Matt Ridley on How Innovation Works
Aug 31 2020

How-Innovation-Works-300x300.jpg What's the difference between invention and innovation? Could it be that innovation--the process of making a breakthrough invention available, affordable, and reliable--is actually the hard part? In this week's EconTalk episode, author Matt Ridley talks about his book How Innovation Works with EconTalk host Russ Roberts. Ridley argues that we give too much credit to inventors and not enough to innovators--those who refine and improve an invention to make it valuable to users. Along the way, he emphasizes the power of trial and error and the importance of permissionless innovation.

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Explore audio transcript, further reading that will help you delve deeper into this week’s episode, and vigorous conversations in the form of our comments section below.

READER COMMENTS

Paul A Sand
Aug 31 2020 at 2:34pm

Excellent episode, and (very unusual) I managed to read the book before listening to the EconTalk episode.

I used to teach an intro “for poets” Computer Science course which involved one lecture on history. I wish I’d had Ridley’s book to sponge from back then; his section on “who invented the computer” is much more interesting than the hodgepodge I usually managed to convey to my students.

Frank Robertson
Aug 31 2020 at 3:05pm

It’s not who invented the innovative device who gets rich. Instead, it’s the person who builds the teams and the company to make/sell/exploit the device. Steve Jobs didn’t invent the person computer. He invented Apple.

Jordan Henderson
Aug 31 2020 at 7:05pm

A couple of observations.

I think the non-replaceable battery is because we’re at a weird place in consumer technology right now.  Devices have gotten small and cheap and the marginal cost of devices is such that the extra cost of having a battery compartment is often not worthwhile.  It’s wasteful and none of the little device manufacturers want to standardize on standard batteries.

Still, it hardly makes sense to throw away an expensive laptop when the battery gets weak and there are still laptops with replaceable batteries.  Some have a hybrid approach, where the laptop will feature an internal battery and an external battery that can be swapped even while the computer is being used.   This kind of thing is still seen in cell phones.

Ultimately, I think consumers will gravitate toward devices that have a longer life will need replaceable batteries.  I think ultimately, there’ll be new battery standards which will be flatter like a hearing aid battery, but larger with much more capacity.

On the invention of the Search Engine.  Lycos, Yahoo and Altavista all predated Google in that space.  I agree with Matt Ridley that these were largely about organization and not search (I believe Altavista may have been all about search).  Note that someone did come up with Google’s search innovation before they did.  A Chinese researcher, Robin Li, who invented the PageRank independently while working for Reuters and possibly before the Google founders.  He founded Baidu, the Chinese search engine and he’s worth $6Bln.

The Wright Brothers never married, but were very close to their Sister, Katharine, who was very helpful to Wilbur in France when they traveled there to demonstrate and sell the invention in Europe.  Wilbur was socially inept and unwilling to take time to learn French.  Katharine, who had an aptitude for languages leaned French and was very popular.  They were also close to their Father, Bishop Milton Wright, who founded a breakaway Protestant Church that still exists today.

 

Jordan Henderson
Aug 31 2020 at 7:22pm

A couple of observations.

I think the non-replaceable battery is because we’re at a weird place in consumer technology right now.  Devices have gotten small and cheap and the marginal cost of devices is such that the extra cost of having a battery compartment is often not worthwhile.  It’s wasteful and none of the little device manufacturers want to standardize on standard batteries.

Still, it hardly makes sense to throw away an expensive laptop when the battery gets weak and there are still laptops with replaceable batteries.  Some have a hybrid approach, where the laptop will feature an internal battery and an external battery that can be swapped even while the computer is being used.   This kind of thing is still seen in cell phones.

Ultimately, I think consumers will gravitate toward devices that have a longer life will need replaceable batteries.  I think ultimately, there’ll be new battery standards which will be flatter like a hearing aid battery, but larger with much more capacity.

On the invention of the Search Engine.  Lycos, Yahoo and Altavista all predated Google in that space.  I agree with Matt Ridley that these were largely about organization and not search (I believe Altavista may have been all about search).  Note that someone did come up with Google’s search innovation before they did.  A Chinese researcher, Robin Li, who invented the PageRank independently while working for Reuters and possibly before the Google founders.  He founded Baidu, the Chinese search engine and he’s worth $6Bln.

The Wright Brothers never married, but were very close to their Sister, Katharine, who was very helpful to Wilbur in France when they traveled there to demonstrate and sell the invention in Europe.  Wilbur was socially inept and unwilling to take time to learn French.  Katharine, who had an aptitude for languages leaned French and was very popular.  They were also close to their Father, Bishop Milton Wright, who founded a breakaway Protestant Church that still exists today.

An interesting story about the Wright’s and innovation: A well connected friend wanted to petition bankers to fund their development, but the brothers turned it down.  They felt that if they took time away to work on the invention full time that the bicycle business would falter.  They were concerned they’d have nothing to come back to should the invention failed and others depended on the bicycle shop for their living.   It turned out that their associate at the bicycle shop, Charlie Taylor, developed their aluminum engine crucial to their success.  (It was the Brother’s idea to use aluminum, but Taylor did the engine work.)  Innovation often only flourishes in an environment where the focus is other work.

Steve
Sep 1 2020 at 4:09pm

Very interesting discussion and guest. Couple of observations.

I don’t share Russ’s affection for Twitter, although it sounds like maybe the gild is coming off the lily for him; like a lot of other social media it’s a double-edged sword, and the bad side of the sword is awfully sharp.

On the other hand, what would I do without the internet through which I’m commenting right now and constantly looking up information? I probably don’t fact-check as much as I should, so again there is wonderful opportunity laced with danger.

I was reminded of the episode (“Nature Rebounds”) about the “re-greening” of the earth as the developed countries use innovation to reduce our resource impact and the effect on developing countries who will leap past the days of pollution and waste.

I wonder if Mr. Ridley truly believes that the “glory” of Rome was foiled by Christians? I always thought it was the barbarian hordes invading while Christians were eaten. Like all institutions, including the British House of Lords, the Church is made of fallible men and women, but hard to argue that the Christian ethos didn’t sustain western civilization for two millenia.  We know this because the 2oth and 21st century atheist systems, such the Nazis, the Stalinists and now the Chinese communists are responsible for untold misery and hundreds of millions of murders of its own citizens. To say, and I’m paraphrasing, that China was, until recently, “economically free as long as you didn’t interfere with the party” is to deny the devil’s bargain that makes the claim laughable, that is the utter annihilation of anyone who didn’t tow the CCP line, including the forced abortion of tens or hundreds of millions of babies, forced sterilizations of women, and the systemic abandonment of female babies, to cite key examples from the ill fated but perfectly compatible One Child Policy. The juxtaposition of Mr. Ridley’s points about China and Rome were juicy.

Gregory McIsaac
Sep 2 2020 at 10:11am

Matt Ridely said:

“And he [Boylson] vaccinates–‘inoculates’ is the right word to use in that context–300 people and they all survived the Boston smallpox pandemic. “

According to the History.com link on this subject provided above, 242 were inoculated and 6 died for a fatality rate of 2.5% compared to a fatality rate of 14% among the general population.  These figures are consistent with this article by Gross and Sepkowitz on the history of the smallpox vaccine:

https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(98)90096-0/pdf

Gross and Sepkowitz also make reference evidence for inoculation (or variolation) in 10th Century China, and in 17th Century Denmark, but the English seem to have been skeptical of the practice in the early 18th century.

Edward Jenner is often given credit for first developing the more effective vaccination against Smallpox by using drainage from sores of patients suffering from Cowpox. This article documents that there was a prior discovery by Benjamin Jesty. Jenner rightly deserves credit for effectively promoting adoption of the practice.

 

Matt Ridley said: “The immunologists are very clever people, but I sometimes think when I’m listening to them that they haven’t quite figured it all out yet. They suddenly start to say, ‘Well, yes, but T cells are important as well as B cells.’ You think, ‘All right. Well, which?’”

 

I think immunologists would agree that they “haven’t quite figured it all out yet”, which is why they keep doing research, but I also think they would say that both T and B cells are important.

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4414089/

 

The disconnect between Immunology and vaccine development was recently discussed by immunologist Shane Crotty on the highly recommended podcast This Week in Virology (TWIV)

https://www.microbe.tv/twiv/twiv-657/

 

Dr. Crotty and others have been working to connect immunology and vaccine development. He said in the past, once a vaccine was shown to be effective, there was not much interest in studying how it worked. In a series of studies published around 2008 he examined the immunological mechanisms of the Smallpox vaccine. A generalization he made on the podcast was that successful vaccines typically have multiple mechanisms for inducing immune system responses.

Doug Iliff
Sep 3 2020 at 10:18pm

With regard to the importance of tinkerers to the evolution of inventions, and the inability of aviation archeologists to fly the Wrights’ device—- for how, after all, could one learn from a textbook how to steer by ‘wing warping’:

Samuel Eliot Morrison, in his definitive biography of Christopher Columbus, noted the unseaworthiness of the modern attempts to recreate the 1492 voyage—- of which he was a participant:

“[The originals], constructed by shipwrights who had centuries of experience behind them, under the supervision of men who had been on African voyages, were probably better ships in all essential respects than the so-called replicas or reconstructions made by archaeologists on the basis of such scanty data as they could cull from the records of the past.”

Doug Iliff
Sep 3 2020 at 10:24pm

Errata: Samuel Eliot Morison, not Morrison.

Irwin Kraus
Sep 4 2020 at 9:56am

A couple of comments.

Those 747s still flying are entirely different aircraft than those introduced in 1969. New engines and electronics among many other updates.

Wheeled suitcases? I know when I bought my first one – in the long, slow lines endemic to the immediate aftermath of 9/11.

Gregg Tavares
Sep 6 2020 at 10:01am

You probably knew you’d get some geek like me taking your praise of Steve Jobs to task but ….

As Matt Ridley pointed out that if Sergey Brin had not met Larry Page we’d still have search engines, well without Steve Jobs we’d still have computers with interfaces/windows/mice. Plenty of companies were working on such stuff and it’s well know those idea came from somewhere else.

We’d still have music players. Pocket mp3 players came out in 1997, the iPod didn’t come out until 2001. Online music was a thing via Napster in 1999.

We’d also still have smartphones. It seems like everyone forgets there were 20yrs of PDA (Palm Pilots, Windows CE, Sony Clie, Compaq iPaq, Dell Axim, etc…) before iPhone.

Of course iPhone was it hit because of great design but it was also at the right place at the right time. As an owner of all of those previous devices the #1 thing they missed was data connection because they were too early. But, just like the search engine example the line of innovation is clear and if iPhone had not come out something similar would have as it was a natural and obvious progression. Heck, my 1998 Window CE PDA (10yrs before iPhone) boots up just like an iPhone with a grid of app icons and a home button and size and shape wise is certainly in the same category of device.

That is not to say Steve Job wasn’t great person or a great innovator or made great products. I own and use all of them. But, let’s not forget the actual history and lineage of those products. Just like the search engine they all would have happened

Chris
Sep 15 2020 at 12:40pm

Great episode, two brief thoughts.

On claim that ‘we’d still have x invention if such and such a person wasn’t around’ (also applied to geographic explorers, scientists and others), well, yes, if we went back and murdered Brin and Page in the cot, we’d still have search engines, maybe one as good as Google (or maybe not). However, the implication that many would like to make that therefore such people do not deserve their billions or dollars or the lionisation that often comes with them does not follow. We reward in order to incentivise, and if we did not do these things, then we would not get Google and Apple and the rest.

Second, regarding the Christian destruction of antiquity that Ridley references, I believe he is drawing on Catherine Nixey’s 2018 book, which he reviewed. However some scholars have seriously questioned its credibility and commitment to truth. For example see Tim O’Neil’s review at his blog (incidentally a website I believe Russ would enjoy, and I say that as an atheist, which O’ Neil also is) https://historyforatheists.com/2017/11/review-catherine-nixey-the-darkening-age/

 

 

bogwood
Sep 17 2020 at 8:06am

Nate Hagens uses the milkmaid example.  At one extreme, assuming you will feed the milkmaid anyway you get a gallon of milk with no extra watts of energy.  At the other extreme, an automated milk barn you thousands of gallons of milk but also thousands of watts of energy per gallon.

There should be an appendix in which the energy costs are estimated, and even better, exactly where the energy is going to come from and how much it costs.  Vaccines were low hanging fruit. Electric cars, not so much.

Physics ultimately prevails.

Comments are closed.


DELVE DEEPER

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AUDIO TRANSCRIPT
TimePodcast Episode Highlights
0:33

Intro. [Recording date: July 13th, 2020.]

Russ Roberts: Today is July 13th, 2020, and my guest is author Matt Ridley. His latest book, and the subject of today's discussion is How Innovation Works. This is Matt's fourth appearance on EconTalk. He was last here in February, 2016 talking about his book, The Evolution of Everything. I want to remind listeners, there's a video of this episode available on YouTube. You can go there, search EconTalk. You can subscribe. You can watch as well as listen. Matt, welcome back to EconTalk.

Matt Ridley: Russ, it's really nice to be back on EconTalk, one of my favorite shows.

1:08

Russ Roberts: Thank you, sir. This book, your latest, is the rare book that gets better as it goes along. It's really almost two books. In the first half, it's a catalog of the complexity of innovation, some of its history in some very important areas. In the second half--which is fascinating and we'll, of course be drawing on that--but the second half are the insights that you come to having done that catalog in the first half. And I learned a great deal from the book. It's very provocative. It's just fantastic.

I want to start with a question--the difference between invention and innovation. I think a lot of people use those words interchangeably, but there's an important distinction there. What is it?

Matt Ridley: Yes. And the way I distinguish the two words is that when a new device is invented, it also has to be made available, affordable, and reliable, and that process is innovation. And it's often much harder work than the original invention. Coming up with the first prototype is sometimes the easy bit. Turning it into something that people want and people can afford, and that people can get ahold of is really tough work.

There's a lovely story that Charles Townes, the inventor of the laser, used to tell, which rather nicely illustrates the difference between invention and innovation. He said, there's a beaver and a rabbit looking at the Hoover Dam and the beaver says to the rabbit, 'No, I didn't build it, but it is based on an idea of mine.'

Russ Roberts: I love that story. It's quite profound, actually. It's funny, but it's quite profound.

I think a lot of people come up with good ideas and then they claim that people stole them, forgetting as you point out in many cases, the genesis of an idea spontaneously is in many people's heads at once. And that's often not the hard part. The hard part is the practical side.

Matt Ridley: Correct. And the great innovators were people who realized the importance of the downstream innovation process. So, Thomas Edison is the classic example of this. He's one of 21 different people who invented the light bulb, but he is the only one--

Russ Roberts: You said 21.

Matt Ridley: 21.

Russ Roberts: You said it quickly. I want to emphasize that because I wouldn't have known that before I read your book, 21. Go ahead.

Matt Ridley: 21 different people deserve credit for independently coming up with the light bulb around the same time. It was kind of inevitable. It was kind of inexorable. The technologies you need to combine to make a lightbulb were ripe: they were ready to go. And so, Lodygin in Russia and Swan in England and various other people basically had roughly the same idea at the same time, and very little snooping, as far as we can tell in this case. Some of these cases of simultaneous inventions--which are very common by the way--some of these cases are based on people snooping on each other's work.

But, the difference was that Edison realized that in order to make light bulbs reliable, make them last for a long time without going 'phut' [slang for 'going out'--Econlib editor]. He needed to do a lot of hard work, and he needed to do a lot of trial and error. So, he put in huge number of hours or got his assistants to put in huge number of hours, testing different materials. 5,000 different plant materials were tried in the Edison factory till they came up with a particular kind of Japanese bamboo that made a beautiful filament that worked really well.

