We like to think the future is open. That our lives are shaped by choices, chance, and a bit of luck.

But increasingly, the future is being predicted, and those predictions are starting to decide things in advance. Whether we get a job, a loan, medical treatment, or even how we’re policed, many of life’s possibilities are now filtered through forecasts about who we are and what we might do next.

In this provocative conversation, Oxford philosopher Carissa Véliz argues that prediction has always been less about seeing the future than about controlling it. From ancient oracles to modern data systems, prophecies don’t just describe what will happen – they shape behaviour, narrow our options, and quietly distribute power.

Joining her is Roger McNamee, tech investor and NYT bestselling author of Zucked, who has spent years exposing how digital platforms turn prediction into influence.

Together, they explore a deeper, more uncomfortable question:

What happens when the future arrives pre-decided?

Speaker:

  • Carissa Veliz, associate professor at the Oxford Faculty of Philosophy and the Institute for Ethics in AI

Chair:

  • Roger McNamee, tech investor and author

Roger McNamee

Tech investor and author

A black-and-white close-up photo of a person with medium-length hair, wearing round glasses and smiling gently, captures a moment that hints at The Power of Prediction, with shelves blurred in the background.

Carissa Véliz

Oxford philosopher

A woman with dark hair and a slight smile rests her chin on her clasped hands, exuding quiet confidence. She wears a watch and sits before a blurred background with soft lights—capturing the introspective mood of The Power of Prediction in black and white.

Photo credit: Jorge Monedero

Book cover for "Prophecy: The Power of Prediction" by Carissa Véliz, featuring a crystal ball with a camera lens on a pedestal, set against a gradient yellow-green-blue background, with handwritten title and author text.
A person wearing a bright orange sweater and yellow earrings smiles while seated on a green chair. They are on a stage or panel, with a blurred audience in the foreground and a projection screen in the background.

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