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Peter Gerdes's avatar

Consider the perspective of a randomly choosen person from all of human history (behind the veil of ignorance). Do they want to maximize innovation **per year**? Certainly not. They would want to maximize **Innovation per person year**.

You don't want to have more people existing at earlier, less productive, times because that makes the average human life less good. Since a smaller population both decreases innovation and person years that pass each year proportionally we should be indifferent to it.

To put it differently, If a demon caused literally everything in the universe to slow to half speed (according to his infernal clock) would that be bad because now it takes 2 years to increase productivity by 5% instead of one year? Surely not. What's relevant is the amount of human experience which occurs at each level of productivity not some arbitrary unit of time.

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Arnold Kling's avatar

This analysis seems to rely a great deal on a model in which causality runs pretty strictly from population growth to innovation. But I read history more the other way around. Innovation enabled population growth. Going forward, my intuition is that if innovators were surrounded by much better institutional support, we would see more innovation even if world population were an order of magnitude below what it is today.

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