Go ahead dream about the future Charlie Jane Anders

Every science fiction writer

has a story about a time
when the future arrived too soon.

I have a lot of those stories.

Like, OK, for example:

years ago, I was writing a story
where the government

starts using drones to kill people.

I thought that this was
a really intense, futuristic idea,

but by the time the story was published,

the government was already
using drones to kill people.

Our world is changing so fast,

and there’s a kind
of accelerating feedback loop

where technological change
and social change feed on each other.

When I was a kid in the 1980s,

we knew what the future
was going to look like.

It was going to be some version
of “Judge Dredd” or “Blade Runner.”

It was going to be neon megacities
and flying vehicles.

But now, nobody knows
what the world is going to look like

even in just a couple years,

and there are so many scary apparitions
lurking on the horizon.

From climate catastrophe
to authoritarianism,

everybody is obsessed with apocalypses,

even though the world ends
all the time, and we keep going.

Don’t be afraid to think about the future,
to dream about the future,

to write about the future.

I’ve found it really liberating
and fun to do that.

It’s a way of vaccinating yourself

against the worst possible case
of future shock.

It’s also a source of empowerment,

because you cannot prepare for something
that you haven’t already visualized.

But there’s something
that you need to know.

You don’t predict the future;

you imagine the future.

So as a science fiction writer

whose stories often take place
years or even centuries from now,

I’ve found that people are really hungry
for visions of the future

that are both colorful and lived in,

but I found that research on its own
is not enough to get me there.

Instead, I use a mixture
of active dreaming

and awareness of cutting-edge trends
in science and technology

and also insight into human history.

I think a lot about what I know
of human nature

and the way that people have responded
in the past to huge changes

and upheavals and transformations.

And I pair that with
an attention to detail,

because the details are where we live.

We tell the story of our world
through the tools we create

and the spaces that we live in.

And at this point, it’s helpful
to know a couple of terms

that science fiction writers
use all of the time:

“future history”
and “second-order effects.”

Now, future history is basically
just what it sounds like.

It is a chronology of things
that haven’t happened yet,

like Robert A. Heinlein’s
famous story cycle,

which came with a detailed chart
of upcoming events

going up into the year 2100.

Or, for my most recent novel,

I came up with a really
complicated time line

that goes all the way to the 33rd century

and ends with people
living on another planet.

Meanwhile, a second-order effect
is basically the kind of thing

that happens after the consequences
of a new technology or a huge change.

There’s a saying often attributed
to writer and editor Frederik Pohl

that “A good science fiction story

should predict not just
the invention of the automobile,

but also the traffic jam.”

And speaking of traffic jams,

I spent a lot of time
trying to picture the city of the future.

What’s it like? What’s it made of?

Who’s it for?

I try to picture a green city
with vertical farms

and structures that are partially
grown rather than built

and walkways instead of streets,

because nobody gets around
by car anymore –

a city that lives and breathes.

And, you know, I kind of start
by daydreaming the wildest stuff

that I can possibly come up with,

and then I go back into research mode,

and I try to make it as plausible as I can

by looking at a mixture
of urban futurism, design porn

and technological speculation.

And then I go back, and I try to imagine
what it would actually be like

to be inside that city.

So my process kind of begins
and ends with imagination,

and it’s like my imagination
is two pieces of bread

in a research sandwich.

So as a storyteller, first and foremost,

I try to live in the world
through the eyes of my characters

and try to see how they navigate
their own personal challenges

in the context of the space
that I’ve created.

What do they smell? What do they touch?

What’s it like to fall in love
inside a smart city?

What do you see when you
look out your window,

and does it depend on how the window’s
software interacts with your mood?

And finally, I ask myself
how a future brilliant city

would ensure that nobody is homeless
and nobody slips through the cracks.

And here’s where
future history comes in handy,

because cities don’t just spring up
overnight like weeds.

They arise and transform.

They bear the scars and ornaments
of wars, migrations,

economic booms, cultural awakenings.

A future city should have monuments, yeah,

but it should also have layers
of past architecture,

repurposed buildings

and all of the signs of how
we got to this place.

And then there’s second-order effects,

like how do things go wrong – or right –

in a way that nobody ever anticipated?

Like, if the walls of your apartment
are made out of a kind of fungus

that can regrow itself
to repair any damage,

what if people start eating the walls?

(Laughter)

Speaking of eating:

What kind of sewer system
does the city of the future have?

