 Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler. Today I'm chatting with Stuart Brand, and Stuart is an individual who is above all else an individual and who defies summary. But think of him as someone who was there early or there first in a multitude of movements, including cyber-culture, psychedelics, the importance of Native Americans in their philosophy, the whole earth catalog, the entire San Francisco scene, the Long Now Foundation, and the notion of the importance of durability and the idea of maintenance, the idea of bringing back woolly mammoths to life, and much, much more. Stuart Brand, welcome. Oh, thanks. It's a delight and an honor to be here. Thinking back on your entire life, in which ways do you see yourself as a product of the Cold War? I was in a town that was in Rockford, Illinois that was rated as number seven on the list of the American cities to be destroyed by the Soviet Union with bombs because we built machine tools, and they thought that was upstream of American industry and therefore blah, blah, blah. I was younger than 10 by then, and so I had nightmares about wandering around in a destroyed Rockford where I was the only person left alive. So I had a certain built-in apprehension, and among things that led to, as you may remember, I think you're old enough to remember when the mushroom cloud of the atomic explosion was the sort of symbol of human civilization at that point. That was the way global everything thought about itself was the threat of nuclear annihilation. And the photograph of the Earth from space that came along, 68 and 69, 70 from the Apollo program, completely replaced that nuclear cloud with an image of a very hopeful-looking Earth. And it's interesting because I realize now the Earth is sort of being deployed, that photograph which was so hopeful and green and better than the mushroom cloud is now evoked a lot in context of climate change. And once again, it's sort of an image of a threat rather than a promise. So am I correct in thinking of you of somehow taking the research environment of World War II, the notion of threat, but redeveloping the ideas of the computer and the network forum to put forward some more optimistic, also more decentralized vision of the future? Yeah, I think there's some motivations for all of that. And I paid very close attention, as I started to pay attention to things, to the research library and electronics that was going on at MIT. And they were studying Shannon's version of information. They were studying how communications, electronic communications, and then digital communications were transforming humanity, basically. And so that was a set of premises. This was before we had Moore's Law, but I had a sense of a self-enhancing process that was going to not just change everything once, but change it many times. That's what exponentials do, if they keep going. And so I sort of rode that wave of an engineering understanding of civilization that I have to this day. And how is it that you became such a decentralized? Oh, God, decentralized. That's entry. You're right. Well, I mainly, I think you probably see this with the artists that you study. I got a degree in biology from Stanford and then was going off to be an army officer. But in the course of that, I started hanging out with artists and bohemians in North Beach in San Francisco. This is the late 50s, early 60s. And so my first calling was as a professional photographer that then turned into a so-called creative photographer doing art. And I was doing multimedia with a group called USCO in New York and basically took on the role as an artist in the world. And that kind of stuck. And so my media would change a lot. I would start nonprofits and sometimes businesses and various things, but it was always this not part of a hierarchical organization and not trying to build a hierarchical organization. It was basically enhancing creativity at the individual level. And so with the whole earth catalog that led to a kind of a lazy libertarianism that I later got over when I worked for Governor Brown of the state of California. But it was and remember also as a biologist and evolution, Darwinian evolution is the most decentralized thing that you can imagine. It's way beyond the market economy is something that runs itself and is self-organizing at every level and at every scale. And so I haven't answered that question before. So answering at this time, I think I've talked myself into being a Darwinian. What was the influence of Nikos Kazensakis on your thought? The Greek author, Zorba the Greek, right? Yeah, Zorba the Greek and the just the modern sequel and so on, which I think I'm the only person who read. There was a strong committed romanticism there. It was also clear in Ein Rand, who I also paid attention to for a while before the preposterousness of it all took it over. But Kazensaki had this sort of commit everything to your theory of the world, even if it's wrong. And I got over that also because that's that way lies madness and also great destruction. But it was fun to go down that road with him. He's a beautiful writer and thinker. In which ways is your thought drawing from America's pre-industrial past? Well, I old enough to have actually lived with ice boxes. Ice is what kept the refrigerators cold in Michigan in our summers, and we used outhouses. So to a certain extent, I'm just grounded in Midwestern forest living. But also I for some reason picked up a strong through a writer named Kenneth Roberts, a strong identification with New England and kind of traditional New England. Book Minister Fuller later played right into that for me. And so all of that has a kind of grounded continuity. I was one of the three guns Midwesterners where I started with a BB gun and then got a pellet rifle and then a 22 and then a more serious rifle. So hunting and fishing were part of the world I was in. I didn't do much of either one, but that was who we were. He wanted to be a good outdoorsman. Alfred Hitchcock's rear window. How did it matter for you? Oh, God. Well, you know, because of the name James Stewart, because he was kind of lanky and laconic. I identified with him. My older brother, Mike, I figured it was Bert Lancaster, but I was James Stewart. And so two movies that Stewart made were rear window where he was with Grace Kelly, and he was a photojournalist. And that looked exciting. And I later became a photojournalist. And then also he was in a movie called Broken Arrow, which was the first movie that was liberal about American Indians. It was really, really well written, well researched on Chiricahua Apache culture. And James Stewart there is the guy who connects with Indians. And one night later, married an Indian woman, Lois Jennings, we used to play scenes from that where she's watching him shaving and wondering