RIP Robert Lucas. His most-quoted line: “The consequences for human welfare involved in questions [of economic growth] are simply staggering: Once one starts to think about them, it is hard to think about anything else.” More from @srajagopalan, @lugaricano, @singhabhi, and many others.
Jason’s links and tweets, 2023-05-23
Link post
Here on the Progress Forum (ICYMI)
Why growth in developing countries matters for progress (via @jmazda)
Opportunities
Dwarkesh Patel is looking for a physics tutor
Announcements
Arnold Ventures is launching a major new infrastructure initiative
“Building a Better NIH,” a paper series from IFP and others (via @calebwatney)
New book from Daron Acemoglu & Simon Johnson against “techno-optimism.” I expect to learn a lot from this, and to find much to agree and to disagree with
Blueprint for a new Great Exhibition (by @antonhowes)
News
RIP Robert Lucas. His most-quoted line: “The consequences for human welfare involved in questions [of economic growth] are simply staggering: Once one starts to think about them, it is hard to think about anything else.” More from @srajagopalan, @lugaricano, @singhabhi, and many others.
NASA: Blue Origin will build a second Human Landing System for the Moon
Longevity startup NewLimit raises $40M (via @garrytan)
Articles
How will AI impact science? (by @michael_nielsen)
Britain shows what degrowth looks like in practice (via @s8mb). So does South Africa
King Tut and his meteorite dagger (by @WillRinehart)
Queries
A case against AI x-risk by someone who understands the case for x-risk well?
Are there any good examples of “nuclearpunk”?
Technologies that were expected to have huge impacts but never got cheap?
Which public figure combines intellectual rigor and moral forcefulness?
Who decides what kinds of business are good for private equity?
Tweets
What if they gave an Industrial Revolution and nobody came? (the intro to my recent post, ICYMI). Also: The American Information Revolution in Global Perspective
How people without research training can push forward the frontier of technology
Everything has to be invented. Even spaces and punctuation
How to fight antibiotic resistance. Also, human DNA can be sequenced from the air
Nuclear fracking (!) But, our nation’s nuclear reactor laboratory has gone 56 years without building a new reactor
Landmark Experiments in Twentieth-Century Physics
Self-imposed challenges (sports, games, music) are sufficient for human flourishing
Regulatory costs explain ~⅓ of the increase in market power in the last 50 years. Also, whatever AI regulations we write today will sound ridiculous 50 years from now
Learning exactly how San Francisco governance works. Related, most people pay no attention to the deficit or how it constrains political choices
The Story of Education, Chapter 1: Primates to Primary Schools
Why some rich people keep working hard
A mark of the master craftsman
Excellent reply guys
Charts
Different types of single- and multi-causal explanations