Existential Hope is a program by @foresightinst for thinking big about what positive futures are possible with science and tech.

Joined September 2021
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It’s 2035, and AI has gone well. What could a normal day in your life look like? Most popular AI futures are dystopias. Almost no one takes the time to seriously and vividly imagine a future that's actually worth building. So we made a short film following one day in the life of an AI auditor in 2035, in a world radically transformed by AI for the better. Digital twins model how people’s unique physiologies respond to illness. Sensors stop pandemics before they start. AI helps governments actually listen to citizens by synthesizing vast amounts of data into actionable policy suggestions, but humans stay in control and make the final call. If this resonates, please share to spread the word about positive AI futures!
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We often talk about AI as a threat to democracy. But what if it could also be one of its best tools? @bethnoveck's new book “Reboot” argues that we already have the tools to rebuild institutions that listen better, decide more wisely, and work for more people. We just haven't pointed them at the right problems yet.
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Submissions close tomorrow. Last chance to win up to $5K for building a grounded 2035 scenario where AI goes well. The AI Futures Challenge 2026 is open until June 30, any time on Earth. Just take our free 1.5hr course and share your most hopeful yet realistic vision for 2035. $5K Grand Prize 5 × $1K Bounties. There’s still time → worlds.existentialhope.com/#…
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We imagined something like this in our animated short about what 2035 could look like: sensors on public transit detecting novel viruses before they spread. It’s so exciting to see people working to make it real. youtube.com/watch?v=Besh6Xad…
Today we're launching Intercept: a $500M philanthropic initiative to make respiratory infections, like the common cold and flu, a thing of the past. We treat respiratory infections as a minor nuisance, but that’s really not the case. Most of us will spend 5% of our lives (!) sick from these viruses, they kill 1M people a year, cost $600B annually in productivity, and periodically threaten civilization through pandemics. So, if they’re such a big problem, why haven’t we dealt with them yet? Last year we convened ~40 leading scientists, pharma R&D leaders, biotech investors, and regulatory experts to better understand that. We heard two main reasons: (1) First, it’s just technically very challenging: respiratory viruses represent hundreds of distinct, mutating strains across several families. Fortunately, recent breakthroughs make this newly possible. (2) Second is a lack of funding: broad-spectrum solutions have historically been underfunded, in part because they’re not a great fit for most philanthropic or commercial funding (and while COVID generated a burst of activity around preventing and understanding respiratory infections through an influx of new funding, that hasn't been sustained). We think that with enough focus and funding, this might be solvable. Intercept is a $500 million philanthropic initiative that will take advantage of new tools to catalyze the development and deployment of two types of products: broad-spectrum preventatives and air cleaning technologies. This problem is undoubtedly difficult. But it’s more tractable now than it’s ever been. We think we should give it our best shot. We’re enormously grateful to our anchor funders: @stripe, @AnthropicAI, @TheFluLab, @FoundationOAI and individuals from Jane Street. And, I’m very excited to be building this with @incredutility and the rest of the team.
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It’s 2035, and AI has gone well. What could a normal day in your life look like? Most popular AI futures are dystopias. Almost no one takes the time to seriously and vividly imagine a future that's actually worth building. So we made a short film following one day in the life of an AI auditor in 2035, in a world radically transformed by AI for the better. Digital twins model how people’s unique physiologies respond to illness. Sensors stop pandemics before they start. AI helps governments actually listen to citizens by synthesizing vast amounts of data into actionable policy suggestions, but humans stay in control and make the final call. If this resonates, please share to spread the word about positive AI futures!
