"What should exist? To me, that's the most exciting question imaginable. What do we need that we don't have? How can we realize our potential?"
About this Quote
Paul Allen frames ambition as an act of imagination, not acquisition. Coming from a billionaire co-founder of Microsoft, the question "What should exist?" is a quiet rebuke to the usual tech-era tell: that success is about optimizing what already exists and then monetizing it. Allen’s phrasing pitches creation as a moral and civic project, a way to justify power by pointing it outward.
The intent reads as a manifesto for a particular kind of capitalist self-image: the builder-philanthropist who sees markets as laboratories. By asking "What do we need that we don’t have?" Allen positions innovation as a response to absence, even hunger. It’s a rhetorically clever move. Need implies urgency and legitimacy; it suggests that new products or institutions aren’t indulgences, they’re answers. That’s Silicon Valley’s favorite alchemy: turning desire into necessity, and necessity into destiny.
The subtext is equally revealing. "To me" softens what could sound like entitlement, but it also centers the visionary individual, the person with the resources to treat possibility as a personal thrill. "Realize our potential" expands from the inventor to the collective, inviting everyone into the uplift narrative, even though the ability to shape what exists is radically unequal.
Context matters: Allen’s career spanned the shift from computers as tools to platforms as environments. His later investments and philanthropy (science initiatives, arts, conservation) read like attempts to answer his own prompt at scale. The quote works because it makes creation feel like a civic duty while keeping the romance of the frontier intact.
The intent reads as a manifesto for a particular kind of capitalist self-image: the builder-philanthropist who sees markets as laboratories. By asking "What do we need that we don’t have?" Allen positions innovation as a response to absence, even hunger. It’s a rhetorically clever move. Need implies urgency and legitimacy; it suggests that new products or institutions aren’t indulgences, they’re answers. That’s Silicon Valley’s favorite alchemy: turning desire into necessity, and necessity into destiny.
The subtext is equally revealing. "To me" softens what could sound like entitlement, but it also centers the visionary individual, the person with the resources to treat possibility as a personal thrill. "Realize our potential" expands from the inventor to the collective, inviting everyone into the uplift narrative, even though the ability to shape what exists is radically unequal.
Context matters: Allen’s career spanned the shift from computers as tools to platforms as environments. His later investments and philanthropy (science initiatives, arts, conservation) read like attempts to answer his own prompt at scale. The quote works because it makes creation feel like a civic duty while keeping the romance of the frontier intact.
Quote Details
| Topic | Vision & Strategy |
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