Posted on 02/21/2018 7:18:04 AM PST by Red Badger
The Long Now Foundations clock is a symbol for multi-generational thinking
Jeff Bezos wants us all to be good ancestors. The Amazon supremo just tweeted that installation has begun on one of his pet projects of the last decade, the 10,000 Year Clock, also called the Clock of the Long Now.
Designed to stay accurate for that huge time period, the giant clock will tick once a year, moving its century hand every 100 years, and send out a cuckoo once a millennia just 10 times in its life. And it costs US$ 42 million. What is Bezos thinking?
Its supposed to make us think about the distant future
Credit: Rolfe Horn & The Long Now Foundation
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What is the 10,000 Year Clock for?
Humans are shortsighted and could be hurtling towards extinction. Global warming? Not our problem. Resource depletion? Let the grandchildren worry about that. Humanity is using-up Planet Earth at an alarming rate, and no generation appears to give any thought to the next.
The 10,000 Year Clock is designed to make us all think about an expanded sense of time, the massive generational impact of our decisions, and become more responsible. Its about protecting Earth, our home.
As a symbol it's supposed to change the way people think about the planet and each other. File it next to the first picture of an Earthrise taken by by Apollo 10 astronauts, or Carl Sagan's stirring Pale Blue Dot image.
That mindset makes the project similar to ex-NASA Space Shuttle astronaut Mae Jemisons 100 Year Starship project, which aims to make human interstellar travel possible by the year 2112. Bezos shared a stage with Jemison at last years Apollo 11 Gala event, at which he suggested that exploration and colonization of the solar system would make it possible to support one trillion people, mostly on Earth.
The full-size clock will show the Gregorian year in five digits, so 2018 would be shown as 02018. Why 10,000 years exactly? Most civilizations last about 10,000 years.
The clock is now being installed inside a 500 ft. shaft
Credit: The Long Now Foundation
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Who came up with the idea for the 10,000 Year Clock?
It wasn't Jeff Bezos. In his tweet he name-checked the genius of Danny Hillis, Zander Rose & the whole Clock team. He's referring to the Long Now, a San Francisco-based group for scientists, inventors, writers and futurists who hope to provide a counterpoint to today's accelerating culture and help make long-term thinking more common.
Computer scientist Danny Hillis planned the clock way back in 1989. He built a working 8ft prototype called the Clock of the Long Now in the 1990s. It chimed twice to start the new millennium on New Years Eve 1999, and now resides in London's Science Museum.
The finished clock is destined to be 500 ft tall, and Bezos' tweet is to congratulate the team on drilling the 500ft deep vertical shaft in a mountain his mountain and beginning the clocks installation. There is no completion date, but the video in his tweet shows that the clock is quickly coming together. The clock is being built by Hillis' company Applied Minds.
The clock self-corrects by phase-locking to the Sun at midday. Credit: Rolfe Horn & The Long Now Foundation
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Most of the publicity surrounding the 10,000 Year Clock comes from Jeff Bezos for two reasons. Firstly, he is financially supporting the project, and secondly, it's being built on his land in Texas. The 10,000 Year Clock facility will be built inside a mountain on Bezos' land in the Sierra Diablo mountains in West Texas, near the town of Van Horn.
It's no accident that the clock is being built in an ultra-remote location in the Texan desert. The fact that a clock is being designed to last for 10,000 years immediately gets us thinking about whether it will really last that long without being demolished or destroyed and our civilisation along with it. That's kinda the point of it in the first place.
However, it is possible to reach the clock facility if you're prepared to drive several hours from the nearest airport and hike a trail 2,000 ft. above the valley floor. Once you get to the facility, there will be a series of steel doors (to keep out animals), one of which is an airlock, followed by long tunnels and, eventually, a rock-hewn spiral staircase leading to the clock chamber.
The 10,000 Year Clock could be the first of many so-called 'millennial clocks'; another is slated for the top of a mountain in eastern Nevada surrounded by 5,000-year-old bristlecone pines among the longest-living organisms.
When finished, it will keep deep astronomical time
Credit: Rolfe Horn & The Long Now Foundation
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How does the 10,000 Year Clock work?
Most clocks lose time, and even a 99.9% accurate clock is out by 90 seconds each day, so the 10,000 Year Clock self-corrects by phase-locking to the Sun at midday.