what the hell he's doing because Indians don't shave. And we just played that stuff out. So James Stewart was a handy character to identify with for me. And what do you think is the major intellectual influence from Native American or Indian perspectives on your thought? Is it the idea of maintenance, something else? Well, part of it is that, I mean, it surprised for me. I've been surprised a couple of times. I was surprised in Venice that it was basically an Asiatic town. I was surprised by the Indians I was photographing in Oregon in 1963, I guess it was, that it was such a rich and active culture. These was not people in the past with feathers and teepees. These was people in the present. They were doing a wild horse round up. They were cowboys, not, you know, cowboys and Indians together. And rather different cowboys than the ones I'd seen. The white cowboys tended to be very ferociously individualistic and competitive. And the Indian cowboys I saw were much, much more collaborative. And there was a gentleness, a constant humor, welcome to people like me. So when I started hanging out, I was inspired by that experience to visit a lot of reservations and just hang out with the Indians. I eventually did a multimedia show called America Needs Indians. And that turned out to become a point of reference for the hippie subculture. And it was basically one subculture paying attention to another subculture for inspiration and a sense of identity. So the long hair convergence, as it was called, was a way for the older Indians, the long hair gentlemen, and the younger Indians who were trying to decide who to be because they had a lot of choices, realizing that the continuity of their native culture was a really valuable thing. Not something to feel bad about or to flee from. And that's played out very well. So Indians are in way better shape now than they were when I first started paying attention. Or when Marlon Brando did, before I got to know Marlon, he was basically at every place that I went to before I was hanging out with the fish Indians in Washington with the sort of revolutionary Indians in Oklahoma. And it was regarded with affection and respect by the Indians that I met. Now if I try to place you in the earlier part of your career, and if I compare you to Buck Minster Fuller, Norbert Wiener, Gregory Bateson, what are the key variables for you disagree with them? How should I sum up intellectually that difference? I bought Robert Wiener, I guess, first, and he shelled up very well. Buck Minster Fuller, the artist I was hanging out with, were paying close attention to him and to Marshall McLuhan. And he was this amazing thinker who sort of revolutionized his whole behavior and his whole thought patterns around what he thought was a more productive way to behave from the think in the world. The only person I know who's that radical with himself is Kevin Kelly, who occasionally takes an ocean and just goes all the way down just to see what's there. So Buck only really changed himself once, but it was an impressive change. When I came across Gregory Bateson, he was sort of the corrective for Buck Minster Fuller for me, because Fuller was so totally an engineer, what Bateson would call a kind of an input-output approach to understanding and solving everything, whereas Bateson was much more, he was aware that every system is basically self-referential to some degree, which that's the kind of thing Fuller would never take on, and hierarchically organized at a very deep conceptual level, and that we are always immersed in the system that we think we're isolating something from. And so Gregory was wonderfully dubious about engineering solutions, about naive intention, and went a little far in the mystical direction for me, and so there were later corrections for that for me, because I've kind of gone a mystical route back when I studied comparative origin at Stanford, and that turned out to be eventually non-productive, and I think counterproductive, often people go down a mystical or romantic route, but that was all stuff that I was kind of working through, and I got to know Fuller, I got to know Gregory Bateson very well, I never met Wiener, but I hung out later with people like Marvin Minsky and other part of the MIT intelligentsia, who are really still my frame of reference. So in 1968, the whole earth catalog, you have the view that what the world needs is a photo of the earth appearing to be one thing. What is the photo we need today? Well, interesting is the various photos of earth, and one of the things I learned early on is people fixed on basically two photographs, the earth rise photograph of the moon in the foreground, which was powerful because he saw in one frame of reference a dead planet and a living planet, and boy, the difference is striking, and you're glad that you're on the living planet, and it sort of incites you to want to make sure that it stays living. And then there's the so-called blue marble where the photograph is taken with the sun behind the spaceship, behind the camera, and so you see there's no crescent, there's no gibbous earth, it's just a big round earth like people expect, which of course is the rarest photograph you can take, you have to be right in line with the sun to get that image. But there were thousands of other photographs of earth. Soviets took some, we took countless ones, and eventually I found their drawer at the NASA headquarters in Washington, where they all are. I just paged through her and, you know, picked out these amazing images and started using them, and later whole earth catalogs. I think one of the best things that's happened in this last century is that outside the planet perspective, and every astronaut comes back with stories of how amazing it was, even though they're trained for and prepared for being amazed. They are then really amazed by getting out there in the photograph. It's just a glimpse of how powerful it is to be off-planet and see the planet as a whole. So that, I think, will continue as we explore the rest of the solar system, mostly with robots sometimes with humans. Lately, I don't think we're going to the stars, Tyler. No. I think it's too far. What do you think? I don't think we are either. I think it's impossible. Because of the distance. Because, and the wear and tear on bodies, even if you freeze them. And, you know, physical space is not what is scarce. So why not Nevada, I like to say. Okay, right. How about space colonies? Where are you on those? Right outside the Earth, I think there will be some. But I've not for a long time been very optimistic about space as the future of progress. I just don't see what's the scarce input out there that we really need. So if you think, well, the Earth is so crowded, we must go elsewhere. But if you've lived in New Jersey or the Netherlands or, you know, South Korea, that hardly seems like an imperative. Exactly. I think I share that. I think it'll be basically voluntary and of interest. Science fiction can make great use of the generationships and so on. But Kim Stanley Robinson recently did a book called, I think, Aurora, where basically makes your point in my point that, even if you get people out that far, the wear and tear on the social fabric, on the biology, on everything, you cannot isolate a very complex biological system like humans for that long and expect to get anywhere that's useful. What was the nature of your mother's interest in space and space colonies? She seemed almost obsessed with it. Yeah, she was an ambassador girl who was a liberal in probably a not very liberal town in Northern Illinois. And she kind of fell in love with Wernher Van Braun and the very early space stuff. And so she got all the Willy Lay and the other kind of popular colliers and Saturday Evening Post magazines and books that came out at that time. Lauding, Going to the Moon, Going to Mars. She loved all that stuff. And later in life, I got to know an astronaut named Rusty Schweiker. I took and we went to see the movie, The Right Stuff. My mother and Rusty, this astronaut, went to that movie together. And that was a real connection for her to the dream. Do you think the images of the Navy UFO videos will have cultural resonance the way the image of a single whole earth did? Oh, I don't track on that at all. But evidently, you do. What do you see there? I see a very serious puzzle that our military and CIA cannot figure out at all. I suppose I think there's a modest chance it's an actual alien drone probe. Probably not a very interesting drone probe just sent out to follow us and then run away. I've given that five or 10% in my estimations, but I find it very puzzling. It forces me to think about our world a lot, that we could have multiple sensory sources of data measuring an object that moves very quickly. And we simply cannot figure out what it is. And it dates back to at least 2004, possibly much longer. So to simply say, oh, it's the China or it's laser induced plasma, a lot of explanations just don't quite seem to cut it. Good. Well, I'll keep some mystery in your life. There's things like that that I sort of just shrug and adopt a two-minded approach. It might be true. Is it something I can do anything about? Is it something that's going to affect me? If not, I'll just stay open to further news. But in the meantime, kind of shrug at it. Because one of the things you probably notice as you get older is you've seen a lot of illusions come and go. And I've seen a lot of the world has doomed illusions come and go. Y2K, when we got all the computers are going to stop because they don't know how to handle the year 2000 and stuff like that. On and on, peak oil and one thing after another. So I've become a trying to encourage a certain sense of perspective and realism about when people say that the world is going to end because of this that or the other thing. Humanity has been around for a long time now. The world has been around for a long time now. Biology is incredibly resilient and robust. And I think the world ending trope is just a waste of mind. When you put out the whole earth catalog, how much did you think about the font and style of the early editions? Well, I was I stole everything. The typeface, the Windsor typeface I used on the the whole earth catalog, there's sort of become now the typeface and hippied on apparently when I look at some of the nostalgia stuff. That was the L.L. Bean type font that they used. As I admired, I was building on my father's interest in in mail order catalogs. And L.L. Bean was one of the ones we really liked. And there was a kind of a straightforward New England honesty about it that I really appreciated. And so he would have a leather belt in there for $2 and 25 cents. And the write up on it instead of, you know, this will make you more of a man. I just said, it's pretty good, a little leather belt, $2 and 25 cents. And that kind of pragmatic clarity and succinctness, it took us a model of how to review things in the whole earth catalog. Do you know what I think of when I see editions of that catalog? I wonder, how did you manage to typeset the whole thing? Oh, well, a couple of things made possible, self publishing a book that ambitious. And one of them was the IBM Selectric Composer. It was the golf ball striker where you could take one golf ball that had all of the letters on it, in a particular size in font, put on another one italic or whatever. And so you could do very complex typesetting with basically a kind of a jumped up electric typewriter. And so that let us do really good compositing right there in real time. And likewise photography, getting half tones, there was a brand new device that would let you make half tones. And then lots of times I just clipped stuff out of magazines and books and just pasted it down and then pasted up. We originally used beeswax to in a big old frying pan, electric frying pan with a mouth of beeswax, and you just paste that in the back of something and slap it down on the page. And that was how we laid it down. How is it that the whole earth catalog ended? It was a best seller, had big cultural impact, I reached Steve Jobs, why did it stop? You could have just sold the rights and sold out, right? I fucked up. The original one was 64 pages and $5. And the idea was each one would be bigger and cost less and be better. And that went on. And as you can imagine, we were doing this every six months. And that put a, I didn't know about taking breaks or vacations or things like that. So I was bearing down pretty incessantly on this thing and getting it right and getting it better. And I was like, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know. So I was bearing down pretty incessantly on this thing and getting it right and getting it better each time and all of that. And so I went down my own kind of asymptotic black hole. And one writer said, by the end of the whole earth catalog, Stuart Brander's a wreck. And I was a wreck. So rather than just, you know, retire and hand it over to somebody else, again, kind of with an artist impulse, I wanted to see what happens if you take a full blown success and just stop it and see what happens. My turned out wrong hypothesis was that others would immediately step into that very obvious opportunity in the market and fill it perhaps better in many different ways that did not happen. But what did happen is as soon as I named the last whole earth catalog, the last whole earth catalog, that turned out to be the best possible marketing device you'll ever come up with. And calling something the last anything turns out to, if it's honest, which it was at the time, it gets people. And