(or A Technologist’s Manifesto)
It’s easy to get disappointed with technology and to question what’s important and what’s not. Are people really happier than they were a hundred years ago or when they lived in villages? What’s with the stress and the constant striving for seemingly nothing in our modern lives? After all, an iPad is just an iPad regardless of how magical it might seem. From a technologist’s point of view, there are so many things in life that are easier, so many things that the comfort of a hundred thousand odd dollar job offers, so why bother starting new companies or embarking on risky endeavors?
Trivializing technology is easy enough. For one thing, we are so immersed in it, that the simple lives of the past and in distant places seem appealing, perhaps just for how starkly different they are. Humans definitely live longer than they have ever done and that’s an disputable success of technology. But even that can’t be conclusively called an “improvement”. After all, the answer to the question of whether people live happier lives has to be argued on subjective grounds.
In this unsure state of mind, I stumbled across an interview of Elon Musk (PayPal, SpaceX, Tesla). When asked about the importance of going to Mars, he explains that the biggest criteria for what he chooses to work on is how much it matters on the scale of evolution and the universe. Just as easy as trivializing technology is forgetting the magnitude of our technological achievements. In the 4 billion years since life begun, in the history of earth, at no moment in time has the possibility of landing on Mars even been within the realm of possibility. Ever! Until today. (Sit back and think about that for a minute)
An object from Earth landed on the moon for the first only 50 years ago even though the Earth and the moon have been around for billions of years before that. We communicated via video despite 6000 miles of distance for the first time ever only within the last ten years. These are incredible advances on the magnitude of billions of years. That 6 feet tall humans could achieve things like this, considering the vastness of space and time, using a minuscule brain is just remarkable.
A lot of pursuits, a multitude of possible careers and paths in life don’t make that huge of a difference on this scale. Being a technologist, doing research or being part of a company that’s sending people to space are few of the things that do. That’s why we should be proud of humanity’s progress. That’s why we do what we do.
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