Toby Ord, THE PRECIPICE

Subtitled: Existential Risk and the Future of Humanity
(Hachette, 2020, 468pp, including 225pp of resources, acknowledgements, appendices, further reading, notes, bibliography, and index.)

Here is book about existential risks, a topic on which I have several books, though this one and a couple other recent ones address the subject in the context of Effective Altruism. That is, part of EA would be to decide how to direct resources to avoid future calamities, with the usual cost/benefit considerations. Ord, along with MacAskill and Singer and many others, were mentioned in the Rutger Bregman book I read recently (review here). This one seems more specifically focused on risks.

*

Key Points

  • Author defines the “precipice” as the moment in history when it became possible for the human race to destroy itself, and places that moment at the explosion of the first atomic bomb in 1945. (And it roughly coincides with the beginning of the Anthropocene.)
  • This book is about existential risks, which he defines rather precisely. Not just garden-variety catastrophes, from which a small population of humans might eventually recover.
  • He places the current situation in the context of humanity as being some 200,000 years old, as having gone through three great transitions, the agricultural revolution some 10,000ya, the scientific revolution, only about 400ya, and the industrial revolution, a couple hundred years ago. Each brought problems, but average human conditions are better now than they’ve ever been in history.
  • And, there are potentially centuries ahead for humanity, given the average mammalian species lasting about a million years. If we leave the earth, millions or billions more years are available to us.
  • So it’s imperative now to avoid risks while we can take action to avoid them.
  • How existential risks are different from extinction or the collapse of civilization. He recalls Jonathan Schell, and invokes the term “longtermism.” This entails the economic concept of ‘discounting’, which places relative values on people alive today vs all those billions who may be alive in the future.
  • Then he steps through various natural risks: supervolcanoes, stellar explosions, the death of the sun; anthropogenic risks: nuclear weapons, climate change, environmental damage including resource depletion; and then future risks: pandemics, AI, various dystopian scenarios such as totalitarianism.
  • Part Three starts quantifying things, and comes up with a 1 in 2 change that humanity will survive to achieve its potential. Then considers how to prioritize risks, considering importance, tractability, and neglectedness.
  • Then a general strategy for humanity. Reach existential security; conduct a “long reflection”; and achieve our potential. The middle step is in MacAskill too. How expanding into space would or would not solve anything. What role a world government would have. What technological progress can do. With examples of what not to do, and what we can do right now.
  • The final chapter contemplates our potential: how long humanity might endure; some comments about scale; the quality of human life; and the choices we can make along three dimensions: time, space, and experience.

Continue reading

Posted in Book Notes, Culture, Evolution, Human Progress | Comments Off on Toby Ord, THE PRECIPICE

A Muted July 4th

  • San Francisco fireworks hidden by fog;
  • Trump’s July 4 speech.

Last night, the DC fireworks being delayed, and the SF fireworks obscured, we were left watching Trump’s July 4th speech.

The fireworks shot off the Golden Gate Bridge were yet again shrouded by Pacific fog, as they are almost every year, from our viewpoint in the Oakland hills. (Actually, the SF fireworks are usually shot off from the Marina area; this was only the third time in history that the Golden Gate Bridge was shut down for a couple of hours, for this reason.)

We thought we might walk down to a prime viewing site, on a street below us, but by 9:15 it was clear that the fog would block all views. So we just sat at home and watched TV. At the same time, while there’s no official fireworks in Oakland, there have always been dozens or hundreds of local, likely illegal, fireworks, seen from our vantage out along the flats of Oakland.

As for Trump’s speech.

Continue reading

Posted in Personal history | Comments Off on A Muted July 4th

The 250th, Patriotism, and the Sin of Pride

On the bright side,

  • 25 reasons to be optimistic about the future;
  • 5 questions that will determine America’s next 50 years;
  • Connie Willis relates some potential optimism in the decline of MAGA;
  • Why Americans are living longer;
  • Nicholas Kristof on Nordic happiness;

On the dark side,

  • The dangerous idea that the United States was chosen by God;
  • Trump treats half the American population as enemies, now calling them “communists”;
  • Why church and state should be kept separate, as the founders wanted;
  • Thought: didn’t the earliest settles to North America flee the same kind of religious persecution that MAGA is eager to impose on others?
– – –

Today is the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, by the US, to separate itself from English rule.

