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Thomas
@aviationdoctor.eth
People in the early 1900s used to dream enthusiastically about the 21st century. They held ambitious world's fairs to celebrate humanity's ambitions, published glowing pop-sci articles, and wrote hopeful futuristic fiction. Who does that anymore? Who gets positively excited about what the future holds for our great-great-grandchildren? It feels like the 21st century, despite being just one average human lifespan away, already lies behind some inscrutable (and perhaps impassable) Great Filter caused by some combination of technological singularity, AI takeover, collapse of late-stage capitalism, demographic decline, societal rot, deadly pandemic, and/or climate catastrophe. It's as if nobody dares being bullish about humanity's future due to a growing collective (and largely unspoken) unease
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cyrus
@cyrus
I wonder if anything has really changed. We still have world expos and such events today where ambitious visions are presented and designed to inspire optimism. The general optimism bias is still holding up and is as irrational as ever. I imagine that it’s also mostly the same types of people that were bullishly optimistic and hopeful at the turn of the 20th century who are now bullish on contemporary potential futures.
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