Who in the world has super taste, a feel for and way of picking subjects that, decades in the future, will seem prescient, as though they had a line on the future?
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Some examples: the late Marvin Minsky's utterly extraordinary list of students and collaborators: https://web.media.mit.edu/~minsky/people.html … (from Ivan Sutherland to Terry Winograd to Eric Drexler to...)
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Murray Gell-Mann's extraordinary list of proteges include Ken Wilson, John Schwartz, Jim Hartle, and, in a way, the whole Santa Fe Institute.
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Stewart Brand saw so much early: Engelbart & human augmentation; the Merry Pranksters, Ken Kesey; the population bomb (he worked with Ehrlich); Xerox PARC; the Well (one of the first online communities); the Whole Earth Catalog; and so much else: http://sb.longnow.org/SB_homepage/Home.html …
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More people: I can make a case for George Church, Jane Jacobs, Eric Drexler, and many others. In each case they saw multiple things, often in (supposedly) unconnected disciplines, decades ahead of the mainstream.
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Who else can you think of? What did they see, decades before almost everyone else?
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More good examples: John Wheeler, Hal Abelson (suggested by
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Just a clarification: I mean people who are right over and over again. Not just that they founded a field, but rather that they were a key enabler in the early days of many, many fields. Eg, Minsky's proteges helped found perhaps a dozen or more distinct fields or subfields.
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Replying to @kdkeck
That's a really interesting suggestion. I don't know her work super-well, but everything I do know points in that direction, for sure! What do you think of as the things she was really early to? I know her work on symbiosis, and her support for Gaia.
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(Regardless of what one thinks of Gaia, it's an interesting hypothesis, and she was brave & imaginative to support it, and for her role in developing it. Obviously, her work on symbiosis is one of the great breakthroughs ever in the history of biology...)
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