Showing posts with label longterm. Show all posts
Showing posts with label longterm. Show all posts

Tuesday, 5 February 2013

Samuel Arbesman on the importance of long-term data



Digital data is exploding in volume and there’s enough money in making sense of it all that it’s garnered its own buzzword lately: big data. In an increasingly measurable world, data-sets of unprecedented size and comprehensiveness are turning up new and genuinely exciting insights. Applied Mathematician Samuel Arbesman points out, though, that many of these data-sets are but snapshots, when it’s timelapse videos we need to really understand something:



Why does the time dimension matter if we’re only interested in current or future phenomena? Because many of the things that affect us today and will affect us tomorrow have changed slowly over time: sometimes over the course of a single lifetime, and sometimes over generations or even eons.


Datasets of long timescales not only help us understand how the world is changing, but how we, as humans, are changing it — without this awareness, we fall victim to shifting baseline syndrome. This is the tendency to shift our “baseline,” or what is considered “normal” — blinding us to shifts that occur across generations (since the generation we are born into is taken to be the norm).


Arbesman spoke last year at a Salon event at The Long Now Foundation on his book, The Half-Life of Facts. He explained that there are patterns in the ways our scientific knowledge changes over time. Much of what we take to be true today has a half-life: it will decay at a predictable rate as new science overturns our current understanding. Long data, of the type he champions in this recent article, is essential to unearthing these types of insights and avoiding a static understanding of a dynamic world.


(The image above is a page from a notebook of Isaac Newton’s.)

This entry was posted on Thursday, January 31st, 02013 at 7:53 am and is filed under Long Term Science, Long Term Thinking.

Saturday, 2 February 2013

Help Long Now build a new space for long-term thinking

AppId is over the quota AppId is over the quota November 15th, 02012 by Alexander Rose - Twitter: @zander


The Long Now Foundation is creating a new place for ideas, and it will serve great cocktails!


We have begun a campaign to transform our space in Fort Mason into a salon, museum, cafe and bar.  We invite you to check out the video and if you can, please support us by reserving a Founders Bottle of one of the amazing spirits created exclusively for the project by St George Distillery in Alameda. We welcome group and company donations as well if the bottles are out of your personal price range.


Thank you for your support,


Alexander Rose
executive director
The Long Now Foundation

This entry was posted on Thursday, November 15th, 02012 at 2:22 pm and is filed under Long Now Announcements.