Vinay Gupta is the smartest human you’ve never heard of.

He’s a technologist, inventor, futurist, systems theorist, and global resilience guru whose life’s work focuses on how to ensure the long-term survival and flourishing of the human race.

Gupta sees his work as an extension of the work of renowned inventor and systems theorist, R. Buckminster Fuller. Like Fuller, Gupta is a strong believer in the potential for the creation/deployment of “utopian technologies” that address many of the global challenges and issues faced by humanity.

He is perhaps best-known for inventing the hexayurt, an extraordinarily inexpensive and easy-to-build housing structure. Hexayurts are now being utilized as housing in various places throughout the world and are especially popular as temporary dwellings at Burning Man. Gupta’s vision for the hexayurt, though, is much greater: At 20% of the cost of a disaster relief tent, hexayurts are likely to become indispensable in disaster relief scenarios and refugee camps. And, if mass-produced and widely distributed, they could theoretically eliminate homelessness on Earth.

Gupta’s work with the hexayurt is only the proverbial tip of a gargantuan iceberg, though. For years he worked extensively with the US government and military to solve disaster-relief problems that no one else could handle. He’s also created Simple Critical Infrastructure Maps, an analysis tool for evaluating personal and social resilience that is used by the US Department of Defense. He’s developed detailed plans for the alleviation of global poverty through a re-imagining of local infrastructure and the utilization of networked education. He wrote a 60,000-word novel in 6 days. In his 20s, he was a dedicated meditator, studying an ancient practice from the Himalayas under an accomplished guru, and he believes he has attained a form of enlightenment. In the midst of everything, he’s also managed to tweet 116,000 times.

Gupta is basically a 21st-century Übermensch whose work and identity are not easy to pithily summarize. For reference, here’s how he describes himself:

“I am trying to keep you alive. There are lots of threats which governments are either ignoring or causing. I am filling in the gaps. Overconsumption is reducing our planet’s ability to support life. Seven of us exist for every person alive 200 years ago! Nuclear war, bioweapons, even plain old conflict are driven by resource scarcity. Good engineering could at least double how far our resources can stretch, the rest has to be done by demand reduction: living within planetary limits. But governments do not fund engineering solutions to political problems, except in war, so the technologies which could bring plenty to the world (or at least more room for manoeuvre) are largely unfunded or undeployed. A likely response to increasing resource scarcity (manifest as economic problems and rising prices) is centralization of power (fascism). In the past, hard right-wing governments have come to power during and after economic collapses, leading to unnecessary wars or even genocide. Democides (governments turning on their people) killed a quarter-billion people in the 20th century. Finding better solutions than centralization and war is my life’s work.“

3 World-Expanding Vinay Gupta Lectures/Interviews

Listening to Vinay Gupta has been, without a doubt, one of the most educational experiences of my life.

An eloquent speaker, Gupta synthesizes broad knowledge and perspective from a variety of disciplines in a way that illuminates the surprising and exciting connections between them. His overarching concern is always the future of humanity, but in his explorations of this topic he shifts fluidly between the roles of technologist, systems theorist, cultural critic, economist, historian, philosopher, anthropologist, futurist, and political theorist, among others. With the empirical rigor of a scientist and the wonder of a mystic, he unfurls incomparably lucid arguments and explanations that serve as an invaluable model of clear thinking.

And I’ve barely said anything about his specific ideas. Here’s a small sampling of some of the profound possibilities/thoughts he discusses:

How we could utilize blockchain technology to create a global democracy on the Internet that allows the entire human race to vote on issues that affect everyone

on the Internet that allows the entire human race to vote on issues that affect everyone How smartphones, hexayurts, and cryptocurrencies could transform refugee camps, massively empower the people within them, and/or help eliminate global poverty

How the rapidly declining cost of solar power and other decentralized technologies will likely catalyze a major migration away from cities in the next couple decades

in the next couple decades Why it makes sense for humanity to become a multi-planetary species to ensure the long-term continuation of our earthly evolutionary branch

to ensure the long-term continuation of our earthly evolutionary branch Why nation-states are ineffective/inefficient when it comes to addressing poverty, climate change, environmental degradation, etc.; and why technological change is therefore our best hope for confronting many global issues

If these ideas seem somewhat inaccessible, have no fear: Vinay Gupta is a master of explaining complex concepts in a way that virtually anyone can understand. So, you know, just listen to him speak.

And if you don’t really see how these ideas are relevant to your life, look closer: Gupta is attempting to devise solutions to humanity’s greatest challenges: the environmental crisis, global poverty, the refugee crisis, governmental corruption/ineffectiveness, existential risks, etc. We are at a precarious moment in human history, one in which all of our lives and the lives of future generations depend upon our collective ability to address the issues which Gupta is tackling. It is no exaggeration to say that his work is relevant to every sentient being on the planet. After listening to hours upon hours of Vinay’s expositions, I feel I now have a significantly better understanding of this point in human history and of the most urgent issues faced by our species.

Below you’ll find three of my favorite videos of Vinay Gupta. If these pique your interest, you can find many more on YouTube. I’ll also likely create a follow-up post in which I share several more of his lectures/interviews. For now, though, these three videos are a spectacular place to start, and I genuinely believe that watching them will teach you more about the world and the future of humanity than several university courses.

Resilience Guru: Interview With London Real

This interview is essentially the ultimate crash course in Vinay Gupta’s work. It’s more or less an autobiography of Gupta’s life that is also bursting with amazing insights. Listening to it was one of the most profound 1.5-hour experiences of my life. If you would prefer to start with a shorter introduction, start with the next video.

Transcending Politics: Interview With Brave the World

In this short 17-minute interview, Vinay Gupta responds to the question, “Do you think we can transcend politics?” He discusses various promising technologies that may allow humanity to address certain pressing issues without needing to rely on slow, outmoded political processes to bring about change.

Plausible Utopias: Lecture at the Meaning Conference, 2012

Though only ~28 minutes long, this lecture is seriously potent. In it, Gupta discusses the present state of the human enterprise and a number of risks that could threaten the entire global population. However, he is fairly optimistic, ultimately arguing that if a few things go in our favor, we are rapidly approaching an arguably utopian world.

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If you want to continue down the Vinay Gupta rabbit hole, you simply must listen to his five-part interview with the folks at the Future Thinkers podcast. It’s stunning. Here are links to parts 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5.

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Further Study: The Future We Deserve: 100 Essays About the Future by Vinay Gupta, et al.

A version of this essay was first published at HighExistence.