I think that we have iteratively become smarter about anticipating the secondary and tertiary effects of an innovation or a technology. But then I worry, okay, you have rogue actors out there where our good intentions really don't have any bearing. There's a fear that every some number of years, the IQ that it takes to destroy the world drops by one point. That would be so powerful that they could destroy everything. And then it doesn't even take a nation state, right? It just takes one terrorist group or one lunatic.
Jason Crawford is the founder & president of The Roots of Progress, a nonprofit dedicated to establishing a new philosophy of progress for the 21st century. Jason has written well over 100 essays on the history of technology and the philosophy of progress, and given numerous talks and interviews on the same. He joins the show to discuss whether humans deserve progress, how to make progress cool, the two types of optimism, and more! Important Links:
Show Notes:
- Why do we need progress studies?
- Are humans conditioned to resist progress?
- Increasing the burden of safety
- What the Roots of Progress is seeking to achieve
- How can we make progress cool?
- Pessimism of the intellect; optimism of the will
- Do we deserve progress?
- Progress & politics
- Steelmanning the case against progress
- How can we defend against bad actors?
- Calibrating our approach to risk
- MUCH more!
Books Mentioned:
- Frankenstein; by Mary Shelley
- Erewhon; by Samuel Butler
- Darwin Among The Machines; by Samuel Butler
- The Beginning of Infinity: Explanations That Transform the World; by David Deutsch
- The Ultimate Resource; by Julian L. Simon
- The Collapse of the Common Good: How America's Lawsuit Culture Undermines Our Freedom; by Philip K. Howard
- The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy; by Douglas Adams
- The Jungle; by Upton Sinclair
- One Summer: America, 1927; by Bill Bryson