#TBT: Long Now's first ever talk was given by co-founder @BrianEno back in 02003. It was titled, appropriately, "The Long Now." We were a couple of years away from a good A/V setup, but you can listen to the audio here: longnow.org/seminars/02003…
Co-founder @stewartbrand also wrote up a summary of the talk—something he'd continue doing for each Long Now Seminar for the next 15 years. Read it in the tweets below.
.@stewartbrand: Brian told the origins of his realizations about the "small here" versus the "big here" and the "short now" versus the "long now."
He noted that the Big Here is pretty well popularized now, with exotic restaurants everywhere, "world" music, globalization, and routine photos of the whole earth.
Instant world news and the internet has led to increased empathy worldwide. But empathy in space has not been matched by empathy in time. If anything, empathy for people to come has decreased. We seem trapped in the Short Now.
The present generation enjoys the greatest power in history, but it appears to have the shortest vision in history. That combination is lethal.
.@dannyhillis proposed that there's a bug in our thinking about these matters—about long-term responsibility. We need to figure out what the bug is and how to fix it.
We're still in an early, fumbling phase of doing that, like the period before the Royal Society in 18th-century England began to figure out science.
.@timoreilly gave an example of the kind of precept that can emerge from taking the longer-term seriously.
These days shoppers are often checking out goods (trying on clothes, etc.) in regular retail stores but then going online to buy the same goods at some killer discount price.
Convenient for the shopper, terrible for the shops, who are going out of business, hurting communities in the process.
The aggregate of lots of local, short-term advantage-taking is large-scale, long-term harm.
Hence Tim's proposed precept, now spreading on the internet: "Buy where you shop." Ie. When you shop online, buy there. When you shop in shops, buy there. Four simple words that serve as a reminder to head off accumulative harm.
.@leightonread observed that imagining the future is an acquired skill, and comes in stages.
An infant can't imagine the next bottle, or plan for it. A teenager can at most imagine the next six months, and only on a good day; on a rowdy Saturday night, Sunday morning is too remote to grasp. For us adults the distant future is still unimaginable.
One thing that Leighton likes about the 10,000-year Clock project is that it lets you imagine a particular part of the very remote future—the Clock ticking away in its mountain—and then you can widen your scope from there, to include climate change over centuries, for example.
.@zander suggested that we should collect examples where a small effort in the present pays off huge in the long term. @timoreilly would like to see us develop a taxonomy of such practices.
Brian's talk Friday night at Fort Mason was a smashing affair. Some 750 people were pried into the Herbst Pavilion, while 400-500 had to be turned away. Eno evidently attracts the sweetest, brightest people—everyone was polite and helpful and patient.
The only publicity for the lecture had been email forwarded among friends and posted on blogs, plus one radio show (Michael Krasny's @KQEDForum).
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We couldn't bear the thought of a year without @footage's Lost Landscapes of San Francisco. We're delighted to announce that the show will be returning for its 15th edition. This is an online event. RSVP to the film premiere here: eventbrite.com/e/lost-landsca…
While we can't gather in-person at The @Castro_Theatre, we're working hard to approximate the experience as best we can in digital space.
Rick will be joining us live on chat with the audience, so come prepared to identify places, people and events, to ask questions and to engage in spirited real-time repartee with fellow viewers.
THREAD: A large part of Long Now’s work in 02020 focused on how to bring long-term thinking to a broader, more global audience. This Giving Season, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to Long Now to help us continue this work: longnow.org/support/#LongNow02020
In April, we used the necessary suspension of large in-person gatherings to bring an even larger global audience together virtually—with free and open talks that continue today. #LongNow02020
In an effort to bring the quality our audience has come to expect from our in-person events, we transformed our Long Now talks into richly-produced multimedia storytelling experiences. #LongNow02020
We are saddened to hear of the passing of the groundbreaking theoretical physicist and mathematician Freeman Dyson: nytimes.com/2020/02/28/sci…
In 02005, Dyson, his daughter @edyson, and son George Dyson appeared on stage together for the first time to discuss the difficulty of thinking far ahead.
@edyson When asked a question at the Seminar about death, Freeman Dyson replied: "The worst thing that could happen would be if doctors cured death. There would be no room for young people in power."