Ow Ow Ow Ow
Weirdly enough, there is one prediction that looks like it panned out:
Repairing dental defects will also be revolutionized by the introduction of good, tough, and reliable polymers which will replace metallic amalgams. By the late 1990’s to early 2000’s biocompatible ceramics and coated polymers will be available that will allow for workable single tooth and multitooth gum-implanted prostheses.
It would have to be in the single least life-critical area.
A lot of those areas turned out to be intrinsically harder than anyone expected. Oncology, Alzheimer's...
One thing that I just cannot understand: We had semi-workable artificial hearts 30 years ago. Now, yes, it is hard to make surfaces biocompatible. Still, that has been accomplished in many cases. As a society, we are reasonably good at mechanical engineering. How come a quarter of us still lose our live to the failure of a pump? We hear all the time about global warming, and sustainable this and recyclable that, and sometimes about what NASA might do. Prioritizing any of those things ahead of a decent permanent artificial heart is crazy.
It would have to be in the single least life-critical area.
I thought the increase in cosmetic surgery prediction was also very accurate, even if the US is not yet competitive with (say) South Korea.
Oops, missed that area, even less life-critical, Many Thanks! (Can I construe the replacement of solid metal crowns with polymers and ceramics as a cosmetic change, and therefore being in an area of overlap? :) )
Depends. Weren't solid metal crowns often involved with mercury amalgams? Whenever mercury is involved with anything, I have an unshakeable suspicion that someone is being harmed somewhere. It's a little like lead or a bloody body: maybe it's perfectly innocent and there's a reasonable explanation why you should not be worried by its presence... but don't bet on it and call the police.
I have three such ceramic implants. I remember having them put in over a simple half-hour operation, being awed by the amazing advances that medicine had made to allow me to carry on my life as if I hadn't knocked my teeth out at all. Little did I know that this was one of the only success stories of the last decade of medicine!
This puts me in a tricky situation. My general position has been that it would be better for the US public if the FDA even more strongly regulated against treatments which do not go through the full clinical trial gamut with high marks. I don't like it when people who are in crisis are vulnerable to getting ripped off by snake oil salesmen.
But it seems like, as so often happens, there's a net marginal utility issue going on here. The FDA, in attempting to slow down potentially harmful and/or worthless medicine, also slows down legitimately awesome medicine from reaching the public as quickly as it could.
And then again, there is the problem the article mentions of diagnosis outpacing treatment, and the resulting over-confidence in the net safety of new medicines.
So what from a policy perspective is needed here? Let's say I now have exclusive, uncontested, and (at least until I take action) unresented control of the FDA. What should I do with it?
But it seems like, as so often happens, there's a net marginal utility issue going on here. The FDA, in attempting to slow down potentially harmful and/or worthless medicine, also slows down legitimately awesome medicine from reaching the public as quickly as it could.
The harm from delayed treatment is estimated to be around an order of magnitude larger than the damage prevented by FDA standards. The FDA's current position is far too cautious.
So what from a policy perspective is needed here? Let's say I now have exclusive, uncontested, and (at least until I take action) unresented control of the FDA. What should I do with it?
This would require more control than just the FDA, but entirely abandon restrictions on what drugs / treatments doctors can prescribe. Require all patient data to be public (once anonymized). Rather than treating things as binary (either the drug is good enough or not good enough) you let people set their own thresholds and decide on the best data available.
The harm from delayed treatment is estimated to be around an order of magnitude larger than the damage prevented by FDA standards. The FDA's current position is far too cautious.
Do you have any source for this? I'd be interested in reading it.
Good discussion, and a good reference.
Re DSimon's:
My general position has been that it would be better for the US public if the FDA even more strongly regulated against treatments which do not go through the full clinical trial gamut with high marks. I don't like it when people who are in crisis are vulnerable to getting ripped off by snake oil salesmen.
FDAReview says:
If the U.S. system resulted in appreciably safer drugs, we would expect to see far fewer postmarket safety withdrawals in the United States than in other countries. Bakke et al. (1995) compared safety withdrawals in the United States with those in Great Britain and Spain, each of which approved more drugs than the United States during the same time period. Yet, approximately 3 percent of all drug approvals were withdrawn for safety reasons in the United States, approximately 3 percent in Spain, and approximately 4 percent in Great Britain. There is no evidence that the U.S. drug lag brings greater safety.
