Why did you mention the agricultural revolution 10,000 years ago, but not the Industrial Revolution that started a few centuries ago? The shfit from universal Malthusian poverty to high wealth/standard of living and the sustained fast growth rates that have been true for pretty much every decade since do seem to compose a new future relative to preindustrial life.
Not to mention the rise of democracy, huge increases in life expectancy, peace in the developed world and global peace by historical standards (in per capita rates of violent death, # of wars in Europe and globally, etc), nuclear weapons, electricity, computers, powered flight, incredible population growth, etc.
In a world with sustained growth, and one where growth has gotten faster over time, one has to choose to construct a "Business as Usual" future. For object-level conditions to remain the same, the pace of progress has to collapse, and the sequence of growth revolutions must have finished.
Just projecting economic growth forward would mean a world with over 30 times current total wealth by 2100. Robin Hanson's approach is to extrapolate the past pattern of shifts to faster rates of growth and technological change and further predict a faster growth rate..
In a world with sustained growth, and one where growth has gotten faster over time, one has to choose to construct a "Business as Usual" future. For object-level conditions to remain the same, the pace of progress has to collapse, and the sequence of growth revolutions must have finished.
I think we have a very different concept of "object-level conditions--" I consider them more or less the same since the Roman Empire. Certainly by a great many metrics we can say that life on Earth has improved, but these metrics strike me as fundame...
What, in a broad sense, does the future look like? We don't know, and while many have historically made predictions, the track record for such predictions is less than impressive. I have noted that there appear to be two main types of view about the future-- the "new future" and the "business-as-usual future." In order to simplify this discussion, let's restrict it only to the coming century-- the period between 2013 and 2113.
The "new future" is, generally speaking, the idea that the coming century is going to be very different from the present; the "business-as-usual future" is, generally speaking, the idea that the coming century is going to be very similar to the present.
Here are some characteristics of the new future:
Here are some characteristics of the business-as-usual future:
Reference class forecasting seems to indicate that the business-as-usual future is quite likely. But as we know, this is far from a textbook case of reference class forecasting, and applying such techniques may not be helpful. What, then, is a good method of establishing what you think the future will look like?