Threads and discussions like this are fascinating. Consider...
Only three hundred years ago, the most ordinary, mundane aspects of our daily lives, things we don't even think about, would have been considered the stuff of fantasy.
Electric lights...refrigerators...elevators...paved roads...surgical anesthesia...pneumatic tires...air conditioning...weather forecasting...radio and television...railroads...mass-produced consumer goods...farm equipment...photography...GPS...video doorbells...fire engines...
When we talk today about what "can't be achieved", or what "we'll never be able to" do, we aren't taking into account future scientific, engineering, and technological discoveries that will make today's "impossible" become tomorrow's "mundane"...but progress is inevitable.
Consider what life was like in 1724, and how people lived back then...and then realize that folks in the year 2324 (if we last that long) will look at us the same way...
Only three hundred years ago, the most ordinary, mundane aspects of our daily lives, things we don't even think about, would have been considered the stuff of fantasy.
Electric lights...refrigerators...elevators...paved roads...surgical anesthesia...pneumatic tires...air conditioning...weather forecasting...radio and television...railroads...mass-produced consumer goods...farm equipment...photography...GPS...video doorbells...fire engines...
When we talk today about what "can't be achieved", or what "we'll never be able to" do, we aren't taking into account future scientific, engineering, and technological discoveries that will make today's "impossible" become tomorrow's "mundane"...but progress is inevitable.
Consider what life was like in 1724, and how people lived back then...and then realize that folks in the year 2324 (if we last that long) will look at us the same way...
Last edited: