Technology
Zuckerberg: How Silicon Valley reacts to my $3B fund to end disease
- In 2016, Mark Zuckerberg and Priscilla Chan pledged a $3
billion donation to “cure all disease.” - In a recent interview with The New Yorker, Zuckerberg
said the reception he’s received is either one of two things:
he should focus on something else or be less ambitious with his
goals. - But Zuckerberg isn’t deterred —
he thinks there’s an upside to speeding up the increase in life
expectancy, and he believes the framework behind his plan will
do just that.
In 2016, Mark Zuckerberg and his wife
Priscilla Chan made a significant step toward humankind:
Announcing that the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative
(CZI) will donate $3 billion to fund a plan to “cure all
disease.”
According to Chan, a pediatrician, the goal is not
for no one to ever get sick, but to drastically reduce the
frequency and severity of global disease.
In the two years since, Zuckerberg has soaked up a
range of criticism and response to this ambitious objective. In a
recent in-depth interview with the The New Yorker, Zuckerberg
said people in Silicon Valley react in one of two ways:
“A bunch of people have the reaction of ‘Oh, that’s
obviously going to happen on its own — why don’t you just spend
your time doing something else?’ And then a bunch of people have
the reaction of ‘Oh, that seems almost impossible — why are you
setting your sights so high?'”
But Zuckerberg is one for a
challenge. The foundation intends to make riskier projects
possible for scientists, even if they won’t yield results for 20
or 50 years. “They want to give medical scientists the
opportunity to work like coders in an ambitious Silicon Valley
startup,” Business Insider previously
explained.
In 2017, the organization created an independent nonprofit
Biohub, which committed $50 million to 47
scientists, technologists, and engineers working at UCSF,
Stanford, and UC-Berkeley, reported Business Insider’s Lydia
Ramsey.
Despite the dubious reactions he’s received, Zuckerberg remains positive
about this plan.
“On average, every year for the last eighty years or so, I
think, life expectancy has gone up by about a quarter of a year.
And, if you believe that technological and scientific progress is
not going to slow, there is a potential upside to speeding that
up,” he told The New Yorker.
He continued: “We’re going to get to a point where the life
expectancy implied by extrapolating that out will mean that we’ll
basically have been able to manage or cure all of the major
things that people suffer from and die from today. Based on the
data that we already see, it seems like there’s a reasonable
shot.”
The billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates seems to
agree.
“There are aspirations and then there are plans, and plans
vary in terms of their degree of realism and concreteness,” Gates
told The New Yorker in regards to Zuckerberg’s objectives.
As Gates put it, Zuckerberg’s long-range goal is “very
safe, because you will not be around to write the article saying
that he overcommitted.”
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