[FutureBuddha (2)] 2023 as seen from 1923

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  • Jundo
    Treeleaf Founder and Priest
    • Apr 2006
    • 40014

    [FutureBuddha (2)] 2023 as seen from 1923

    Hello, Fellow Residents of the Future (as viewed from 1923) ...

    As a good place to start these reflections, a trending twitter feed on what pundits in 1923 thought the world of 2023 would be like. Many misses, although some surprisingly prescient hits:



    Ah, a warning to us who look in crystal balls, of the perils and pearls of prediction ... although still time in the year for it all to come true!

    This review summarizes ...

    A researcher collected century-old newspaper clippings with predictions in fields ranging from public health to beauty to transportation. Some have proven more accurate than others.


    Here's what 2023 has in store, as predicted by experts in 1923

    Forget flying cars. When scientists and sociologists in 1923 offered predictions for what life might look like in a hundred years, their visions were more along the lines of curly-haired men, four-hour workdays, 300-year-old people and "watch-size radio telephones."

    That's according to Paul Fairie, a researcher and instructor at the University of Calgary who compiled newspaper clippings of various experts' 2023 forecasts in a now-viral Twitter thread.

    They include projections about population growth and life expectancy, trends in personal hygiene, advances in industries from travel to healthcare and even some meta-musings on the future of journalism itself.

    "In reading a forecast of 2023 when many varieties of aircraft are flying thru the heavens, we do not begin the day by reading the world's news, but by listening to it for the newspaper has gone out of business more than half a century before," wrote one newspaper (which was neither identified nor entirely off-base).

    Fairie told NPR over email that he's always loved looking at old newspapers, first for an elementary school project (on microfiche), then as a political science Ph.D. student and now in his free time.

    "Since last summer I've been sharing themed collections of clippings on Twitter, and I thought it might be fun to look at what people were thinking about 2023, but 100 years ago," he wrote. "Digging through archives is a fun hobby — it's weirdly relaxing to read about what people were thinking decades ago."

    He also thinks it's revealing that many of these century-old predictions were about things people worried about at the time and that remain a source of concern for some today.

    For instance, predictions about men curling their hair appear to stem from "a general worry about anything that challenges gender norms," while talk of a four-hour workday is seemingly part of a larger conversation about the promise of automation.

    Some predictions proved way more prescient than others (consider it a sliding scale between smartwatches and telepathy). Fairie says his big takeaway is "just to be modest about the certainty of predictions a century out."

    "If there's one thing I've learned from putting this together," he writes, "it's that I have absolutely no idea what a century from now will be like."

    Here's a selection of the — understandably rose-tinted — 2023 predictions he found, and how they panned out.

    Advancements in health and beauty
    Several seers described a world full of healthier and more beautiful people (though only one explicitly linked those two ideas).

    One writer predicted the eradication of cancer, as well as tuberculosis, infantile paralysis (also known as polio), locomotor ataxia and leprosy.

    Another went with the headline "Fewer Doctors and Present Diseases Unknown; All People Beautiful."

    "Beauty contests will be unnecessary as there will be so many beautiful people that it will be almost impossible to select winners," they continued. "The same will apply to baby contests."

    Some focused on the personal grooming and style trends that made up the standard of beauty itself.

    One anthropologist, reportedly versed in masculine and feminine trends, declared "curls for men by 2023." A similar prediction appeared in the Savannah News, which also forecast that women will "probably" be shaving their heads.

    "Also the maidens may pronounce it the height of style in personal primping to blacken their teeth," it added. "Won't we be pretty?"

    Living longer and working smarter
    Some newspapers predicted that the average person would live longer in 2023, though the exact amount varies based on whom you ask.

    One said the average lifespan could reach 100 years, though certain individuals could make it to 150 or even 200. Another cited a scientist who put the average at 300 years.

    "Quite a change," the article reads. "We of today have been living that long about once a month."

    For context, the expected lifespan of someone born in the U.S. decreased last year to 76.4 years — the shortest it's been in nearly two decades.

    In another optimistic outlook, mathematician and electrical engineer Charles Steinmetz predicted that people would spend even less time working ("No More Hard Work By 2023!" that headline blared).

    Steinmetz believed "the time is coming when there will be no long drudgery and that people will toil not more than four hours a day, owing to the work of electricity," the paper declared, adding that in his vision "every city will be a 'spotless town.' "

    And where exactly would all these people be spending their (long and leisurely) lives?

    Several publications posited that technological and industrial advances would make more parts of North America more habitable, estimating the U.S. population at 300 million and Canada at 100 million in 2023.