That's the kind of thing that Edison meant when he said that 'Invention,' but actually he meant innovation--that word wasn't around then, 'Innovation is 1% inspiration and 99% perspiration.'

Russ Roberts: Which is another great line. You also point out, he sometimes said 2% innovation, '2% invention, 98%'--I like that clarification on the historical record because somebody might've--in today's world--might've said, 'Oh, well I saw 2%, so Ridley was off by 100%' in his quote. But, I'm glad you showed there's some variety there.

So, that highlights two things that I think shine through in the first part of the book that are incredibly important. One is that there are a lot of people working on most of the great inventions of our time to turn them into innovations. It's a slowish process that is highly trial-and-error oriented. Those are two, I'd say key takeaway facts, stylized facts about innovation that you highlight.

And the third one I want to mention--you can add to that if you like. But, the third is that so many of the great innovations of history were not done by scientists. They were done by practical people trying to solve a problem that they were grappling with, that they solve via trial and error, not a formal theoretical model; and that there were a lot of people doing it at the same time. And because of that, they often built on each other's gradual improvements to get to the stage of the technology that we become familiar with through history. And I think--so, talk about that. That's an incredibly nice, stylized story of innovation generally.

Matt Ridley: Well, there's a rather nice French word, bricolage, which means trial and error, means tinkering, really. And, tinkering is a good description of what a lot of innovators do. They take a thing and they just keep trying different versions of it till they make it a little better; and above all, they add in the insights of lots of different people.

So, for example, the Wright brothers, Orville and Wilbur Wright. They were absolutely insistent on writing to everybody they could find across the world, even in Australia, who had done experiments with gliders and other pre-flight things just to glean as much information as they can. They realize that innovation is not a matter of going and sitting in a darkened room with a wet towel around your head, because you're such a genius you're going to come up with the answer yourself. It's a matter of combining lots of people's ideas.

And the contrast with Samuel Langley, who got a huge grant from the U.S. Government to build a powered plane around the same time and refused to tell anyone his plans, did the whole thing in secret, and then unveiled it in front of a crowd in Washington, D.C., and it crashed into the Potomac within 20 yards, 10 days before the Wright brothers did it the right way in North Carolina--the contrast is very striking.

And as that example shows, the world is often very reluctant to believe that a couple of bicycle mechanics can have done something that a brilliant astronomer who is head of the Smithsonian Institution has failed at--which Samuel Langley was.

And you get the same thing in the United Kingdom. You get Humphry Davy and George Stephenson, both invent the miner's lamp, but George Stephenson is an illiterate mechanic and Humphry Davy is the President of the Royal Institution. So, no one wants to believe that the better lamp has been invented by a journeymen.

So, one of the things I want to do in this book is not to denigrate scientists because they do have great achievements and they are key to this whole process, but to rescue the reputation of the ordinary tinkering people--the bicycle mechanics from Dayton, Ohio, if you like--what they can achieve. Because, quite often you find that they achieve a huge amount, and then they go back to the scientists to explain what it is they're doing.

Sir Thomas Newcomen, as far as we can tell, who invented the steam engine right at the start of the industrial revolution--incredibly important discovery, the first use of heat to do work, basically--as far as we can tell, he's just a blacksmith, an engineer. He may not even have been literate. We've got no portrait of him. We don't know very much about his life. But he invented this tremendous machine. And, as a result, the science of thermodynamics was born. It's effectively: the scientists had to catch up with what the engineers were doing.

9:35

Russ Roberts: Yeah. There's a lot there. First, I want to observe that 'tinkering' has a slightly pejorative tone to it. It sounds like fooling around or just modifying things at the edges, when in fact it's the key to the, not so much the scientific method, but the discovery method, that's at the heart of innovation.

The other thought that comes to mind here and when I was reading your book is that, if you had asked me who invented the steam engine, I would have said Watt. Thomas Newcomen, whose name I had heard before, but I couldn't have brought up from my brain until I read your book. I can try to remember it again, in his honor--but he doesn't get much glory. A lot of the people who either contributed to these processes or who simultaneously created them, get no glory.

An obvious example, and it might be more familiar to some listeners, is Leibniz, relative to Newton, in inventing calculus; or Alfred Wallace with natural selection relative to Darwin. We understand the person who gets there first gets a little more of the glory. But, this isn't just about that. This is about this whole underlying process. So, tell us why we honor these singular people, when in fact it really isn't the right way to be thinking about it.

Matt Ridley: Well, we have a tendency to tell stories about brilliant individuals and put them on a pedestal. We do this in every walk of life. I mean, after all, we expect New Hampshire to discover a godlike figure to run America for four years, every four years.

Russ Roberts: That's Iowa. But, that's just portrays your--that's Iowa, not New Hampshire. But, that's okay. I knew what you meant.

Matt Ridley: Iowa is just a caucus. New Hampshire is a primary.

Russ Roberts: Good point.

Matt Ridley: Um, where have I got to? Yes. So, the 'great man' theory of history--that, Napoleon changes the world--whereas, versus the idea that Napoleon is a product of the French Revolution, as it were, is one way of thinking about this. That actually, if Thomas Edison had been run over by a tram before he had invented the light bulb, we would still have light bulbs. There were so many other people coming up with the idea.

If Sergey Brin had never met Larry Page, we wouldn't call it Google, but we would still have search engines; and whoever got the most successful search engine would still be a billionaire. And so, if you look at the computer industry over the last 50 years, this industry has an extraordinary inevitability about it, which is expressed in Moore's Law: this marching forward of the efficiency and the cost of computers. And yet, it produces these billionaires who make huge fortunes out of doing these inevitable things that were going to be done anyway--which I find an interesting paradox to think about.

So, to some extent, we are making the mistake of giving too much credit, and too much reward, to individuals. And we're singling people out from teams and mixtures of people.

I mean, I have a section in the book called, "Who Invented the Computer?" And I draw very heavily on Walter Isaacson's wonderful book, The Innovators, to understand that story. And in the end, I conclude that, even though this happened only a couple of generations ago and everything was written down and everybody knew what everybody was doing--so, it's not one of these things that's lost in the mists of time in the early 18th century, like the steam engine--we can't say who invented the computer. There is no answer to that question.

The first computer--if it was the ENIAC [Electronic Numerical Integrator and Computer] in Philadelphia--well, the ENIAC didn't have stored programs. Well, if it was the Mark I in Harvard--well, that didn't have electronics. It was a mechanical device. You know, etc., etc. So you can see how it's a much more collective, a much more distributed phenomenon--innovation--than we generally give it credit for.

Russ Roberts: We do have--we like romance. And I think the picking of the great inventor--the great mind, the great whatever--appeals to our sense of romance there. I'm not quite sure why.

Matt Ridley: And I should just add that the first half of my book is stories about people. And I single out these people. And I tell their stories.

But I do so partly in order to say that, although these people achieved incredible things--they invented the steam engine or vaccines or whatever it might be--they did so as part of a process and part of a team and part of a group. They didn't--they weren't gods. And I think this is quite an important lesson to teach young people, particularly today, because there's a tendency to say, you know, Marconi, or Morse, or Watts, or someone like that was unbelievably brilliant. Or even Steve Jobs was unbelievably clever and could see far further into the future than anyone else.

And that just ain't true. I mean, sometimes these were just people who worked a bit harder. They put in more hours, or they did more experiments. They weren't particularly brilliant. They just were prepared to be open-minded, to fail often and fast, and learn from failure--all these kinds of things.

You know, Jeff Bezos actually says this very clearly, and I quote him in the book in the couple of places where he says, 'What I've achieved is just by failing a lot and learning from those failures and trying things and swinging and occasionally hitting.'

You know, the story of Amazon is just a story of a string of failures. They went into the wrong businesses. They did things wrong. They did it badly--

Russ Roberts: Lost a lot of money--

Matt Ridley: Lost a lot of money. And then in the end they made a lot of money.

