A Philosophical Start to 2023

We are once again at a transition moment in history. Where our journey goes from here could be exceptionally good or absurdly bad. This mirrors past moments, such as the transition into the Agrarian Age, which gave us early high cultures but also various dark ages. Or more recently the transition into the Industrial Age, with democracies flourishing, but also fascism and communism killing tens of millions.

In the past few years we have had incredible unlocks across many fields. To name just a few, in computation we are making real progress on artificial intelligence; in biology, we can now read and write genetic code; in energy, we are closing in on nuclear fusion.

At the same time we are facing unprecedented threats. The climate crisis is accelerating at a pace faster than most of the dire predictions. Our democracies are moribund with bloated and risk-averse bureaucracies. With social media and easy image/video manipulation and creation we live in post-truth world. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has edged us closer to the possibility of nuclear war.

The threats are truly scary and I completely understand why some people find it hard to get out of bed. The opportunities can be anxiety inducing in their own ways, even if you don’t think a superintelligence will wipe out humanity any day now. At all times there are people seeing that opportunity is elsewhere, finding themselves trapped in stagnant fields. Personally I am excited by the opportunities. But even excitement carries potential failure modes with it, such as “all work and no play.”

So where does this leave me? Aristotle was wrong about a lot of things, but I quite like his conception of virtues as intermediates between too little and too much of something. For example, courage sits between cowardice and rashness. In a similar vein I try to find middle paths between ignoring threats and despairing about them, between dismissing opportunities and glorifying them, and between asceticism and hedonism.

Finding these balance points is an ongoing process as it is easy to be drawn away to either extreme. The story of Odysseus needing to navigate between Scylla and Charybdis can be read as a metaphor for this challenge. As an aside, the same is true for making choices in startups and I have a series of blog posts about that.

I am sharing this framework in the hope that it may be helpful to others. Also if more people start thinking and operating this way, maybe we can get past the current state of discourse which favors extremes.

May you all find the right middle paths in 2023!

Posted: 2nd January 2023 – Comments
Tags:  philosophy life personal 2023

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  1. thalgrumm reblogged this from continuations and added:
    The phrase: “Everything in moderation”, properly applied, is very very useful.
  2. perryismangil reblogged this from continuations and added:
    I like middle paths.
  3. continuations posted this
    We are once again at a transition moment in history. Where our journey goes from here could be exceptionally good or...

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