(This was actually something of a surprise to me. My wife has been on a couple of medications which have since been withdrawn, so I've been getting increasingly uncomfortable with the general level of safety of pharmaceuticals, so I'd been leaning in DSimon's direction on this - but this evidence says that increased scrutiny from the FDA hasn't been helping)
The section on off-label uses of drugs is also very persuasive:
Yet any textbook or medical guide discussing stomach ulcers will mention amoxicillin as a potential treatment, and a doctor who did not consider prescribing amoxicillin or other antibiotic for the treatment of stomach ulcers would today be considered highly negligent. Off-label uses are in effect regulated according to the FDA’s pre-1962 rules (which required only safety, not efficacy), whereas on-label uses are regulated according to the post-1962 rules.
I'm not sure I'd quite agree with
entirely abandon restrictions on what drugs / treatments doctors can prescribe.
The phase I trials, looking for human toxicity, still sound reasonable. To my mind, it does look like the efficacy trials should be moved out of the FDA - basically crowd-sourced as post-market data gathering.
I agree with
Require all patient data to be public (once anonymized).
It would help if as many groups as possible have the opportunity to dig through the data as possible. One caveat/suggestion: Epidemiological studies tend to be terrible at giving solid conclusions. Double blind randomized studies are able to cancel out far more of the confounding variables. I suggest that, for any medical decisions that are anywhere close to a 50:50 decision, that an incentive be offered to explicitly randomize the decision and record that fact, along with the other outcome data on the case. Where there is uncertainty anyway, this won't hurt the participating patients on average anyway, and it would embed a continuous stream of randomized trials in the available data.
The big story of our times is Great Convergence - formerly dirt-poor 90% of human population rapidly increases their wealth, health, political freedoms etc. This is accompanied by stagnation in the formerly super-wealthy 10% of human population (and there are some models claiming to explain why these two processes are linked).
Technology progresses extremely rapidly, rich world stagnation simply means rich countries are further behind technological frontier than they used to be. That's all.
The world on average is progressing extremely rapidly. Average lag behind technological frontier is diminishing rapidly. What's the point in throwing ridiculous amount of money on saving one life of old person in wealthy country, if you can make hundreds of undercapitalized people in poor countries productive for the same price? There's no logic in doing so, so it is not done.
It will take only 100-150 years for Great Convergence to complete. By simple extrapolation adoption of new technologies should accelerate sometime before it happens.
What's the point in throwing ridiculous amount of money on saving one life of old person in wealthy country, if you can make hundreds of undercapitalized people in poor countries productive for the same price?
Well if that person is you or your grandfather selfishness sounds a pretty good and human reason.
Most people don't spend their own money on saving their grandparents, they spend other people's money. Don't act surprised that other people's willingness to throw tens of millions at your grandfather's last year is not unlimited.
Also if people really cared about how long other people in their country lived, total cigarette ban would be a super simple and super cheap way to start (especially since e-cigarettes are an existing and viable low-cancer substitute - people want the psychoactive bits not the tar). And trans fat ban - or at least strict labeling requirement (which would amount to the same, since nobody want that, and trans fats don't have any special taste or anything, they're just industrial poison in food). Or throwing some money at making roads safer (most accidents happen on small fraction of bad spots). And in countless other ways. Throwing ridiculous amount of money at people when they're oldest is stupid way to achieve an already stupid goal.
And trans fat ban - or at least strict labeling requirement (which would amount to the same, since nobody want that, and trans fats don't have any special taste or anything, they're just industrial poison in food).
I think you overestimate the degree to which people are intentional about their food intake.
IAWYC, but
total cigarette ban would be a super simple and super cheap way to start
I don't think that would work. Marijuana is already illegal but people smoke it anyway, and the war against it costs lots of money.
e-cigarettes are an existing and viable low-cancer substitute
I've heard that lots of people start smoking for signalling purposes (some people even claim it's the only reason why anyone starts smoking at all), and I'm not sure e-cigarettes would send exactly the same signals.
The legal situation here in Australia of e-cigarettes being more restricted than cigarettes pisses me off when I think about it.
I was collecting papers on the topic of dependency on nicotine-replacement therapy (patches, gums, inhalers) the other day, and I was fascinated to read in explanations of why so little non-smoker data was available that, prior to 1996, you needed a prescription to buy them in the USA.