15:34

Russ Roberts: You can argue that Jeff Bezos's biggest innovation is creating a company that tries lots of different things and fails and picks the good ones. Now, picking the good ones is not always easy. There's an art to that, obviously. But there's also serendipity and luck.

Matt Ridley: Correct. And I once asked Jeff, 'Now, you're a big company. How do you keep it innovative?' Because most big companies stop being innovative when they get big.

And he gave me a very interesting example of the kinds of things they do at Amazon to solve that problem. Which is that, normally, if somebody junior in the organization has a bright new idea, what we should do is, I don't know, is, 'Sell dog food or something,' he comes to a management committee and makes a proposal. And the management committee, three quarters of them say, 'It's a bad idea,' and one quarter say, 'It's a good idea.' And the idea is turned down.

And the problem with that is that--the higher up in the organization you are, the less you're going to hear about the maverick ideas from the bottom. So, he operates a reverse veto system. If one person on that committee still thinks it's a good idea, and all the others think it's a terrible idea, then it has to be sent up to the next level of management--

Russ Roberts: Great insight.

Matt Ridley: It's quite a nice concept.

16:54

Russ Roberts: I want to come back to what you said about Steve Jobs. I want to do it through an interesting list I saw from Gwern Branwen. Gwern Branwen has a website, @gwern.net, and he has an essay there called, "My Ordinary Life: Improvements Since the 1990s." And, I love this list. It's a list of innovations, some of which are obvious, dramatic. Some of them are not so noticeable and I've added a few of my own. So, just a few examples. He says, 'Streaming video,'--huge, obviously. 'The death of a VHS [Video Home System] and tapes,' that meant no trips to Blockbuster. Enormous expansion of choice from both the archive of past work and new material.

You know, I like to say we lived in the golden age of storytelling through video. It's incredible. No rewinding, it's one of the things he emphasizes. You have to rewind the tapes.

The death of phone tag. You don't have to constantly go back and forth trying to reach someone. Texting has allowed that to happen, and sharing calendars.

Hearing aids are smaller and cheaper.

GPS [Global Positioning System], the fact that you don't get lost anymore is extraordinary.

Search, obviously.

Smartphones, obviously I would point in particular to the photography revolution that search phones have allowed and soon will be the death of cameras, I think in very short order.

Russ Roberts: He gives example of power tools that are often rechargeable. You don't have to constantly be finding the right size of batteries.

Cars--

Matt Ridley: Just on that, on that one, when did you last have to replace a battery in anything? I did on a portable razor the other day, but I haven't done so for a year or so, where we used to spend the whole time.

Russ Roberts: Cars have rear view cameras. They're keyless. Movie theaters: ticketing is simpler, the seats are better. LASIK [Laser-Assisted In Situ Keratomileusis] surgery is safe and inexpensive. Board games: We're not stuck with Monopoly, which I think is a lousy game, but rather you get Puerto Rico and Settlers of Catan. Obviously, we have a massive multiplayer, online, role-playing games that we talked about with Josh Williams last week.

Here's one from Gwern: Self-adhesive postage stamps. Nice. It's pleasant. The explosion of craft beer, high quality beer; and coffee. This one's a fabulous one: Better apples. The Honey Crisp just so dominates the Red Delicious--and this is the one--I love this--Brussels sprouts are less bitter. Who knew? And he doesn't mention wireless[?]--

Matt Ridley: Is that right? I should try them because I avoid them like the plague, because they taste bitter to me.

Russ Roberts: I love them. I don't mind when they were a little bitter. They're better. And he doesn't mention wireless earbuds, but they're, like, to me, a game changer--you can just walkin' around and--

Matt Ridley: What about the seedless grape?

Russ Roberts: Huge. Seedless watermelon. There's so many good things.

19:52

Russ Roberts: But, I want to suggest, and some of these--you're laughing, and some of these are silly. But many of them are momentous. And I want to suggest that you could make the case that Steve Jobs is somewhat in a class by himself, as a revolutionary, in terms of how he changed the way we consume music, the role that the internet plays in our lives, because we can put it in our pocket, and it--the laptop, he transformed it. Is there anyone who's put more of a stamp on our weirdly radically different daily lives since Steve Jobs?

Matt Ridley: I think you're right. And I think he stands out in several ways, partly because the model of Apple was it developed things in-house. It wasn't an open source model. The rest of the computing world is moving towards open source and always has been. But this was going in a different direction. And partly because of this, 'fake it till you make it' philosophy that he adopted, where, he would announce things that he wasn't yet ready to produce--which is a risky option. Which, by the way, his disciple, or rather, sorry, the person who was trying to model herself on him, Elizabeth Holmes, tried with--

Russ Roberts: Theranos, yeah.

Matt Ridley: Theranos, and it didn't work. And the reason he was able to get away with it, was because Moore's Law kept delivering. I mean, the great thing about transistors was the smaller you made them, the cheaper they got--and the more reliable they got. Whereas, everything else gets less reliable the smaller you make it. So, he was able to deliver on these extraordinary promises.

There's a very nice novel by Robert Harris, very recent novel called The Second Sleep, which came out about a year ago, in which he--I don't want to give the plot away too much, but it's set in the distant future in a very primitive time when we've lost most technologies. And, one of the things they're trying to figure out is why so many of the devices that belong to the ancients had a half-bitten apple drawn on them.

Russ Roberts: Yeah. Well, that's a great way to put his influence.

I was going to say something akin to what I said about Jeff Bezos. Both of us, I think in the last three minutes, used Steve Jobs as a--with verbs and then nouns as if he was the creator. But, of course, he wasn't. He wasn't the inventor of almost any of these things. He was not the innovator. He was the coach. What'd you call him?

Matt Ridley: Packager. I mean, he packages--

Russ Roberts: But, more than that --

Matt Ridley: It's more than that. I agree--

Russ Roberts: He's the coach, he's the inspirer, he's the muse. And he got people to do things for him. You said, 'Fake it till you make it.' He got people to make stuff for him that weren't possible. But they did it because of his charisma.

The Walter Isaacson biography--I happened to pick it up last night after reading your book, and I was looking through it. He talks about when he launched the first Macintosh in 1984. The code wasn't ready. It was a week before they had announced the launch. And, the team came to him and said, 'We're really sorry, we're working like crazy, and it's going to take us three weeks, not one week. So, what we'll do is we'll ship it with a demo software and then we'll ship the real software two weeks after that.'

And, he said, 'You know, you guys, you're so talented. I know you can do it in a week.' And, he walked away. And they did it. They did it. They did something they didn't think they were capable of. And the Isaacson book is filled with those kinds of stories where--you know, he's a visionary, obviously. But, I think, akin to Bezos, he created an innovation factory--not a factory of the late 19th century, but a place where minds work together, crowd-sourcing and creating and testing and failing. And that's his gift--that was his gift, literally.

Matt Ridley: I agree with that. And I think Jobs, Bezos, and Edison have this one thing in common, which is that they spotted that innovation itself could be a product.

Russ Roberts: Well said.

Matt Ridley: You could have a place that, whose job was to generate innovations. Edison was trying all sorts of things. 'Give me a common old garden device that's in use, and I'll try and find you an innovative version of it.' That was the theme of everything he did.

One of the interesting issues that I grapple with in my book is why this works in some fields and not others. It's obviously worked incredibly well in electronics in the last generation. It's not worked as well in vaccines, as we're discovering this year. It's not worked nearly as well in transport, which ground to a halt about 50 years ago in terms of improvements in speed, at least. Sure, airplanes are less likely to crash, and have better movies on them, but they don't go any faster than they did in the 1960s. In fact, we still fly 747s, which entered service in 1969. Imagine using a computer that entered service in 1969?

So, sometimes you come up against physical limits that make it very difficult, or sometimes you come up against regulatory obstacles. The reason nuclear has been unable to innovate in the last generation is because every new design must go through such an enormously expensive and time-consuming regulatory approval process that nobody tries anything new, because if it doesn't work, you're a billion dollars out of pocket, which nobody wants to be.

