7. Expertise Michael Nielsen has this line in Reinventing Discovery that I really like: “The attention of the right expert at the right time is often the single most valuable resource one can have in creative problem solving.”
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During the mission, Apollo had hundreds, maybe thousands of experts carefully networked together and on-call, poised to solve any problem that might arise. A truly staggering concentration of expertise.
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8. Singular achievement You might wonder: Why haven't we accomplished anything like the Moon landing in 50 years? Has progress stagnated? Is our civilization in decline?
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The answer to those latter questions is "definitely maybe." But I think there's a bigger reason we haven't done something more inspiring than the Moon landing: There's just nothing like it left to achieve.
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The Moon landing was a binary, all-or-nothing venture. We either landed or we failed. Whereas almost every other technological advance is painfully incremental. Both failures and (more importantly) successes happen slowly.
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By the time we freeze and reanimate a human being, we will have done it a thousand times in mice and monkeys. Self-driving cars are already here, but only kinda sorta. Even AGI must come gradually.
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The modern internet is a goddamn miracle. We've made it possible for almost everyone on the planet to communicate instantly and at zero marginal cost. If there'd been a moment when the whole tech stack got switched on, zero to one, it would have blown our fucking minds.
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But in reality, the internet was built up slowly. And our appreciation got smeared out over decades, rather than focused onto a single celebratory moment.
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What else is out there, similar to the Moon landing? (This is a genuine question; I'd love to hear ideas.) What might we achieve in the next 50–100 years that can be celebrated all at once?
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This is totally off my radar and doesn’t sound that impressive or interesting. What am I missing??
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