Go Ahead, Dream About the Future | Charlie Jane Anders | TED

120,781 views ・ 2020-04-20

TED


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Every science fiction writer
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has a story about a time when the future arrived too soon.
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I have a lot of those stories.
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Like, OK, for example:
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years ago, I was writing a story where the government
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starts using drones to kill people.
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I thought that this was a really intense, futuristic idea,
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but by the time the story was published,
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the government was already using drones to kill people.
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Our world is changing so fast,
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and there's a kind of accelerating feedback loop
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where technological change and social change feed on each other.
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When I was a kid in the 1980s,
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we knew what the future was going to look like.
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It was going to be some version of "Judge Dredd" or "Blade Runner."
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It was going to be neon megacities and flying vehicles.
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But now, nobody knows what the world is going to look like
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even in just a couple years,
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and there are so many scary apparitions lurking on the horizon.
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From climate catastrophe to authoritarianism,
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everybody is obsessed with apocalypses,
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even though the world ends all the time, and we keep going.
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Don't be afraid to think about the future, to dream about the future,
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to write about the future.
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I've found it really liberating and fun to do that.
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It's a way of vaccinating yourself
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against the worst possible case of future shock.
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It's also a source of empowerment,
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because you cannot prepare for something that you haven't already visualized.
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But there's something that you need to know.
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You don't predict the future;
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you imagine the future.
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So as a science fiction writer
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whose stories often take place years or even centuries from now,
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I've found that people are really hungry for visions of the future
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that are both colorful and lived in,
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but I found that research on its own is not enough to get me there.
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Instead, I use a mixture of active dreaming
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and awareness of cutting-edge trends in science and technology
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and also insight into human history.
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I think a lot about what I know of human nature
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and the way that people have responded in the past to huge changes
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and upheavals and transformations.
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And I pair that with an attention to detail,
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because the details are where we live.
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We tell the story of our world through the tools we create
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and the spaces that we live in.
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And at this point, it's helpful to know a couple of terms
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that science fiction writers use all of the time:
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"future history" and "second-order effects."
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Now, future history is basically just what it sounds like.
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It is a chronology of things that haven't happened yet,
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like Robert A. Heinlein's famous story cycle,
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which came with a detailed chart of upcoming events
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going up into the year 2100.
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Or, for my most recent novel,
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I came up with a really complicated time line
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that goes all the way to the 33rd century
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and ends with people living on another planet.
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Meanwhile, a second-order effect is basically the kind of thing
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that happens after the consequences of a new technology or a huge change.
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There's a saying often attributed to writer and editor Frederik Pohl
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that "A good science fiction story
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should predict not just the invention of the automobile,
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but also the traffic jam."
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And speaking of traffic jams,
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I spent a lot of time trying to picture the city of the future.
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What's it like? What's it made of?
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Who's it for?
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I try to picture a green city with vertical farms
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and structures that are partially grown rather than built
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and walkways instead of streets,
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because nobody gets around by car anymore --
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a city that lives and breathes.
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And, you know, I kind of start by daydreaming the wildest stuff
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that I can possibly come up with,
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and then I go back into research mode,
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and I try to make it as plausible as I can
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by looking at a mixture of urban futurism, design porn
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and technological speculation.
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And then I go back, and I try to imagine what it would actually be like
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to be inside that city.
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So my process kind of begins and ends with imagination,
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and it's like my imagination is two pieces of bread
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in a research sandwich.
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So as a storyteller, first and foremost,
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I try to live in the world through the eyes of my characters
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and try to see how they navigate their own personal challenges
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in the context of the space that I've created.
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What do they smell? What do they touch?
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What's it like to fall in love inside a smart city?
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What do you see when you look out your window,
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and does it depend on how the window's software interacts with your mood?
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And finally, I ask myself how a future brilliant city
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would ensure that nobody is homeless and nobody slips through the cracks.
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And here's where future history comes in handy,
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because cities don't just spring up overnight like weeds.
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They arise and transform.
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They bear the scars and ornaments of wars, migrations,
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economic booms, cultural awakenings.
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A future city should have monuments, yeah,
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but it should also have layers of past architecture,
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repurposed buildings
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and all of the signs of how we got to this place.
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And then there's second-order effects,
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like how do things go wrong -- or right --
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in a way that nobody ever anticipated?
