perm filename GABOR.LET[ESS,JMC] blob
sn#005478 filedate 1971-08-15 generic text, type T, neo UTF8
00100 COMPUTER SCIENCE DEPARTMENT
00200
00300 STANFORD UNIVERSITY
00400
00500 Stanford, California 94305
00600
00650 August 15, 1971
00700
00710
00720 Dr. Dennis Gabor
00730 CBS Laboratories
00740 Stamford, Connecticut
00750
00800 Dear Dr. Gabor:
00900
01000 I am afraid it is lack of imagination on your part when you
01100 assert that there are no more inventions of the importance of the
01200 telephone to be made. (I take this to be the import of the phrase
01300 "exhaustion of primitive desires by past inventions") Let me list a
01400 few fundamental inventions left to be made and reasons why they will
01500 have as much effect on human life as the telephone:
01600
01700 1. A universal automatic transportation system for material
01800 goods. Thus, when you order something from the store, it appears in
01900 a port in the wall of your apartment after a while. Its realization
02000 requires mainly a reduction in the cost of mechanical devices in
02100 human labor plus computer control plus a good design.
02200
02300 2. Computer driven automobiles which can go to a keyboarded
02400 destination without any human control. This will give children
02500 freedom of motion in the suburbs, reduce the need for new super-
02600 highways by increasing the capacity of the present ones, and reduce
02700 accidents.
02800
02900 3. The private flying machine that can fly door to door.
03000 This can probably be done with a computer-flown airplane that takes
03100 off and lands from a catapult (to reach 64 feet per second velocity
03200 in 16 feet requires that the passengers withstand 4g for 1/2 second)
03300 and which uses the Lockheed developed techniques of low noise
03400 airplanes.
03500
03600 4. A public safety system that will permit children and women
03700 to go anywhere at any time without fear of attack. It would be
03800 better to achieve this by social means, but it can be achieved by
03900 ubiquitous surveillance recording TV cameras whose records are looked
04000 at only in case of crime.
04100
04200 5. The home computer console that gives everyone instant
04300 access to all the world's information plus other services.
04400
04500 6. The individualization of design via computers that will
04600 permit individually designed articles at the present cost of mass-
04700 produced ones.
04800
04900 7. Finally, the household robot will make women's liberation
05000 really possible.
05100
05200 A burst of mechanical invention affecting everyday life
05300 terminated mainly in the 1920s by exhausting most of the
05400 possibilities of simple mechanical devices without computer control.
05500 The main effect of mechanical invention since this time has been to
05600 extend the previous goodies to larger sections of the population.
05700 This makes the upper classes restless since they don't see the spread
05800 of refrigerators and color TV to the blacks as progress. However, a
05900 new wave of goodies like those mentioned above will start soon.
06000
06100 I was really shocked at the introduction to your book on
06200 innovation; I would not have expected so much cliche pessimistic
06300 rhetoric from the author of "Inventing the Future". You must have
06400 attended too many symposia with literary types. Let me give a few
06500 examples:
06600
06700 1. "How long can it take before the toll of air traffic will
06800 approach the level of road deaths?" 1970 was the first year in which
06900 there were no deaths on scheduled airliners in the U.S. There are
07000 many ways in which collisions can be avoided in the air even if there
07100 were as many planes in the air as there are cars on the ground. The
07200 problem gets easier all the time, and eventually it will get so easy
07300 that even the clowns in the FAA will solve it.
07400
07500 2. The problem you quote from de Jouvenel has always existed.
07600 Its precise formulation is new, and, as you quote it, it is teachable
07700 to high school students.
07800
07900 3. Your assertion "The most important and urgent problems of
08000 the technology of today are no longer the satisfaction of primary
08100 needs or of archetypal wishes, but the reparation of the evils and
08200 damages wrought by the technology of yesterday." Perhaps you might
08300 say that the need for birth control technology in India is a
08400 consequence of the technology of disease control. However, the
08500 biggest famine in world history according to the Britannica occurred
08600 in India in 1769. The difference is that in 1769, Americans didn't
08700 even hear of the famine, let alone feel any responsibility to do
08800 something about it.
08900
09000 4. "...most thinking Americans are filled with grave doubts
09100 about the sanity of their society." Society is not a person with a
09200 mind that can be sane or insane. True, like a person, it can be said
09300 to make decisions which are often bad. However, to use words like
09400 "sanity" in referring to society only muddles thought and makes it
09500 harder to formulate the problem of making correct social decisions.
09600 To put it bluntly, it seems to me that when you use such language,
09700 you are merely currying favor with the literati; it can't be natural
09800 to you as a scientist.
09900
10000 5. "...the insane quantitative growth must stop". Does this
10100 mean that India must not be allowed to produce 100,000,000 tons of
10200 steel a year, for example? How do you propose to stop them?
10300
10400 The predictions in the book that involve computers were not
10500 very good because the right questions weren't asked. The effect of
10600 the Delphi technique is to average opinions, and the average expert
10700 in the current way of doing things hasn't really thought about the
10800 future in an imaginative way. When I received the Institute of the
10900 Future questionnaire on computers, I could hardly bring myself to
11000 answer the questions, they were so unimaginative.
11100
11200 I should finally mention that the survey of innovations in
11300 your book is quite useful even if it is not comprehensive in the
11400 sense it was intended to be.
11500
11600
11700 Sincerely yours,
11800
11900
12000
12100 John McCarthy
12200
12300 P.S. I hope you can bring yourself to answer this letter in spite of
12400 its complete lack of tact. I enclose printouts of two essays in order
12500 to show what I mean, and if your are agreeable to discussing these
12600 issues personally, the time will surely come when you are in my part
12700 of the country or I am in yours.