\
  The most prestigious law school admissions discussion board in the world.
BackRefresh Options Favorite

"Objectively" identify the fastest rate of human advancement in history

Candidate 1: The Neolithic Revolution (~10,000–3,000 B...
Mainlining the $ecret Truth of the Univer$e
  03/16/26
Candidate 4: 2026–forever — The Mahchine™ ...
....,....,.......,.........,....,.,....
  03/16/26
Wow
Mainlining the $ecret Truth of the Univer$e
  03/16/26
...
Amerika's Gutter Trash
  03/16/26


Poast new message in this thread



Reply Favorite

Date: March 16th, 2026 4:44 AM
Author: Mainlining the $ecret Truth of the Univer$e (One Year Performance 1978-1979 (Cage Piece) (Awfully coy u are))

Candidate 1: The Neolithic Revolution (~10,000–3,000 BCE)

This wins on magnitude but loses on rate. Humans transitioned from nomadic hunting-gathering to sedentary agriculture, which cascaded into writing (~3400 BCE), the wheel (~3500 BCE), horse domestication (~3500 BCE), cities, social stratification, and proto-states — all within roughly the same few centuries. The problem: spread across millennia, the annual rate of change was imperceptible to individuals living through it. Cambridge economists modeling the Neolithic-to-Industrial transition confirm this was generationally slow by modern standards. It was the most foundational transformation but arguably the least fast.

Candidate 2: 1876–1945 — The Most Defensible Answer

This roughly 70-year window is the strongest candidate for objective fastest rate of compounding, multi-domain transformation in human history.

What makes it extraordinary is not just volume of invention but simultaneous disruption across every major category of human experience:

- Communication: Telephone (1876), phonograph (1878), radio (1895), motion pictures (1891)

-Energy & mobility: Electric light (1879), internal combustion engine (1885), powered flight (1903), automobiles at scale (1910s)

-Cognition: Quantum mechanics and general relativity overturned Newtonian physics entirely (1905–1925)

-Medicine: Germ theory → vaccines → antibiotics (penicillin, 1928) — life expectancy in the West jumped ~20 years

-Destruction & computation: Nuclear fission, radar, and the first programmable computers all within 1939–1945

A Stanford/SIEPR big-data patent analysis found that the innovation bursts of the 1800s-early 1900s had greater measurable social impact than the digital revolution — counterintuitive but well-supported when impact is normalized against baseline human experience. A person born in 1870 and alive in 1945 had seen their world transform more completely — in transport, communication, medicine, physics, and geopolitics — than arguably any prior human being ever had.

The BBC's "technology in deep time" framing puts this in sharp relief: if all of human history were compressed to 24 hours, the industrial revolution occupies the last five-thousandths of a second, but within that sliver, most of the structural change concentrates in this window.

Candidate 3: 1990–2026 — The Rate Argument

The strongest rate argument — change per year, not per decade — belongs to the current era. Consider the compression:

1993: Public internet

2003: Human genome sequenced

2007: Smartphone

2012: Deep learning breakthrough (ImageNet)

2020: mRNA vaccines go from concept to deployment in ~11 months

2022–2026: Large language models cross into general-purpose cognition, CRISPR enters clinical use, autonomous systems proliferate

The annual rate of change is faster now than in 1876–1945 by most objective measures. But the per-individual experiential disruption may actually be lower, because infrastructure (electricity, indoor plumbing, aviation) was already in place. The person born in 1870 who flew on an airplane in 1930 experienced a more alien discontinuity than a person born in 1980 getting a better phone.

The Most Defensible Single Answer

Objectively, 1876–1945 wins the overall argument for fastest consequential rate of human change across the most dimensions simultaneously. It combined: the highest density of foundational invention ever recorded, a complete overhaul of the human physical environment within a single lifetime, paradigm-shattering shifts in physics and biology, mass urbanization, and two world wars that restructured global political order — all before the baseline of modern infrastructure existed. Every change hit harder because humans had no prior frame for any of it.

The Axial Age (~800–200 BCE) deserves an honorable mention that rarely gets raised: Karl Jaspers identified it as the period when philosophical and ethical consciousness exploded simultaneously across Greece (Socrates, Plato), India (Buddha), China (Confucius, Laozi), and Persia (Zoroaster) — a transformation of the structure of human thought itself, which is harder to measure but arguably as deep as any technological shift.

The current AI/biotech era (post-2015) may ultimately surpass 1876–1945 on every metric — but we are likely still in the early acceleration phase rather than at the inflection point, which makes a definitive judgment premature.



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5846244&forum_id=2\u0026show=week#49747279)



Reply Favorite

Date: March 16th, 2026 4:53 AM
Author: ....,....,.......,.........,....,.,....


Candidate 4: 2026–forever — The Mahchine™ Era

$porTTT is exposed as fraud and grocery Self-Checkout™ becomes completely automated. Digital price tags update within seconds and coupons scan without Tabitha's approval. Evan moves in with Chad and Humanity™ becomes fully aware of all supermarket HR policies and procedures.

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5846244&forum_id=2\u0026show=week#49747285)



Reply Favorite

Date: March 16th, 2026 5:03 AM
Author: Mainlining the $ecret Truth of the Univer$e (One Year Performance 1978-1979 (Cage Piece) (Awfully coy u are))

Wow

(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5846244&forum_id=2\u0026show=week#49747293)



Reply Favorite

Date: March 16th, 2026 5:17 AM
Author: Amerika's Gutter Trash



(http://www.autoadmit.com/thread.php?thread_id=5846244&forum_id=2\u0026show=week#49747303)