Climate Change Concepts Long-term Thinking The Big Here Digital Dark Age Organizational Continuity Futures Millennial Precedent Archives Long Shorts Long News Projects Announcements Long Now Talks The Clock of the Long Now The Rosetta Project The Interval Long Bets Revive & Restore PanLex Manual For Civilization Disciplines Art Business Cities Civilization Climate Change Computing Culture Economics Energy Environment Evolution Genetics Globalization Government History Infrastructure Language Psychology Science Science Fiction Space Technology Year 02022 02021 02020 02019 02018 02017 02016 02015 02014 02013 02012 02011 02010 02009 02008 02007 02006 02005 02004 OLDER Nevada Bristlecone Preserve Enlarging the Question A wide-ranging discussion with the conceptual artist and experimental philosopher Jonathon Keats on his life, his philosophy, and a handful of his many projects, including Centuries of the Bristlecone, a forthcoming collaboration with Long Now and the Nevada Museum of Art. Jonathon Keats in conversation with William L. Fox Science Fiction Space is Dead. Why Do We Keep Writing About It? Maybe our best bet of finding out what’s Out There in the universe is to extend our reach not into the vastness of space but into the equally vast expanse of time. By Andrew Dana Hudson Long Now Talks Roman Krznaric & Kate Raworth What Doughnut Economics Can Learn From History Infrastructure Pascal's Other Wager What if the long-term solution to today's traffic jams was invented more than three centuries ago? By Taras Grescoe Climate Change On Exactitude in Climate Science Climate models could become infrastructure for our collective knowledge – but the choices we make in building these simulated worlds matter. By Kyle Barnes Environment To Save It, Eat It Why gene banks aren’t enough to save the world’s food By Taras Grescoe Long Now Talks Alicia Escott and Heidi Quante The Bureau of Linguistical Reality Performance Lecture Long Now Talks Denise Hearn Embodied Economies: How our Economic Stories Shape the World Economics In "The Ministry for the Future," New Ideas From Ancient Wisdom When we are bound in a system of reciprocity, not return on investment, we will be closer to being the kind of ancestors future people need. By Forrest Brown Science The Three-Century Lifespan of the Modern Bee The preservation of individual bee specimens across the centuries allows us to embrace the temporal expanse of what came before us, and leave good records for those who follow. By A'liya Spinner
Nevada Bristlecone Preserve Enlarging the Question A wide-ranging discussion with the conceptual artist and experimental philosopher Jonathon Keats on his life, his philosophy, and a handful of his many projects, including Centuries of the Bristlecone, a forthcoming collaboration with Long Now and the Nevada Museum of Art. Jonathon Keats in conversation with William L. Fox
Science Fiction Space is Dead. Why Do We Keep Writing About It? Maybe our best bet of finding out what’s Out There in the universe is to extend our reach not into the vastness of space but into the equally vast expanse of time. By Andrew Dana Hudson
Infrastructure Pascal's Other Wager What if the long-term solution to today's traffic jams was invented more than three centuries ago? By Taras Grescoe
Climate Change On Exactitude in Climate Science Climate models could become infrastructure for our collective knowledge – but the choices we make in building these simulated worlds matter. By Kyle Barnes
Environment To Save It, Eat It Why gene banks aren’t enough to save the world’s food By Taras Grescoe
Economics In "The Ministry for the Future," New Ideas From Ancient Wisdom When we are bound in a system of reciprocity, not return on investment, we will be closer to being the kind of ancestors future people need. By Forrest Brown
Science The Three-Century Lifespan of the Modern Bee The preservation of individual bee specimens across the centuries allows us to embrace the temporal expanse of what came before us, and leave good records for those who follow. By A'liya Spinner