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Most of the ideas in the film aren't science fiction. Much of it is already being built. A few of the people and orgs making it real: Digital twins of human biology: @InsilicoMeds @AToliasLab Pandemic early warning and rapid vaccines: @Blueprintbio @PopVaxIndia @hellobluedot AI for democratic participation: @collect_intel @RadxChange Personalized AI tutoring: @synthesischool @karpathy Universal basic income: @BasicIncomeOrg Communicating with other species: @earthspecies
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One week left to win up to $5K for imagining a future where AI went well! Take our free 1.5hr Udemy course, build an ambitious yet realistic vision for 2035, submit by June 30. No prior knowledge needed. Prizes: $5K Grand Prize for best overall world 5×$1K Bounties for best visuals, best transformative technology, most inspiring vision, best transformed sector, best institution. Send us your most hopeful 2035 by June 30 → worlds.existentialhope.com/#…
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Science fiction has always shaped the technologies we build, from the submarine to the smartphone. But almost every story we've ever told about AI is dystopian. And now we're training AI on those stories: no wonder models are learning to behave like Hollywood villains. In this episode, we spoke with @PeterDiamandis, entrepreneur and founder of @XPRIZE, which runs large-scale incentive competitions to crack some of the world's hardest problems, from private spaceflight to carbon removal. He recently launched the Future Vision XPRIZE, a $3.5 million competition to generate a new wave of optimistic science fiction. Links below! 0:00 Cold open 1:25 Why Peter Diamandis created the Future Vision XPRIZE 5:57 Is it harder to recruit for a culture prize than a science one? 11:38 How do you design a great XPRIZE? 14:19 What would you measure in 10 years to know this worked? 19:34 Why scientists should team up with filmmakers on the Future Vision XPRIZE 22:16 Beyond film: the case for rebooting games, journalism, and education 27:29 Why sci-fi turned so dark: the evolutionary reason we focus on doom 31:12 Peter's favorite positive sci-fi examples (besides Star Trek) 31:56 Real-world inventions that started as sci-fi 32:46 How AI has democratized the ability to build the future 33:50 How to counter the anti-tech narrative 38:04 Peter's advice for anyone thinking of submitting to the Future Vision XPRIZE 39:11 What does Peter Diamandis's ideal future actually look like? 40:13 The technology Peter most wants to exist 40:39 What's underhyped and what's overhyped right now? 42:05 The best piece of advice Peter has ever received
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If you need an in-person dose of existential hope, this is where to find it. Vision Weekend USA brings together the people building the future we actually want. Happening in San Francisco, November 13-15, and celebrating @foresightinst’s 40th anniversary. Early bird tickets open until June 30.
With Vision Weekend UK in the books, we're already turning toward Vision Weekend USA: November 13-15 in San Francisco. This one will be a big one. In our 40th year, Vision Weekend USA will be our main anniversary celebration in the United States. We're marking it will everything Vision Weekend does best: frontier science and tech, unconference sessions, lab tours, 1:1 connections, tech demos across venues like @internetarchive, Lighthaven, and The Fold. Plus a VIP pre-party aboard the USS Hornet and a $10K grant for the best frontier project pitch. Speakers already confirmed: • @v_maini, Mythos • @SumnerLN, Merge • @woj_zaremba, OpenAI • @hannu, Red Queen Bio • @sebkrier, Google DeepMind • @seemaychou, Astera Institute • @robinhanson, George Mason University • @AdamMarblestone, Convergent Research Early bird tickets are live now until June 30: foresight.org/events/vision-… Block your calendars. Get your ticket. See you in November.
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Over the coming months we’ll commission writers we admire from outside the usual AI conversation to reflect on one question: what future with AI would they actually want? We’ve spent a lot of energy imagining how AI might go wrong, and far less on what going right would look like. So we’re asking writers from cultural and literary corners to think it through on their own terms, with room to be skeptical, as long as it points somewhere hopeful. We’re glad to start with @noampomsky of bookbear express!
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5 reasons to be hopeful about AI, from our recent podcast conversations ↓
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5. As AI takes over more routine tasks, it opens up the freedom for us to choose a more meaningful life. @jasoncrawford argues that's always been what technological progress was for, and AI is the next chapter of that story. w/ Jason Crawford, youtube.com/watch?v=mIO2Xgn7…
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All five of these futures are possible; none of them are guaranteed. What happens next depends almost entirely on the choices we make about how to build, regulate, and deploy AI, and those choices are still ours to make.
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