1 00:00:07,451 --> 00:00:10,221 Would you like to know what's in our future? 2 00:00:10,221 --> 00:00:14,724 What's going to happen tomorrow, next year, or even a millennium from now? 3 00:00:14,724 --> 00:00:16,276 Well, you're not alone. 4 00:00:16,276 --> 00:00:20,620 Everyone from governments to militaries to industry leaders do, as well, 5 00:00:20,620 --> 00:00:23,285 and they all employ people called futurists 6 00:00:23,285 --> 00:00:26,163 who attempt to forecast the future. 7 00:00:26,163 --> 00:00:29,120 Some are able to do this with surprising accuracy. 8 00:00:29,120 --> 00:00:30,790 In the middle of the 20th century, 9 00:00:30,790 --> 00:00:33,402 a think tank known as the RAND Corporation 10 00:00:33,402 --> 00:00:36,459 consulted dozens of scientists and futurists 11 00:00:36,459 --> 00:00:38,945 who together forecast many of the technologies 12 00:00:38,945 --> 00:00:41,136 we take for granted today, 13 00:00:41,136 --> 00:00:42,575 including artificial organs, 14 00:00:42,575 --> 00:00:44,532 the use of birth control pills, 15 00:00:44,532 --> 00:00:49,333 and libraries able to look up research material for the reader. 16 00:00:49,333 --> 00:00:52,288 One way futurists arrive at their predictions 17 00:00:52,288 --> 00:00:55,961 is by analyzing movements and trends in society, 18 00:00:55,961 --> 00:00:59,605 and charting the paths they are likely to follow into the future 19 00:00:59,605 --> 00:01:01,852 with varying degrees of probability. 20 00:01:01,852 --> 00:01:06,522 Their work informs the decisions of policymakers and world leaders, 21 00:01:06,522 --> 00:01:09,324 enabling them to weigh options for the future 22 00:01:09,324 --> 00:01:13,758 that otherwise could not have been imagined in such depth or detail. 23 00:01:13,758 --> 00:01:18,495 Of course, there are obvious limits to how certain anyone can be about the future. 24 00:01:18,495 --> 00:01:21,131 There are always unimaginable discoveries that arise 25 00:01:21,131 --> 00:01:24,805 which would make no sense to anyone in the present. 26 00:01:24,805 --> 00:01:25,831 Imagine, for example, 27 00:01:25,831 --> 00:01:30,426 transporting a physicist from the middle of the 19th century 28 00:01:30,426 --> 00:01:33,142 into the 21st. 29 00:01:33,142 --> 00:01:37,774 You explain to him that a strange material exists, Uranium 235, 30 00:01:37,774 --> 00:01:42,215 that of its own accord can produce enough energy to power an entire city, 31 00:01:42,215 --> 00:01:45,463 or destroy it one fell swoop. 32 00:01:45,463 --> 00:01:48,911 "How can such energy come from nowhere?" he would demand to know. 33 00:01:48,911 --> 00:01:51,064 "That's not science, that's magic." 34 00:01:51,064 --> 00:01:53,995 And for all intents and purposes, he would be right. 35 00:01:53,995 --> 00:01:55,728 His 19th century grasp of science 36 00:01:55,728 --> 00:02:00,021 includes no knowledge of radioactivity or nuclear physics. 37 00:02:00,021 --> 00:02:04,108 In his day, no forecast of the future could have predicted X-rays, 38 00:02:04,108 --> 00:02:05,582 or the atom bomb, 39 00:02:05,582 --> 00:02:07,420 let alone the theory of relativity 40 00:02:07,420 --> 00:02:09,504 or quantum mechanics. 41 00:02:09,504 --> 00:02:11,037 As Arthur C. Clarke has said, 42 00:02:11,037 --> 00:02:15,754 "Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." 43 00:02:15,754 --> 00:02:19,842 How can we prepare, then, for a future that will be as magical to us 44 00:02:19,842 --> 00:02:23,674 as our present would appear to someone from the 19th century? 45 00:02:23,674 --> 00:02:27,695 We may think our modern technology and advanced data analysis techniques 46 00:02:27,695 --> 00:02:31,167 might allow us to predict the future with much more accuracy 47 00:02:31,167 --> 00:02:33,492 than our 19th century counterpart, 48 00:02:33,492 --> 00:02:34,971 and rightly so. 49 00:02:34,971 --> 00:02:38,058 However, it's also true that our technological progress 50 00:02:38,058 --> 00:02:43,376 has brought with it new increasingly complex and unpredictable challenges. 51 00:02:43,376 --> 00:02:47,491 The stakes for future generations to be able to imagine the unimaginable 52 00:02:47,491 --> 00:02:49,682 are higher than ever before. 53 00:02:49,682 --> 00:02:51,348 So the question remains: 54 00:02:51,348 --> 00:02:53,091 how do we do that? 55 00:02:53,091 --> 00:02:56,796 One promising answer has actually been with us since the 19th century 56 00:02:56,796 --> 00:02:58,760 and the Industrial Revolution 57 00:02:58,760 --> 00:03:01,525 that laid the foundation for our modern world. 58 00:03:01,525 --> 00:03:04,326 During this time of explosive development and invention, 59 00:03:04,326 --> 00:03:08,992 a new form of literature, science fiction, also emerged. 60 00:03:08,992 --> 00:03:12,918 Inspired by the innovations of the day, Jules Verne, H.G. Wells, 61 00:03:12,918 --> 00:03:16,784 and other prolific thinkers explored fantastic scenarios, 62 00:03:16,784 --> 00:03:19,552 depicting new frontiers of human endeavor. 63 00:03:19,552 --> 00:03:22,418 And throughout the 20th century and into the 21st, 64 00:03:22,418 --> 00:03:26,211 storytellers have continued to share their visions of the future 65 00:03:26,211 --> 00:03:31,338 and correctly predicted many aspects of the world we inhabit decades later. 66 00:03:31,338 --> 00:03:32,799 In "Brave New World," 67 00:03:32,799 --> 00:03:37,217 Aldous Huxley foretold the use of antidepressants in 1932, 68 00:03:37,217 --> 00:03:40,310 long before such medication became popular. 69 00:03:40,310 --> 00:03:45,971 In 1953, Ray Bradbury's "Fahrenheit 451," forecast earbuds, 70 00:03:45,971 --> 00:03:48,293 "thimble radios," in his words. 71 00:03:48,293 --> 00:03:50,997 And in "2001: A Space Odyssey," 72 00:03:50,997 --> 00:03:58,076 Arthur C. Clarke described a portable, flat-screen news pad in 1968. 73 00:03:58,076 --> 00:04:01,524 In works that often combine entertainment and social commentary, 74 00:04:01,524 --> 00:04:05,418 we are invited to suspend our disbelief and consider the consequences 75 00:04:05,418 --> 00:04:10,628 of radical shifts in familiar and deeply engrained institutions. 76 00:04:10,628 --> 00:04:11,497 In this sense, 77 00:04:11,497 --> 00:04:15,882 the best science fiction fulfills the words of philosopher Michel Foucault, 78 00:04:15,882 --> 00:04:20,867 "I'm no prophet. My job is making windows where there were once walls." 79 00:04:20,867 --> 00:04:25,699 Free from the constraints of the present and our assumptions of what's impossible, 80 00:04:25,699 --> 00:04:30,466 science fiction serves as a useful tool for thinking outside of the box. 81 00:04:30,466 --> 00:04:32,331 Many futurists recognize this, 82 00:04:32,331 --> 00:04:36,452 and some are beginning to employ science fictions writers in their teams. 83 00:04:36,452 --> 00:04:40,765 Just recently, a project called iKnow proposed scenarios 84 00:04:40,765 --> 00:04:43,464 that look much like science fiction stories. 85 00:04:43,464 --> 00:04:45,941 They include the discovery of an alien civilization, 86 00:04:45,941 --> 00:04:50,352 development of a way for humans and animals to communicate flawlessly, 87 00:04:50,352 --> 00:04:52,921 and radical life extension. 88 00:04:52,921 --> 00:04:55,116 So, what does the future hold? 89 00:04:55,116 --> 00:04:57,210 Of course, we can't know for certain, 90 00:04:57,210 --> 00:05:00,808 but science fiction shows us many possibilities. 91 00:05:00,808 --> 00:05:02,781 Ultimately, it is our responsibility 92 00:05:02,781 --> 00:05:06,084 to determine which we will work towards making a reality.