We Have No Future
For most of human history, the future was repetition.
You were born where your father was born. You did what he did. The tools changed slowly. The beliefs changed slower. History moved like a glacier. Heavy, predictable, grinding forward but barely perceptible within a lifetime.
No one needed a vision. Survival was enough.
Then came rupture.
The American Revolution tore monarchy from legitimacy.
The French Revolution detonated hierarchy.
The Industrial Revolution shattered the rhythm of agrarian life.
For the first time, the future was not inheritance. It was construction.
The Enlightenment did not whisper. It declared that the world could be redesigned. Science would expand. Rights would expand. Wealth would expand. Humanity would expand.
It was arrogant. It was naïve. It was violent in its consequences. But it was forward.
Even the Romantics, suspicious of cold reason, were not stagnant. They warned that the machine could devour the soul. William Blake saw dark mills rising over London and sensed spiritual catastrophe. But he burned with vision. He did not want less future. He wanted a different one.