80,000 Hours Podcast

#102 – Tom Moynihan on why prior generations missed some of the biggest priorities of all

Jun 11, 2021
This conversation features Tom Moynihan, an intellectual historian and research associate at Oxford University, who explores how past generations viewed existential risks. He reveals that until the 18th century, many believed extinction was impossible, shaped by the 'principle of plenitude.' Moynihan discusses historical perceptions of extraterrestrial life and how these ideas influenced thoughts on humanity’s permanence. Ultimately, he encourages a modern reevaluation of our understanding of extinction, existential risks, and the significance of historical context in shaping our future.
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INSIGHT

Intuitive Plenitude

  • The principle of plenitude was intuitive because it defined possibility based on frequency.
  • A new logic, challenging this principle, emerged in the late medieval era through discussions of God's omnipotence.
ANECDOTE

Lucretius and Plenitude

  • Lucretius, despite seemingly modern ideas, still adhered to plenitude.
  • He believed in other inhabited worlds and the impossibility of a kind's final extinction.
ANECDOTE

Aristotle's Cyclical History

  • Aristotle believed all knowledge has been discovered infinitely many times.
  • He even questioned whether we lived after Troy, suggesting historical recurrence.
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