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Formation | January 4, 1996; 29 years ago (1996-01-04) |
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Type | 501(c)(3) |
68-0384748 | |
Registration no. | C1956835 |
Headquarters | Fort Mason Center,San Francisco,California, US |
Coordinates | 37°48′23″N122°25′56″W / 37.8064591°N 122.4321258°W /37.8064591; -122.4321258 |
Key people | PresidentStewart Brand,Brian Eno |
Website | longnow![]() |
TheLong Now Foundation, established in 1996,[1] is an Americannon-profit organization based inSan Francisco that seeks to start and promote a long-termcultural institution. It aims to provide a counterpoint to what it views as today's "faster/cheaper" mindset and to promote "slower/better" thinking. The Long Now Foundation hopes to "creatively foster responsibility" in the framework of the next 10,000 years. In a manner somewhat similar to theHolocene calendar, the foundation uses 5-digit dates to address theYear 10,000 problem[2] (e.g., by writing the current year "02025" rather than "2025"). The organization's logo isX, a capital X with an overline, a representation of 10,000 inRoman numerals.
The foundation has several ongoing projects, including a 10,000-year clock known as theClock of the Long Now, theRosetta Project, theLong Bet Project, the open sourceTimeline Tool (also known as Longviewer), theLong Server and a monthly seminar series.[3]
The purpose of theClock of the Long Now is to construct atimepiece that will operate with minimum human intervention for tenmillennia.[4] It is to be constructed of durable materials, to be easy to repair, and to be made of largely valueless materials in case knowledge of theclock is lost or it is deemed to be of no value to an individual or possible futurecivilization; in this way it is hoped that the Clock will not belooted or destroyed. Its power source (or sources) should be renewable but similarly unlootable.[5] A prototype of a potential final clock candidate was activated on December 31, 1999, and is on display at theScience Museum in London. The Foundation is currently building theClock of the Long Now inVan Horn, Texas.[6]
TheRosetta Project is an effort to preserve alllanguages that have a high likelihood of extinction over the period from 2000 to 2100.[7] These include many languages whosenative speakers number in the thousands or fewer. Other languages with many more speakers are considered by the project to be endangered because of the increasing importance of English as an international language of commerce and culture. Samples of such languages are to be inscribed onto a disc of nickel alloy three inches (7.62 cm) across. A Version 1.0 of thedisc was completed on November 3, 2008.[8]
TheLong Bet Project was created by The Long Now Foundation to propose and keep track ofbets on long-term events and stimulate discussion about the future. The Long Now Foundation describes The Long Bet Project as a "public arena for enjoyably competitive predictions, of interest to society, with philanthropic money at stake."[9] One example bet would be on whether people will regularly fly on pilotlessaircraft by 2030.
Bets that were resolved in 2010 included predictions aboutpeak oil,print on demand,modem obsolescence, and commercially available 100-qubitquantum computers.[10]
An analysis by researcher Gwern Branwen found dozens of bets that had already expired but had not resolved, and many others with poorly defined resolution criteria. Branwen also found that the vast majority of the expired predictions resolved false, so that anyone could make a profit by betting indiscriminately against existing predictions. In light of these and other issues, and the website’s extremely low activity levels (with an average of less than two bets per year), Branwen concluded that the Long Bet Project should be shut down.[11]
In November 2003, The Long Now Foundation began a series of monthly seminars about long-term thinking (SALT) with a lecture byBrian Eno. The seminars are held in theSan Francisco Bay Area and have focused on long-term policy and thinking, scenario planning, singularity and the projects of the foundation. The seminars are available for download in various formats from The Long Now Foundation.[12] They are intended to "nudge civilization toward making long-term thinking automatic and common".[13] Topics have included preservingenvironmental resources, the deep past and deep future of the sciences and the arts, humanlife extension, the likelihood of anasteroid strike in the future,SETI, and the nature of time.[citation needed]
As part of the seminar series, there are occasionally debates on areas of long term concern, such as synthetic biology[14] or "historian vs futurist on human progress".[15]
The point of Long Now debates is not win-lose. The point is public clarity and deep understanding, leading to action graced with nuance and built-in adaptivity, with long-term responsibility in mind.[14]
In operation, "There are two debaters, Alice and Bob. Alice takes the podium, makes her argument. Then Bob takes her place, but before he can present his counter-argument, he must summarize Alice's argument to her satisfaction — a demonstration of respect and good faith. Only when Alice agrees that Bob has got it right is he permitted to proceed with his own argument — and then, when he's finished, Alice must summarize it to his satisfaction."[16]
Mutual understanding is enforced by a reciprocal requirement to describe the other's argument to their satisfaction, with the goal being more understanding after the event than there was beforehand.[citation needed]
Opened in June 2014,[17] The Interval was designed as social space in the foundation's Fort Mason facility in San Francisco. The purpose of The Interval is to have a public space where people can come together to discuss ideas and topics related to long-term thinking, as well as provide a venue for a variety of Long Now events. The Interval includes lounge furniture, artifacts from the foundation's projects, a library, audio/video equipment, and a bar serving tea and coffee during the day, and cocktails during the night. In October 2014 The Interval was named by Thrillist as one of the best new bars in America.[18]
The Manual for Civilization is a living, crowd-curated library of 3,500 books with the purpose of creating a record of humanity and technology for the current generation's descendants. The library is curated by the Long Now community and is on display at The Interval, Long Now’s cafe-bar-salon in San Francisco.[19]
PanLex is a linguistic project whose stated mission is to overcome language barriers to human rights, information, and opportunities.[20] Started in 2004 at the University of Washington’s Turing Center, the project sought to build software that would enable all humans to use their native language to share information, ideas, and emotions with the rest of the world. This research produced a lexical database (TransGraph) designed to support panlingual translation, and a more powerful extension of it (PanDictionary) based on intelligent automated inference.[21] After this work demonstrated the feasibility of the concept, the PanDictionary became the PanLex Database, and PanLex has continued to enlarge, enrich, and modify it by consulting multilingual dictionary and dictionary-like sources. In 2012, PanLex became a project of The Long Now Foundation.[3]
Neal Stephenson's science fiction novelAnathem was partly inspired by the author's involvement with theClock of the Long Now project. As a result of Brian Eno's work on the clock project, an album entitledJanuary 07003 / Bell Studies for The Clock of The Long Now was released in 2003.[22] English songwriterOwen Tromans released a single entitled "Long Now", inspired by the foundation, in 2013.[23]
The Board of Directors of The Long Now Foundation as of February 2023[update]:[24]
Emeritus members