• #15: The Idiocy of Future Predictions

  • 2024/12/29
  • 再生時間: 36 分
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#15: The Idiocy of Future Predictions

  • サマリー

  • “Predictions are extremely difficult, especially when they concern the future”, Winston Churchill once said.


    And yet, every year, as December rolls around, we’re buried under a flood of predictions from experts and self-proclaimed gurus. It’s that season again. But how do we make sense of it all—and what should we do instead to kick off the new year with real success?


    "But aren’t you a futurist?" some of you asked me in the past when I criticised future predictions.


    No I am not, and I’ll tell you why.


    Trying to predict the future with data, AI, the intestines of sacrificed animals or the weird spells of drugged-up alleged virgin priestesses implies a belief in a deterministic future.


    I don’t buy that.


    Because I don’t think the future is set yet.


    We can shape it together with our fellow humans.


    The Good News


    The future is, and remains, volatile and uncertain; otherwise, it would not be called the future but the past.


    But that is also the good news about it.


    It means that the future has not yet been decided. It means we can still shape it. Anything else would be incredibly boring and would also contradict our free will.


    It’s neither possible nor desirable to eliminate the uncertainty of the future. We simply have to learn to deal with it in a different way:


    Let’s spend less time on forecasts of a deterministic future and devote more time to shaping a desirable one.


    Because “the best way to predict the future is to create it.”


    As Abraham Lincoln (or whoever, it’s attributed to several leaders) put it so beautifully.


    And that’s what I am all about:


    Creating the future, not predicting it.

    ─•────

    👉 Hit subscribe for more unfiltered discussions about the intersections of technology, art, and humanity here on Spotify, Youtube, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.


    🔗And don't forget to join the Code Red Substack community at coderedbyredswan.substack.com. We love to see you there! ♥️


    👇Let us know in the comments: What do you think about future predictions?

    ─•────

    🎬Video concept by the fabulous Red Swan Chief Creative Officer Xaver Kettele.


    ♬Music: Audiojungle

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あらすじ・解説

“Predictions are extremely difficult, especially when they concern the future”, Winston Churchill once said.


And yet, every year, as December rolls around, we’re buried under a flood of predictions from experts and self-proclaimed gurus. It’s that season again. But how do we make sense of it all—and what should we do instead to kick off the new year with real success?


"But aren’t you a futurist?" some of you asked me in the past when I criticised future predictions.


No I am not, and I’ll tell you why.


Trying to predict the future with data, AI, the intestines of sacrificed animals or the weird spells of drugged-up alleged virgin priestesses implies a belief in a deterministic future.


I don’t buy that.


Because I don’t think the future is set yet.


We can shape it together with our fellow humans.


The Good News


The future is, and remains, volatile and uncertain; otherwise, it would not be called the future but the past.


But that is also the good news about it.


It means that the future has not yet been decided. It means we can still shape it. Anything else would be incredibly boring and would also contradict our free will.


It’s neither possible nor desirable to eliminate the uncertainty of the future. We simply have to learn to deal with it in a different way:


Let’s spend less time on forecasts of a deterministic future and devote more time to shaping a desirable one.


Because “the best way to predict the future is to create it.”


As Abraham Lincoln (or whoever, it’s attributed to several leaders) put it so beautifully.


And that’s what I am all about:


Creating the future, not predicting it.

─•────

👉 Hit subscribe for more unfiltered discussions about the intersections of technology, art, and humanity here on Spotify, Youtube, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.


🔗And don't forget to join the Code Red Substack community at coderedbyredswan.substack.com. We love to see you there! ♥️


👇Let us know in the comments: What do you think about future predictions?

─•────

🎬Video concept by the fabulous Red Swan Chief Creative Officer Xaver Kettele.


♬Music: Audiojungle

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