There is a point ahead—perhaps near, perhaps already passed—where change becomes so rapid and profound that human minds cannot model what comes next. This is the singularity: not an event, but a threshold of comprehension.
You have lived through many singularities already. The agricultural revolution was a singularity for hunter-gatherers. The industrial revolution was a singularity for farmers. The internet was a singularity for pre-digital minds.
Each time, those on the far side could not imagine the world on the near side. Try to explain social media to someone from 1950. Try to explain global supply chains to someone from 1750. Try to explain writing itself to someone from 10,000 BCE.
The coming singularity will be different in degree, not in kind. Artificial intelligence that exceeds human intelligence. Biotechnology that rewrites the human form. Nanotechnology that manipulates matter at the molecular scale. These are not separate futures—they converge.
And beyond the threshold? We cannot say. Those who claim to know are lying or deluded. The very definition of a singularity is that prediction fails. All we know is that everything will be different.