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Like, if the walls of your apartment are made out of a kind of fungus
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that can regrow itself to repair any damage,
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what if people start eating the walls?
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(Laughter)
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Speaking of eating:
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What kind of sewer system does the city of the future have?
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It's a trick question. There are no sewers.
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There's something incredibly bizarre about the current system we have
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in the United States,
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where your waste gets flushed into a tunnel
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to be mixed with rainwater and often dumped into the ocean.
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Not to mention toilet paper.
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A bunch of techies, led by Bill Gates,
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are trying to reinvent the toilet right now,
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and it's possible that the toilet of the future
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could appear incredibly strange to someone living today.
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So how does the history of the future, all of that trial and error,
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lead to a better way to go to the bathroom?
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There are companies right now
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who are experimenting with a kind of cleaning wand
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that can substitute for toilet paper,
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using compressed air or sanitizing sprays to clean you off.
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But what if those things looked more like flowers than technology?
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What if your toilet could analyze your waste
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and let you know if your microbiome might need a little tune-up?
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What if today's experiments with turning human waste into fuel
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leads to a smart battery that could help power your home?
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But back to the city of the future.
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How do people navigate the space?
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If there's no streets, how do people even make sense of the geography?
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I like to think of a place where there are spaces
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that are partially only in virtual reality
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that maybe you need special hardware to even discover.
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Like for one story, I came up with a thing called "the cloudscape interface,"
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which I described as a chrome spider that plugs into your head
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using temporal nodes.
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No, that's not a picture of it, but it's a fun picture I took in a bar.
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(Laughter)
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And I got really carried away imagining the bars, restaurants, cafés
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that you could only find your way inside
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if you had the correct augmented reality hardware.
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But again, second-order effects:
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in a world shaped by augmented reality,
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what kind of new communities will we have,
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what kind of new crimes that we haven't even thought of yet?
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OK, like, let's say that you and I are standing next to each other,
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and you think that we're in a noisy sports bar,
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and I think we're in a highbrow salon
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with a string quartet talking about Baudrillard.
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I can't possibly imagine what might go wrong in that scenario.
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Like, it's just -- I'm sure it'll be fine.
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And then there's social media.
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I can imagine some pretty frickin' dystopian scenarios
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where things like internet quizzes,
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dating apps, horoscopes, bots,
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all combine to drag you down deeper and deeper rabbit holes
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into bad relationships and worse politics.
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But then I think about the conversations that I've had
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with people who work on AI,
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and what I always hear from them is that the smarter AI gets,
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the better it is at making connections.
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So maybe the social media of the future will be better.
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Maybe it'll help us to form healthier, less destructive relationships.
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Maybe we'll have devices that enable togetherness and serendipity.
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I really hope so.
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And, you know, I like to think that if strong AI ever really exists,
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they'll probably enjoy our weird relationship drama
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the same way that you and I love to obsess about the "Real Housewives of Wherever."
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And finally, there's medicine.
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I think a lot about how developments in genetic medicine
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could improve outcomes for people with cancer or dementia,
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and maybe one day, your hundredth birthday will be just another milestone
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on the way to another two or three decades of healthy, active life.
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Maybe the toilet of the future that I mentioned
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will improve health outcomes for a lot of people,
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including people in parts of the world
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where they don't have these complicated sewer systems that I mentioned.
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But also, as a transgender person,
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I like to think: What if we make advances in understanding the endocrine system
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that improve the options for trans people,
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the same way that hormones and surgeries expanded the options
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for the previous generation?
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So finally: basically, I'm here to tell you,
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people talk about the future
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as though it's either going to be a technological wonderland
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or some kind of apocalyptic poop barbecue.
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(Laughter)
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But the truth is, it's not going to be either of those things.
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It's going to be in the middle. It's going to be both. It's going to be everything.
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The one thing we do know
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is that the future is going to be incredibly weird.
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Just think about how weird the early 21st century would appear
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to someone from the early 20th.
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And, you know, there's a kind of logical fallacy that we all have
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where we expect the future to be an extension of the present.
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Like, people in the 1980s
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thought that the Soviet Union would still be around today.
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But the future is going to be much weirder than we could possibly dream of.
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But we can try.
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And I know that there are going to be scary, scary things,
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but there's also going to be wonders and saving graces.
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And the first step to finding your way forward
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is to let your imagination run free.
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Thank you.
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(Applause)
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