This will change everything Ideas that will shape the future

Book - 2010

"Edge.org presents 125 of today's leading thinkers ... [responding to the question,] 'What game-changing scientific ideas and developments do you expect to live to see?'"--Cover.

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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Harper Perennial c2010.
Language
English
Other Authors
John Brockman, 1941- (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
xxiii, 390 p. ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780061899676
  • Evolution changes everything / Scott Sampson
  • DNA: writing the software of life / J. Craig Venter
  • A change in who we are / PZ Myers
  • The robotic moment / Sherry Turkle
  • The brain-machine interface / Jame Geary
  • Breaking the species barrier / Richard Dawkins
  • Slippery expectations / Corey S. Powell
  • The full flourishing of solar technology / Ian McEwan
  • Personal genomics-- or maybe not / Steven Pinker
  • Our genes are not our fate / Dean Ornish
  • A forebrain for the world mind / W. Daniel Hillis
  • Future as present: a final expeiment / Ernst Pöppel
  • But we shall all be changed / Frank J. Tipler
  • The credit crunch for materialism / Rupert Sheldrake
  • The laptop quantum computer / Donald D. Hoffman
  • Undo the present; Recall the past / Seth Lloyd
  • Rounding an endless vicious circle / Alan Alda
  • The idea of negative and iatrogenic science / Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  • The feeling that things will get worse / Brian Eno
  • Homesteading in Hilbert space / Frank Wilczek
  • Revelation / Stefano Boeri
  • The discovery of intelligent life from somewhere else / Douglas Rushkoff
  • A cure for Humankind's existential loneliness / Paul Saffo
  • AI and intellectual mastery / John Tooby and Leda Cosmides
  • Avoiding doomsday / Alexander Vilenkin
  • Escaping the gravity well / David Dalrymple
  • Synthetic biology with interplanetary reach / Dimitar Sasselov
  • Life (or not) on Mars / Rodney Brooks
  • A separate origin of life / Robert Shapiro
  • Shadow biosphere
  • Laboratory Earth colonies / John Gottman
  • Interstellar viruses / George Dyson
  • Computers are the new microscopes / Terrence Sejnowski
  • Silicon immortality: downloading consciousness into compters / David Eagleman
  • The implementation of life in engineered materials / Neil Gershenfeld
  • Decoding the brain / Gary Marcus
  • Cheap cryonic suspension of brains / Bart Kosko
  • Superintelligence / Nick Bostrom
  • Becoming robotic / Gregory Paul
  • The synchronization of brains / Jamshed Bharucha
  • Thinking small: undersanding the brain / Irene Pepperberg
  • Controlling the brain's plasticity / Leo M. Chalupa
  • Never-ending childhood / Alison Gopnnik
  • The ebb of memory / Kevin Slavin
  • Artificial self-replicating meme machines / Susan Blackmore
  • Mathusian information famine / Charles Seife
  • Reading minds / Kenneth w. Ford
  • True lie detection / Sam Harris
  • Radiotelepahty: direct communication from brain to brain / Freeman Dyson
  • Little changes make the biggest difference / Barry C. Smith
  • Neuronally expressed messages / Peter Schwartz
  • A new kind of mind / Kevin Kelly
  • The age of reputation / Gloria Orrigi
  • Cracking open the lockbox of talent / Howard Gardner
  • Culture / Timothy Taylor
  • Molecular manufacturing / Ed Regis
  • Resizing ourselves / Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster
  • The actual, the possible, and the unimaginable / Marc D. Hauser
  • Computing the embryo / Lewis Wolpert
  • Homo Evolutis / Juan Enriquez
  • The open universe / Stuart Kauffman
  • Living ot a hundred and fifty / Gregory Benford
  • Mastering death / Marcelo Gleiser
  • No more time decay / Emanuel Derman
  • West Antartica and seven other sleeping giants / Laurence C. Smith
  • Conserving the climate: will Greenland's melting ice the deal? /Stephen H. Schneider
  • Climate will change everything / William Calvin
  • Molecular manufacturing and climate change / Eric Drexler
  • The mastery of climate / Stewart Brand
  • The use of nuclear weapons against a civilian population / Lawrence Krauss
  • Deployment of a significant rogue nuclear device / Gerald Holton
  • Accidental nuclear war / Max Tegmark
  • The breakdown of all computers / Anton Zeilinger
  • The growing perception of a clash between safety and liberty / Dan Sperber
  • Adopting rationality and sustainability / Patrick Bateson
  • Fusion expectations / Roger Highfield
  • Green oil / Alun Anderson
  • Attempts at geoengineering / Oliver Morton
  • Why don't running shoes biodegrade? / Daniel Goleman
  • The shift from harvesting to manufacturing energy / Andrian Kreye
  • The anthroposphere / Nicholas A. Christakis
  • At last: technology will change education / Haim Harari
  • Inexpensive customizable interactive e-texts for worldwide use / David G. Myers
  • On basketball and science camps / Stephon H. Alexander
  • A Web-empowered revolution in teaching / Chris Anderson
  • Wisdom reborn / Roger C. Shank
  • Tracks and clusters / David Gelernter
  • The mobile phone / Keith Devlin
  • Energy and economics: the road to civilization 1.0 / Michael Shermer
  • Undoing Babylon / Daniel L. Everett
  • Soul travel for selfless beings / Thomas Metzinger
  • Inside out: the epistemology of everything / Tor Nørretranders
  • Chanages in the changers / A. Garrett Lisi
  • Neurocosmetics / Marcel Kinsbourne
  • Neurophenomics + targeted stimulation = psychological optimization? / Brian Knutson
  • Celebratory self-reengineering / Andy Clark
  • A different kind of male subjectivity / Tino Sehgal
  • Hidden persuaders '09 / Helen Fisher
  • A lively gamete market / Henry Harpending
  • Immortal cognition, boundless happiness / Marco Iacoboni
  • A farewell to harm / Karl Sabbagh
  • God need not actually exist to have evolved / Jesse Bering
  • Proof of the Riemann hypothesis / Clifford A. Pickover
  • The reality of time / Lee Smolin
  • The existence of additional spacetime dimensions / Gino Segrè
  • Black holes: the ultimate game changer? / Paul L. Steinhardt
  • Better measurements / Gregory Cochran
  • We are learning to make phenotypes / Mark Pagel
  • The next step in human health care? / Ian Wilmut
  • Broadening the spectrum of infectious causation / Paul Ewald
  • Biological markers for mental illness / Eric Kandel
  • Recognizing that the body is not a machine / Randolph Nesse
  • The organizm itself as the emergent meaning / Brian Goodwin
  • Faster evolution means more ethnic differences / Jonathan Haidt
  • Africa / James J. O'Donnell
  • Epistemology will change the world / Lera Boroditsky
  • Social media literacy / Howard Rheingold
  • The decline of text / Marti Hearst
  • The end of analytic science / Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
  • coordinated computational power will change science / Lisa Randall
  • Carniculture / Austin Dacaey
  • Exploitability / David M. Buss
  • Post-rational economic man / David Berreby
  • Nothing will change everything / Richard Foreman
  • Beyond boolean logic, digital manipulations, and numerical evaluations / Verna Huber-Dyson
  • People who can intuit in six dimencions / Robert Sapolsky
  • Massive technological failure / David Bondanis
  • Happiness / Betsy Devine
  • Oure brave new map of the world / Christine Finn
  • The unmasking of true human nature / Aubrey de Grey
  • And if the big change doesn't arrive? / Carlo Rovelli
  • "Everything" has already changed! / Kai Krause
  • The slow motion revolution / Robert R. Provine
  • Why human nature will rebel / Nicholas Humphrey.
Review by Booklist Review

