Authors: Steven Kotler
ALSO BY STEVEN KOTLER
The Angle Quickest for Flight
West of Jesus
A Small, Furry Prayer
The Rise of Superman
Abundance
(with Peter Diamandis)
Bold
(with Peter Diamandis)
Text copyright © 2015 by Steven Kotler
All rights reserved.
No part of this work may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission of the publisher.
Published by Amazon Publishing, New York
Amazon, the Amazon logo and Amazon Publishing are trademarks of
Amazon.com
, Inc. or its affiliates.
ISBN-13: 9781477827949
ISBN-10: 1477827943
Cover design by Dave Stanton / Faceout Studio
Author photograph by Ryan Heffernan
For my mother and father
Contents
The Future Is Here:
AN INTRODUCTION
Bionic Man:
THE WORLD’S FIRST BIONIC MAN
The Genius Who Sticks Around Forever:
THE SCIENCE OF MIND UPLOADING
Extreme States:
THE BIOLOGY OF SPIRITUALITY
Evolution’s Next Stage:
THE FUTURE OF EVOLUTION
Vision Quest:
THE WORLD’S FIRST ARTIFICIAL VISION IMPLANT
PART TWO: THE FUTURE OUT THERE
Reengineering the Everglades:
THE WORLD’S FIRST TERRAFORMING PROJECT
Buckaroo Banzai:
THE ARRIVAL OF FLYING CARS
Meltdown or Mother Lode:
THE POSSIBILITIES OF NUCLEAR ENERGY
Space Diving:
THE FUTURE OF SPORT
Building a Better Mosquito:
THE WORLD’S FIRST GENETICALLY ENGINEERED CREATURE
The Great Galactic Gold Rush:
THE BIRTH OF THE ASTEROID MINING INDUSTRY
PART THREE: THE FUTURE UNCERTAIN
The Psychedelic Renaissance:
THE RADICAL WORLD OF PSYCHEDELIC MEDICINE
Sympathy for the Devil:
THE TROUBLED SCIENCE OF LIFE EXTENSION
The Final Frontier:
THE POLITICS OF STEM CELLS
Hacking the President’s DNA:
THE CONSEQUENCES OF PLAYING GOD
The God of Sperm:
THE CONTROVERSIAL FUTURE OF BIRTH
Sure this is magic, but not necessarily fantasy.
—Thomas Pynchon
The Future Is Here
AN INTRODUCTION
It was early spring of 1997, about five years into my career as a journalist, a day of dark skies and cold rain. Peter Diamandis and I had gotten together for the very first time at a rundown diner on the outskirts of Chinatown, San Francisco. The diner was long and narrow, and we were seated toward the rear of the room. I was sitting with my back to the building’s far corner, Peter with his back to the rest of the restaurant. And the rest of the restaurant was staring at him.
For twenty minutes, Peter had been getting more and more excited while telling me about his newly launched endeavor: the XPRIZE, a ten-million-dollar competition for the first team to build a private spaceship capable of taking three people into space twice in two weeks. Already, the Sharpie had come out. There were charts on napkins, graphs on placemats, a healthy rearrangement of condiments — the ketchup marking the end of the troposphere, the mustard the beginning of the mesosphere. About the time he got loud about how some maverick innovator working out of a garage somewhere was going to “take down NASA,” people began to stare. Peter couldn’t see them; I could. Twenty folks in the restaurant, all looking at him like he was stark raving mad. And I remember this: I remember thinking they were wrong.
It’s hard to put my finger on why. Part of it was a strange hunch. Journalists tend to be cynical by nature and disbelieving by necessity. The job requires a fairly healthy bullshit detector, and that was the thing — mine wasn’t going off.
More of it was that I had just come from a month in the Black Rock Desert, outside of Gerlach, Nevada, watching Craig Breedlove try to drive a car through the sound barrier. Breedlove’s effort was terrestrial-bound rocket science, for sure. The
Spirit of America
, his vehicle, was pretty much a miniature
Saturn V
— 40 feet long, 8 feet wide, 6 feet high, and powered by a turbojet engine that burned, well, rocket fuel.