so that book became best seller, it became, got the National Book Award. It was a big deal. And in fact, two different Broadway producers got in touch with me saying that they wanted to do a Broadway play titled The Last Whole Earth Catalog. And with, you know, people playing volleyball between scenes and Paul Simon was going to write the lyrics and songs. I asked Paul Simon if that was really true. He said, you know, went away like things do. So, but I was, I was on a real downward slope by the marriage falling apart, my fault. And so I was on the wreck for a few years. Why aren't the top entrepreneurs of Silicon Valley more interested in the visual arts? You have been your entire life, but it seems they are not. Why is that? I have no idea. Hippies in general were not very good on the visual arts, except for comics, Robert Kromm and so on. We were terrific on music. I'm not no good on music at all. But I was trained as and then worked as a graphic photographer. I studied graphic design. I even studied magazine design back at Stanford and then took a bunch of classes afterwards at San Francisco State College and in the San Francisco Art Institute. So I think the exception there is Steve Jobs who basically studied visual design somewhat at Reed College and and when he became fascinated by design as design that really played out with, you know, Apple and I'm glad I got Apple stock because I knew Steve Jobs. So what do you think is missing in Silicon Valley because of the slack of interest in the visual arts? Jobs aside. Well, you and I both know Patrick Collison and I see Patrick as a kind of a whenever anybody says something kind of disparaging about Silicon Valley and tech bro and so on. I think that Patrick can think well that's because he's sort of personally the one I know of the current set. You know, I've had some people who said have gotten touch and said admiring things like Mark Andreessen and Jack at Twitter and Chris Cox at Facebook. So I feel some personal connection there, but what I'm jibbering about here is I have no theory of Silicon Valley at all, Tyler. What's yours? Well, striped press books are beautiful. I would stress that. But maybe maybe there's something about the engineering mindset that in some ways runs counter to the aesthetic mindset. That's interesting. They may come together with psychedelics, but not in the arts. Okay, I sort of buy that. And that would be a program for I think engineering and you see a fair amount of MIT of trying to keep their engineers from being too mentally siloed into just solving problems with numbers. Now, you first took LSD, if I understand correctly, as part of a military experiment, military, but there's probably military money in it. What led you to take that plunge? Someone said do this. It wasn't a known thing back then. Why did you do it? I wouldn't have done it. Well, you know, I was young and careless. I was jumping out of airplanes and climbing things and doing all the dangerous stuff that you do when you're young and witless. But that one, I think, was an outgrowth of the Bay Area, Mid Peninsula, tea groups that developed the kind of confrontational personal interaction in group sessions that developed in the 50s at Stanford and in that area. And that led to a very transformational approach to ideas of human potential and so on. When Esalen Institute got started, I had already been doing seminars of my own with students from Stanford at Slate's Hot Springs. It later became Esalen and got to be friends with Mike Murphy when he was here. And Richard Price was starting Esalen Institute. And so all of that human potential stuff was looking at religion, looking at meditation, looking at drugs. We were, you know, reading about Aldous Huxley and what he got from peyote. And I was hanging out with peyote Indians a lot, increasingly in the 60s. And so friends in the Stanford areas and LSD was just starting to turn up. And it was still legal through the early 60s. And there was a so-called therapeutic model, which is now completely revived. It's interesting that it had to go through a long hiatus of that psychedelics can be useful as metal in significant personal therapy. And the idea then was, remember before that, when psychoanalysis first came along, all the anthropologists felt they had to get psychoanalyzed. And this was sort of a similar thing that, okay, there's this new therapy and it's supposed to be used on sick people. But if it works for sick people, let's try it on healthy people to see if it makes them even healthier. And so that was kind of the theory we were going on. As it happened in that set and setting, as they said, of therapy, I basically flunked out. It was just a not very pleasant long episode. But later on, I had personal LSD experiences that were transformative, including one that got me going on what a difference the photograph of the whole earth would make. As you know, San Francisco is a relatively small city. So why did it, and not Los Angeles, become the center of hippie culture? That's a fair question. Los Angeles never had 49ers. Los Angeles never burned to the ground. And so San Francisco, the Phoenix city, they still say sometimes, has waves of boom and bust. It's not particularly infrastructural. Los Angeles is completely based on oil and then water infrastructure and major shipping even more than the Bay Area. And there's a frivolousness that the Bay Area is good at. It has two universities of significance, with Stanford and Cal. And I mean, so does LA. But LA does not feel like a college intellectual world, whereas San Francisco somewhat does. And so Silicon Valley really is an outgrowth of the industrial park at Stanford that was invented by one guy. And then those things, as you know, take off economically. They feed themselves and then they become their own storm system. There's a lot of people like me from Midwest that come to places like California. And one of the things that I sort of saw, because I spent time on the East Coast from prep school and then in New Jersey as an military officer and then a lot of New York as an artist. And the sense I got is that people go to New York and LA to be successful. And, you know, if you can make it in the Big Apple, you can make it anywhere, that sort of thing. Nobody says that about San Francisco. They never have and I bet they never do. People go to San Francisco to be happy, by and large. And then that leads to this sort of devil may care creativity, which is actually good for business startups of certain kinds, especially ones that have a low threshold like anything digital or anything online. And so screwing around is not only possible, but encouraged. And screwing around is the way you discover new useful things in the world, I think. So I knew by the time I graduated from Stanford that I wanted to stay in