'So', I thought, 'before 1996, if you were over 18-21, you could buy any tobacco product you wanted in unlimited amounts and guaranteed that you were cutting several years on average off your life expectancy; yet you could not buy any amount of nicotine patches which come with essentially no side-effects and absolutely zero effect on life expectancy. Oh America!'
I'm now reminded of the brother of a friend of mine who has never smoked, but nevertheless has an annoying nicotine craving that stems from having tried out a nicotine patch in his teens.
"Total cigarette ban" doesn't mean "Very few people smoke", it means "Almost all smokers redirect their money to the black market; hope you like financing terrorist groups".
France has thrown lots of money at making people drive safely, it's working (and fines are a big part of it so there's money recovered that way) but it doesn't seem miraculously impressive. Making roads themselves safer tend to encourage reckless driving so it's not obvious there are big gains here.
France has thrown lots of money at making people drive safely, it's working (and fines are a big part of it so there's money recovered that way) but it doesn't seem miraculously impressive.
Here's list of countries by traffic fatalities per capita, per vehicle, and per distance travelled. Disparity is just ridiculously huge compared to death cares from just about any other cause, even between seemingly similar countries.
Making roads themselves safer tend to encourage reckless driving so it's not obvious there are big gains here.
Except there's no serious evidence for that, and massive counter-evidence (see table above).
Also if people really cared about how long other people in their country lived, total cigarette ban would be a super simple and super cheap way to start [...] And trans fat ban [...]
The lack of these bans doesn't mean people don't really care about lifespan; it could just mean they value something else more, such as the autonomy represented by being able to smoke cigarettes or eat trans fats. Or (as implied by some of this comment's siblings) they don't think those measures work well enough to justify whatever the bans' anticipated downsides.
Most people don't spend their own money on saving their grandparents, they spend other people's money.
Upper middle class and the wealthy do this quite a bit, even in countries with universal healthcare.
Don't act surprised that other people's willingness to throw tens of millions at your grandfather's last year is not unlimited.
Why in the world would I? I don't care very much about other people's grandfathers, why should they care about mine? I'm indirectly willing to kill quite a few people to save my own life or that of my family. Even my friends are each worth more than one life to me, going of revealed preferences.
Also you are forgetting that the purpose of the state is basically to serve the desires of its citizens, it is not a global utility maximizer. That citizens of a country would cooperate for selfish gain is hardly unheard of. Also we care more about people in our in-group more than people in our out-group. Many different people identify these by culture, subculture, company, religion, citizenship, ideology, language, profession, nationality or language.
Poor people in Africa are far. We feel more idealistic and more moral thinking about helping them. We get more brownie points of signalling we wish too or will help them than by helping local poor people. But we are ironically less likley to do anything for their benefit, since that is mostly a near action. We more accurately perceive that local poor people are sometimes nasty but we end up helping them more anyway.
Also when thinking about helping people in far places we are less even likley to be pragmatic about the best way to acheive this. Considering how much we fail even at helping those around us this can be a dispiriting.
Throwing ridiculous amount of money at people when they're oldest is stupid way to achieve an already stupid goal.
You should read "The great Charity Storm". We systematically overspend stupidly on education, healthcare and helping poor people.
We systematically overspend stupidly on education, healthcare and helping poor people.
Wait, nothing in "The Great Charity Storm" indicates that we overspend on those things. It just says our spending in those areas has increased since 1800, and gives some theories as to why that might be. I would certainly agree that we don't spend money well in those areas, but it's not the quantity that's the problem.
Your statements about what we want to do (care for our in-group, donate to "far" causes to gain status) don't mean anything about what we should do. I recognize that I have little emotional reason to care about people I'll never meet who live very different lives from mine, but I believe it's wrong for them to suffer and die when I could easily prevent that. So I make an effort to think about things that make them feel nearer - their bodies hurt like mine, they protect their children, they make music, they fall in love.
"We're born to think this way" doesn't mean you can't try to change it.
I think it was implied rather strongly by the explanation he offered. I obviously think it plausible if not probable, lest I wouldn't invoke it.
Around 1800 in England and Russia, the three main do-gooder activities were medicine, school, and alms (= food/shelter for the weak, such as the old or crippled). Today the three spending categories of medicine, school, and alms make up ~40% of US GDP, a far larger fraction than in 1800. Why the vast increase?
