| > When faster CPUs will be very hard to invent but essential to human survival? Maybe. I'd say we're already at the point that they are essential to our survival, at least for societies as they currently exist. CPUs are also hard to invent, and hard to progress already, requiring hundreds of millions of dollars for each new iteration. > Business is great at researching processes of manufacturing. Not so good when it comes to researching actually new stuff. I don't believe it. Most of the things we currently use were invented by businesses, or by someone who then started a business to sell it. > But they must become unreasonable at some point if they cost as much as the incentive for research for companies. Again, you're assuming the conclusion. Maybe this is the case in some circumstances, but it's a assuming a lot to claim this is the case for all companies and all drugs. And if the cost is really this high, then incentivizing more creative approaches to treatment might just be better anyway. It shows a lack of imagination if we can only use a hammer when faced with a health problem. |
Yes. I don't say business is useless when it comes to research. Business is great at researching how to tune the production process so that the thing they went to produce is affordable for as many people as possible.
Every invention goes through business to reach you. But it usually starts at the university on in military research.
> Again, you're assuming the conclusion.
I don't think I do.
1. Companies fund research with selling drugs they invent.
2. Inventing drugs gets more expensive.
1 & 2 => drugs get more expensive.