25:52

Russ Roberts: I want to go back to the Wright brothers for a second. Two things there. One is a wonderful quote in the book. You talk about a remark that a photographer made in describing the Wright brothers. He called them, 'The workingest boys I ever knew. The workingest boys I ever knew.' I think that's just the greatest--

Matt Ridley: Isn't that a lovely quote? I was just thrilled when I came across that quote.

Russ Roberts: And that they just worked like crazy. They didn't have lives; they had no family other than each other. They weren't married, no children.

Matt Ridley: Their sister was a--funnily, their sister was the only graduate in the family, she went to university; they didn't, interestingly.

Russ Roberts: And, that they just kept trying. I read--i don't think this is in your book, but I read on Wikipedia that in, I think it was 2003, the 100th anniversary of the flight at Kitty Hawk, they tried to recreate it; and it couldn't be done because they had so much particular knowledge--

Matt Ridley: Fantastic knowledge--

Russ Roberts: of how that design worked, that to get to that, you couldn't just steer it. You couldn't just take off. It's really a beautiful image. And it's also--by the way, there's a photograph we'll link to, it was a very famous photograph, of the plane when it took off. It gives me goosebumps when I look at it and just mentioning it--it actually looks like it could be photoshopped. It looks like maybe they weren't really off the ground. It's hard to tell. And--I assume it's Wilbur--is standing there in silhouette watching it. And there's something about his stance and the way he's standing that's just incredibly moving to me as part of human creativity.

Matt Ridley: In a stiff collar.

Russ Roberts: Yeah. You talked about how they dressed for church every day, it sounds like.

27:46

Russ Roberts: But, I also want to mention, to take us to the next topic--it's a segue here: there's a book I love called Orbiting the Giant Hairball, which is an unusual title. It's a book by the late Gordon McKenzie, who I had the privilege of talking to a little bit. He is a wonderful man. It's about his adventures in Hallmark, the greeting card company. He was in charge of creativity there and how bizarre that was.

So, the 'giant hairball' is sort of the corporate mess that stops creativity from happening. He has a chapter in that book that is one sentence long, and this is the sentence, could have been in your book, one of my favorite sentences: 'Orville Wright did not have a pilot's license.'

And, there's two great aspects to that. One is it shows the problems with licensing generally; but secondly, it's really about permissionless innovation. Talk about that.

Matt Ridley: Right. Well, I think that's a terrific insight. Because, the degree to which you have to get permission to go off and innovate in certain areas has become a real problem. As you say, it's either through occupational licensing or through government regulation. But also through patents. You had to get permission from your competitors, essentially, to dive into certain areas.

And, one of the interesting things that I'm intrigued by is how the Clinton Administration in the late 1990s deliberately set out to pass some really astonishingly libertarian legislation through Congress that paved the way for eCommerce, that made online retail and online business possible for the first time.

And these rules were essentially it being permissionless. You didn't have to seek someone's permission before you set up an online business.

And, when you contrast that with what it's like if you want to go out and develop a new drug to start to cure cancer or develop a new medical device to diagnose a disease, or something like that, the contrast is truly extraordinary.

And that's why, essentially--and Peter Thiel often makes this point--today we don't--you know, drug discovery has ground to a halt to some extent, whereas the making of video games goes from strength to strength. Because you don't need permission to develop a video game, and you do need permission to develop a drug.

Now, there are good reasons for that. I'm not saying it's not a sensible to have regulation in terms of safety for drug development and so on. But, is it really necessary to take up to 14 months to give approval to a new medical device? No, it's not. The reason we know it's not is because during the COVID-19 Pandemic of 2020, we shortened that period to a couple of weeks in many cases, and we gave new diagnostic devices, new ventilators, all these kinds of things rapid approval.

So, rediscovering the virtues of permissionless innovation is, I think--that phrase by the way, was coined, I think, or at least I came across it in a work by Adam Thierer. I don't know how to pronounce him, T-H-I-E-R-E-R. It does feel to me that this gets to the heart of why I have as a subtitle of my book 'And Why Innovation Flourishes in Freedom,' because I think the one ingredient that is common to all the themes that came out from the stories I told in my book is that the innovator had to be free. He had to be free to fail and try again. He had to be free to change his mind and go in a different direction. He had to be free to try something without getting someone's permission.

But, the consumer also had to be free to express his preference: to say, 'Yes, actually I do want innovations in this area, but I'm not interested in them in another area.' And this combination of completely unpredictable freedom expressed through permissionless innovation is absolutely vital.

And this reminds me of one other point, which I really like, which is that I mentioned earlier that the search engine was kind of inevitable in the 1990s. Once you've invented the Internet, it's obvious you're going to invent the search engine. At least, it's obvious in retrospect, but in prospect, was it obvious? No! Nobody, very few people predicted the importance of search in the 1980s. When they did, they did so in a very vague way.

And in fact, even the people who were inventing search engines, including Larry Page and Sergey Brin, didn't realize that's what they were doing. They were just thinking of ways of cataloging the Internet. And in fact, they came up with--I'll tell you what people were getting wrong. People thought we would go into the Internet and wander around and see what we came across. Instead of which, we go into the Internet looking for something, looking for--

Russ Roberts: Yeah. And then we wander around.

Matt Ridley: And then we wander around within a limited area, is what we do [?]--

Russ Roberts: But, it's interesting how the wandering around has become such an important part of it, a testament to our wealth, I think, the amount of leisure in our standard of living, but--

Matt Ridley: Correct.

Russ Roberts: There's a paradox you just highlighted, I just want to emphasize, which is--and it's what I had in mind also, when I mentioned Steve Jobs--everything seems inevitable, but it seems like every once in a while, someone like Steve Jobs comes along who makes something that only is inevitable in retrospect.

I mean, the App Store--I didn't mention that--but that's a genius idea. Again, on the surface, all of this, just a marketplace. It's just a place to buy and sell stuff. What's the innovation? Really amazing idea, and a risky one because he lost control, obviously, to some extent of what goes on the product, the phone. But, that paradox between: in retrospect, everything looks inevitable, but at the time we can't figure out what comes next--it's a little bit--it's mind-bending.

34:11

Russ Roberts: The other point I want to mention, which I got out of your book, which was really not obvious to me: You can talk about the freedom of both producer and consumer. You have a quote from William Petty--18th century, maybe?

Matt Ridley: Seventeenth century: 1600s.

Russ Roberts: So, a long time ago. He had a tough life. A lot of his insights didn't come to fruition. There's a fantastic quote--I'm not going to read it at length. I'm not going to read it, but there's a quote in there of his frustration. He had all these great ideas, barrier after barrier he couldn't surmount. Competitors, lots of troubles, tough time. And, I thought of that long quote--and it's a litany of complaint--in light of a bromide of--in English--which is: 'Build a better mouse trap, and the world will beat a path to your door.' Which is a statement about consumer sovereignty, basically, and the power of markets.

Yet, a lot of times the consumer doesn't know they want a better mouse trap until it's there, and then it sometimes takes a long time.

So, I thought of that whole dynamism of frustration and the time to market. You have the example of wheeled luggage. That was a good idea. What took so long? And the answer as you pointed out is, it actually was here for a long time. People just didn't notice it--it wasn't marketed well, or who knows? But, that whole idea that, 'Oh yeah, once you build a better thing, it's magic.' It's not.

Matt Ridley: Yeh. Yeh. No--and this comes back to this difference between innovation and invention--is that: you cannot say, 'Here's my prototype. I'm going to sit back and let everybody enjoy the product.' You've got to get out there. And, first of all, explain to people that they might enjoy having your product--which isn't always obvious in some cases. And then you've got to make sure that it's reliable, that the instructions don't take too long to read, or whatever.

I mean, right at the beginning of the book I talk about sliced bread--for the obvious re ason: 'The best thing since slic ed bread,' it became a sort of cliché.

