Albert Camus’s warning from nearly 80 years ago, that humanity is subordinate to abstraction, people are replaced by calculations, and the willingness to accept suffering as an administrative variable persists. We have industrialized the human crisis. We are at an inflection point where the consequences of our choices, both good and bad, will arrive faster, hit harder, and spread more widely than any prior moment in history. We have the proven capacity to recover from previous crisis. The question is whether the next crises potentially makes recovery impossible.
Our most intractable problems cannot be solved with behavior modification, conservation, or our existing technology, regardless of its advanced or widespread applications.
Only new knowledge creating innovative solutions can address our most intractable problems. This can only be achieved through basic scientific discoveries and then combining these discoveries with enterprise-based innovation, commercial discipline, and competition. Innovation, creativity, and competitive dynamics create the most effective innovations, the best solutions, and the most sustainable companies. Developing the best public policy as well as the best structure to enable innovative and creative solutions, as well as the economic incentive to scale these opportunities and make them economically sustainable.
Central planning, bureaucratic industrial policy, government-led economic management, and dictatorial focus have always failed, and always will.