    Yes and no: The latest estimates from Worldometer put the U.S. population at 335 million and Canada at more than 38 million.

    Gizmos, gadgets and other innovations
    Naturally, there were also advances to dream about in science, technology, transportation, communications and other fields.

    First, the products: One writer proposed that people will be wearing "kidney cosies," which they compared to teapot cozies for one's internal organs. Another posited that utensils and dwellings will be made largely of "pulps and cements."

    Next, the flying: Aviation pioneer Glenn Curtiss predicted that by 2023 "gasoline as a motive power will have been replaced by radio, and that the skies will be filled with myriad craft sailing over well-defined routes," which the Minneapolis Journal deemed "an attractive prophecy."

    Elsewhere, the opening of a new "Polar airline" was cheered for making it possible to fly from Chicago to Hamburg — via the North Pole — in just 18 hours (as opposed to the roughly 13 hours most direct flights take nowadays).

    There was also considerable excitement about the prospect of wireless and paperless communications.

    One writer envisioned a world in which Pittsburgh and London take orders "on talking films" from merchants in Peking, and "1,000-mile-an-hour freighters" deliver goods before sunset.

    "Watch-size radio telephones will keep everybody in communication with the ends of the earth," they added, hitting the nail on the head.

    Archibald Low — the British scientist and author who invented an early version of TV and the first drone, among other things — wrote that "the war of 2023 will naturally be a wireless war," thanks to "wireless telephony, sight, heat, power and writing."

    He went a step further, according to one newspaper account:

    "Professor Low concludes that it is quite possible that when civilisation has advanced another century, mental telepathy will exist in embryo, and will form a very useful method of communication."

    Low, an esteemed "futurologist" of his era, made many other — and more accurate — predictions about the 21st century.

    They include the rise of smartphones and dictation, contemporary department stores, the internet and, arguably, British TV phenomenon Strictly Come Dancing.
    Gassho, J

    stlah
    Last edited by Jundo; 01-13-2023, 11:57 PM.
    ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE
  • Doshin
    Member
    • May 2015
    • 2641

    #2
    A thought arose as I read these predictions. Before the “Industrial Revolution” were there futurists? What were they thinking the future may bring? We have grown up in a world where technology has changed much and very rapidly so our imaginations are fueled by this experience. For the first 300,000 years of our species time here I think I am correct in saying change was much slower. Then about 10,000 years ago things began to change more rapidly (a relative comparison) and then in the last 150 years it has become hard to keep up.

    Doshin
    St

    Comment

    • Jundo
      Treeleaf Founder and Priest
      • Apr 2006
      • 40014

      #3
      Originally posted by Doshin
      A thought arose as I read these predictions. Before the “Industrial Revolution” were there futurists? What were they thinking the future may bring? We have grown up in a world where technology has changed much and very rapidly so our imaginations are fueled by this experience. For the first 300,000 years of our species time here I think I am correct in saying change was much slower. Then about 10,000 years ago things began to change more rapidly (a relative comparison) and then in the last 150 years it has become hard to keep up.

      Doshin
      St
      Futurists in the year 150,000 B.C.E., a time of spears, mastodons and rocks, thought of a future ... of identical spears, mastodons and more rocks.

      Futurists in China of the year 500 C.E., a time of Emperors, rice and Confucian values, thought of the future ... of the Emperor's children, of rice and the same Confucian values.

      Things really got rocking maybe about the Renaissance, then certainly by the Industrial Revolution.

      Gassho, J

      stlah
      Last edited by Jundo; 01-03-2023, 02:20 PM.
      ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

      Comment

      • Bion
        Treeleaf Unsui
        • Aug 2020
        • 4251

        #4
        Us buddhists, we’ve always been futurists, pondering things to come. Subhuti was concerned whether people in the future would actually believe in the authenticity of the dharma and sutras like the Diamond Sutra, and the Buddha, being a visionary, unequivocally said: “sure… there will be brave and faithful boddhisatvas” . [emoji1]

        [emoji1374] Sat Today
        "Stepping back with open hands, is thoroughly comprehending life and death. Immediately you can sparkle and respond to the world." - Hongzhi

        Comment

        • Jundo
          Treeleaf Founder and Priest
          • Apr 2006
          • 40014

          #5
          Originally posted by Bion
          Us buddhists, we’ve always been futurists, pondering things to come. ...
          I agree. The Buddhists tended to see universal history in cycles, but always with hope for the future of eventual enlightenment, or a good age to come. An example is this vision of the future world in the "Age of Maitreya," the "Future Buddha" ...

