The “end of history illusion” – your life is about to drastically change

In his terrific book, Precipice, Australian philosopher Toby Ord talks about existential risks that threaten the future of humanity. Some are natural risks: an asteroid hitting the earth, or super-volcanic eruptions. Another category is anthropogenic risks which are caused by humans, like nuclear weapons, climate change, and unaligned artificial intelligence. 

But the risks that are most alarming to me are the risks that may develop that we currently can’t even imagine.

It’s happened before. 

    • The possibility of nuclear holocaust was inconceivable until 1942 (the year physicist Enrico Fermi initiated the first self-sustaining nuclear chain reaction).
    • The field of artificial intelligence wasn’t formally founded until 1956, at a conference at Dartmouth College, in Hanover, New Hampshire, where the term was coined.

So 60 years ago, nuclear catastrophe and unaligned artificial intelligence would not have been mentioned in Ord’s book. 

Chances are good that in the next 50 years, an existential threat will be identified that we have never even thought of.

Which leads me to a discussion of the end of history illusion.

Humans have a tendency to acknowledge that change took place in the past but we discount the possibility of change happening in the future. For example, a 20-year-old’s prediction of how great a change he will undergo in the next ten years will not be as extreme as his recollection, as a 30-year-old, of the changes he underwent between the ages of 20 and 30. The same phenomenon is true for people of any age.

We can clearly see how our lives have changed a lot in the past, but we are reluctant to anticipate how much our lives will change in the future. Psychologist Dan Gilbert says we are “works in progress claiming to be finished.” In his research he discovered that young people, middle-aged people, and older people all believed they had changed a lot in the past but would change relatively little in the future. [Click here for more information about Gilbert’s work.]  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/End-of-history_illusion 

We need to disavow ourselves of this illusion. 

Relative to change:

Change is inevitable so we should anticipate and embrace it.

Every individual (and organization) has its own unique attitude toward change. We can be change-averse (resistant to change); we can reluctantly acquiesce to change (change is seen as unavoidable but undesirable) we can be change-friendly (view change as inevitable and probably necessary), or change-eager (view change as desirable and the key to growth and health).

The rate of change is going to accelerate.

In their must-read book, The Leader’s Voice, Clarke and Crossland say, “In ancient times, work was performed on an almost stationary stage. Visionary inventor Ray Kurzweil explains the rate of change in terms of paradigm shifts. During the agricultural age, paradigm shifts occurred over thousands of years. The industrial age produced paradigm shifts, first in a century and then in a generation. At the start of the information age, paradigms appeared to shift at the rate of three per lifetime. Kurzweil suggests that beginning in the year 2000, paradigm shifts have begun to occur at the rate of seven to ten per lifetime.”

Two thousand five hundred years ago the Greek philosopher Heraclitus said, “The only thing that doesn’t change is change.” Let’s anticipate and embrace changes that will occur in the future.

10 Replies to “The “end of history illusion” – your life is about to drastically change”

  1. I’ve been meaning to write to you on several occasions, but this is the first. I don’t know how I got on your newsletter, but over the last year there have several times where the topic you’ve written on has come on a day when I’ve LITERALLY was talking/thinking/wrestling/processing the exact same thing. It happened enough times where you would think we had just had lunch the day before and then you wrote about it. Your writing and insight has greatly encouraged me on those days in particular, but I enjoy and benefit from each newsletter you produce. I wanted you to know so that you keep pressing forward with enthusiasm in the work you’ve been called to do. Happy Thanksgiving!

  2. We may not be embracing the change that has occurred in this week or even in this past year! We must accept and embrace change that is already here to even begin anticipating and looking forward to future change before it becomes ‘future shock’. Great article and timely for sure.

    1. Thanks, Mark, for sharing an interesting insight: our reluctance to accept current change will inhibit our ability to accept future change, and, accepting gradual changes may eliminate the shock-factor. Don

  3. we seem most likely to be overwhelmed by information in the information age.
    The bulk of information from the digital realm is not realistic, false, and elevating to man and mankind–every PHD is an expert–typically not in their field. It is very important to have the correct standard for the change elements given by mankind for mankind. Embracing change that has not been vetted through the Right Perspective of a Biblical model will ultimately lead to not having eternal life. Thanks for letting me share. The actual age of enlightenment started with Eve in the Garden and the age of illumination has always existed.

    1. Thanks, Dwight, for taking the time to share your thoughts. You’re right, the information age has morphed into the mis-information age. Increasingly, just discerning what is true will be difficult. We must be wise regarding which changes we accept and those we should reject.

  4. When it comes to specific changes, I think the decision to embrace or reject is dependent upon what those changes are. To accept the fact of change as being inevitable is indeed wise and beneficial; however, we should be careful about embracing every change that comes along, especially when those changes run counter to a biblical worldview (for me anyway).

    Good thought-provoking article.

    1. John, I couldn’t agree more. Change for change sake is unnecessary, and changes that are counter to our values are not beneficial. Thanks for taking the time to write. Don

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