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RT Roko 🐉: Many people don't understand just how brutal diminishing returns in theoretical physics were. Physics barely existed before 1820. After ...
RT Roko 🐉
Many people don't understand just how brutal diminishing returns in theoretical physics were.
Physics barely existed before 1820. After 1970, there was essentially nothing left to discover.
In 1819 there were probably less than 100 full-time paid physicists in the whole world.
By 2026 there are probably about a million physicists across academia and industry, and that number was already huge in the 1970s when physics sort of "ended" with QCD and electroweak unification.
A small, brave band of gentlemen-scholars and amateurs worked out the most important parts of physical law in the 1800s. People doing it as a hobby!
Today, vast armies of professionals equipped with supercomputers toil away in the quantum gravity dungeon, unable to make progress.
Diminishing returns are brutal.
Roko 🐉: @odinsbadeye @XiXiDu my point is that the low hanging fruits of physics were all picked in a brief window from about 1820 to 1970.
Before that, it was difficult to get anything done at all, there was no funding and almost nobody worked on physics professionally.
After that, there were ~millions of
Many people don't understand just how brutal diminishing returns in theoretical physics were.
Physics barely existed before 1820. After 1970, there was essentially nothing left to discover.
In 1819 there were probably less than 100 full-time paid physicists in the whole world.
By 2026 there are probably about a million physicists across academia and industry, and that number was already huge in the 1970s when physics sort of "ended" with QCD and electroweak unification.
A small, brave band of gentlemen-scholars and amateurs worked out the most important parts of physical law in the 1800s. People doing it as a hobby!
Today, vast armies of professionals equipped with supercomputers toil away in the quantum gravity dungeon, unable to make progress.
Diminishing returns are brutal.
Roko 🐉: @odinsbadeye @XiXiDu my point is that the low hanging fruits of physics were all picked in a brief window from about 1820 to 1970.
Before that, it was difficult to get anything done at all, there was no funding and almost nobody worked on physics professionally.
After that, there were ~millions of