During those long days in the desert, I spent a lot of time talking to aerospace engineers. They all made one thing clear: Driving a car through the sound barrier was a lot harder than sending a rocket ship into low-earth orbit. In fact, when I asked Breedlove’s crew chief, former Air Force pilot turned aerospace engineer Dezso Molnar — who we’ll meet again later as the inventor of the world’s first flying motorcycle — what he was going to work on when all this was over, he said, “I want to do something easy, something relaxing. I think I’m going to build a spaceship.”
He wasn’t kidding.
Plus, Breedlove’s effort was exactly the kind of big-budget project you would expect an agency like NASA to get behind. Except there was no budget. And no NASA. The
Spirit of America
had a crew of seven working out of an oversized tool shed. And while they never did break the sound barrier, they got really close — 670 mph (700 was the barrier) — and then ran out of cash. They were literally one sponsorship check away from making history.
So, that day in the diner — despite Peter’s exuberance, despite the fact that, back then, the XPRIZE had no major sponsors and no money in the bank, and despite the fact that NASA had called his idea utterly impossible and the entire aerospace industry had agreed — from where I was sitting, some maverick opening the space frontier didn’t seem too outlandish.
Of course, today, with the XPRIZE won, with the private space industry worth more than a billion dollars, none of this may seem incredibly shocking. But it was. In 1997, space was off-limits to anyone but big government. This much was gospel. Yet I left that diner absolutely certain that sometime in the next decade, the far frontier would open for business.
I also left the diner a little gobsmacked. In less time than it took to drink a cup of coffee, a paradigm had shattered — science fiction had become science fact. On the way home, I started to wonder about other paradigms. After all, if private spaceships were possible, what about all the other sci-fi mainstays? What about bionics? Robotics? Flying cars? Artificial life? Life extension? Asteroid mining? What about those more ephemeral topics: the future of human evolution, the possibilities of downloadable consciousness? I made a long list — and that list defined large parts of the next two decades of my career.
Tomorrowland
is the result of that journey. The pieces in this book come from an assortment of major publications — the
New York Times, Wired, Atlantic Monthly
, to name a few — and all were penned between 2000 and 2014. They are all investigations into those moments when science fiction became science fact and the massively disruptive impact those moments have on culture. Because of the blitzkrieg rate of change in today’s world, few of these stories appear exactly as they ran. Instead, I’ve updated the science and technology so — unless the tale is historical in nature — the information contained in this book is as current as possible.
Furthermore, to help make better sense of things, I’ve also broken these stories into three categories. The first grouping — The Future In Here — is about us, an examination of the ways science and technology are fundamentally altering you and me. Here we’ll explore artificial senses (the world’s first artificial vision implant), bionic limbs (the world’s first bionic soldier), and evolution’s future (say good-bye to
Homo sapiens
), among
other seismic shifts in what it means to be human. The second section — The Future Out There — is about the ways science and technology are radically reshaping our world. Here we’ll cover everything from on-world paradigm shifts, like the birth of the world’s first genetically engineered insect, to off-world paradigm shifts, like the birth of the asteroid mining industry. Finally, in The Future Uncertain, we’ll examine the gray areas, those explosive collisions between science and culture — for example, the use of steroids for life extension or the use of synthetic biology for the creation of bioweapons — where lines are being crossed and controversy reigns, and no one is certain what tomorrow brings.
This last bit is no small thing. All of the technologies described in this book are disruptive technologies, though not as we traditionally define the word. Typically, disruptive technologies are those that displace an existing technology and disrupt an existing market, but the breakthroughs described herein do more than dismantle value chains — they destroy longstanding beliefs. You will, for example, come across an article about William Dobelle, inventor of the world’s first artificial vision implant. Dobelle was extremely paranoid about talking to the press. This isn’t that uncommon, but it’s usually about protecting intellectual property. That wasn’t Dobelle’s problem. When I asked him about his reticence, his answer surprised me: “Jesus cured blindness. People don’t like it when mortals perform miracles.”