*

Some overviews then.

Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Human Nature, Human Progress, Politics, Psychology | Comments Off on The 250th, Patriotism, and the Sin of Pride

About the Appeal of Stories

  • How the great books appeal both to literary standards and our lizard brains;
  • With my speculations about the appeal of science fiction;
  • July 4th. The Guardian on how the US is a global citizen gone rogue; how the stain on America is the narcissist Trump;
  • Brief items about the MAGA indifference to Trump’s billions in personal gains, the jingoistic view that only the USA benefits from the greatness of Jesus; and Republican idiocy about wind and solar power.
– – –

What is the appeal of stories? Both in books and at the movies?

The Atlantic, Boris Kachka, today: The ‘Have It Both Ways’ Theory of Great Books, subtitled “Many literary classics have a way of appealing to our lizard brains while making us question why we’re so compelled by them.”

A standard answer goes to the roots of tribalism and the human understanding of cause and effect in the natural world. We tell stories to relate cause and effect, e.g. thunder is caused by the god Thor tossing lightning bolts. And we tell stories to valorize heroes and leaders who unite the tribe. Why the appeal of stories about danger and violence? As lessons about the risks of the world. Or as rehearsal to situations we might face. A kind of abstract, inverse, play. What about science fiction stories? But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. To the article:
Continue reading

Posted in Narrative, Politics | Comments Off on About the Appeal of Stories

What Is This About Democratic Socialists?

  • Jonathan Chait thinks they’re bad;
  • Jerry Coyne echoes his animus;
  • Robert Reich sees a different trend, more exciting than democratic socialism;
  • While Paul Krugman thinks “most of us are social democrats”, which seems to exhibit the way these words are variously used;
  • The books on the new Air Force One are fakes; how the reflecting pool is especially captivating; how the Capital is a mess; how Christians spread false Christian Nationalist history (with many links to examples).
– – –

OK, so what are Democratic Socialists and why do even some Democrats think they’re bad? Jonathan Chait seems skeptical.

The Atlantic, Jonathan Chait, today: There’s Nothing Democratic About These Socialists, subtitled “The DSA was formed in opposition to the very thing it has become.”

Continue reading

Posted in Politics, Religion | Comments Off on What Is This About Democratic Socialists?

Lost Potential

  • The families conservatives want;
  • Heather Cox Richardson on the Republican motives to strike down the Fourteenth Amendment;
  • Brief items about mandating the Bible in class; yet another study finds no link between Tylenol and autism; a conservative wants to sterilize foreign visitors; how the Qatari-gifted Air Force One was, actually, built in America; how MAGA takes the latest SCOTUS loss as an existential crisis;
  • And David Wallace-Wells on the need to retrofit the planet.
– – –

For all that conservatives resent big “nanny state” government, they’re eager to micromanage social trends that don’t align their expansionist, tribal values.

NY Times, Jessica Grose, today: The Gap Between the Families We Have and the Ones Conservatives Want [gift link]

The panic about Americans having fewer babies continues unabated. But we know this: Marriage and fertility rates in this country and across much of the world have been declining for years, with no signs of reversing. Prominent American conservatives keep saying that the problem is that it’s not 1950. That’s when it was typical to get married in one’s late teens or early 20s, to someone only of the opposite sex, and a majority of families had a male breadwinner with more legal rights than his wife.

(The answer, of course, Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, conservatives, Psychology, Religion, Science | Comments Off on Lost Potential

The Conservative Ethos: Tribalistic, Xenophobic, Autocratic

  • How the Supreme Court repeatedly gives Trump the license to discriminate (never mind “all men are created equal”);
  • Robert Reich on the Court’s decision to let Trump fire officials in government agencies whenever he likes;
  • Robert Reich on how the 14th amendment survived the Supreme Court, though only barely;
  • Items about the conservative distaste for foreigners (again…);
  • How Elon Musk thinks cuts to USAID didn’t cause any deaths (he’s wrong);
  • Brief items about Nuclear Family Month, Hegseth’s purges, Vance’s claims about the “deep state” and Nixon; and two idiots on the right.
– – –

This is from three days ago.

