Will Innovation Kill Us? by Philosophy Talk published on 2015-11-12T22:45:07Z More at http://philosophytalk.org/shows/will-innovation-kill-us Innovation, be it social, economic, or technological, is often hailed as the panacea for all our troubles. Our obsession with innovation leads us to constantly want new things and to want them now. But past innovations are arguably the main reason for many of our current predicaments, which in turn creates a further need to innovate to solve those problems. So is innovation – and our obsession with it – ultimately a force for good or ill? Is our constant need to innovate a function of our biology, or just a product of various cultural forces? Can we ever escape the innovation loop? Should we try before it kills us? John and Ken find new ways to talk to Christian Seelos, author of "Innovation and Scaling for Impact: How Effective Social Enterprises Do It." Genre philosophy Comment by James William Absolutely, without innovation we would have "fewer hungry people". We'd have less than a few million people on the Earth, period. Farming is an innovation. 2015-11-17T20:46:22Z