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A particularly depressing aspect of this downturn in research productivity was recently analysed by Patrick Collison and Michael Nielsen in the pages of The Atlantic. They show that, despite an enormous increase in research activity over the last 50 years, there has been a marked decrease in return on investment, We are getting less bang for our buck. Major innovation is becoming increasingly scarce in the natural sciences, and most Nobel Prizes in the Sciences are handed out for research that was done decades ago.
couldn't dream of the stuff we have in a smartphone.
Yep, we beat the soup out of the Star Trek "communicator" but nothing close to the "2001 Space Odyssey" space travel or even the Astro-Boy flying cars and android robots of the Year 2000. Not even a ray gun.
The next 10 yrs will see similar astounding changes coming from the biotechnology sector.
Heraclitusstudent saysThe next 10 yrs will see similar astounding changes coming from the biotechnology sector.
It's already happening in biotech and biochemistry, but we surely will see much, much more. Now even some 4th stage cancers can be treated with immune therapies. Perhaps in 20 yrs nearly all cancers could be cured.
"A retrospective risk analysis by the Space Shuttle Safety and Mission Assurance Office finds that the first nine shuttle flights had a 1 in 9 chance of catastrophic failure — 10 times the risk of flights today."
We just went through 3 wrenching decades of changes on the information technology front, and people in the 60s who imagined bases on the moon and fusion power couldn't dream of the stuff we have in a smartphone.
https://quillette.com/2019/02/21/whats-happening-to-technological-progress/