All in all, I think that the human experience has not fundamentally changed in thousands of years and is unlikely to fundamentally change in the near future.
Now, I agree that human nature appears to only have shifted a small amount in the last thousands of years, and so most things look the same on the inside; worrying about how to pay for rent is probably not all that different psychologically from worrying about whether you'll survive the winter. I also agree that relatively few parts of human experience look totally new- there were obese urban paper-pushers in the Roman Empire, for example. But it seems that if you invert the number of urban desk-jobbers and farmers, you get a fundamentally different society and 'human experience', and that seems to be a somewhat fair comparison of now and Rome.
I wonder whether some of the inferential distance here is around what is understood by 'the human experience'.
Materially, the human experience has changed quite profoundly, along the lines Vaniver points out (dramatic improvements in life expectancy, food supply, mechanisation, transport and travel, and so on).
Subjectively, though, the human experience has not changed much at all: the experience of love, loss, fear, ambition, in/security, friendship, community, excitement and so on seems to have been pretty much the same for humans living now as it was for...
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?