Get your free personalized podcast brief

We scan new podcasts and send you the top 5 insights daily.

Near-future science fiction is a powerful tool for cultivating strategic imagination. Unlike fantasy, it presents a plausible future with key alterations, forcing the reader to problem-solve and strategize how they would adapt. This is why it's used as a training tool by elite military units.

Related Insights

Like basketball coaches who make players analyze game film to spot momentum shifts, business leaders can use 'what-if' teams. By regularly gaming out hypothetical market shifts or competitor actions, they train the organization to recognize and seize real opportunities when they arise.

Titus uses his sci-fi novel to create an "ethical crucible" for human genetic engineering, forcing readers into a binary choice between extinction and genetic modification. This medium allows for exploring high-stakes scenarios and removing the "edge cases" that often bog down real-world policy discussions.

Author Max Harms defines "rationalist fiction" not by the realism of its initial premise, but by the author's commitment to extrapolating the consequences of that premise as realistically as possible. The creative act is setting up compelling initial conditions, not bending the plot for entertainment later.

Employees often reserve their best strategic thinking for complex hobbies. By intentionally designing the work environment with clear rules, goals, and compelling narratives—like a well-designed game—leaders can unlock this latent strategic talent and make work more engaging.

Staging a coup today is hard because it requires persuading a large number of human soldiers. In a future with a robotic army, a coup may only require a small group to gain system administrator access. This removes the social friction that currently makes seizing power difficult.

The scarcest resource in AI is a positive vision for the future. Non-technical individuals can have an outsized impact by writing aspirational fiction. Stories like the movie 'Her' inspire developers and can steer the trajectory of the entire field, making imagination a critical skill.

The tech industry often builds technologies first imagined in dystopian science fiction, inadvertently realizing their negative consequences. To build a better future, we need more utopian fiction that provides positive, ambitious blueprints for innovation, guiding progress toward desirable outcomes.

Play is not just for children or sports; it's a critical adult activity for exploring 'if-then' scenarios in a safe environment. This process of low-stakes contingency testing expands our mental catalog of potential outcomes, directly improving creativity and adaptability in high-stakes situations.

Your brain processes a vividly imagined scenario and a real-life experience through similar neural pathways. This is why visualization is a powerful tool for skill acquisition and even physical change. For instance, repeatedly thinking about exercising a muscle can lead to a measurable increase in its mass, without physical movement.

Due to extreme uncertainty and a lack of real-time data, discussions about AI's future, even among top executives, are fundamentally about storytelling. The void of concrete knowledge is being filled by narratives of either utopia or dystopia, making the discourse more literary than purely analytical.