Russ Roberts: I lov e that. I love that you did that.

Matt Ridley: A guy, a former optometrist in Chillicothe, Missouri, who first ma de sliced bread. Why there, in 1920s? Why then? Why there, why him? And there isn't a particularly good answer to any of those questions, actually. I mean, he's German and he's probably a techie kind of guy.

And the heart of the country there has been surprisingly innovative. I mean, Ohio, you know, had produced a whole string of invitations from this airplane to the sewing machine in the decades before that. There was something weird about the Midwest at that point that. Well, the way Silicon Valley is today, if you like.

But, also, this guy realized that it's no good inventing sliced bread unless you invent good packaging for bread. Because, if you slice bread and don't package it properly, it's just going to dry out quicker.

Russ Roberts: Right. It's a great point.

Matt Ridley: So, he realizes, you've got to invent the whole package, quite literally in this case. You don't just invent one aspect of it: you package it in a way that works for people.

And then you get cases like Google Glass, which is just a few years ago, Google came up with a device from their kind of Skunkworks, which they called Google X, which is where they come up with weird products. They came up with this pair of spectacles that you put on and you could basically see in the Glass, your emails or whatever it is you can see, I can't remember--

Russ Roberts: In your field of vision. It can give you information about what you're looking at. It was a brilliant idea, and it's such a failure--

Matt Ridley: It's an incredible technological[?] achievement.

Russ Roberts: It's such a failure that you have to describe what it is because there are people listening who have already forgotten about it, or didn't even know what happened because it dropped off the face of the earth.

Matt Ridley: Right. They launched it, and nobody wanted it. So, they withdrew it and said, 'Well, maybe we'll tweak it and relaunch it,' and they tried that and it didn't work. Turns out that $2,500 to be able to see things in your field of vision, like a fighter pilot can, while looking a bit geeky, because you're wearing a weird pair of specs, doesn't hit the spot for consumers. There are cases where you can take the consumer to water, but he doesn't want to drink.

38:44

Russ Roberts: Yeah. There's a great line in your book--you could teach a whole class of economics around this line, I think. You say the following, 'The chief way in which innovation changes our lives is by enabling people to work for each other.' What did you mean by that?

Matt Ridley: Well, I think this is the great theme of human history: that we've gone from being self-sufficient, where you go out and you plant your own crops and you eat them, to where you spend your working day doing things that help other people and in exchange you get paid for it. We get more and more specialized in the things we produce in order to become more and more diversified in the things that we consume.

So, compared with a self-sufficient peasant, as it were, I can consume a far greater variety of things. Movies, restaurant meals, whatever it might be.

But, in order to achieve that, I have to produce one thing--in my case, a book or in somebody else's case, accountancy, or airline pilot services or whatever it might be--

Russ Roberts: Haircuts.

Matt Ridley: A haircut, exactly. And it's innovation that has been at the heart of making that journey towards interdependence possible or away from self-sufficiency, because it's--this is back to Adam Smith's pin factory: by making me more efficient at cutting hair or writing books, whatever it is, it then makes more sense for me to cut a lot of people's hair rather than just cut hair and plant my own crops. Because if I cut enough people's hair, then I can get enough money to go out and buy food. I don't need to plant my own crops. So, that whole process is--

Here's a really nice story which actually gets to the heart of How Innovation Works. That way of expressing it--that we get more and more specialized in our production so that we can get more and more diversified in our consumption--I got that from a book called Second Nature by a guy called Haim Ofek, which was about, basically, sort of stone-age economics. And, I wrote to him and I said, 'This is such a nice idea. I really want to take it further and explore it; and have you done anything else on this?' This is a long time ago. He wrote back and said, 'Well, I think I got that idea from your book, The Origins of Virtue.' And actually, I hadn't expressed it that way, but he had twisted what I'd said into a way that I then twisted back into a way that I found useful. That's the way innovation works. In this case, innovation in ideas rather than devices, but it's the same.

Russ Roberts: It's fantastic. My version of that is: Self-sufficiency is the road to poverty. You make the point that mutual interdependence is safer. And, of course, it's more interesting. The way you phrase it is: "Modern people have a less varied job, but a much more varied life." So, rather than moving from crop to crop and repairing your house and keeping the horses happy and whatever else was part of agricultural life, now people tend to do one thing--less interesting doing one thing--but their scope for enjoying the fruits of that are of course much larger.

And as you point out, it's a great statistic--it's of course not true, sorry, but it's approximately true, and it's sort of true on average--which is, I think you said in 1900, average people, maybe it was America--I can't remember; I think somewhere, maybe in the Western world--spent about 25% of their life at work. That number is down to 10% because of longer retirement, longer life, longer life expectancy, more education, shorter work week, the two day weekend. And that doesn't include, as you point out, lunch on the job, but it also doesn't account for the use of the Internet on the job, which I always like to point out that many people are able to do in their so-called full-time job. There's a lot of leisure in the full-time job, even though it's less varied.

So, I think that that transformation away from a richer work-life to a richer non-work-life is really a powerful way of thinking about modernity.

Matt Ridley: Yes. I think that's right. And, it'll be interesting to see how far it goes, because this gets to the question of whether robots can replace human work. If we got to the point where robots could do everything and all you need to do is your work instead of flicking a switch at the beginning of a day to tell the robots to fulfill all your needs. People think that's a horrifying concept. But, actually: where's the problem?

Russ Roberts: Well, it's hard to know. A lot of people get meaning from work. So, it's tricky.

Matt Ridley: No, I can see that, and I understand that. But I think it's vanishing the unlikely we will get there because the more--every generation has said, 'Oh my God, this automation, this technology is going to throw people out of work.' In fact, what it's done is enabled us, as you just said a moment ago, to work a smaller proportion of our lives, which is sharing out the ledger that automation gives us. And, you can always think of something, whether it's having your pet groomed or whatever it might be, that you now would like done for you that you couldn't imagine wanting to have done for you when you were an 18th century-century peasant.

45:00

Russ Roberts: I'm going to read a long quote from the book about freedom, and I want to turn to that. You say:

Innovation is the child of freedom because it is a free creative attempt to satisfy freely expressed human desires. Innovative societies are free societies where people are free to express their wishes, seek the satisfaction of those wishes, and where creative minds are free to experiment to find ways to supply those requests so long as they do not harm others.

I do not mean freedom in some extreme libertarian lawless sense. Just the general idea that if something has not been specifically prohibited then the assumption should be made that it must be allowed. A surprisingly rare phenomenon today in a world where governments try to dictate what you can do as well as what you cannot

And I'm just going to continue, because I think this is just the important consequence of that observation. This is again, a quote:

This reliance on freedom explains why innovation cannot easily be planned because neither human wishes nor the means of their satisfaction are easy to anticipate in the detail required. Why innovation nonetheless seems inevitable in retrospect, because the link between desire and satisfaction has only then manifest. Why innovation is a collective and collaborative business because one mind knows too little about other minds. Why innovation is organic, because it must be a response to an authentic and free desire, not what somebody in authority thinks we should want. Why nobody really knows how to cause innovation because no one can make people want something.

And I just think that's a great summary of what your book is about. Just one more line; you say:

Innovation is the child of freedom and the parent of prosperity.

It's a beautiful line.

Matt Ridley: Right. Well, we would not be able to live prosperous lives and have such low child mortality and long lifespans and things, if it weren't for innovations. Innovations like vaccination, which is a beautiful example of a technology that has unbelievably large upsides and extremely small downsides, despite the worries of many people. As we are being reminded at the moment.

And by the way, which has never made anybody a fortune as far as I can make out. I can't think--I talk in the book about the slave who brought vaccination to America, a guy called Onesimus, who was working for the preacher, Cotton Mather, in Boston. Who said, 'Look, I know there's smallpox in Boston at the moment. Back where I came from in West Africa, we used to give a little dose of smallpox to kids from people who'd survived, and that tended to protect them for their lives. You might want to try it.'

