Jed Anderson
A Walk You've Never Taken

Essay

A Walk You've Never Taken

Twelve things actually happening to you right now

Begin the walk →

We are climbing a mountain no one has climbed—using information to protect physical environmental systems at scale. The single biggest obstacle isn’t technology. It’s that we walk through reality every day without seeing what’s actually happening.

This piece is twelve exercises, each grounded in verified physics, each takeable in about ten seconds. The point isn’t to be impressive. The point is that the world is already extraordinary, and almost no one is looking at it. Once you can see what’s actually there—your feet falling and catching twice per second, 870 watts of infrared pouring off your skin, a tree assembled from air and sunlight by 25 kilobytes of genetic instructions—the move from mass-based stewardship to information-based stewardship stops feeling like a thesis and starts feeling like the only sensible response to what’s in front of you.

The twelve observations end at the same ratio that anchors The Intelligence Leverage Equation: 239 to 1 at the chemical bond level, 10²⁰ at the theoretical limit. Knowing is cheaper than moving. That’s the mountain. This walk is the first switchback.

Best experienced full-screen. Scroll slowly. Look closely.


Cite this
BibTeX
@misc{anderson_2026_walk_youve_never_taken,
  author = {Jed Anderson},
  title  = {A Walk You've Never Taken},
  year   = {2026},
  url    = {https://jedanderson.org/essays/walk-youve-never-taken},
  note   = {Accessed: 2026-05-13}
}
APA
Anderson, J. (2026). A Walk You've Never Taken. Retrieved from https://jedanderson.org/essays/walk-youve-never-taken
MLA
Anderson, Jed. "A Walk You've Never Taken." Jed Anderson, May 12, 2026, https://jedanderson.org/essays/walk-youve-never-taken.

Press Esc to close.