My explanation: we long ago evolved strong feelings of respect for these activities, but modern context changes have allowed out-of-equilibrium exploitation of such feelings.
We have evolved strong feeling regarding these activities that are no longer reliable in our modern context. Can you see why this implies we will not only be irrational in our decisions on how much to spend (even in our original context the intuitions where geared towards evolution's utility function not our own) but also in what way we spend on those things.
but I believe it's wrong for them to suffer and die when I could easily prevent that.
How familiar are you with the Far vs. Near material on Overcoming Bias? The reason I invoked it was to point out that when thinking in far mode we are more likley to consider such principles very important, yet in near mode much less so. And remember both far and near are shards of desire
How familiar are you with the Far vs. Near material on Overcoming Bias?
Medium-familiar? As a dichotomy, it seems useful if it lets you do things differently because of it. So if you recognize that your far-mode diet isn't working because your food cravings are near, it may be helpful to make more concrete, near-mode steps. Likewise, if your far-mode ideals say that it's wrong for people to die of TB when there's a cheap cure, but you never get around to acting on it or you instead donate to nearer but less efficient causes, doing something to put it in nearer mode might be helpful. As in, "I will look at pictures of people in countries where people die of stupid diseases and remember that they are regular people like me", or "I will donate to an efficient health charity and then have an ice cream sundae." (Though his may interfere with the far-mode diet...)
Also you are forgetting that the purpose of the state is basically to serve the desires of its citizens,
(mind-killed)
That's an interesting notion. I would have thought that the purpose of the state is to oppress its people, and that modern governments are so much nicer because checks and balances / political infighting cause them to be ground to a near-halt.
I should have said the supposed or stated purpose of a state is to serve the desires of its citizens. Maybe I should have been even more fancy and disguised "desires" as rights. Most people vote and behave like the government is the default engine for doing good as they define it, so it didn't seem to controversial to describe it that way in this context.
You are obviously correct that government's role (purpose is the wrong word to use) is to oppress its people. Government is nothing but a territorial monopolist of violence, though few people explicitly think about it that way. However it can sometimes be useful to be oppressed.
Also generally I'm of the opinion that in the long run formalized check and balances don't really work. It seems pretty unlikely that anything like a stable equilibrium of actual power relations can be enforced by something as weak and easily worked around and gamed as laws or constitutions. Many Western Democracies don't have a strong separation of powers formally and don't seem any more or less nice. Now while this may seem like a trivial difference, but it really isn't. It basically means that formal definitions of the balance of power are for example unable to contain changes in actual power ratios be they caused by technology, culture or economics.
Keeping the polite fiction however works together with other aspect of "democracy" to convince its citizens it is legitimate. Much like divine right was a polite fiction with the same function in a different time. It seems to me very likley that that the reason democracy seems nicer is because it is much more capable of convincing and indoctrinating citizens that it is legitimate and good. A government capable of perfect brainwashing would never need to be mean at all to maintain power.
While I can agree there is a lot of political infighting isn't this more a result of the iron law of oligarchy than anything designed on purpose?
While I can agree there is a lot of political infighting isn't this more a result of the iron law of oligarchy than anything designed on purpose?
Meh. I'm agnostic about whether it was "on purpose". Humans revolt and so select for governments that aren't revolting.
I'm not sure how the iron law of oligarchy results in political infighting, and i'm skeptical of the iron law of oligarchy, but I don't think that's particularly relevant if we agree about the facts on the ground.
Also generally I'm of the opinion that in the long run formalized check and balances don't really work.
Well, nothing works in the indefinite long run, unless your goal is entropy. It does seem to stop a lot of legislation from being passed / sticking in the US, which I suppose is only a benefit from a particular perspective.
Meh. I'm agnostic about whether it was "on purpose". Humans revolt and so select for governments that aren't revolting.
I think that selection filter is much weaker than most imagine. The poor don't revolt.
but I don't think that's particularly relevant if we agree about the facts on the ground.
Agreed.
What's the point in throwing ridiculous amount of money on saving one life of old person in wealthy country, if you can make hundreds of undercapitalized people in poor countries productive for the same price?