And, Mather approaches a bunch of doctors and 13 of them said, 'Don't be ridiculous, that's the most dangerous idea I've ever heard.' And the 14th, Zabdiel Boylston says, 'I'll give it a go.' And he vaccinates--'inoculates' is the right word to use in that context--300 people and they all survived the Boston smallpox pandemic. But Boylston is hounded out of town, is forced to go into hiding because he's done something so unpopular.

Then there are these two wonderful women who invented the whooping cough vaccine very quickly in the 1930s, and never put a foot wrong and never made a penny out of it either. They were just very public-spirited people.

So, the idea that--I'm going to have to just tell my dog to stop making so much noise.

Russ Roberts: It doesn't bother--I can barely hear it. Go ahead, we'll edit this out. Keep going. Go back to the two women and keep your train of thought going. Repeat that part.

Matt Ridley: Yes, exactly. Well Grace Eldering and Pearl Kendrick, or was it the way around, Pearl Eldering and Grace Kendrick? Anyway, that was their names. And they set out really in their spare time to develop a whooping cough vaccine. In four short years, they did it, with the help of Eleanor Roosevelt, who championed their cause. But they then gave it away freely to anyone who wanted it. It basically got rid of whooping cough in America, and then the world. It's now a very rare disease. It was one of the biggest killers of all in the 1920s.

So, you know, these innovations are fantastically important for giving us a better life.

Russ Roberts: The part I particularly liked about the vaccination stories was that: you know, we didn't know anything about antibodies. We didn't know anything about how the human immune system worked. People had this idea of giving people the disease? It's a horrible idea. It's really a bad idea. But some people had seen it work. I forget how I got--the first person who tried it, it's not really the thing you'd think of first as a technique.

Matt Ridley: Well, we don't know. We know that it got to Britain from Constantinople where it was being practiced in the Ottoman Court. But, there was a rumor that this had come from China or Africa. And as I say, an African brought it to America direct from Africa. So, somewhere out in the world, someone had figured this out.

But, as you say, it was centuries, it was Pasteur, before we begin to understand how it works. And even then, we don't really understand it. Even today, I would argue, we don't fully understand it--

Russ Roberts: Not so well.

Matt Ridley: The immunologists are very clever people, but I sometimes think when I'm listening to them that they haven't quite figured it all out yet. They suddenly start to say, 'Well, yes, but T cells are important as well as B cells.' You think, 'All right. Well, which?'

Russ Roberts: Well, it reminds me of the story you tell about birds, that birds have different nests depending on their species, but every bird around the world of a particular species makes a certain kind of nest. They've innovated this technique for incubating their eggs. And, the part that's so weird about it is that, how is that possible? The answer--because they don't have a manual that they show their kids. They don't have the Internet, so kind of they're handicapped. And we have a phrase to explain it. We say, 'Well, it's innate.' To me, that's just the way of saying we don't have any idea how it works.

Matt Ridley: Right. Because, if there was only one way of making a nest and all birds had it, then you would understand it. You know, right now in my garage, there's a swallow, which has five babies in its nest. That nest is made entirely of mud. Now, yesterday I happened when I was taking my dog for a walk to stumble upon a reed bunting's nest, which is made entirely of grass.

Now, that's always the case: all reed buntings build their nests of grass; all swallows build their nests with mud. How on earth do you set up a brain to do that?

By the way, does that explain why we, human beings had a million years of technology before we had anything that seems to resemble innovation? We had these stone tools that did not show any sign of changing for thousands of generations. Maybe they were expressions of instinct in the same way that a bird's nest is an expression of it's instinct.

52:26

Russ Roberts: We're going to digress here for a minute, because I thought this was just so incredibly interesting. You talk about the dog as an innovation. There's a section of the book. Part of this book is about technology and the vaccines and light bulbs and standard things we think of as innovation. But, it also has some things that we sometimes forget are innovative, such as putting a curve in the piping of a toilet to keep the odors out--huge innovation; really simple. But, the domestication of animals and the transformation of a wolf into a more docile creature, and then a wide array of variations on that is an extraordinary innovation.

But, the part that was really mind blowing, is you talk about the idea that maybe humans did this to themselves, as well. We domesticated ourselves: we looked for mates, partners, or partners evolve more effectively when they were more docile, could communicate with strangers, could trust strangers. This whole idea that we look different--and we have smaller brains than some of our ancestors in the same way that dogs have smaller brains than wolves? Do you want to talk about that? That's utterly fascinating.

Matt Ridley: Yeah. Well, one of the ideas about human development over the last tens of thousands of years is that it has been a process of self-domestication--that in some way we had to weed out the people who just lashed out and killed people.

Russ Roberts: You suggest--ape species, they can't board a bus peacefully because they're going to kill each other.

Matt Ridley: Exactly. You're boarding a plane and the guy behind you bumps the back of your knee with a suitcase. You might feel slight irritation, but you don't turn around and kill him, which is what a chimpanzee would do. 'It is a stranger from another tribe and he's just physically assaulted me? We have to attack.'

So, human beings are way lower in reactive aggression than other species. This is an argument made very nicely in a recent book by Richard Wrangham, and I'm struggling to remember his name, the name of the book, but anyway, it's a very good book.

Russ Roberts: We'll find it and link to it. Carry on.

Matt Ridley: Whereas we're worse than other species in terms of planned aggression, cold blood aggression--going out there and deliberately starting a war or murdering someone. We're pretty good at that. But, in terms of the reacting violently, we've somehow tamped that down. Now, the only way we could have done that is by ostracizing or killing the people who did that too much, so that generation after generation, we somehow rewarded the karma people and got rid of the more ridiculously angry and violent people.

We don't know exactly how we did that, but one of the effects that that would have had would be to slow down the development of the last part of the brain. The brain goes through a sort of developmental phase from the bottom to the top. One of the last things it does, it has a whole bunch of cells that migrate to something called the neural crest, which gives you the sort of angry, alpha male end of your brain. That's a terribly oversimplified way of saying what's going on.

And, in doing so, we therefore just slowed down the development of a brain a bit, and as a result, we got slightly smaller brains, as well as having slightly more childlike faces, more interest in play. Like dogs, we're just a bit frozen in youth, as animals. We don't really fully mature into the big, smelly, cross, aggressive, hairy--okay, we do a bit.

Russ Roberts: But, it's less than you might expect. I think that's the punchline and that's what's interesting about it, we're all--yeah. It's just a fascinating idea, unknowable if it's true, but I like to think about it.

Matt Ridley: It's probably 20,000 or 30,000 years back. We're never going to get good evidence.

Russ Roberts: Correct. Now, when we get those time machines, which--

Matt Ridley: Wouldn't that be wonderful?

Russ Roberts: If Steve Jobs had lived longer, I'm sure he would have invented one because we'd like to have one.

57:13

Russ Roberts: More seriously, I want to close with a topic that I don't think you talked about in the book, that I think about a lot. I'm going to put this sort of in a negative way to start with. The book is in praise of innovation to a large--almost totally. You concede there's some innovations that have dark sides, obviously. But, in general, innovation leads to prosperity.

And, oe could argue that, taking a negative view of innovation, that it's just a bunch of gadgets, at least in the modern era: that the cell phone, as remarkable a device as it is, and we had Rodney Brooks on the program talk about an essay he wrote, which I love, where he imagines Newton traveling forward in time and you hand him a cell phone, and here's the person who totally began our understanding of color and how it works. And he sees the screen of the cell phone with all the apps lit up, and it would just blow them away.

And you could actually show him the Principia, his great work, online with his handwritten annotations that we have--that would just--I don't know: his head would explode. Forget showing him a YouTube video on how to make sourdough bread, which he would probably find interesting as well. But, he'd have no idea how it works, none at all. So, there's enormous temptation to romanticize this.

On the flip side--let's be honest--it really doesn't make us that much happier. In fact, it may lead to some dysfunctional behavior we're going to struggle to deal with.

