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  • The future of humanity seems insecureRapid climate change, political division,  

  • our greed and failings make it hard to look at  our species with a lot of optimism and so many  

  • people think our end is in sight. But humans have  always thought they lived in the end times. Every  

  • generation assumes they're important enough to  witness the apocalypse and then life just goes on.

  • This is a problem because it  leads to short term thinking  

  • and prevents us from creating the best world  for ourselves and our descendents. What makes  

  • this worse is that we may actually BE living at  an extremely critical moment in human history.  

  • To understand why, let us look at the  temporal window of humanity and ask:

  • When will the last human be born and  how many people will there ever be?

  • These sorts of estimates come withlot of uncertainties, so please take  

  • them with a gigantic grain of salt. To get  a sense of how many people there will be,  

  • let us see how many have already lived. Modern  humans arose some 200 thousand years ago.  

  • They were uniquely good at  making tools, telling stories,  

  • thinking abstractly, planning and working together  in large groups beyond their close family.

  • Still there were not that many of us. Surpluses  in food were sparse, survival was hard,  

  • life expectancy was low. It took us 150,000  years to grow to a population of 2 million.  

  • Improvements were gradual and eventually  led to the agricultural revolution,  

  • arguably the biggest change in our historyThis was when our numbers really started  

  • growing. It took ten thousand more years to get  to 300 million. But that increase was dwarfed  

  • by the industrial revolution. In 1800 there  were a billion of us. The human population  

  • doubled in just 120 years and then again in  fifty. Today, we number around 8 billion.

  • In total, over the last two hundred thousand years  about 117 billion humans were born and lived,  

  • and 109 billion also died. Which means that  about 7% of all humans that ever lived are alive  

  • right now. As many as were born in the first  150,000 years of human history. Every minute,  

  • 270 babies join the party. But there are not just  more people, never before have we been as healthy  

  • and well off, or lived longer. With growing  living standards our birth rates collapsed.  

  • The UN estimates that around the year 2100  we will hit our population peak and there  

  • will be 125 million people born each yearIt is pretty unlikely that birth rates will  

  • stay stable forever, but let's pretend  to make our thought experiment simpler.

  • How many people there will be in the future  depends on when our species will die out.  

  • And here we find a lot of uncertaintiesWe are able to destroy ourselves through  

  • our own inventionsbut we are also able to  find solutions to avert catastrophic risk.

  • We can change the direction of planet killer  asteroids but we've also invented nuclear weapons.  

  • We discovered antibiotics but also carry diseases  across the globe in a matter of days. Our  

  • industrial system gave us an incredible standard  of living but also changed the atmosphere in the  

  • process. It is very hard to say if human ingenuity  will prolong or shorten our species' lifespan.

  • If things go badly our end could come  suddenly. But if we manage to avoid that,  

  • we could conceivably stick around for a long  time. So every day we don't destroy ourselves  

  • may mean life for an unfathomable number of  humans. How many people are we talking about?  

  • It depends on how far our  species is going to expand.

  • Scenario 1: Humans will never leave Earth

  • If we stay on our home planet, a good metric  to look at is the extinction rate of animals  

  • that we get from the fossil record. The  average lifespan of mammalian species is  

  • in the region of 1 million years, with  some surviving up to 10 million years.  

  • Our close relative homo erectus  survived for about 1.9 million years.

  • Let us be conservative and assume that humans  will survive for a million years, which leaves  

  • us 800,000 more years to dawdle away. Assumingstable birth rate of 125 million people each year,  

  • this means there are roughly 100  TRILLION humans waiting to be born.  

  • 850 times greater than the number  of people that have ever lived.  

  • This would make everybody alive today only  0.008% of all people that will ever live.

  • Think about where this leaves you. Instead  of putting you at the end of the chaotic  

  • mess that was our past, it would mean you  live at the very beginning of something big.  

  • The start of the human story rather than the  end. Doesn't this feel incredibly different?

  • And now consider that this may be  an extremely pessimistic estimate.  

  • If we match the survival time of the most  successful mammals, then our future numbers  

  • rise to 1.2 quadrillion people that have yet to be  born. And even this seems far from our potential:  

  • As the sun slowly gets hotter and brighter, earth  will remain habitable for about 500 million years,  

  • giving so many more potential people  the chance to become actual people.

  • And now let's begin to think big.

  • Scenario 2: Humans will leave Earth

  • We went from humans worshipping  the moon, to humans walking on it,  

  • so who knows how much farther we can go? If we  don't die out within the next few hundred years,  

  • ideas that seem outlandish right  now become serious considerations.

  • If we believe that we have a chance of  surviving for maybe millions of years,  

  • then we could expand onto the other planets  or into our own artificial worlds. Life needs  

  • three things: a surface, resources and energy.  