It’s a trick question.
There are no sewers.

There’s something incredibly bizarre
about the current system we have

in the United States,

where your waste
gets flushed into a tunnel

to be mixed with rainwater
and often dumped into the ocean.

Not to mention toilet paper.

A bunch of techies, led by Bill Gates,

are trying to reinvent
the toilet right now,

and it’s possible that
the toilet of the future

could appear incredibly strange
to someone living today.

So how does the history of the future,
all of that trial and error,

lead to a better way
to go to the bathroom?

There are companies right now

who are experimenting
with a kind of cleaning wand

that can substitute for toilet paper,

using compressed air
or sanitizing sprays to clean you off.

But what if those things looked
more like flowers than technology?

What if your toilet
could analyze your waste

and let you know if your microbiome
might need a little tune-up?

What if today’s experiments
with turning human waste into fuel

leads to a smart battery
that could help power your home?

But back to the city of the future.

How do people navigate the space?

If there’s no streets, how do people
even make sense of the geography?

I like to think of a place
where there are spaces

that are partially only in virtual reality

that maybe you need
special hardware to even discover.

Like for one story, I came up with a thing
called “the cloudscape interface,”

which I described as a chrome spider
that plugs into your head

using temporal nodes.

No, that’s not a picture of it,
but it’s a fun picture I took in a bar.

(Laughter)

And I got really carried away
imagining the bars, restaurants, cafés

that you could only find your way inside

if you had the correct
augmented reality hardware.

But again, second-order effects:

in a world shaped by augmented reality,

what kind of new communities will we have,

what kind of new crimes
that we haven’t even thought of yet?

OK, like, let’s say that you and I
are standing next to each other,

and you think that we’re
in a noisy sports bar,

and I think we’re in a highbrow salon

with a string quartet
talking about Baudrillard.

I can’t possibly imagine
what might go wrong in that scenario.

Like, it’s just – I’m sure it’ll be fine.

And then there’s social media.

I can imagine some pretty
frickin' dystopian scenarios

where things like internet quizzes,

dating apps, horoscopes, bots,

all combine to drag you down deeper
and deeper rabbit holes

into bad relationships and worse politics.

But then I think about
the conversations that I’ve had

with people who work on AI,

and what I always hear from them
is that the smarter AI gets,

the better it is at making connections.

So maybe the social media
of the future will be better.

Maybe it’ll help us to form healthier,
less destructive relationships.

Maybe we’ll have devices that enable
togetherness and serendipity.

I really hope so.

And, you know, I like to think
that if strong AI ever really exists,

they’ll probably enjoy
our weird relationship drama

the same way that you and I love to obsess
about the “Real Housewives of Wherever.”

And finally, there’s medicine.

I think a lot about how developments
in genetic medicine

could improve outcomes for people
with cancer or dementia,

and maybe one day, your hundredth birthday
will be just another milestone

on the way to another two or three
decades of healthy, active life.

Maybe the toilet of the future
that I mentioned

will improve health outcomes
for a lot of people,

including people in parts of the world

where they don’t have these complicated
sewer systems that I mentioned.

But also, as a transgender person,

I like to think: What if we make advances
in understanding the endocrine system

that improve the options for trans people,

the same way that hormones and surgeries
expanded the options

for the previous generation?

So finally: basically,
I’m here to tell you,

people talk about the future

as though it’s either going to be
a technological wonderland

or some kind of apocalyptic poop barbecue.

(Laughter)

But the truth is, it’s not going
to be either of those things.

It’s going to be in the middle. It’s going
to be both. It’s going to be everything.

The one thing we do know

is that the future is going
to be incredibly weird.

Just think about how weird
the early 21st century would appear

to someone from the early 20th.

And, you know, there’s a kind
of logical fallacy that we all have

where we expect the future
to be an extension of the present.

Like, people in the 1980s

thought that the Soviet Union
would still be around today.

But the future is going to be much weirder
than we could possibly dream of.

But we can try.

And I know that there are going
to be scary, scary things,

but there’s also going to be
wonders and saving graces.

And the first step
to finding your way forward

is to let your imagination run free.

Thank you.

