Review
What happened around the year 2000 that dramatically altered youth culture
(half-serious) People found that if you start the Y axis not from zero - you can make the effect appear as big or as small as you want.
(more serious) Probably a combination of factors - scared after 9/11 society + improvements in personal electronic and internet meant there were simultaneously less desire, less societal push towards and less ways to do listed things.
I’ve been traveling for a while, so this is a long one, covering the last ~month. I tried to cut it down, but there have been so many amazing announcements, opportunities, etc.! Feel free to skim and jump around:
From the Roots of Progress fellows
On the Progress Forum
Events
Prizes
Opportunities
Announcements
Karkió and Weissman win the Nobel for mRNA
RIP
News
AI
Queries
Books
Newly available:
Podcasts
Papers
Links
Social media
Quotes
In the late 1800s, some enterprises basically just didn’t measure their business or track any real metrics, except for balancing their books annually. (!) Carnegie, Rockefeller, and others started measuring and found all sorts of inefficiencies to improve (The Autobiography of Andrew Carnegie)
How much the structure of business changed starting in the mid-19th century (John Micklethwait and Adrian Wooldridge, The Company)
Electricity, literally a life-changing technology (Robert J. Gordon, The Rise and Fall of American Growth)
Lower transport costs → more competition → better for consumers. Better engines, faster vehicles, cheaper energy all contribute to this (Joel Mokyr, The Lever of Riches)
More examples of predicted resource shortages that never appeared (Virginia Postrel, The Future and Its Enemies)
The loss of optimism about progress in the 20th century began with the World Wars, the Great Depression, and the rise of totalitarianism around the world (Gabriel A. Almond, Progress and Its Discontents)
Verdi’s opera Aïda was commissioned for the opening of the Suez Canal, but was completed late (Jean Strouse, Morgan)
The United States in 1945 (via @CPopeHC)
Aesthetics
The pre-WW2 covers of Fortune (via @simonsarris)
“Once, America found beauty in the blend of industry and nature—a train against the fiery dance at a steel mill. The smoke told tales of prosperity, each puff a testament to our relentless spirit. We embraced the aesthetic of ambition, and we were better for it” (@Itsjoeco)
Charts
“What happened around the year 2000 that dramatically altered youth culture?” (@jayvanbavel)
“Neither covid nor WW2 had any lasting effect on US GDP growth trends… our strong prior should be ‘unless this is literally more disruptive than WW2, things will revert to trend’” (@RichardMCNgo)
Everything, Everywhere, All On One Plot (via @AlexanderRKlotz)