The Next Fifty Years: Science in the First Half of the Twenty-First Century by John Brockman

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(Paperback)

  • Pub. Date: May 2002
  • 301pp
  • Sales Rank: 343,515
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: May 2002
    • Publisher: Random House Inc
    • Format: Paperback, 301pp
    • Sales Rank: 343,515

    Synopsis

    A brilliant ensemble of the world’s most visionary scientists provides twenty-five original never-before-published essays about the advances in science and technology that we may see within our lifetimes.

    Theoretical physicist and bestselling author Paul Davies examines the likelihood that by the year 2050 we will be able to establish a continuing human presence on Mars. Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi investigates the ramifications of engineering high-IQ, geneticially happy babies. Psychiatrist Nancy Etcoff explains current research into the creation of emotion-sensing jewelry that could gauge our moods and tell us when to take an anti-depressant pill. And evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins explores the probability that we will soon be able to obtain a genome printout that predicts our natural end for the same cost as a chest x-ray. (Will we want to read it? And will insurance companies and governments have access to it?) This fascinating and unprecedented book explores not only the practical possibilities of the near future, but also the social and political ramifications of the developments of the strange new world to come.

    Also includes original essays by:

    Lee Smolin
    Martin Rees
    Ian Stewart
    Brian Goodwin
    Marc D. Hauser
    Alison Gopnik
    Paul Bloom
    Geoffrey Miller
    Robert M. Sapolsky
    Steven Strogatz
    Stuart Kauffman
    John H. Holland
    Rodney Brooks
    Peter Atkins
    Roger C. Schank
    Jaron Lanier
    David Gelernter
    Joseph LeDoux
    Judith Rich Harris
    Samuel Barondes
    Paul W. Ewald

    Publishers Weekly

    Agent Brockman has collected 25 of his writers to discuss the future of science in their respective fields of study. Several of these writers surpass ordinary trend spotting to entertain some rather pulse-quickening ideas completely beyond the kin of the so-called dominant paradigm. And some are of a magnitude to radically advance the nature of humans' interaction with each other, the planet and beyond. The neurologist Robert Sapolsky, for example, posits that sadness will take its place alongside AIDS and Alzheimer's as the most notorious medical disasters of the next half-century. Brockman, who is also an author-editor (The Third Culture; The Greatest Inventions of the Past 2,000 Years, etc.), divides his collection into two parts: the future in theory and the future in practice. Theoretical topics include cosmology, what it means to be alive, the nature of consciousness and the possibility of extraterrestrial intelligence. Mars exploration, DNA sequencing, neuroscience, child rearing and the like are addressed in the practical half. These essays can be quite technical, intended as they are to make the latest scientific information available for cross-disciplinary research. The intellectual adventures collected here point to a future that is dazzlingly bright, at least to the eyes of these unorthodox thinkers. The general public, for whom these essays are also written, should be similarly bedazzled. (May 21) Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.

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    Biography

    John Brockman lives in New York City.

    Customer Reviews

    Next Fifty Years: Science in the First Half of the Twenty-First Centuryby Anonymous

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    February 28, 2008: I'm new to the subject of futures so a bunch of things in this book was mind boggling for me. I wouldn't have read this book by my own choice but I'm glad I did. If your not a big fan of science this is a great way to quickly catch up with what is currently going on in various fields of science and what experts believe will happen in the near future. Some of the topics may be familiar from what we read and see in the news, but even then, here they dig a little deeper on subjects which then better explain how they come to the conclusion that these ideas will be feasible with in the next fifty years. I enjoyed Martin Rees? Cosmological Challenges as it really forces you to at least consider that other forms of life exist outside our planet. Paul Davies? Was There a Second Genesis? suggests and makes a strong case that life on Mars probably existed. Then moves further to suggest finding traces of life there will be our next step. Reading some of these theories reminded me of movies. In the movie Gattica people are segregated by genes. In the essay Swappable Minds by Hauser, he suggests that these issues could become a reality. In the essay Son of Moore?s Law, Dawkins suggest that bring back dinosaurs like Jurassic Park may be feasible. As it is a bunch of collected essays not everyone is a winner. Being an average joe some the topics and some of the language the essays are written in are a little above my head and lose my interest immediately.

    Next Fifty Years: Science in the First Half of the Twenty-First Centuryby Anonymous

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    November 18, 2007: This book is definitely interesting and well written, and puts forth generally plausible ideas from many bright, well respected people. A few of the ideas seem a bit hard to swallow, such as Paul Ewald claiming that many of the major human diseases, such as bipolar disorder and Alzheimer's, will be shown to be caused by viruses. But for the most part the book is plausible, interesting, and even somewhat entertaining.


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