Texarkana Gazette

The silver lining of 2020 — believe it or not

- Tyler Cowen

For obvious reasons, 2020 will not go down as a good year. At the same time, it has brought more scientific progress than any year in recent memory — and these advances will last long after COVID-19 as a major threat is gone.

Two of the most obvious and tangible signs of progress are the mRNA vaccines now being distribute­d across America and around the world. These vaccines appear to have very high levels of efficacy and safety, and they can be produced more quickly than more convention­al vaccines. They are the main reason to have a relatively optimistic outlook for 2021. The mRNA technology also may have broader potential, for instance by helping to mend damaged hearts.

Other advances in the bioscience­s may prove no less stunning. A very promising vaccine candidate against malaria, perhaps the greatest killer in human history, is in the final stages of testing. Advances in vaccine technology have created the real possibilit­y of a universal flu vaccine, and work is proceeding on that front. New CRISPR techniques appear on the verge of vanquishin­g sickle-cell anemia, and other CRISPR methods have allowed scientists to create a new smartphone-based diagnostic test that would detect viruses and offer diagnoses within half an hour.

It has been a good year for artificial intelligen­ce as well. GPT-3 technology allows for the creation of remarkably human-like writing of great depth and complexity. It is a major step toward the creation of automated entities that can react in very human ways. DeepMind, meanwhile, has used computatio­nal techniques to make major advances in protein folding. This is a breakthrou­gh in biology that may lead to the easier discovery of new pharmaceut­icals.

One general preconditi­on behind many of these advances is the decentrali­zed access to enormous computing power, typically through cloud computing. China seems to be progressin­g with a photon method for quantum computing, a developmen­t that is hard to verify but could prove to be of great importance.

Computatio­nal biology, in particular, is booming. The Moderna vaccine mRNA was designed in two days, and without access to COVID-19 itself, a remarkable achievemen­t that would not have been possible only a short while ago. This likely heralds the arrival of many other future breakthrou­ghs from computatio­nal biology.

Internet access itself will be spreading. Starlink, for example, has a plausible plan to supply satellite-based internet connection­s to the entire world.

It also has been a good year for progress in transporta­tion.

Driverless vehicles appeared to be stalled, but Walmart will be using them on some truck deliveries in 2021. Boom, a startup that is pushing to develop feasible and affordable supersonic flight, now has a valuation of over $1 billion, with prototypes expected next year. SpaceX achieved virtually every launch and rocket goal it set.

Finally, while not quite meeting the definition of a scientific advance, the rise of remote work is a real breakthrou­gh. Many more Zoom meetings will be held, and many business trips will never return. Many may see this as a mixed blessing, but it will improve productivi­ty significan­tly. It will be easier to hire foreign workers, easier for tech or finance workers to move to Miami, and easier to live in New Jersey and commute into Manhattan only once a week. The most productive employees will be able to work from home more easily.

Without a doubt, it has been a tragic year. Alongside the sadness and failure, however, there has been quite a bit of progress.

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