This story would be more plausible as an explanation of slow medical progress if there hadn't been big increases in medical R&D spending and employment (on first-world diseases) over the last 40 years, and massive growth in overall medical spending relative to GDP. It doesn't explain the declining rate of drugs developed per dollar invested in pharma R&D, or the broader failure to translate research spending to health gains.
Technology progresses extremely rapidly, rich world stagnation simply means rich countries are further behind technological frontier than they used to be. That's all.
Or maybe there's some kind of ceiling on economical progress, and the First World has already hit it but the rest of the world hasn't.
The lesson here may be: once a society starts to take progress for granted, it grinds to a halt.
Melatonin is a naturally occurring bioregulatory molecule which is inexpensive and freely available as an over the counter “nutrient.”
...
What kind of black irony is it that I live in terror of stroke and cardiac arrest (for both myself and my loved ones) and yet the very molecules I discovered to combat them are as unavailable as if they had never been found?
Huh? What am I missing here? I take melatonin all the time, it's far from "unavailable".
Melatonin has a very short half life and is secreted as needed by the pineal gland. It's apparent primary biological function is as a signal transduction/regulatory molecule. It's unclear if this function is what is responsible for its protective effect in ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI), because melatonin is also a powerful radical scavenger - and in fact, a particularly effective scavenger of the radical species associated with neuronal injury in IRI, such as peroxynitrite. Other factors to consider are the timing, route of administration and dose used in our studies. The drug was given intravenously in a micellized form to speed delivery across the blood brain barrier. This was done at the start of reperfusion. Finally, the effective dose given was very large (and was based on the stoichiometry of the radical species we wanted to scavenge). The drug was also given in conjunction with many others and, perhaps critically, in combination with the rapid induction of mild therapeutic hypothermia ( 3 deg C below normothermia). Next up on my agenda to test was whether the drug combination was effective without hypothermia since it is very problematic to achieve a 3 deg C reduction in body temperature in ~15 min or less! Unfortunately, that study was canned.
The point here is that the application of any such treatment in the setting of a critical illness would require that it be both an integrated and ACCEPTED part of the medical infrastructure. For instance, it was over 30 years ago that Peter Safar, et al., demonstrated that mild hypothermia AFTER cardiac arrest was profoundly effective in reducing ischemic brain injury, and it has been 9 years since ILCOR made post-cardiac arrest hypothermia the standard of care: http://circ.ahajournals.org/content/108/1/118.full. And yet, post-arrest hypothermia is used almost nowhere. So, even if a treatment is approved and demonstrated to be scientifically valid, it still may not see widespread clinical application for a host of reasons.
I recently watched a BBC documentary called "Back From The Dead", mainly about using extreme hypothermia to prevent IRI in some rather extreme cases, though drug development was also mentioned (that portion mostly focused on the study of cell death).
One case was a Norwegian woman who fell in a crevasse while hiking on a glacier - the extreme cold plus 3+ hours of constant CPR was enough to keep her brain alive long enough to be revived. She made a full recovery and now works at the hospital that revived her.
Another was a man who's blood was intentionally cooled to extreme hypothermic temperatures in order to repair an aortic aneurism. Doctors were able to operate for 45 minutes with the patient in full cardiac arrest with no ill effects.
It's amazing to me that the basis for these techniques have been around for so long, and yet still they seem like science fiction when anyone discusses them. Since the benefits of mild hypothermia had been at least hinted at 30+ years ago, you would think researchers would have been playing with extreme hypothermia soon after and we'd be a lot further along with this stuff in general.
I don't have any idea how often hypothermia is actually used to save lives, but the documentary made it seem rare, with extreme hypothermia being only used in one or two hospitals in the world. Your experience seems to back that up as well.
You're not taking your nightly melatonin pill when you are unconscious or suffering a stroke or cardiac arrest, nor are you popping it in a loved one's mouth in similar circumstances; he's referring to use, routine or exceptional, by medical personnel.
I'd like to see cheap and easy chemical testing-- for example, being able to track what's in your tap water. I expect to see that before I see the sort of cheap and easy medical monitoring you describe. For that matter, tracking the current nutrient value in food would be interesting. Neither one seems to be on the immediate horizon, which makes me wonder if such medical monitoring as you describe is within 10-15 years.
What are the odds of more knowledge of amazingly simple methods for dealing with potentially medical problems? I recently cleared up a case of gastric reflux-- I was waking up with a mouthful of acid fairly often-- just by sleeping on my left side. I don't think that sort of solution exists for every ailment, but I bet there's more of them to be found.