All mechanical, powered by day/night thermal cycles, synchronized at solar noon, said Bezos in his tweet. At noon each day, the sun will be overhead and illuminate the clock chamber, and the clock built with stainless steel, titanium and dry running ceramic ball bearings will achieve a precision equal to one day in 20,000 years. Each day at noon it will chime, but never the same way twice. A sequence of ten bells will ring at noon each day, which British musician, producer and artist Brian Eno who's closely involved in the project realized meant 3,628,800 permutations. That's the same as the number of days in 10,000 years. Thanks to Eno, every single day will have a unique sound.
Although theres no completion date scheduled, the Long Now Foundation does plan to open the clock to visitors once it's ready. To be notified of exactly when, email a blank message to clockinterest@10000yearclock.net. Just make sure you get there before noon.
Theres another millennial clock planned for Nevada
Credit: Rolfe Horn & The Long Now Foundation
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Bezos' 'No Plan B' philosophy
In another nod to the 'how long will civilization last?' debate, the 10,000 Year Clock can be maintained by simple bronze-age technology. Thats predicated on the theory that human societies of the future could easily be more primitive than our own.
The 10,000 Year Clock may seem like a bizarre concept, but it fits neatly into Bezos philosophy. His space company Blue Origin wants to colonize the moon and, eventually, explore the solar system to make humanity a multi-planet species.
Weve sent robotic probes to every planet in this solar system, Bezos tweeted from the Perito Moreno Glacier in Patagonia right before the 10,000 Year Clock announcement. Earth is BY FAR the best one. We go to space to save the Earth.
His latest project may not cost as much as rockets and space exploration, but it's part of his increasingly forthright 'no Plan B' ethos. It differs hugely from Elon Musks belief that we need to colonize space because Earth will suffer a mass-extinction event. Put it in that context and his latest 'vanity project' is easy to understand; the chiming 10,000 Year Clock is humanity's wake-up call.
Jeff Bezos is also keen on finding the next Game of Thrones for Amazon
Idiot journalist.
They don’t teach ‘history’ in journalism school...................
If we’ve learned anything about this planet, it’s that it does a hard-reset every now and then - which is important. That’s how it works.
My guess is he wants to leave his “pyramid” behind so that if in the future something like that happens, it will be found.
Just my guess, but if you want to look at the bright side, think of all the mouths it fed to get it done.
Capitalism
This project can give a (admittedly tenuous) anchor to civilization. One theory is that a complete breakdown can be addressed by some at least focusing on maintaining the clock, as a connection to a civilized past and provide a focused hope for rebuilding anew.
One day we will be visited by aliens and as they are meandering around they will come across this clock. They will look at it, turn to each other and wonder who was the a$$hat who put it there.
Looks like Elon Musk envy to me.
“we can’t even find any evidence of them today.”
They will now, the damn clock. I’m reminded of the last scenes of Planet of the Apes and Heston’s discovery. Humanity never dies, it destroys itself like suicide and then is puzzled in why. We ain’t very smart. We can see the hole in the road filled with water, but we can’t seem to step over it.
rwood
Just as archeologists do today: dig up stuff in obscure locations, and often go “WTF were they thinking?”
Whose job is it to wind this thing for 10,000 years?
There will be a cave in.....
Insightful! This new batch of techno robber barons do seem to mirror the great Roman Leaders. Eventually they will bring back Caesar (or Anti-Christ)
Gobekli Teppe
I respectfully disagree. Plenty of evidence of a civilization that existed before a comet strike hit the ice caps 12,000 years ago
Can he make one I can wear? or at least one I could install in one of those old English style phone booths? ;-)
I’m surprised it wasn’t digital......................
A clock never fed a hungry child.
I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them on the sand,
Half sunk, a shatter’d visage lies, whose frown
And wrinkled lip and sneer of cold command
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamp’d on these lifeless things,
The hand that mock’d them and the heart that fed.
And on the pedestal these words appear:
“My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!”
Nothing beside remains: round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare,
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
I miss Robin, that crazy liberal.
I would be more impressed if he fixed his corrupt newspaper.
The new millennium began at 12:00:01 AM on January 1, 2001 - the clock is already off 365 days!
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Nice catch.
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