15 WAYS THE WORLD WILL BE AWESOME IN 2050
When you consider
the ongoing social and economic progress and the coming innovations in science
and technology, there's plenty of room for optimism
CHILD MORTALITY
Between 1990 and
2012, the number of under-5 child deaths went from 90 deaths per 1,000 live
births to 48 deaths per 1,000 live births, according to a 2013 report from
UNICEF .
The Copenhagen Consensus on Human Challenge report ex pects
the rate dropping to 31 per 1,000 live births in 2050.
VACCINES AND CURES
Researchers are confident that within 20 years they can
design a vaccine to stop the spread of HIV , which currently kills anywhere
from 1.5 million to 2 million people per year. A US vaccine already exists for
meningitis. A rheumatoid arthritis drug recently cured a young child's
leukemia.
A modified measles vaccine put another woman's cancer into
remission.
LIVE FOREVER
In the coming decades, scientists hope to upload the
contents of human brains into computers, allowing people to live forever.
Neuroscientist Randal Koene and Russian financial-backer Dmitry Itskov are
trying to transfer human consciousness and brain functions to an artificial
body by 2045 by “mapping the brain, reducing its activity to computations, and
reproducing those computations in code,“ according to Popular Science.
FEWER POOR
“By 2035, there will be no more poor countries,“ Bill Gates
wrote earlier this year. The global poverty ratio will fall from about 21% in
2005 to less than 2.5% in 2050, and the number of people living in absolute
poverty will decline by another billion, according to the United Nation's Food
and Agriculture Organizations.
ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE
Hans Moravec of Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics
Institute predicts that by 2050 freely moving robots that outperform humans
both physically and intellectually will run entire businesses by themselves.
That could allow humans to “occupy their days with a variety of social,
recreational and artistic pursuits, not unlike today's wealthy leisure
classes,“ he wrote in Scientific American.
CLEAN ENERGY
If the world invests enough in clean energy , we will be able
to rely almost entirely on renewable energy by 2050 -cutting energy sector
greenhouse gas emissions by 80%, according to a World Wildlife Fund (WWF)
report.
SELF-DRIVING CARS
In the next decade, major car makers expect to release cars
with self-driving features, such as steering, parking, gear-shifting, and
braking, the Milken Institute predicts. Experts say most driverless cars will
operate entirely without a human occupant's control by 2035.
Driverless cars will be safer because they eliminate human error, which causes 90% of car accidents, according to the Institute. Electric cars will also be widespread by 2050 -a tremendous benefits for the environment.
Driverless cars will be safer because they eliminate human error, which causes 90% of car accidents, according to the Institute. Electric cars will also be widespread by 2050 -a tremendous benefits for the environment.
GENDER EQUALITY
The rising
participation of women in the workforce will continue to change dynamics at
home. In 2050, men and women in much of the developed world will do an equal
share of childcare and housework, according to an Oxford University study of 16
European and Bloomberg North American countries, in addition to Australia and
Israel.
GLOBAL LITERACY
Currently , 23.6% of
the global population can't read, costing about 7% of worldwide GDP , according
to “ A Scorecard for Humanity ,“ a report from the Copenhagen Consensus Center.
By 2050, experts estimates that illiteracy rates will fall to
just 12% and cost only about 3.8% of GDP .
FEWER WARS
From 2009 to 2050,
the number of countries involved in internal armed conflicts will decrease by
more than 50%, according to a report from International Studies Quarterly . The
study predicted that, in 2050, 7% of countries will be embroiled in internal
conflicts, down from 15% in 2009. Reasons for the decline of violence include
more education and the high cost of war. “It has become too expensive to kill
people,“ the report's co-author University of Oslo Political Science Professor
Håvard Hegre told Apollon. “Modern society is dependent on economic
development. It is too expensive to use violence to destroy this network.“
INTERNET EVERYWHERE
In “The World We Made,“ Forum for the Future founder Jonathon
Porritt predicts that by 2050, more than 8 billion people will go online, 97.5%
of the population then. Currently , about 40% of the globe has internet access,
with 78% of users in developed countries and 32% in developing countries.
That's about 2.85 billion people, many of whom get internet access from mobile
phones.
ORGAN TRANSPLANTS
Technology is unlocking ways to prolong life while people
wait for transplants. Dialysis replaces kidneys for people who need a
transplant, and, more recently , artificial hearts have been able to keep some
patients alive while they wait for a new one. In the next 35 years or so,
artificial and lab-grown organs will create a more permanent solution for
patients, who won't have to wait for another person to die before getting a
life-sustaining organ. We are already implanting lab-grown bladders and
vaginas. Other organs -from hearts and lungs to skin -are on their way .
REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY
REPRODUCTIVE TECHNOLOGY
These days, women
only have a very general sense of when in their lives they'll stop being
fertile, but in the future, women will have more “personalized“ biological
clocks so they'll know exactly when they'll stop being able to make babies,
Alexis Madrigal has written in The Atlantic. Couples of the future will also
have a better idea of when they should try to conceive. Personal hormone
trackers that detect bodily changes through the skin could become a normal part
of tracking our fertility .
DESIGNER BABIES
Scientists are
currently working on genetic engineering to help make sick children healthy by
removing or replacing diseased genes. This could later be used to perfect
children by genetically engineering away crooked teeth or bad eyesight, improve
IQ. “[I] n a couple of decades, and certainly by 2050 ... we'll choose its sex and
its appearance and stuff like that, but we can bump up his IQ by 10 points, or
by really giving the very latest technology , you get 15 points more of IQ,“
Yale professor and computer scientist David Gelernter told Big Think.
UNIVERSAL TRANSLATOR
The “universal
translator“ -an imaginary device that lets people who speak different languages
communicate instantly -has been featured in sci-fi shows like “Star Trek.“ The
Economist noted last year that it may not be long before automatic simultaneous
translation becomes the norm in the real world, too. In the future, you may be
able to go to a foreign country and speak fluently with the locals just by
wearing a pair of special goggles or using a phone app.
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