  • Our Sun provides energy for billions of years and  there is so much water and material floating in  

  • the asteroid and kuiper belt that we could  sustain many times our current population.

  • Instead of living on planets, we could decide to  construct our own artificial worlds and habitats.  

  • With resources and energy so abundant, we could  try out different types of society and ways of  

  • life. An interconnected civilization spanning the  solar system would create the basis of existence  

  • for an absurd number of individuals, orders of  magnitude more than if we stick to earth, even  

  • if it only existed for a few million years. This  future doesn't have to be grim and dark as science  

  • fiction likes to paint it. With quadrillions of  people waiting to be born, we will have billions  

  • of doctors working on curing cancer, billions  of problem solvers working on ending poverty and  

  • billions of video game developers making life  fun. More humans may actually mean more progress.

  • Another upside of leaving earth and spreading  out is that it becomes much harder for us to  

  • become extinct, as you need a solar system  wide catastrophe to catch everybody.  

  • So aside from nearby supernovae  or Gamma Rays bursts,  

  • humanity would be relatively safe from  extinction, maybe for billions of years.

  • If we manage to survive for that long, slow  evolution or genetic engineering might split us  

  • into multiple species, or we might intentionally  keep ourselves the same as we are now.  

  • So to account for that, we'll just talk  about people from now on, instead of humans.

  • Ok. Now let us think really big.

  • Szenario 3: People leave the Solar System

  • As enormous as the solar system is, it is just  one star system among billions in the milky way.  

  • If future people can colonize, say, 100 billion  stars and live there for 10 billion years, while  

  • each generating 100 million births per year, then  we can expect something like a hundred Octillion  

  • lives to be lived in the future. This is a 1 with  29 zeros, a hundred thousand trillion, trillion.

  • We can spin this up as much as we like. The  Andromeda Galaxy will merge with the Milky way,  

  • adding another trillion stars for us to settleRed Dwarfs stay active for up to a trillion  

  • years and future civilizations might even find  energy for their habitats around black holes.  

  • A sufficiently advanced civilization of our  descendants might even try to reach other  

  • galaxy groups. While these numbers are mind  blowing, they may underestimate the number of  

  • unborn people by many orders of magnitude. If we  divide the total energy available in a galaxy by  

  • the average energy needs of a single personthen we get a tredecillion potential lives.  

  • A million, trillion, trilliontrillion potential people.

  • Conclusion

  • Hopefully what has become evident is that  if we don't kill ourselves in the next  

  • few centuries or millennia, almost all humans  that will ever exist, will live in the future.  

  • Which brings us back to us, in the presentWe exist at a highpoint of human history,  

  • with incredible possibilities at our graspTechnological, environmental and societal.  

  • What we do matters for all the  people who do not exist yet.

  • So while it is not en vogue to think  about humanity's long term future with  

  • optimismor to think about it at all –,  maybe this has given you a bit of perspective.  

  • If we screw up the present, so many  people may never come to exist.  

  • Quadrillions of unborn humans are at our mercy. Even if we go with fairly conservative estimates,  

  • the unborn are by far the largest group of people  – and the most disenfranchised. Somebody who might  

  • be born in a thousand or even a million years  deeply depends on us today for their existence.

  • This is why it is important to think about the  distant future and why our presence is so crucial,  

  • why it matters what we do today. One day the  last human will be born. We don't know when.  

  • But if we change our perspective from  us living at the end of the human story,  

  • to us living at the very beginning we can  not only build a wonderful world for us  

  • and for them but also for  countless numbers of others.

  • HUGE announcement: we are launching Kurzgesagt in  six more languages! Arabic, Brazilian Portuguese,  

  • French, Hindi, Japanese and Korean, on top of our  English, German and Spanish channels. To bring  

  • new perspectives and a love for science to as  many people as possibleespecially to some  

  • languages that are underserved because  it is not profitable to translate to.  

  • If enough people watch our new channels, we  hopefully can run them for many years to come!

  • This is where we need YOUR help. It takes uslot of time, effort and yes, money to translate  

  • our videos properly and run so many channels  – so to make this sustainable, please help  

  • us spread the word!If you are a native in one of  these languages, share our videos on social media  

  • and tell your friends and familymake people  in your native language aware that it exists.

  • This multi language expansion is  supported by Open Philanthropy,  

  • an organization that tries to do as much good as  possible. They want to help us spread awareness  

  • of science, and ideas for how YOU can help  humanity thrive. Their values align with  

  • ours in many fundamental ways so we are going to  work with them on more projects in the future.

  • So please help us spread the word  – and thank you for watching.

The future of humanity seems insecureRapid climate change, political division,  

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