Exploring Long-Term Human Projects and the Institutions Behind Them
By
calvinfo
A baker's-dozen of insight crammed into one ring.
Summary
The article explores long-term human projects and the institutions required to solve problems over extended periods. It highlights goal-directed endeavors like scientific experiments and construction projects, distinguishing them from decentralized changes such as language evolution or livestock domestication. Examples are crowdsourced from Twitter, emphasizing the marvel of sustained human effort.
Key quotes
· 3 pulledWhat problems can human beings only solve over a very long period of time?
How can we build institutions that solve those problems?
The focus is on goal-directed projects (e.g., a scientific experiment or a building), less on more decentralized or unplanned changes.
Article URL: https://michaelnotebook.com/slow/index.html
Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44748934
Points: 13
# Comments: 0
You might also wanna read
Lightning's temperature is roughly five times hotter than the Sun's surface, NOAA confirms
This article examines the claim that lightning heats the air to five times the temperature of the Sun's surface. It confirms that the US Nat
Mathematicians challenge dark energy model, suggesting cosmic acceleration may arise naturally from Einstein's equations
A team of mathematicians challenges the long-standing dark energy model, arguing that the model it was designed to rescue was never mathemat
Massachusetts invests $25M in MIT's new Quantum Systems Laboratory for quantum computing research
MIT is launching a Quantum Systems Laboratory in Cambridge, backed by a $25 million state investment from Massachusetts. The facility aims t
Viewing Mars as an Exoplanet: Lessons for Detecting Habitability from Afar
This scientific article explores what we could learn about Mars if we viewed it as an exoplanet—a distant world orbiting another star. The a
2026 Peer Review Report Challenges Crisis Narrative, Calls for Evidence-Based Assessment
The 2026 Future of Peer Review Report challenges the prevailing narrative that peer review is in crisis. Based on eight years of ScholarOne
Pedro Duque, Spain's first astronaut, reflects on his journey from childhood dreams to space and analyzes the Artemis II mission
Profile and interview with Pedro Duque, Spain's first astronaut, who recounts his journey from watching the 1969 Moon landing as a child in