the Bay Area, I went away to be in the Army and then I came right back. What was the creative peak of Jefferson Airplane? I have no idea. You didn't know them? Well, no. Who I knew was Grateful Dead pretty well. You know, the trip successful that I organized with the Merrick Banksters with Ken Kesey's group. Grateful Dead had just renamed themselves from the Warlocks and they really took over the three-day show that we did. People just wanted to dance their guts out all night long. And the Dead had the way to do that and all the other artistic stuff that I brought in there was sort of interesting, amusing, frippery, but the Dead really won the day. And so that's how I got to know them early on and stayed somewhat in touch through the years. What did you learn from David Crosby? Not a thing. I love his songs. We apparently had this conversation. I guess you've been reading John Markov's biography. Of course, yes. It's a good book. And what I remember is being shamefully out of it when I talked to David Crosby. People would show up at the Whole Earth Truck Store where we had this kind of retail outlet for Whole Earth catalog stuff and wanted to chat with me. And like Philip Morrison, a fantastic book reviewer, a scientific American showed up like that. And David Crosby showed up like that. I guess you and Romney must have brought him. So wave at gravy. And lost to me. Maybe David remembers the conversation. What is it about the early days of San Francisco culture that most people still do not know? Which early days? There's a lot of them. Say the 1960s, hippie days. I don't think people know the extent to which the mob took over. That first pornography, there was some really, really creative pornography coming out of basically hippie artists having a good time and turning the camera on. And then the whole dope culture, no hope without dope, everybody was selling or buying marijuana and these other drugs from each other. And then one of the guys named Super Spade was his arms and legs cut off and his torso was hung out by Ocean Beach from a tree. It's sort of knowledge of well those amateur days of drug sales are gone now and the big time players are here in town and do not fuck with us. So that was the end of that. And everybody was selling dope and sort of learned a little bit of business from doing it, then went into business, legitimate business and they were good at it. And so hippies became basically a very good commercial startup folks partly because of that sequence of experiences. Is Clint Eastwood's Dirty Harry a good movie? I don't remember. Clint Eastwood is an incredible movie director, except for this last one. You know, it shows San Francisco and I think 1971 and the city is supposed to be falling apart. Maybe in some ways it is, but what's striking to me is how much cleaner San Francisco was then than now and also how few new buildings have been put in. It looks almost like the same city, except for parts of downtown. Well that's interesting. You saw it again recently. About a year ago during pandemic, you gave it another watch. Well, it was a good and I think respectable dialogue that was set in motion between a kind of conservative approach and a probably excessively liberal framing that was going on at the time in the Bay Area. And so make my days became a kind of a conservative line. Now, given your long history with San Francisco, do you think you see its current problems differently since you know so much of the past? I think I don't see them clearly enough. I think Patrick Cullis and I was a lot more substantial to say on this issue because he's in the thick of it. He's got to figure out where his workers live and where his point of place of business is and so on. I think that a major shift that occurred is the, to me, completely understandable retreat from Silicon Valley, from the mid peninsula. I lived there when we were doing the whole earth catalog. It's actually a kind of a horrible place to live compared to Marin County, where I am now. Marin County being north of Golden Gate and Silicon Valley being south of San Francisco. So with Salesforce, with Twitter, with these various web-based organizations that moved into the city and built their headquarters there and tried to house all their workers there and so on, that is a disgust with suburban working and living and a seeking out of downtown. You've seen it in Seattle with Amazon, you know staying in downtown Seattle and so on. And because I've been thinking about writing about or researching about cities from about 1998 on, that all seemed completely sensible to me. Cities are highly centriple. They attract talent, they attract all these things and you know so Jeffrey West's book scale and the studies going on at Santa Fe Institute on how cities accelerate everything. They're the major economic engines of any region or any culture they're in. If you're ambitious and talented, you're going to go to a town. And in the Bay Area, town of San Francisco still. Now in the last two decades or maybe even a bit more, you've become very interested in this idea of the long view. There's the Long Now Foundation trying to take a very long-term perspective on things. This attempt to build a clock that will last for 10,000 years. But if I look at your own career, a lot of the most influential things you have done have been quite finite. So you ended the whole earth catalog, the Mary pranksters with Ken Kesey, right? That ended a long time ago. The online bulletin boards you were a part of, which were very important for the early years of the internet, those in their earlier form, those are gone. So why seek durability if your own influence has typically come through the supposedly transient? Well, some of us just getting older. And I developed when I was studying buildings and then later writing about civilization and this kind of pace-layered understanding that part of what makes a dynamically self-stabilizing and learning system is that some parts of anything complex and dynamic move very fast and some parts move very slow. And we tend to pay attention to the fast parts like fashion and commerce and not pay attention to the really powerful parts like nature and culture. And once I sort of had that perspective, and plus I'd been a professional futurist for 20 years with the Global Business Network, where I saw that people doing scenarios would treat 25 years as a very long timeframe. Military we did scenarios for would sometimes grow up 50 years. And I thought, you know, that's considering the level of stuff going on, changes going on, it's understandable people would pay attention to the short term. But meanwhile, these basic dynamics of the really slow stuff is where the power is calls for a reorientation of focus. And so when Danny Hillis, computer scientist MIT, who I've gotten to know at the Media Lab, wrote an email saying, I'd like to build a clock, the scale of Stonehenge that keeps a very long term time and ticks once a century, bongs every thousand years. He sent that out to everybody new, but nobody responded but me. And I responded, so let's do it. I think because of the stuff I just mentioned, as realizing, Danny's framing of it was, this is all through the 80s and 90s, everybody referred to the future as the year 2000. And Danny was growing up during that time. He said, so for my entire life, the future has been getting shorter by one year per year. That does not seem like a healthy frame of mind for a civilization that wants to be healthy to have. And what could pop through that membrane of the year 2000? And so coming up with the idea of a very durable, basically perpetual motion machine of a clock. The clock, by the way, it is not trying to be built, it is built. It's almost completed in Texas on Jeff Bezos' mountain range. It's not a perpetual motion machine in the sense that it takes the temperature difference on the very high mountain. It's on between night and day and runs an air bladder that then provides energy that keeps the clock knowing what time it is for thousands of years. Would the younger Stuart Brandt say in his 20s be disappointed in the future that has come to pass? Oh, mixed bag. A whole lot of stuff developed fantastically, I think. As a biologist of low seeing biotechnology, finally relink with field biology, conservation biology. I'm involved in that doing co-founding, revive, and restore to use biotech for the help of conservation wildlife projects. So that's played out pretty well. But in large, when I was optimistic about stuff, I turned out to be right. When I was pessimistic about stuff, I turned out to be wrong. Often enough that it has kept optimism alive. Right now, the political conundrum of the United States has me worried and I don't know what to do about it. I can see that cyber war is going to play out in some ugly ways, and already is to a large extent. I don't see automatic solutions either of those or ones that I can help with, except that focusing on long term frame, the long now, we describe it as the last 10,000 years and the next 10,000 years. So there's the now that is an hour long, the hour now that is two weeks long, the year in the middle off, and then there's the somewhat longer now that is 20,000 years long. And I think human civilization is earned and needs the perspective of that is a foundation for thinking about everything. Do you look much to science fiction for ideas and inspiration or not? Yeah, I mean, the new Steele Neuvenson, Neil Stevenson termination shock is brilliant in terms of really playing out the geoengineering schemes that are out there. Neil did fantastic research on it, better than most people I know, including many professionals. And likewise, Kim Stanley Robinson, with the Ministry for the Future, again, fearful research on what overheating wet bulb high temperatures can mean for human survival in places like India. And then playing that out in kind of politically astute terms. This is some of the best thinking going on in society. And science fiction has always opened that door to thinking about the future in creative ways. Marvin Minsky, who I knew at MIT, was always quoting Isaac Asimov. And he just said, look, these are artists who thought about this stuff a lot, and I pay close attention. I feel the same. How did your year working with California Governor Jerry Brown make you less libertarian? Hasn't California governance turned out to be a big mess? No, California governance was and still is pretty damn good. What I learned is that the libertarians I knew, and they sort of clustered around the whole earth catalog because in central earth catalog, it was saying, you know, this is right after Jack Kennedy said, that's not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country. We sort of said, that's not what your country can do for you. Do your damn self. And so there was a do it yourself thing that translated for many as a screw the government. And then the whole hippie period was counterculture and a lot of that was played out politically in the new left and so on. So working for in the governor's office in Sacramento and wearing a three-piece suit. One of the things we started was that I started was a water atlas of California. And then the research that was that we set in motion from the governor's office to bring about this actually quite beautiful and somewhat influential book. California's hydraulic civilization as you know, we move our water around and that's what makes agriculture the main event here. That's what makes Los Angeles possible and so on and so forth. I saw the people at the water resources department. I saw what they did all day. And we would show up saying, look, we need we need some data on the Smith River, which is the only undamned Smith only undamned river in California. And you know, what's the patterns of flow and that and how deep your records go. And somebody's deputy assistant would say, we thought you'd never ask. And they had been, you know, carefully keeping this data and trying to correlate it with things and keep it up to date and then various computer systems and so on for decades. And the low paid high quality selfless work that these folks were doing. And in the governor's office, you always knew who was Republican, who was a Democrat and why and all this kind of stuff. Down in the departments, nobody knew and nobody cared. There were Republican Democrats scattered throughout the whole system. And it was part of the ethic of that part of government to just not be political in the divisive sense at all. And so I was seeing something that the libertarian folks I knew knew nothing about and were not the slightest bit interesting and they weren't actually interested. I think here as a somewhat of a libertarian are interested in how government works. Most of the ones I knew were not. And they were interested in how election works and they thought the absurdities that they saw in elections and electioneering was government and it's not. And so I finally got the perspective of what is now vilified as the deep state. And the deep state at least in California is damn impressive. And so I came out being way less interested in who was the governor. I basically came out saying, well, Jerry's a good governor as near as I can tell. But then later on, unfortunately, there was a pretty good governor. Reagan had been a pretty good governor. And the realization I had is Donald Duck could be governor and it wouldn't be the end of the state. You know, Trump finally proved that you could have somebody as a president in that case. It could be really destructive. And the deep state was not as successful as it usually is of working around it. But that's reflective of a whole bunch of other stuff going on that I do not comprehend, frankly. Now you've written a good deal about architecture. Do you view the forthcoming smart home as a blessing or a curse? Well, it's always been a curse. The Internet of Things is making stuff a lot more convenient and a lot more handy. But people are banging away on making home smart for decades and decades. I think that one of the things we'll be figuring out increasingly for the next few decades is what things to hand over to robots and what things not to. And there'll be lots of stuff that surprises us. It's just great that robots are doing that. Frankly, I love the autopilot on the Tesla drive. I don't use it to get all the way from here to there. I use it so I don't have to pay close attention to traffic, just peripheral attention. And the difference there is fantastic. But trying to get a whole bunch of things coordinated around shortcut convenience, that is kind of a long cut to finally program it all sort of works. It kind of winds up like those remote clickers for television. They have too many buttons and people finally learn the three buttons to do what they mainly want and pay no attention to the rest. And then the younger members of the family sort them all out and become adept at it. And then the next generation of excessive choices comes along and they don't know. And they've got to ask their kids, how the hell does this complex thing work? So I think there's a kind of an endless quest for complete handiness. And I think generally people who go for simplicity rather than robotized complexity in terms of personal living are happier. And if we, in proper Hayekian fashion, want more than organically evolving architecture, what can we do to get there? Well, I wrote a whole book called How Buildings Learn. It's probably my best book. And it's certainly most successful. It's now treated as a classic and taught in classes and so on. And it's basically that building is not something you finish a building, something you start. The building is ongoing process that is in a perpetual dialogue with the user, the users of the building and the uses of the building. And it's standing in the real estate market and so on. And professional high concept architecture is sort of allergic to all of that. And they want to make work of our signature piece of something or other with the look of that particular architect. And they hope that the function will work out. So the buildings that tend to go best are ones that are really durable, like the old brick factories of the East Coast or some of the total concrete spaces, what I call long road buildings. For example, at Stanford, when I was there, there were temporary buildings left over from World War II and at MIT, the Rad Lab, the Building 20, was where most of the real, well, much of the real innovation that happened in curriculum, in science, engineering happened in the trailers. It happened in Building 20. And because those were buildings that nobody cared about, you could do anything you wanted in there. You could adapt the building, whatever kind of research you were doing, and it was cheap. And you could throw things together and have them fall apart and not care or have them take over the world. And because it started cheap, you were able to get there without having to over invest. And so buildings that adapt well over time are basically built strong for certain reasons. And then stay strong as the decades go by and the different uses go by. In the book, I wound up sorting out various things that have those qualities and things that don't. I had a chapter on maintenance because everything, buildings are sort of the most maintenance, needing and maintenance-defying things that we build. And so there's a constant dialogue between keeping up with that and letting it go and then cycles of real estate value that go in and out and so on and so forth. I don't have a short answer to your question of what makes them more adaptable, but really looking at what buildings do over time sure helps. Why does Japan fascinate you so much? They're the most advanced material culture in the world, I think. You know, how to wrap five eggs and things like that are a matter of enormous interest and craft. And I'm paying attention to them now because my friend Kevin Kelly, who's traveled all over Asia and including all over Japan, he said he's looked and looked for a broken roof tile in Japan and he can't find it. And there's an attention to detail of caring about the physical essence of stuff that the Japanese are surpassing it. On the other hand, there's a lot of so screwed up in Japanese culture, the cities are massive, buildings most of them are kind of haphazardly built. I first fell in love with Japanese architecture through a book written by a Japanese home and it's surrounding 1896 by a New Englander and he just spelled out the traditional Japanese home and the Genkan and they're used to the tatami mats and the relationship with the garden and the banjo and all that stuff for the bathroom. And the aesthetic practicality of it just knocked me out. I actually got to stay in the house like that in Kyoto for a season, one year and it was fantastic. So the Japanese craft at its best is just the best there is. In what year will we bring back the woolly mammoth? What's your point estimate? Certainly in the century I think we'll have what looks like and acts like woolly mammoths back. I would like to see them back in large herds in the Siberian and in the Northern Canadian steppes doing their old job of eating the grass and therefore causing the grass, grazers make grass and so the so-called mammoth step which was once the world's largest biome reaching all the way across the around the North Pole and Arctic and subarctic. Climate logically is much more stable but mainly it was the Serengeti of the North. This was where endless large animals and incredibly rich animal and vegetable ecosystem compared to what's there now. That's a case where humans to some extent climate but mainly humans got rid of all the megafauna by killing them and eating them and that keeps happening. And as they come back they will the way the elephants and rhinos and what not do in Africa they will bring back the mosaic landscape that is drastically richer and by the way much more stable in terms of climate. And what's stopping us from doing this within the next say 20 years? It might happen in the next 20 years. The outfit called colossal has decided to put in serious commercial money with George Church at Harvard and others that are working on bringing genes from the extinct mammals that we know what they are now because of paleo genetics and putting them into Asian elephant genomes and start bringing back the Arctic capability of the blood system and the thick hair and the rest of it that makes it possible for an elephant to not only survive but thrive in the far North. As it happens Asian elephants already live in Canada and like to break through the ice in the pond or go swimming they wouldn't make it through the long Arctic night but they already like the cold when you're big and massive cold is not that harsh an event. So I think bringing grazers and megafauna back to the far North will be practical and beneficial. It's already going on at this place called Pleistocene Park in Far Northeastern Siberia. To close I have just a few questions about the Stewart brand production function. Are you ready? Sure. Now you're well into your 80s, correct? Correct, I'm 83. So what is it you do to stay so sharp? Pick parents with genes that make that possible that's the main thing. And what do you do after that? And after that frankly I don't understand people who go quiescent intellectually as they get older. You know as you get in a way getting older you get more control over your time and you have more savvy on how to do things and how to make things happen and who to call and you have a question and all that stuff. And so your ability to investigate stuff and especially with the internet now is growing up all the time. And why would you let curiosity fade? And many don't. You probably notice that people you know in their 70s are different from people that you knew in their 70s when you were a little kid. When they kind of you know was over they were settling down to play golf or whatever it was. And probably a whole lot of people you know in their 70s and 80s are hard at it. In some cases just hitting their stride and that's a change that has occurred in my lifetime that is a total treat. And as near as I can tell that one is permanent. I think that's with us now. People will live longer and thrive longer. The health span is not being referred to instead of lifespan and health span meaning how long you can be really engaged and productive and alive to things. So and I think that's very good in terms of long-term thinking. Because people are older are half a longer now. Their future may be getting shorter but their past is personal and significantly long. They've seen a lot of stuff come and go and they've seen a lot of skills that possibly they had time to pick up that they can now deploy. And all of that is makes at least a kind of intellectual life that we both seem to enjoy that much richer. And so long as your genes are supporting your brain cells and whatever other medications and stuff we can do. I mean medically it's possible for me to carry on in ways that would not have been possible a century ago. So there you have it we are we are living longer and we're finding ways to keep the human body and human brain functioning better longer. So why would you not take advantage of that? How has giving away money kept you creative? I'm not that good at it. I've now gotten to know a number of philanthropists who are really good at it and I know that I'm not. At one point I was a guy who was getting into philanthropy because he started eBay and I said you know if you like I can try to find some good things that I know about that maybe you don't that would be good to put your money into. He said sure fine here's an extra amount of money go ahead and make good things happen and I worked on it for about six months and just failed utterly. It was not good at that. So I would love to see a whole lot more really creative philanthropy. This is another thing that I think you and Patrick Collison like you've done with your fast grants can help move much more creative philanthropy. One of the things I've noticed all my life is that philanthropy should be the most creative thing going. It's got to be more creative than government. It's got to be more creative than anything that the commercial entities can do and that it is not is just a waste because especially in America we're most philanthropic society in the world and yet it's not as creative as it should be. Last question how do you decide what to pay attention to? Well it's a little different from Kevin Kelly's when you get Kevin Kelly on he'll tell you it's what he sees that nobody else is doing that only he can do and then he'll pay attention to that and try to make something useful happen. I'm I don't care as much about whether other people are doing something. What I'm looking for is things that will in Gregory Bachen's terms make circuit with the world and you see some of this in software development where people talk about the minimum viable product and you start to get a user base that you can co-evolve with and develop your products so it's actually being useful to them and Amazon talks about the minimum lovable product where it's not only useful it's compelling and that you don't let anything into the world unless it has its lovability or quality to it. I'm a little earlier in the process of I'm just feeling around for things that that feel like they're overlooked the whole earth catalog do-it-yourself was something that you know middle-aged gentlemen who'd retire is what they were doing in their garage and was kind of looked down on catalogs we kind of looked down on and basically I just took those two things that were regarded with disdain and turned them into something that turned out to be powerful. Likewise right now I'm focusing on maintenance partly because I noticed in myself and then everybody else are reluctant to think about maintenance because it's a chore it's a nuisance it's a problem there is no kind of economic short-term value in it and and and and and because with the Long Now Foundation we're looking at becoming a long-term institution to sort of stay with the clock that's based on noticing the difference between Stonehenge Egyptian pyramids and the Issei Shrine in Japan where nobody knows the hell of pyramid that what the Stonehenge was really for and we know a lot about Fahrenheit religion with the pyramids but it's dead as a doornail and yet Issei Shrine expressing Shinto culture in Japan is as alive today as it was 1500 years ago and it is the beating heart of Japanese culture so what's the difference and the difference is I guess maintenance and it's institutionalizing we've got a lot more respect for institutions and trying to understand their institutions and Alexander Rowe is the director of Long Now Foundation is actively funding and pursuing the study of longevity in institutions what actually makes it work what's makes them earn their longevity and keep it in a changing world well the whole concept of maintenance I think is in the thick of all of that and so I'm spending all my time now in this room with all these books sorting out how to think about maintenance in general Stuart Brand thank you very much thank you sir that was fun