

Long Now
The Long Now Foundation
The Long Now Foundation is a non-profit dedicated to fostering long-term thinking and responsibility. Explore hundreds of lectures and conversations from scientists, historians, artists, entrepreneurs, and more through The Long Now Foundation's award-winning Long Now Talks, started in 02003 by Long Now co-founder Stewart Brand (creator of the Whole Earth Catalog). Past speakers include Brian Eno, Neal Stephenson, Jenny Odell, Daniel Kahneman, Suzanne Simard, Jennifer Pahlka, Kim Stanley Robinson, and many more. Watch video of these talks at https://longnow.org/talks
Episodes
Mentioned books

19 snips
Jan 10, 2004 • 1h 30min
George Dyson: There's Plenty of Room at the Top: Long-term Thinking About Large-scale Computing
George Dyson, a historian of science and technology, dives into the evolution of computing and its future implications. He discusses the balance between digital and analog preservation, highlighting the role of archivists. The conversation touches on computing’s historical ties to bomb development and long-term predictions about the universe's expansion. Dyson shares personal anecdotes that connect ancient kayaking techniques to modern tech, emphasizing the cyclical nature of innovation and the partnership between computing and biology.

Dec 13, 2003 • 2h 7min
Peter Schwartz: The Art Of The Really Long View
### The art of the really long view
For such a weighty subject there was a lot of guffawing going on in the Seminar Thursday night.
The topic was "The Art of the Really Long View." Peter Schwartz chatted through his slides for tonight's lecture, then the discussion waded in. Present were Danny Hillis, Leighton Read, Angie Thieriot, Ryan Phelan, David Rumsey, Eric Greenberg, Kevin Kelly, Anders Hove, Schwartz, and me.
The event was very well audio and video taped, so we can link you to a fuller version later. For now, here's a few of my notes.
Much of discussion circled around Schwartz's assertion that the most durable and influential of human artifacts are IDEAS. And a distinction worth drawing is between POWERFUL ideas and GOOD ideas. Not all powerful ideas turn out to be good, in the long run. For example, Schwartz proposed that monotheism has been an extremely powerful idea, dominating all kinds of human activity for millennia, but its overall goodness is increasingly questionable.
Or take the powerful idea of Communism and the powerful idea of Capitalism. Looking at them when both were being touted as world solutions around, say, 1890, how would you distinguish which one was likelier to play out as good? Most of us, then, would probably have given the nod to Communism, particularly in light of robber-baron excesses in the US, etc.
Danny Hillis proposed that bad powerful ideas are essentially collective hallucinations which mask reality, whereas good powerful ideas have built into them all kinds of reality checks. So Capitalism---expressed as markets---has prevailed so far because it is an emergent, distributed, out-of-control feedback system.
Some notable quotes (among many):
> "The future is the ONLY thing we can do anything about." --Hillis
> "Denial is a special case of optimism." --Leighton Read.
Revisiting Long Now's frequent chant that multiplying options is the great good to do for future generations, we examined the idea of "toxic choice"---for instance the stupefying multiplicity of choices in a supermarket or department store that make you long for a good boutique. "But lots of boutiques," said Ryan Phelan. "I've got it! " said Read, "We'll have two big toxic choice emporiums, connected by a bunch of boutiques! I think we've just invented the mall."
Contemplating work to be done, Schwartz said: "We know it would be a good idea to have the rule of law extended to include ecological systems, but we haven't figured out how to make that a powerful idea yet."

Nov 15, 2003 • 1h 17min
Brian Eno: The Long Now
In this podcast, Brian Eno, a pioneer in ambient music, discusses the importance of long-term thinking and planning. He explores the impact of music on time perception, the societal shift towards short-term thinking, and the need for individuals to address long-term societal issues. Eno advocates for embracing the 'long now' to shape a better future and discusses the complexities of planning monumental projects over millennia like atomic waste disposal.