Did a physician inform you about the sleeping-on-side hack?
I personally know of an instance where a person had gastric reflux, went to the doctor, was prescribed a proton pump inhibitor as the sole treatment (Nexum), didn't get any better, went poking around the internet with google, and got non-medicine lifestyle adjustments (elevated bed head, fasting for five hours before bedtime) to fix their reflux problem. Then, later they told the doctor, who said nothing but "oh yeah".
We had no google in 1988 although surely some futurist genius somewhere foresaw it.
I got the sleeping on the left side hack from the wikipedia article.
Seth Roberts posts articles now and then about physicians not being interested in patients who find (cheap/simple) cures for themselves.
Wow. Thank you.
So much interesting here. Metabolic MRI, wow! Brain MRI's can detect cysts, tumors, vasculitis, abcesses, hormonal disorders like pituitary problems or cushing syndrome according to LiveStrong. Whenever someone on the internet brings up brain MRI's, people spew the same shit they feel they're expected to spew - 'you don't know how MRI works, they can't diagnose anything yada yada'. It's just like how everyone says 'go see a doctor' when people ask for medical advice, and they get easy upvotes. I find it really funny. I doubt the people cynical about brain MRI's are neuroradiologists or anything, or psychiatric taxonomists critical of neuroimaging as a diangostic tool. I reckon they've just asked that question before, or something analogous, and internalised that 'it's not a done thing, now I should enforce that rule too'.
In the February and March 1988 issues of Cryonics, Mike Darwin (Wikipedia/LessWrong) and Steve Harris published a two-part article “The Future of Medicine” attempting to forecast the medical state of the art for 2008. Darwin has republished it on the New_Cryonet email list.
Darwin is a pretty savvy forecaster (who you will remember correctly predicting in 1981 in “The High Cost of Cryonics”/part 2 ALCOR’s recent troubles with grandfathering), so given my standing interests in tracking predictions, I read it with great interest; but they still blew most of them, and not the ones we would prefer them to’ve.
The full essay is ~10k words, so I will excerpt roughly half of it below; feel free to skip to the reactions section and other links.
1 The Future of Medicine
1.1 Part 1
1.1.1 Diagnostics
A side-note: genetic associations have been a very fertile field for John Ioannidis, and a big study just blew away a bunch of SNP-IQ correlations.
I recently learned that, besides the usual blame for increasing medical costs, some categories of doctors have been strenuously urged to reduce MRI use as actively harmful.
1.1.2 Resuscitation
1.1.3 Antibiotics
The pharmaceutical industry and antibiotics have been a case-study in stagnation, failure, and diminishing marginal returns. There is only one, highly experimental, anti-viral that I have heard of. In a followup email, Darwin responded to someone else pointing out DRACO:
(This agrees with my own general impressions, which I didn't feel competent to baldly state.)
1.1.4 Immunology and cancer
1.1.5 Atherosclerosis
1.2 Part 2
1.2.1 Anesthesia
1.2.2 Surgery
1.2.3 Geriatrics
We all know how well this has worked out. More troubling is that in some respects, we appear further from any solutions or treatments than before; while resveratrol did well in a recent human trial, the sirtuin research that seemed so promising has been battered by null results and failures to replicate. And anti-aging drugs have their own methodological difficulties; from the followup email:
1.2.4 Psychiatry & Behavior
From the previously quoted followup email:
1.2.5 Implants & Prosthetics
1.2.6 Hemodialysis
1.2.7 Organ Preservation
1.2.8 Other Approaches to Organ Preservation
1.2.9 Genetic therapy
1.2.10 Prevention
1.2.11 The Downside
And on to the economics:
2 Reactions
On reading all the foregoing, I commented: that was a depressing read. As far as I can tell, they were dead on about the dismal economics, somewhat right about the diagnostics, and fairly wrong about everything else. Which is better than the old predictions listed, only one of which struck me as obviously right (but in a useless way, who actually uses perfluorocarbons for liquid breathing?).
To which Darwin said:
See also Fight Aging!’s post, “Overestimating the Near Future”:
Darwin comments there:
3 Further reading
Previous Darwin-related posts:
See also Tyler Cowen's The Great Stagnation and “Peter Thiel warns of upcoming (and current) stagnation”.