By Peter Diamandis
"Diamandis, a tech-entrepreneur turned philanthropist, and journalist
Kolter (The Angle Quickest for Flight) contend that widespread pessimism
about the future is due in part to our cognitive biases and the effects
of mass media. Bad news sells newspapers, while good news escapes our
attention or remains hidden in statistics. This engaging book is a
needed corrective, a whirlwind tour of the latest developments in health
care, agriculture, energy, and other fields as well as an introduction
to thinkers and innovators such as Daniel Kahneman, Ray Kurzweil, and
Craig Ventor. Augmented by the power of exponentially growing
technologies, small groups of motivated individuals are accomplishing
what used to require the resources of government or large corporations.
Other forces driving innovation are infusions of money from
techno-billionaires turned philanthropists and the integration of the
poorest third of humanity into the global economy. Not every development
will be appreciated; steak lovers may not take readily to in-vitro
beef. New technologies contain novel risks, including the disquieting
fact that robots will soon make up the majority of the blue-collar
workforce. Nonetheless, the authors make a compelling case for optimism
over dread as we face the exhilarating unknown." (Publishers Weekly) Check Our Catalog
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