Followup to: Stranger than History, Absurdity Heuristic / Absurdity Bias
Why is the future more absurd than people seem to expect? (Thatis: Why, historically, has the future so often turned out to be more"absurd" than people seem to have expected?)
One obvious reason is hindsight bias. Hindsight does not just cause people to severely underestimate how much they would have been surprised. Hindsight also leads people to overestimate how much attention they would have paid to the key factors, the factors that turned out to be important. As R. H. Tawney put it:
"Historiansgive an appearance of inevitability to an existing order by dragging intoprominence the forces which have triumphed and thrusting into the backgroundthose which they have swallowed up."
When people look at historical changes and think "I could havepredicted X" or "You could have predicted X if you looked at factors 1,2, and 3"; then they forget that people did not, in fact, predict X, perhaps because they were distracted by factors 4 through 117. People read history books, see coherent narratives,and think that's how Time works. Underestimating the surprise of thepresent, they overestimate the predictability of the future.
I suspect that a major factor contributing to absurdity bias is that, when we look over history, we see changes away from absurd conditions such as everyone being a peasant farmer and women not having the vote, toward normalconditions like a majority middle class and equal rights. When peoplelook at history, they see a series of normalizations. They learn therule, "The future grows ever less absurd over time."
Perhaps one way to comprehend the bizarreness of the future would be totry and imagine historical changes occurring in reverse - how absurdwould it be if all your electrical appliances suddenly disappeared, oryou were transformed into a peasant farmer? Even if the future isnicer than the past, it will feel at least that absurd.
The correspondence bias of social psychology may also play a role in how we fail to learn from history - or so my own experiencesuggests. When we read about the strange behaviors of people in othereras, we may see them as people with a disposition to that strange behavior,rather than properly comprehending the strangeness of the times. In the16th century, one popular entertainment was setting a cat on fire. If you think to yourself"What horrible people they must be!" then you have, to the same extent,diminished your appreciation of what horrible times they lived in.
We see at least some social and technological changes during our ownlifetime. We do have some experience of genuine future shock. Whywouldn't this be enough to extrapolate forward?
According to Ray Kurzweil's thesis of accelerating change, ourintuitions about the future are linear - we expect around as muchchange as occurred in the past - but technological change feeds onitself, and therefore has a positive second derivative. We shouldexpect more technological change in the future than we have seen in thepast, and insofar as technology drives cultural change, we shouldexpect more cultural change too.
Or that, in my opinion, is the strongest version of Kurzweil'stheory that can be put forward. Kurzweil dwells on Moore's Law andsmoothly predictable exponential curves, but this seems to me both iffyand unnecessary. A curve does not need to be smooth or exponential tohave a positive second derivative. And our cultural sensitivity to,say, computing power, is probably logarithmic anyway, obeying Weber's Law- a 20% increase in computing power probably feelsthe same whether it'sfrom 1MHz to 1.2MHz, or 2GHz to 2.4GHz. In which case, peopleextrapolating the future "linearly" should get it pretty much correct.
But if you pull backand view the last few millennia, not just the last few decades, thestrength of the core idea becomes obvious - technology change does feed on itself and therefore does speed up.
I would actually question Kurzweil's assertion that peopleextrapolate the past linearly into the future. Kurzweil may be toooptimistic here. As discussed earlier,dwellers on flood plains do not extrapolate from small floods to largefloods; instead, small floods set a perceived upper bound on risk. Isuspect that when people try to visualize the strangeness of thefuture, they focus on a single possible change, of no greater magnitude than the largest single change they remember in their own lifetime.
The real future is not composed of single developments, but many developments together. Even if one change can pass the futurism filter, to suppose three absurdities simultaneously- never mind twenty - would entirely overload the absurdity meter. This may also explain why future projections get wronger and wronger asthey go further out. People seem to imagine futures that are minimally counterintuitive,with one or two interesting changes to make a good story, rather than arealistic number of changes that would overload their extrapolationabilities.
What other biases could lead us to underestimate the absurdity of the future?