Humans have an incredible capacity to build things — things that make our lives better, our bodies healthier, our interactions with each other more efficient. But while the human mind is pretty amazing, we also have a tendency to hold ourselves back — whether due to fear, stubbornness or, well, funding problems. As the world emerges (slowly and unevenly) from the horrors of a pandemic, the time has rarely been better to invest our mind power and our money in the technologies of the future. What's ahead of us is looking pretty amazing — if we're willing to do it right. Why Congress Should Care About the Laws of Physics — Michael R. Bloomberg Biden's Agenda Is Ambitious But Risky — Bloomberg's editorial board Why Most AI Writing Can't Get Its Facts Straight — Leonid Bershidsky Could the Next Space Station Be a Hotel? — Adam Minter Unseen Digital Cash Will Stretch Your Money — Andy Mukherjee How Many Airbuses Can the EU Invent? Too Many — Lionel Laurent Elon Musk's Golden Age of Tech Innovation Is Coming — Tae Kim Four Stories to Watch for (the Rest of) 2021 — Tyler Cowen This is the Theme of the Week edition of Bloomberg Opinion Today, a digest of our top commentary published every Sunday. |
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