Brockman asked about 130 scientists and several artists the following question: What game-changing scientific ideas and developments do you expect to live to see? Their two- to three-page prognostications bid farewell to the present while disagreeing on the mode of change. Several respondents espy catastrophes such as nuclear war or global warming, but the majority tell readers to expect a fundamental alteration in the human species. This group predicts that a stupendous expansion in computational capacity allied to genomic engineering will transform the human body, brain included, such that one writer suggests the end of Homo sapiens and its succession by Homo evolutis. Pending that apocalyptic development, other scientists nevertheless agree that burgeoning data processing speeds presage a revolution. Some find it in the transmission of knowledge that will profoundly affect education; others, in lifestyle changes such as a preference for robots as pets. Whether their predictions are alarming or reassuring, most names in this volume will be recognized by the futurology audience, who will reach for Brockman's book on sight.--Taylor, Gilbert Copyright 2009 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Part of a series stemming from his online science journal Edge (www.edge.com), including What Have You Changed Your Mind About? and What Is Your Dangerous Idea?, author and editor Brockman presents 136 answers to the question, "What game-changing scientific ideas and developments do you expect to live to see?" Milan architect Stefano Boeri responds with a single sentence: "Discovering that someone from the future has already come to visit us." Most others take the question more seriously; J. Craig Venter believes his laboratory will use "digitized genetic information" to direct organisms in creating biofuels and recycling carbon dioxide. Like biofuels, several topics are recurrent: both Robert Shapiro and Douglas Rushikoff consider discovering a "Separate Origin for Life," a terrestrial unicellular organism that doesn't belong to our tree of life; Leo M. Chalupa and Alison Gopnik both consider the possibility resetting the adult brain's plasticity-its capacity for learning-to childhood levels. Futurologist Juan Enriquez believes that reengineering body parts and the brain will lead to "human speciation" unseen for hundreds of thousands of years, while controversial atheist Richard Dawkins suggests that reverse-engineering evolution could create a highly illuminating "continuum between every species and every other." Full of ideas wild (neurocosmetics, "resizing ourselves," "intuit[ing] in six dimensions") and more close-to-home ("Basketball and Science Camps," solar technology"), this volume offers dozens of ingenious ways to think about progress. (Jan.) Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.