Bertrand Russell's parents died by the time he was four years old and in 1876 he went to live with his grandfather, the last Whig prime minister, who as a young man had met Napoleon at Elba.
In 1966 at the age of 94 he met Paul McCartney and converted him to his anti-war stance on Vietnam.
Previously, I had figured that this lifespan (roughly 1870 to 1960) was the most extreme length of history for someone to live through. You have to be born early enough to remember a time when big cities didn’t have street lights or automobiles, while ideally living to see the atom bomb and first man in space (1961).
For example:
* Churchill (1874–1965) rode in Britain’s last great cavalry charge (Omdurman 1898) and later in life ordered Britain’s first hydrogen-bomb program.
* W.E.B. DuBois (1868–1963) was born three years after the Civil War but died before the March on Washington.
Other such lifespans were Laura Ingalls Wilder (1867–1957), Frank Lloyd Wright (1867–1959), W. Somerset Maugham (1874–1965), Picasso (1881–1973).
On Twitter people pointed outside the West, the same lifespan was even crazier, if they were born into totally pre-industrial worlds e.g.
* “Syngman Rhee (1875-1965) who was one of the last people in Korea to pass the old Confucian civil service examinations and later became the President of South Korea, playing a pivotal role in the early Cold War … He was born in a preindustrial world where the old Confucian social order still held sway and nobody around him had ever seen a train and died in a world of jet planes and manned space travel.” @avrilbradley23
* “A curious Surmic born then would have seen the forging of the Ethiopian Empire, the end of the witch-chiefs, Christian missionaries, the Italian conquest, literacy, new crops, and maybe the moon landing.” @Peter_Nimitz
Meanwhile I had figured I was going to live through the “Great Stagnation” and the world would gradually become a humongous nursing home. But it seems like AGI is likely to ke