The Details Are in on How the Feds Are Blowing Your Tax Dollars
Here's the Final Tally on How Much Money Trump Raised for Hurricane Victims
Here's the Latest on That University of Oregon Employee Who Said Trump Supporters...
Watch an Eagles Fan 'Crash' a New York Giants Fan's Event...and the Reaction...
We Almost Had Another Friendly Fire Incident
Not Quite As Crusty As Biden Yet
Poll Shows Americans Are Hopeful For 2025, and the Reason Why Might Make...
Legal Group Puts Sanctuary Jurisdictions on Notice Ahead of Trump's Mass Deportation Opera...
The International Criminal Court Pretends to Be About Justice
The Best Christmas Gift of All: Trump Saved The United States of America
The Debt This Congress Leaves Behind
How Cops, Politicians and Bureaucrats Tried to Dodge Responsibility in 2024
Meet the Worst of the Worst Biden Just Spared From Execution
Celebrating the Miracle of Light
Chimney Rock Demonstrates Why America Must Stay United
OPINION

A Professor’s Message for the Holidays

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

It’s time to put aside your troubles and celebrate.

At Christmas, your creditors, competitors and even the neighbor who complains about your son’s electric guitar offers a smile and wishes you well.

Advertisement

I understand that even Donald Trump will quietly acknowledge Hillary Clinton as a cheery, charitable and clever woman.

That may be hoping for a bit too much, but this is the season we manage to reach into our reservoirs of charity and optimism to proclaim that in the New Year we will find peace with our adversaries, lose those extra pounds and finally live within our means.

We embrace hope, in part, because we remain so powerfully challenged.

Coping with Islamic terrorism, solving environmental problems threatening the planet and managing the economy to accomplish a just prosperity are tough tasks even for gifted minds like those of Barack Obama and Angela Merkel, but since biblical times tribal enmities, human excess and poverty have bedeviled our golden vision for humanity.

Still, we live at the cusp of a new and better age.

Believe what you will about climate change—the earth is getting decidedly warmer, the ice caps are melting and the consequences for civilization could be devastating. Quarreling nations must each do their part, or significant portions of the planet will become virtually uninhabitable and many fewer humans could be walking around 100 years from now.

Believe what you like about the recent Paris Climate Conference—I for one concluded Obama promised too much from America and got too little from China and others in return—virtually every nation in the world managed to put aside their differences and pledge some contribution toward accomplishing an epic transformation to a less carbon dependent civilization.

Advertisement

Accomplishing this agreement, no matter how imperfect, is something to celebrate. The last time humanity forged such common purpose was at the point of a Roman sword.

In that new civilization, human beings will be freed from the debilitating burdens thrust upon Adam and Eve when they were cast from Eden. We will no longer need toil in the fields or dark and dangerous factories.

Technology is not just about emails, selfies and Skyping your daughter who took a job in Australia. Over the next two or three decades, it will become possible to assign virtually all the mindless, backbreaking and dangerous tasks to robots that don’t use a whole lot of energy—or at least energy that soils the atmosphere.

Heretofore technologically intractable tasks like picking lettuce, framing a building or mounting a crown to repair a tooth will be wholly taken up by machines equipped with remarkable dexterity and artificial intelligence.

By the end of this century, the technology of the first Star Wars movie will seem Stone Age and scholars will wonder how 20th century futurists lacked so much imagination about the potential of science.

The real challenge—if we don’t manage to destroy ourselves through war, greed and denial of the imperative for environmental stewardship—finally will become equipping each human being with the means to engage in intellectually demanding and creative work and to share in the bounty.

Advertisement

Access to technology and energy are already remarkably cheap, and globalization is making their benefits ubiquitous—bold commercial innovations are emerging from even the poor countries of Africa. By this century’s end, continued progress could put much of economics—the study of scarcity—out of business.

Measuring and boosting GDP will no longer be the logic of progress.

And that’s this professor’s message for Christmas and the New Year. It’s all before us if we can finally embrace our nobler instincts and see the grand potential of our creator’s most precious gift—the human mind.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos