by Jason Crawford · March 18, 2025 · 3 min read
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I spoke at “d/acc Day” alongside Vitalik Buterin, Juan Benet, Mary Lou Jepsen, Allison Duettmann, and others.
If you haven’t heard of d/acc, I recommend reading Vitalik’s post “My Techno-Optimism” where he coined the term, and his followup “d/acc: One Year Later.” In short: d/acc embraces progress; it recognizes that progress has risks and we need to address them; and it advocates doing so in decentralized ways that don’t lead to authoritarian control and loss of freedom.
My talk was “d/acc: The first 150 years”: a whirlwind tour of how society has thought about progress, decentralization and defense over the last century and a half. You can watch it here (runs about 7 minutes). But here’s the punchline: how each ~generation of the 20th century stacked up against the three core principles of d/acc (in this context, for “defense” think “health and safety,” i.e. defense against the risks of progress):
We are looking for a gifted developmental editor who is passionate about helping 20–25 writers hone their writing skills to craft compelling essays about human progress during our summer/fall fellowship program.
Our fellows, selected from several hundred applicants, are super-smart, interesting, and thoughtful people writing on fascinating topics. As the developmental editor, you’ll work directly with our fellows, helping them to grow and improve their writing skills.
Our Blog-Building Intensive Fellowship program, which runs between July and October every year, is part of the larger mission of The Roots of Progress Institute to establish a new philosophy of progress for the 21st century.
Open Phil launches a $120M Abundance & Growth Fund “to accelerate economic growth and boost scientific & technological progress” (@albrgr). See also Matt Clancy’s list of his favorite wins in their land use reform and innovation policy grants.
The announcement mentions:
We supported Roots of Progress in its early days and are looking forward to its second annual conference for the Progress Studies community later this year. We think the breadth of this community (see this dispatch from last year’s inaugural conference for example), united around a common purpose of identifying and accelerating the drivers of progress, makes it an important resource to draw on and invest in.
I’m grateful to Open Phil for that early support and look forward to working with them to grow the progress movement.
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