EPISODE 10: EXAMINING LIFE-WORLDS THROUGH DEMOGRAPHICS
Episode 10: Examining Life-Worlds Through Demographics | 27 January 2026
In what Trent and Stephen have dubbed their “most (potentially) polarizing episode yet,” the two discuss Chapter 8 of The Worldbuilding Workshop, “Examining Life-Worlds Through Demographics,” including:
Defining "life-worlds" and what they mean for worldbuilding and modeling;
Worldbuilding and modeling as ideologically agnostic processes;
Why role-play can never replace authentic lived experience;
Navigating the relationship between privilege, empathy, and inviting others to understand your life-world;
Using the Dungeons & Dragons Monster Manual to better understand quantitative/nominal data versus qualitative/narrative data;
Capturing the reality of day-to-day life in language;
Establishing scope and sequence, accounting for structures and substructures, and connecting the dots with demographics;
Who is included when devising demographic categories, and why does it matter;
Recognizing intersectional privilege versus intersectional discrimination;
The importance of extending privilege to one-hundred percent of the population;
Avoiding a deficit-driven model of individual ability;
AppleTV's (2022) Severance and the foundational question: "Who are you?";
Our individual sense of self and the performance of identity;
"Going meta" to transfer worldbuilding-based learning into lived reality;
Race, nationality, and making sense of social constructs;
Understanding individual differences as subjective, relative, and situated;
The context-dependence of personal characteristics;
Thinking like a lawyer versus thinking like a scientist (backward justification versus empirical investigation);
Trans rights and why some aspects of individual identity aren't negotiable;
Demographics, life-worlds, and taking action to diminish essentialism;
American corporate and cultural prioritization of "efficiency" over human well-being;
Administrative writing and whether to provide open-ended or narrowly constrained survey questions;
Soliciting and incorporating community member feedback when designing for a particular community;
Radical individualism versus conformity as opposing sociocultural, political, and economic worldviews;
Foundational principles of universal design and inclusivity;
Social media, government surveillance, and the negative downstream consequences of data aggregation;
The value of flexible worldviews and the tendency of rigid perspectives to shatter; and
Escaping political, economic, social, and cultural bubbles to understand other people as fellow humans with lives just as rich and complex as your own.
Episode References:
Mearls, M., Crawford, J., Perkins, C., Sims, C., & Thompson, R. (2014). Monster manual (5th ed.). Wizards of the Coast.
Barab, S. A., & Roth, W.-M. (2006). Curriculum-based ecosystems: Supporting knowing from an ecological perspective. Educational Researcher, 35(5), 3–13. https://doi.org/10.3102/0013189X035005003
Erickson, D. (Executive Producer). (2022–present). Severance [TV series]. Red Hour Productions; Apple Studios.