There is a flight I took in 2001 that I have never fully stopped thinking about. Not the flight itself โ a forgettable three-hour hop in a middle seat โ but the two-hour delay that preceded it. The gate agentโs apologetic crackling over the intercom. The way I surrendered to the terminal, found a bar stool, ordered something I didnโt need. The man next to me was reading a book I recognized. We talked for two hours. He told me about a job. I didnโt take it โ but I spent three months considering it, which is its own kind of detour. I came out the other side different in ways I still canโt fully account for.
I have told this story before as a story about luck. Iโm not sure thatโs what it is.
Alexander Krauss spent years going through the records of scienceโs major discoveries โ Nobel Prize winners, the landmark non-Nobel findings, more than 750 in all โ looking for the mechanism behind what everyone had been calling serendipity. The telescope trained on an unexpected patch of sky. Flemingโs contaminated petri dish. The chance observation that shouldnโt have meant anything but did.
What he found upended the romance of the story. The discoveries that seemed most accidental, most shaped by the caprice of an unlucky sneeze or a mislabeled sample, turned out to follow a pattern. Nearly all of them happened shortly after a researcher gained access to a new tool. The accidental observation of cells under an improved microscope. X-rays discovered through a discharge tube nobody had pointed in that direction before. The first planet beyond our solar system, caught by a spectrograph that hadnโt existed a few years earlier. What looked like lightning striking the same improbable spot again and again was actually the same thing each time: a new instrument creating the conditions under which something unexpected could be seen.
Krauss calls this โengineering serendipity.โ The phrase stops me every time I read it, because it sounds like a contradiction and turns out to be the most practical sentence in the philosophy of discovery. You canโt engineer the specific surprise. But you can engineer the conditions that make surprise likely. You can build the lens before you know what it will show you.
This distinction โ between engineering an unexpected discovery and engineering the conditions for unexpected discovery โ is one Iโve been carrying around like a stone in my pocket. Because I think it applies far outside the laboratory. I think itโs one of the central design problems of a life.
The book trend critics are calling โDigital Nostalgiaโ is, depending on how you read it, either the most sentimental or the most diagnostic thing happening in literary culture right now. The novels topping lists this spring are full of people losing their recordings, waking up in centuries without algorithms, mourning the weight of analog things. Ben Lernerโs new novel begins with a dropped phone in a hotel sink โ the recording gone, the moment unrecoverable. Caro Claire Burkeโs Yesteryear sends a social-media influencer back to an 1855 that is nothing like the one she curated for her followers: cold, filthy, unfiltered, and somehow more real.
What readers are reaching for in these books is not the past per se. Itโs the texture of a life that wasnโt predicted in advance. The feeling of not knowing what came next because nothing had pre-sorted the possibilities. Nostalgia, in its root meaning, is pain at being far from home. What Digital Nostalgia seems to be mourning is something more specific: the disappearance of accident from everyday life.
I notice this in small ways. My phone knows where Iโm going before Iโve decided to leave. The algorithm has predicted, with unsettling accuracy, what I will want to read next. The coffee shop I found by walking down an unfamiliar street now gets recommended to me, which is useful and also somehow diminishes the thing I found. The city I live in has become a more efficient version of itself. Less of it surprises me than used to.
This is not entirely bad. But something is lost in the smoothing. And the books people are buying tell you what.
The urbanist argument for cities has always included, at some level, an argument for density as a serendipity engine. You put people in proximity. You make them share transit and sidewalks and bars and parks. Intersections happen. Ideas cross. The great creative explosions of modern history โ Florentine painting, Viennese psychoanalysis, the Bell Labs cafeteria โ were products less of individual genius than of designed proximity. People who wouldnโt have met each other kept meeting each other.
Whatโs interesting about Kraussโs argument is that it generalizes this principle to the history of science in a way that makes it quantifiable. Itโs not just that cities were generative because they were dense. Itโs that they were generative because they were full of new tools โ printing presses, coffeehouses, salons โ that created new surfaces where minds could collide and refract in new ways. The tool doesnโt make the discovery. It makes the discovery possible, and likely, and reproducible by others.
Which brings me back to the airport bar.
The two-hour delay created an unstructured interval I hadnโt planned for. I didnโt know what to do with it, so I sat somewhere I wouldnโt normally have sat. The man next to me had a book that served as an opening. We were both temporarily outside our routines, which is another way of saying: we were both in a new instrument, looking at something we hadnโt known to look for.
What Iโve been slow to admit is that this kind of moment doesnโt just happen. It happens to people who are outside their routines. It happens in places where unlike people are forced into proximity. It happens when you sit down somewhere without your headphones, without a screen to retreat into, in the condition of being briefly unoptimized. The delay was the tool. The discovery followed.
So here is the tension I keep returning to: you can engineer the conditions for serendipity, but you cannot engineer serendipity itself, and the engineering has to be genuinely open-ended or it stops working. If you design a system that produces specific surprises, you havenโt built a serendipity engine. Youโve built a surprise dispenser, which is a different and lesser thing. Amazonโs โyou might also likeโ feature is not serendipity. It is prediction wearing serendipityโs clothes.
The difference is whether the system preserves its capacity to show you something it didnโt know you needed to see. A new microscope could reveal anything. A recommendation algorithm reveals only a constrained neighborhood of the space of things youโve already wanted. The former is a lens. The latter is a mirror.
I think this is what the Digital Nostalgia readers are grieving, without quite being able to name it: not the analog past itself, but the unoptimized interval. The moment between knowing what you wanted and finding it, when anything might happen. That space has been shrinking for twenty years, and the algorithmโs promise โ to eliminate friction, to anticipate, to smooth โ has turned out to be partly a promise to eliminate possibility.
The question Iโm sitting with is whether itโs recoverable. Not globally โ Iโm not interested in the manifesto version of this argument, the call to smash the phones or return to the forest. But personally. Whether I can design my own life to include enough genuine aperture โ enough unoptimized intervals, enough new tools, enough places where I am briefly outside my routine and available to be surprised โ to keep the surprises coming.
I have some guesses about what this looks like. Reading outside my field. Saying yes to the conversation I donโt have time for. Choosing the longer route. Leaving earlier so the delay doesnโt feel like a crisis.
These are small things. They are also, if Krauss is right, approximately how all the important discoveries get made.
The flight eventually boarded. I didnโt take the job. But I thought about it for three months, which means I thought about my actual life for three months โ what I wanted from it, what I was settling for, what I hadnโt been willing to name. The man at the bar didnโt change my path. He changed my angle of view, briefly, enough. Iโve been a little suspicious of smooth trips ever since.
You must be logged in to post a comment.