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The scientific future
Forecasting, predicting and manifesting the future is a fraught occupation, but we can’t afford to abandon the scientific endeavour to capitalists, write ROX MIDDLETON, LIAM SHAW and JOEL HELLEWELL
THE PRESENT THAT BLIGHTS ALL FUTURES: A call for climate reparations across the African continent at the COP27

A COMPELLING feature of science is its ability to predict the future: theories ought to generate testable predictions that can be borne out. 

Claiming that analysis is “scientific,” such as the motivation behind historical materialism in its original form, is a way of saying that data and theory from the past are being used to make claims about the future.

It is exactly this same predictive capacity that drives the contemporary fascination for data, algorithms and AI. 

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