Clarke’s Third Law:
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic.
—Arthur C. Clarke, "Profiles of The Future", 1961
Today’s recommendation: spare two minutes to watch a mind expanding
video:
The Floating University presents a clip of Dr. Michio Kaku talking about “the difference between ideas
that are beyond our technical capabilities today but will be available within
the next century, ideas that will be doable 1000 years from now, and ideas that
violate the known laws of physics.” “Surprisingly,” he observes, “very little
falls into the third category.” Most of what we see in science fiction is
possible within the next 100 years.
Kaku’s talk illustrates the principle depicted in my
favorite futurist diagram: the Cone of Plausibility.
The boundaries of what is plausible/possible expand outward
over time. Hand-held mobile technology—which would have seemed magical a
hundred years ago—is now ubiquitous. “Stargate” technology is science fiction
now—but maybe our great grandchildren will step through a gate to a different
universe in 2100.
So, when doing forecasting and scenario development for your
museum’s planning process, question assumptions.
Don’t be too quick to dismiss a new technology as “impossible.” Ask, “does this
violate the laws of the known universe?” And, if not, ask instead “when will it be possible?”

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