The Atlantic, Adam Serwer, 27 Jun 2026: The Court That Will Believe Absolutely Anything Is ‘Race-Neutral’, subtitled “The majority gives Trump yet more license to discriminate.”

Trump-administration officials have made no secret of their desire to purge the United States of nonwhite immigrants. Donald Trump has declared, “If you import The Third World, you become The Third World,” a common refrain repeated by his advisers. Trump has also said that immigrants have “bad genes,” that they are genetically predisposed to crime, and that they are “poisoning the blood of our country”—coming, as they are, “from Africa, from Asia, all over the world.”

And yet conservatives claim to worship the Constitution and the Declaration, which come with phrases like “all men are created equal,” which even taken figuratively, they clearly do not believe.

Continue reading

Posted in conservatives, Culture, Politics, Racism | Comments Off on The Conservative Ethos: Tribalistic, Xenophobic, Autocratic

Are the Best Years Behind Us? No.

  • The US is better off than 50 years ago, yet people feel worse (another version of this recurring story);
  • Alfred Schnittke’s Concerto Grosso no. 1.
– – –

Yet another story on this general theme. It’s about human nature, not the actual state of the world.

Vox, Bryan Walsh, today: The US is better off than it was in 1976. So why does it feel worse?, subtitled “America’s 250th birthday feels bleak. The numbers tell a different story.”

The current generation does not remember this.

America in the summer of 1976 was not in a good place.

The president who presided over the country’s bicentennial, President Gerald Ford, only had the job because the previous president and vice president had resigned in disgrace, making him the sole US president who was never actually elected. The Vietnam War had ended in defeat and disgrace when Saigon fell the year before, after the deaths of nearly 60,000 American service members. Inflation hit double digits in 1974 and stayed ugly, unemployment sat near 8 percent, and economists had to invent a word — stagflation — for an economy that seemed to encompass the worst of both worlds.

Continue reading

Posted in Human Nature, Music | Comments Off on Are the Best Years Behind Us? No.

Facebook Saves

  • Rand Paul and Tulsi Gabbard, still out to discredit Dr. Fauci, only reveal their scientific illiteracy;
  • The difference between science and science’s pretenders, pseudoscience and science denial;
  • A crude but apt characterization of Christian theology;
  • Things theists claim as evidence that are not evidence;
  • Sam Harris on the credence given religion (but only modern ones) that would be given to any other discourse;
  • Two examples of science illiteracy: sunny today, so the moon will be brighter tonight; confusion about whether 1 times 1 equals 1.
– – –

Some of these are a bit abstruse, but I’ll try not to belabor them.

Unfiltered M.D., Dr. Terry Simpson, 26 Jun 2026: Making Sense of the Madness: Why Scientific Literacy Matters More Than Ever

Over the past week, Senator Rand Paul has again held up stacks of documents that he says explain the origins of COVID-19 and raise new questions about Anthony Fauci. Tulsi Gabbard has released a four-page presentation describing U.S.-funded laboratories around the world, and social media has been flooded with declarations that “the evidence is finally out.”

So Dr. Simpson read the documents. Gist:
Continue reading

Posted in LIteracy, Science | Comments Off on Facebook Saves

The Arrogance of the Devout

  • Texas inserts Bible readings into public school instruction, only some of them related to literary works;
  • Adam Roberts reviews Disclosure Day, with insights similar to my own;
  • Gubbins: Dismal turn-out for Trump’s rally; right-wing paranoia about Dems.
– – –

Salon, CK Smith, today: Texas mandates Bible readings and Christian-infused curriculum in public schools, subtitled “Education board decision fuels debate over where teaching about religion ends and religious instruction begins”

Texas has become the first state in the nation to require Bible passages as part of its statewide public school reading curriculum after the Republican-controlled State Board of Education approved sweeping new social studies standards Friday.

Continue reading

Posted in Conservative Resistance, Movies, Politics, Religion | Comments Off on The Arrogance of the Devout