×

Our award-winning reporting has moved

Context provides news and analysis on three of the world’s most critical issues:

climate change, the impact of technology on society, and inclusive economies.

 
Part of: Communicating climate change
Back to package

If sci-fi spurs technology, can 'social fiction' spark change?

by Laurie Goering | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Wednesday, 24 April 2013 05:45 GMT

The unmanned U.S. commercial cargo ship Cygnus is seen approaching the International Space Station in this September 29, 2013 handout photo by NASA. REUTERS/NASA TV/Handout via Reuters

Image Caption and Rights Information

* Any views expressed in this opinion piece are those of the author and not of Thomson Reuters Foundation.

Sharing images of a better society is the first step to building one, argues Nobel Prize winner Muhammad Yunus

Ever notice how the gadgets of science fiction - the personal communications devices, the 3-D copy machines, the killer drones - become reality in time? Putting an idea out in the public imagination is the first step to making it real, says Muhammad Yunus, the Nobel Prize-winning founder of the microcredit movement.

“Every day, we see what used to be impossible become possible, and routine,” he says.

So why is social change harder to achieve than technological change? In part because there are fewer visions available of what a better future would look like, he argues.

“Science follow science fiction, but we don’t have social fiction, so society doesn’t move as much,” he noted while receiving an award for his life’s achievements at the Skoll World Forum gathering in Oxford, England, this week. If more movies, television series and other media could be created to help people envision better future societies, “I bet we’ll create the societies,” he said.

He urged people trying to improve society to follow their instincts, to notice small chanced-upon things that spur ideas and not to be afraid to move forward with half-baked ideas.

LITTLE LIGHT-BULB MOMENTS

His microcredit revolution - providing tiny loans at market interest rates to the world’s poorest, helping them escape what he termed a “slavery” relationship with loan sharks - came about by accident when he discovered, while talking to a bamboo weaver in a village in his native Bangladesh, that he could pay off the debts that were crushing her and limiting her income to 2 cents a day with the change in his pocket.

That day he paid the debts of 43 village women - a total of $27 - and his idea was born.

Many great social enterprises come from such moments, not from careful business plans, he said.

“You persuade yourself along the way that what you do is right,” he said.

IMAGINING IMPROVEMENTS

He pointed to the example of another honoree, Salman Amid Khan, who spent two years in a closet in California creating video lectures for students on math topics, science and history, then putting them all online, free, under the name Khan Academy.

Today his lectures, translated into dozens of languages, are used by everyone from Microsoft billionaire Bill Gates’ children to orphans in Mongolia, giving everyone in the world with Internet access the possibility of having the same high-quality education.

Now “we need only one global university - the best,” Yunus said.

In trying to improve technology - or societies - “if we imagine it, it will happen,” he promised.

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

-->