          “The land of the Buddha Maitreya shall be a place of life, pristine … Its ground shall be wide and level like a mirror, covered in beautiful flowers and tender grasses, with a multitude of trees and blossoming fruits. ... The many cities and towns shall lay but a rooster's flight between them. … The residents will be wise, virtuous, joyful and peaceful, satisfied in their sense desires. All will be free of sicknesses caused by cold or heat, wind or fire, and none shall suffer from the nine afflictions (of anger, hate, fear and the rest). People will live to be 84,000 years old, not dying early. … The city will be perfect in setting, exquisite in beauty, lavishly adorned, sparkling and immaculate. … its streets wide and swept clean. … There shall be pillars of shining jewels, 10 leagues high, such that no candles are needed night or day. … Everywhere there are heaps of gold, silver and jewels … The ground cracks open to receive human waste, then closes again, as flowers spring forth to cover all stench. … When people grow old, then frail, they go by their choosing to the mountains and forests, to sit quietly. With thoughts of Buddha in mind, they die peacefully, joyfully, then to be reborn. … In this peaceful and happy age, there is no threat from robbers or thieves, no enemies, no need to lock a door. Nor are there calamities of flood or fire, no wars or weapons, no famine, no toxins doing harm. The people live always with lovingkindness, with respect for one another, in harmony … like sons who loves their father, like a mother who loves her sons. (from "The Sūtra of the Buddha’s Proclaiming Maitreya’s Attainment of Buddhahood")

          Gassho, J

          stlah
          Last edited by Jundo; 01-03-2023, 02:21 PM.
          ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

          Comment

          • Ryumon
            Member
            • Apr 2007
            • 1775

            #6
            Originally posted by Doshin
            A thought arose as I read these predictions. Before the “Industrial Revolution” were there futurists? What were they thinking the future may bring? We have grown up in a world where technology has changed much and very rapidly so our imaginations are fueled by this experience. For the first 300,000 years of our species time here I think I am correct in saying change was much slower. Then about 10,000 years ago things began to change more rapidly (a relative comparison) and then in the last 150 years it has become hard to keep up.

            Doshin
            St
            I’m not sure how much “futurism” existed before the Industrial Revolution, but there were certainly political speculations, such as Plato’s Republic and Thomas More’s Utopia. But don’t forget that literature only stated flourishing with the arrival of the rotary press in the 1840s, so we don’t have that many published texts prior to that time.

            Technology, as such, was a big deal in 18th century France, with the fancy waterworks at Versailles, and quite creative theater machines around that time. I suspect that most of Europe eventually got a hold of these things.

            And prior to that, the clock, the Watch, and the telescope were technologies that allowed people to think differently. But it’s clear that the explosion of technology at the Industrial Revolution made new technology seem inevitable.

            Gassho,
            Ryūmon (Kirk)
            Sat
            I know nothing.

            Comment

            • Veronica
              Member
              • Nov 2022
              • 124

              #7
              Thanks for sharing Jundo! It's so interesting to read about past predictions and compare it to the current world.
              I remember reading the book 1984 in high school in the year 1989. It was science fiction, but it was still a form of future guesswork.

              Veronica
              ST

              Comment

              • Jundo
                Treeleaf Founder and Priest
                • Apr 2006
                • 40014

                #8
                Originally posted by Veronica
                Thanks for sharing Jundo! It's so interesting to read about past predictions and compare it to the current world.
                I remember reading the book 1984 in high school in the year 1989. It was science fiction, but it was still a form of future guesswork.

                Veronica
                ST
                Alas, coming true in many ways ...

                How Has George Orwell's Novel "1984" Come True Today?

                In the novel 1984, written in 1948, George Orwell presents a dystopian society that was intended to be a warning about the future of our world. Although at the time the reality that was set for the novel was almost unthinkable, in many ways, our society has come to look quite similar to the fictional one Orwell created.

                One way our real world and Orwell’s fictional world resemble each other is in the prevalence of surveillance, which has been detailed in the book The Culture of Surveillance: Watching as a Way of Life by David Lyon. This topic has been also been discussed in numerous papers and textbooks and a number of articles have been composed to examine these similarities (see related articles).

                In addition to the unprecedented use of surveillance, there are several other concerns about the future that Orwell expressed in the novel 1984 that have come to pass. These include the state of perpetual war, the prevalence of language shortcuts similar to what is termed “Newspeak” in the novel, and the reliance on fake news or “alternative facts” as a means of controlling public opinion. The presence of these factors in our society is altering the way we think about the world and what we are willing to accept in how we are treated by our leaders.

                Gassho, J

                stlah
                Last edited by Jundo; 01-05-2023, 11:34 PM.
                ALL OF LIFE IS OUR TEMPLE

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