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 Government News from Now-here It's time to rethink revolutionary time. By Charlotte Jones Futures Envisioning Our Shared Storm We talk to the futurist, speculative fiction writer, and Long Now Member about scenario planning through fiction. Andrew Dana Hudson in conversation with Jacob Kuppermann Long Now Talks Johanna Hoffman Speculative Futures: Design Approaches to Foster Resilience and Co-create the Cities We Need Culture Mythmaking for Burning Ground In 19th century Iceland, reframing aggressive nature as a source of belonging shaped a myth that built a more resilient future. We can do the same. By Johanna Hoffman Climate Change Breaking a Vicious Circle of Climate Change in Zimbabwe As climate migration pushes wildlife in Zimbabwe’s lush Eastern Highlands to extinction, how can this region find ways to adapt? By Andrew Mambondiyani Climate Change Living in Mangrove Time If we leave the mangroves to grow in their own time, rather than having to endure and be stunted by the pressures of our own, what stories could they tell us? By Eleonor Botoman Manual For Civilization End-of-the-World Novels Are ‘Memento Mori’ for Civilization Why envisioning the collapse of civilization can be unexpectedly life-affirming. By Adam Lowenstein The Big Here The Greenhouse Effect, Martian-style In order to properly debate our potential future on Mars, it makes sense to take the long view, considering the broader geological history of the world beyond ours. By Jacob Kuppermann Futures How to Imagine Climate Futures The imaginary worlds of climate fiction can help ready us for whatever comes next. By Jacob Kuppermann The Big Here New Study Models Sea Level Rise Risks at African Heritage Sites The impact of sea level rise on African sites has largely been understudied. By Jacob Kuppermann
Futures Envisioning Our Shared Storm We talk to the futurist, speculative fiction writer, and Long Now Member about scenario planning through fiction. Andrew Dana Hudson in conversation with Jacob Kuppermann
Long Now Talks Johanna Hoffman Speculative Futures: Design Approaches to Foster Resilience and Co-create the Cities We Need
Culture Mythmaking for Burning Ground In 19th century Iceland, reframing aggressive nature as a source of belonging shaped a myth that built a more resilient future. We can do the same. By Johanna Hoffman
Climate Change Breaking a Vicious Circle of Climate Change in Zimbabwe As climate migration pushes wildlife in Zimbabwe’s lush Eastern Highlands to extinction, how can this region find ways to adapt? By Andrew Mambondiyani
Climate Change Living in Mangrove Time If we leave the mangroves to grow in their own time, rather than having to endure and be stunted by the pressures of our own, what stories could they tell us? By Eleonor Botoman
Manual For Civilization End-of-the-World Novels Are ‘Memento Mori’ for Civilization Why envisioning the collapse of civilization can be unexpectedly life-affirming. By Adam Lowenstein
The Big Here The Greenhouse Effect, Martian-style In order to properly debate our potential future on Mars, it makes sense to take the long view, considering the broader geological history of the world beyond ours. By Jacob Kuppermann
Futures How to Imagine Climate Futures The imaginary worlds of climate fiction can help ready us for whatever comes next. By Jacob Kuppermann
The Big Here New Study Models Sea Level Rise Risks at African Heritage Sites The impact of sea level rise on African sites has largely been understudied. By Jacob Kuppermann