So, to make the case against innovation, you couldn't do it; you didn't. But one could. I want to suggest that there's an upside of innovation that stands beyond all that, which is just the human enterprise of it, the opportunity to express ourselves, to do what Steve Jobs called, 'Put a dent in the universe.' And whether he actually did, or whether it was inevitable, doesn't matter. The novelty, the dynamism of innovation, the ability to work on something that's never been done before, the ability to make something better than what it is now, just seems like it's a fundamental part of humanity that goes beyond the prosperity, standard-of-living part. You want to comment on that?

Matt Ridley: Yeah, I think you're dead right. That even if it's not making us happy, it's worth it, somehow. Because happiness isn't everything. You're absolutely right. I was too utopian about the internet and social media. Twenty years ago, I thought this internet world was going to enable us to understand each other's points of view.

Russ Roberts: Actually, I think you need maybe French horns, I think at that point, with the violin. Sorry, go ahead.

Matt Ridley: Right. Look what social media has done to our society. Whether it's done it alone or would have done it anyway or whatever, I don't know. But rather like printing had a big impact--it set off religious wars. Radio helped the rise of the dictators. So, I think social media has created populism and anger and identity politics and the cancel culture. It's not the happy world I thought it was going to be 20 years ago.

Russ Roberts: Where are those unicorns?

Matt Ridley: Exactly. But, would I trade it for a perpetual version of the 1950s? Of course not. There's just so much more we know about the world, so much more we can do, so much more we can think now than in any generation in the past that I feel that that is worth it. And that somewhere deep in the human psyche is an interest in knowing what's around the corner. Even if what's around the corner is a pretty angry bear.

Russ Roberts: Yeah. I want to come back to the Orville/Wilbur Wright photograph. I love plane travel and part of what I find hard about the pandemic we're in the middle of is that that's off the table. I can't see my family the way I would otherwise be able to. I can't give talks that I had planned. And you could argue that the airplane--and the car, which were clearly the two together that you could argue were the transformative technologies of the 20th century--that they were terrible for humanity. They pushed us apart. They destroyed the small town. They killed family life. They allowed family members to move far away and not see each other, which meant children were raised--you can tell that story.

And then you look at that photograph--one of the things that's great about it is that whoever is not in the plane--again, I think it's Wilbur--you can't see his face. His back is to us. You see his profile, silhouette. Can you imagine what he would look like head on? We can. We have some idea of that incredible magic. You talk about the space launch, visiting the moon, not much practical about it. Doesn't matter. It's a glorious human achievement.

Matt Ridley: Yeah. I can remember--I think for some reason I was woken in the middle of the night for the Apollo 11 Moon Landing. I can't remember what time of day it happened; but I was nine years old. My parents didn't want me to miss it--11 years old, sorry. My parents didn't want me to miss it. I couldn't understand why these people kept saying the word 'Houston.' I didn't know what Houston was. But, a grainy image; and I'm just so thrilled I was alive at that moment. I would have been furious if my parents had let me sleep through that.

So, this is an incredible planet, and it is an incredible world, and somewhere in the next 50 years, something equally momentous is going to happen. Whether it's first contact with interstellar intelligence or the rescuing of extinct species, like the mammoth from extinction and bringing them back to life, which I think is easily going to be possible in the next two decades. That's why we're in this game.

Russ Roberts: Probably put those species on Mars. I think we'll create this like tourist zoo there, where you can go hang out with the mammoth, the Brontosaurus.

1:04:11

Russ Roberts: Let's close with where we're headed. And I don't mean literally, and you do talk about it in the book a little bit--a lot of people feel we've lost our mojo. Innovation is--we wanted flying cars and we got Twitter. I happen to think Twitter is extraordinary. There are a lot of negative things about it. I talk about it on here. But, when I think about leaving Twitter, which I've thought about and may still do, where would I get my information, my intellectual stimulation?

Matt Ridley: Yeah; it's the most incredible news feed, isn't it? It's so much better than--

Russ Roberts: All the ideas and--well, there'd be an alternative, would be part of the answer; and there are a bunch of them out there trying right now.

But, this view that somehow we live--you know, 'rate of productivity is very low, productivity growth is low; standard of livings are stagnant.' There's a lot of pessimism in the world that I find peculiar. I want your take on that. Are you pessimistic about where we're headed and where we are right now?

Matt Ridley: On the whole, not, I'm still a rational optimist. I spent 10 years going around telling people I've written a book called The Rational Optimist and the world's getting better, not worse. They would say, 'But, you can't possibly go on thinking that because of the Great Financial Crisis, the war in Ukraine, the war in Syria--

Russ Roberts: Climate change.

Matt Ridley: Climate change; whatever it might be. Every year, there would be one reason. This year it's the pandemic.

So, I don't believe we've stopped the engine of human improvement at all. But I do just worry a little bit more than I did 10 years ago about the fact that the main engine of the world innovation system is now in China, which was actually quite a free place until recently. It wasn't free politically, but it was free economically. If you wanted to start a business, as long as you didn't annoy the Communist Party, you could do pretty well anything.

That's no longer the case. That's now run by a pretty monstrous dictatorial regime. Something similar has happened in other places.

And, the West has to some extent lost its mojo. And we are going through a cultural revolution that doesn't like reason and openness and free markets and free enterprise and free ideas to the same degree.

So, I could talk myself into a bit of gloom, and remind myself what happened to the incredible open discussion of ideas in the early Roman Empire--you know, when you could speculate about evolution and the atomic theory of matter and all sorts of things. Then along come the Christians and say, 'Nope, we're banning all those books.' I hope that doesn't happen, but, you know, you can't guarantee it won't happen.

Russ Roberts: Yeah. There are other things to worry about. It's interesting, most of those things are about governance. They're not about the process. The process, if we let it go, which is what your book is about, if we could leave it alone, again, not an anarchist version of leaving alone, but allow permissionless innovation to continue, we would solve, I think, many, many problems. But as you point out, I forgot who you used as your example, someone coming back to the present from the past and--not coming back, someone coming to the present from the past and being amazed by the devices and technology that would be available to that person--would walk into Parliament and feel totally at home, because it has not changed.

Matt Ridley: Daniel Defoe is the person.

Russ Roberts: Yeah; so, that's an incredible thing. That--it's a paradox there. You don't necessarily want government to change. You want it to adjust to deal with the new reality. But you could argue that some of the principles of government that we've had in the past are timeless and they are what allow the rest of the world to move into the future. And vice versa. If we pick the wrong principles, we stay mired in the present into the past.

Matt Ridley: Absolutely. I think that's exactly right . Because, there's a reason you don't make constitutional change easy in any country. And, innovative ways of making laws would not necessarily be much help. You want to make it difficult to change the law. So, to some extent, I'm pleased if we could--well, actually, it's quite interesting that, because, as you know, I sit in one of the Houses of Parliament, in the House of Lords; and we're meeting virtually at the moment. It's going on as we speak. I could be listening in on my colleagues' speeches. It doesn't work at all well virtually. It's almost impossible to have a reasonable--anything resembling a debate. And as for a vote, well, we all vote without listening to the arguments, if we're not careful. Which is not the point.

So, the innovation of making Parliament an online thing that we've experienced this year has been, I would argue, pretty disastrous. We need to get back to real, frontline, face-to-face debate, and of course, bumping into each other in the corridor and having a drink and doing a deal and all that stuff. Because that's the way the world works best in politics.

There are things one could drag into the future. Like, you know, as I point out, I sometimes, if I have to make a formal speech in Parliament, I do so reading it off an iPad. That would horrify the--

Russ Roberts: You should be using parchment and an inkwell.

Matt Ridley: Exactly, a good improvement of that.

Russ Roberts: My guest today has been Matt Ridley. Matt, thanks for being part of EconTalk.

Matt Ridley: Russ, I've really enjoyed the conversation. Thank you for having me on.