Hi everyone, I am developing a project to help people engage in constructive conversations about certain aspects of society 100 years in the future. I woud be very grateful if you could let me know which one of the 8 prompt on this website (https://www.22ndcenturyhub.com/) I have develop you find more interesting (you can also engage in a conversation with the AI, as I built in a GPT API). That would help me in further developing more prompts, I have about 60 at the moment. Thanks a lot in advance!

  • Valmond@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Well this makes you sound like an incel:

    Female leadership Women lead in 2124. What skills should kids learn for this empathetic new world

    “Females” aren’t empatic and “males” intelligent or some bs.

    That said, I would recommend you read Snowcrash. Still a probable future IMO.

    Also, the 100 years is really way too far away, you won’t get “Amortals” and “Mortals” living like in something similar to our society, that’s just stupid (IMO). If you want to figure out how life can be in 100 years, you need to figure out how it’s going to be in 10 years first! Can you do that? Or else you’re just messing around, which is fine too.

    So geopolitics and macro economy is what I’d recommend. And traveling.

    BTW you forgot Atomically Precise Manufacturing or APM (simplistic star trek replicators basically), potentially on schedule for 2035…

    • ChrononautOP
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      1 month ago

      Fair enough about the incel comment. The idea is more about letting people “mess around”m as I don’t believe in anybody having much ability to predict the future more than couple of months ahead. But I see the value of letting people engage in this kind of conversation, and people I have been doing this so far found it a very interesting way to discover more about their opionions and values, the one of others and also about what the future might bring, and this sometimes help shift perspective on the present. Thanks for the book recommendation and for the Atomically Precise Manufacturing, also explored nicely in Life 3.0 btw.