(Applause)

每个科幻作家

都有一个
关于未来来得太快的故事。

我有很多这样的故事。

就像,好吧,例如:

几年前,我正在写一个
政府

开始使用无人机杀人的故事。

我认为这是
一个非常强烈的、未来主义的想法,

但当故事发表时

,政府已经在
使用无人机杀人。

我们的世界变化如此之快

,有
一种加速的反馈循环

,技术变革
和社会变革相互促进。

当我在 1980 年代还是个孩子的时候,

我们就知道
未来会是什么样子。

这将是某个版本
的“Judge Dredd”或“Blade Runner”。

这将是霓虹灯特大城市
和飞行器。

但是现在,即使在短短几年内,没有人
知道世界会是什么样子

而且还有很多可怕的幽灵
潜伏在地平线上。

从气候灾难
到威权主义,

每个人都痴迷于世界末日,

即使世界
一直在终结,而我们仍在继续前进。

不要害怕去想未来,
去梦想未来,

去写未来。

我发现这样做真的很自由
也很有趣。

这是一种为自己接种疫苗以

应对未来可能发生的最坏情况
的冲击的方法。

它也是授权的来源,

因为你无法为
你尚未想象的事情做好准备。

但是有些
事情你需要知道。

你不预测未来;

你想象未来。

因此,作为一个

故事经常发生在
几年甚至几个世纪后的科幻作家,

我发现人们真的很渴望
对未来充满希望的景象,这些景象

既丰富多彩又充满生机,

但我发现单靠
研究并不是 足以让我到达那里。

相反,我结合
了积极的梦想

和对科学技术前沿趋势的认识

以及对人类历史的洞察力。

我想了很多关于我
对人性的了解

以及人们
过去对巨大变化

、剧变和转变的反应方式。

我把它与
对细节的关注结合起来,

因为细节就是我们生活的地方。

我们
通过我们创造的工具

和我们生活的空间来讲述我们世界的故事

。在这一点上,

了解科幻作家一直
使用的几个术语会很有帮助:

“未来历史”
和“第二 ——秩序效应。”

现在,未来的历史基本上
就是它听起来的样子。

这是尚未发生的事情的年表

例如罗伯特 A. 海因莱因
著名的故事周期,

其中附有一张详细的
图表,

显示了 2100 年即将发生的事件。

或者,对于我最近的小说,

我想出了 一个非常
复杂的时间线

,一直到 33 世纪

,以人们
生活在另一个星球上结束。

同时,二阶效应
基本上

是在新技术或巨大变化的后果之后发生的那种事情。

作家兼编辑 Frederik Pohl 常

说一句话:“一个好的科幻故事

不仅应该预测
汽车的发明,

还应该预测交通拥堵。”

说到交通拥堵,

我花了很多时间
试图描绘未来的城市。

它像什么? 这是什么做的?

它是给谁的?

我试图描绘一个绿色城市,
有垂直农场

和部分
种植而不是建造的结构,

以及人行道而不是街道,

因为再也没有人
开车出行了——

一个生活和呼吸的城市。

而且,你知道的,我
开始做白日梦

,做我可能想出的最疯狂的事情,

然后我回到研究模式,

通过研究
城市未来主义的混合体,我试图让它尽可能合理 ,设计色情

和技术投机。

然后我回去,我试着想象

在那个城市里实际上会是什么样子。

所以我的过程
以想象开始和结束

,就像我的想象

研究三明治里的两片面包。

因此,作为一个讲故事的人,首先,

我试图
通过我的角色的眼睛生活在这个世界上,

并尝试看看他们如何

在我创造的空间背景下应对自己的个人挑战

他们闻到什么味道? 他们接触什么?

在智慧城市中坠入爱河是什么感觉

当您向窗外望去时,您会看到什么?这是否

取决于窗户的
软件如何与您的心情互动?

最后,我问自己
一个未来的辉煌城市

如何确保没有人无家可归
,没有人从裂缝中溜走。

这就是
未来历史派上用场的地方,

因为城市不会像野草一样在一夜之间冒出来

它们出现并转变。

他们带着
战争、移民、

经济繁荣、文化觉醒的伤痕和装饰。

一个未来的城市应该有纪念碑,是的,

但它也应该有
过去的建筑,

重新利用的建筑

以及
我们如何到达这个地方的所有迹象。

然后是二阶效应,

比如事情如何

以一种没有人预料到的方式出错或正确?

比如,如果你公寓的墙壁
是由

一种可以自我
再生修复任何损坏的真菌制成的,

那么如果人们开始吃墙壁怎么办?

