Foresight Institute

Foresight Institute
Formation1986 (1986)
TypeNonprofit research institute
PurposeResearch into nanotechnology and the existential risk
Key people
Eric Drexler, Christine Peterson
Websiteforesight.org/our-history/

The Foresight Institute (Foresight) is a San Francisco-based research non-profit that promotes the development of nanotechnology and other emerging technologies, such as safe AGI, biotech and longevity.[1][2][3]

Foresight runs four cross-disciplinary program tracks to research, advance, and govern maturing technologies for the long-term benefit of life and the biosphere: Molecular machines nanotechnology for building better materials, biotechnology for health extension, and computer science and crypto commerce for intelligent global cooperation.[4]

Foresight also runs a program on "existential hope",[5][6][7] pushing forward the concept coined by Toby Ord and Owen Cotton-Barrett in their 2015 paper "Existential risk and Existential hope: Definitions", in which they wrote

we want to be able to refer to the chance of an existential eucatastrophe; upside risk on a large scale. We could call such a chance an existential hope. ... Some people are trying to identify and avert specific threats to our future – reducing existential risk. Others are trying to steer us towards a world where we are robustly well-prepared to face whatever obstacles come – they are seeking to increase existential hope.[8]

Foresight's stated strategy is to focus on creating a community that promotes beneficial uses of new technologies and reduce misuse and accidents potentially associated with them.[9]

Foresight runs a one-year Fellowship program aimed at giving researchers and innovators the support and mentorship to accelerate their projects while they continue to work in their existing career.[10][11]

Since 2021, Foresight has hosted a podcast about grand futures called "The Foresight Institute Podcast" and shares all their material as open source via YouTube with lectures from scientists and other relevant actors within their fields of interest.[12]

In addition, Foresight hosts Vision Weekend, an annual conferences focused on envisioning positive, long-term futures enabled by science and technology.[13] The institute holds conferences on molecular nanotechnology and awards yearly prizes for developments in the field.[14][15]

  1. ^ Guston, David H. (2010). Encyclopedia of nanoscience and society. London: SAGE. p. 253. ISBN 978-1452266176. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  2. ^ "Biotech & Health Extension". Foresight Institute.
  3. ^ "Computation: Intelligent Computation". Foresight Institute.
  4. ^ "The Foresight Institute Podcast". Foresight Institute.
  5. ^ "Foresight: Existential Hope Program". Foresight Institute.
  6. ^ Cotton-Baratt, Owen; Ord, Toby (2015). Existential Risk and Existential Hope: Definitions (PDF) (Report). Future of Humanity Institute. Technical Report #2015-1.
  7. ^ ""Existential Hope" is the website the world needs". 30 May 2018.
  8. ^ Owen Cotton-Barratt; Toby Ord (2015). "Existential Risk and Existential Hope: Definitions" (PDF). Foresight Institute.
  9. ^ "Foresight Institute Launches Podcast on Technology and Science for Long Term Flourishing Futures". Archived from the original on 2021-07-15.
  10. ^ "Senior Research Fellows - Foresight Institute". Archived from the original on 2019-07-08.
  11. ^ "Foresight Institute is Accelerating High Risk High Rewards Projects to Heal the Planet".
  12. ^ "The Foresight Institute Podcast".
  13. ^ "At the Foresight Vision Weekend – Soft Machines".
  14. ^ Oliver, By Richard W. (2003). The biotech age: the business of biotech and how to profit from it (2nd ed., rev. ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill. p. 86. ISBN 978-0071414890. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
  15. ^ Milburn, Colin (2008). Nanovision: Engineering the future. Durham, N.C.: Duke University Press. ISBN 978-0822391487.

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