I asked Claude to write new lyrics for Ode to Joy, with the theme of progress. The result was wonderful! So I am sharing it here.
Fields of plenty, golden harvests
Where once famine stalked the land
Human ingenuity triumphs
Food for every outstretched hand
Engines, circuits, wheels in motion
Labors eased by human minds
What once broke the backs of billions
Now by clever tools designed
Ships and railways, planes connecting
Distant shores to distant shores
Nations trade in peaceful commerce
Through their open, welcoming doors
City lights that shine like beacons
Where once darkness ruled the night
Voices, faces cross vast oceans
Binding hearts through waves of light
Plagues that once decimated nations
Now retreat before our will
Lives extended, pain diminished
Not by prayer but by our skill
From the shadows of past conflicts
Dawn of shared prosperity
Abundance flows through peaceful borders
As one human family
Solar has an average capacity factor in the US of about 25%. Naively, you might think that to turn this into a highly-available power source, you just need to have 4x the solar panels, plus enough batteries to store 75% of a day’s worth of power. E.g., for each continuous megawatt you want to supply, you need 4 MW of solar panels, and 18 MWh of batteries. During the day, you supply 1 MW from the panels and use the other 3 MW to charge the batteries. Overnight, you discharge the batteries to supply continuous power.
Turns out it’s not quite that simple. First, the capacity factor varies throughout the year, as the days get shorter in winter. So you at least need to build enough that even...
This essay is cross-posted from https://thegreymatter.substack.com/p/rethinking-the-palm-oil-boycott
What if the crusade to save the planet’s forests by boycotting palm oil is actually accelerating their destruction? Palm oil, vilified as the scourge of rainforests and orangutans alike, was ranked by consumers as the most environmentally damaging vegetable oil in a recent survey. That’s despite its lurking in nearly 50% of supermarket products—from doughnuts and pizza to toothpaste and lipstick. Yet, as environmental researcher Hannah Ritchie argues in her book Not the End of the World, this well-meaning activism could be backfiring, driving worse deforestation elsewhere.
Ritchie’s seemingly counterintuitive claim rests on palm oil’s hidden edge: it’s a productivity powerhouse. Oil palms churn out far more oil per hectare than any rival crop, so boycotting it pushes the world toward less efficient...
I was wondering if anyone has a good response to Toby Ord's reservations about progress studies.
In summary, Ord argues that it's far from obvious that advancing progress is inherently good or bad, since this depends on whether it also accelerates humanity's extinction, undermining standard economic arguments for progress.
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I spoke at “d/acc Day” alongside Vitalik Buterin, Juan Benet, Mary Lou Jepsen, Allison Duettmann, and others.
If you haven’t heard of d/acc, I recommend reading Vitalik’s post “My Techno-Optimism” where he coined the term, and his followup “d/acc: One Year Later.” In short: d/acc embraces progress; it recognizes that progress has risks and we need to address them; and it advocates doing so in decentralized ways that don’t lead to authoritarian control...
Voting is at the heart of democracy—it's how we collectively decide who will lead us and shape public policy. Traditionally, most democratic elections rely on deterministic voting systems. These are the systems where the outcome is based on a clear majority, and the winner is the one who secures the most votes.
This approach has its objections, for example the problem of the "tyranny of the majority", where the minority's voice is often silenced, and the concentration of power is in the hands of just over half the voters.[1]
In response to these concerns, recent research has started exploring non-deterministic voting systems. Unlike deterministic systems, these introduce an element of chance, beyond just using randomness to break ties.
It might be best if I first give...
Much of this content originated on social media. To follow news and announcements in a more timely fashion, follow me on Twitter, Notes, Farcaster, Bluesky, or Threads.
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Picture a computer that surpasses human intelligence on every level and can interact with the real world. Should you be terrified of such a machine? To answer that question, there's one crucial detail to consider: did this computer evolve through natural selection?
The reason is simple: natural selection is a brutally competitive process, which tends to produce creatures that are selfish and aggressive. While it is true that altruism can evolve under certain conditions (like kin selection or reciprocal altruism), the default mode is cutthroat competition. If they can get away with it, most organisms will destroy rivals in a heartbeat. Given that all of us are products of evolution, there's an ever-present temptation to project our own Darwinian demons onto future AI systems. Many folks today worry...
We're excited to announce our February book discussion featuring Joel Mokyr's A Culture of Growth: The Origins of the Modern Economy.
Pathways to Progress is a community of individuals committed to understanding and contributing to human prosperity. Through our discussions, we examine technological and scientific innovation, economic development, and their role in advancing human prosperity. Each month, we read selected book(s), followed by a Q&A event with the author. Previous books include Starved for Science by Robert Paarlberg, Where's My Flying Car? by J. Storrs Hall, and Stubborn Attachments by Tyler Cowen. We also host speaker events with guests such as Jason Crawford, Matt Clancy, and Casey Handmer. Most speaker events are recorded and available on our YouTube channel.
Here's our schedule:
Really enjoyed this book, it inspired me to start Roots of Progress! https://blog.rootsofprogress.org/the-idea-of-progress
Yes, that's correct. Ord's writes this about discount rates:
... (read more)