(笑声)

说到吃:未来的城市有

什么样的下水道系统

这是一个技巧问题。
没有下水道。 我们在美国现有的系统

有一些令人难以置信的
奇怪之

处,您的废物
被冲入隧道

与雨水混合
并经常倾倒到海洋中。

更不用说卫生纸了。

以比尔盖茨为首的一群技术人员现在

正试图重新发明

马桶,未来的马桶

可能
对今天生活的人来说会显得非常奇怪。

那么,未来的历史,
所有这些尝试和错误,是如何

导致更好
的上厕所方式的呢?

现在有些

公司正在
试验一种

可以替代卫生纸的清洁棒,

使用压缩空气
或消毒喷雾剂来清洁你。

但是,如果这些东西看起来
更像鲜花而不是技术呢?

如果您的马桶
可以分析您的废物

并让您知道您的微生物组
是否需要进行一些调整呢?

如果今天
将人类排泄物转化为燃料的实验

产生了一种
可以为您的家庭供电的智能电池怎么办?

但回到未来的城市。

人们如何在空间中导航?

如果没有街道,人们如何
理解地理?

我喜欢想一个地方
,那里的

空间部分只存在于虚拟现实

中,也许你
甚至需要特殊的硬件才能发现。

就像一个故事一样,我想出了一个
名为“cloudscape 界面”的东西

,我将其描述为一个使用时间节点
插入你的头部的 chrome 蜘蛛

不,那不是它的照片,
但这是我在酒吧拍的一张有趣的照片。

(笑声)

我真的很
想像那些只有拥有正确的增强现实硬件才能进入的酒吧、餐馆、咖啡馆

但同样,二阶效应:

在一个由增强现实塑造的世界中,

我们将拥有什么样的新社区,

什么样的新
犯罪我们甚至还没有想到?

好吧,就像,假设你和
我站在一起

,你认为我们
在一个嘈杂的体育酒吧

,我认为我们在一个高雅的沙龙

里,弦乐四重奏
正在谈论鲍德里亚。

我无法想象
在那种情况下会出什么问题。

就像,它只是 - 我相信它会没事的。

然后是社交媒体。

我可以想象一些非常
糟糕的反乌托邦场景

,其中诸如互联网测验、

约会应用程序、星座运势、机器人之类的东西

都结合在一起,将你拖入
越来越深的兔子洞,

陷入糟糕的人际关系和更糟糕的政治中。

但后来我想起
了我

与从事人工智能工作的人的对话

,我总是从他们那里听到的
是,人工智能越聪明,建立联系

的能力就越好。

所以也许未来的社交
媒体会更好。

也许它会帮助我们建立更健康
、破坏性更小的关系。

也许我们将拥有能够实现
团结和意外发现的设备。

我真的希望如此。

而且,你知道,我喜欢认为
,如果真的存在强大的人工智能,

他们可能会喜欢
我们奇怪的关系

剧,就像你我喜欢痴迷
于“真正的家庭主妇”一样。

最后,还有药。

我想了很多关于
基因医学的发展

如何改善
癌症或痴呆症患者的预后的问题

,也许有一天,你的百岁生日
将只是

通往另外两到三
十年健康、积极生活的另一个里程碑。

也许我提到的未来厕所


改善很多人的健康状况,

包括世界

上没有
我提到的这些复杂下水道系统的人。

但同时,作为一个跨性别者,

我喜欢思考:如果我们
在理解内分泌系统方面取得进展,

从而改善跨性别者的选择

,就像激素和手术
扩大

了上一代人的选择一样,会怎样?

所以最后:基本上,
我在这里告诉你,

人们谈论未来

,好像它要么是
一个技术仙境,

要么是某种世界末日的便便烧烤。

(笑声)

但事实是,这
两者都不会。

它会在中间。
两者都会。 这将是一切。

我们确实知道的一件事

是,未来
将变得非常奇怪。

想想
21 世纪初对 20 世纪初的人来说是多么奇怪

而且,你知道
,我们都有一种逻辑谬误

,我们期望
未来是现在的延伸。

就像,1980 年代的

人们认为苏联
今天仍然存在。

但未来
将比我们想象的要奇怪得多。

但我们可以试试。

我知道
会有可怕、可怕的事情,

但也会有
奇迹和可取之处。

寻找前进道路的第一步

是让你的想象力自由发挥。

谢谢你。

(掌声)