hundreds of thousands of marriages formed in Second Life
- Virtual Economics & Monetary Policy (Mid) — $750M annually in peer-to-peer transactions; managed currency (Linden dollars) as monetary policy case study; comparison to Bitcoin's deflationary model
- The Inequality Problem & Market Simulation (Mid–Late) — Rosedale's simulation showing wealth concentration in pure free markets; Eleanor Ostrom's commons research
- Strong Capitalism & Bushido Ethics (Late) — Vision for entrepreneur communities bound by voluntary code of conduct; social proof and community enforcement of ethical norms
- Technology vs. Humanity (Late) — Why mechanical engineers build safer planes but software engineers build harmful systems
Guest Bio
Philip Rosedale is the founder of Second Life, the pioneering virtual world launched in the early 2000s that became a cultural phenomenon and economic marvel, generating nearly a billion dollars annually in user-created commerce. He is now focused on reimagining capitalism through frameworks like "strong capitalism" and "fair share," drawing on economic theory, simulation, and his observations of how humans build meaning in digital spaces.
Resources Mentioned
Second Life (secondlife.com) · Fair Share Protocol (fairshare.social) · Philip Rosedale's Substack · Eleanor Ostrom (commons governance) · Milton Friedman (money supply) · EverQuest · Joscha Bach
Why Listen
For anyone grappling with questions of digital identity, economic justice, and how technology shapes human meaning-making, this conversation offers both lived wisdom from a twenty-year experiment and a surprisingly hopeful blueprint for building systems where capitalism and ethics are not in opposition.
Keywords
virtual worlds · consciousness · identity · economics · monetary policy · community · capitalism · ethics · inequality · digital ontology · society · meaning-making
What is Leaking Timeline?
Leaking Timeline is a weekly conversation at the frontiers of technology, consciousness, and culture. Hosted by Erik Newton (co-founder of the California Institute for Machine Consciousness) and Guy Sengstock (founder of Circling), the show brings brilliant thinkers into an honest, humor-filled exploration of where the world is heading and what it means for how we live. Each episode features a full two-hour conversation — the live broadcast hour plus an extended bonus hour that goes deeper. If you're curious about AI, meaning, and the future but tired of hype and hot takes, this is your show.