What should we be worried about? Real scenarios that keep scientists up at night

Book - 2014

Posing the question "What should we be worried about?" to one hundred fifty of the world's greatest minds, this collection of responses reveals what about the present or the future worries each of them the most.

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

303.49/What
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 303.49/What Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Harper Perennial [2014]
Language
English
Other Authors
John Brockman, 1941- (editor of compilation)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xxvi, 499 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 479-480) and index.
ISBN
9780062296238
  • The real risk factors for war / Steven Pinker
  • MADness / Vernor Vinge
  • We are in denial about catastrophic risks / Martin Rees
  • Living without the Internet for a couple of weeks / Daniel C. Dennett
  • Safe mode for the Internet / George Dyson
  • The fragility of complex systems / Randolph Nesse
  • A synthetic world / Seirian Sumner
  • What is conscious? / Timo Hannay
  • Will there be a singularity within our lifetime? / Max Tegmark
  • "The singularity" : there's no there there / Bruce Sterling
  • Capture / Charles Seife
  • The triumph of the virtual / Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
  • The patience deficit / Nicholas G. Carr
  • The teenage brain / Sarah-Jayne Blakemore
  • Who's afraid of the big bad words? / Benjamin Bergen
  • The contest between engineers and druids / Paul Saffo
  • "Smart" / Evgeny Morozov
  • The stifling of technological progress / David Pizarro
  • The rise of anti-intellectualism and the end of progress / Tim O'Reilly
  • Armageddon / Timothy Taylor
  • Superstition / Matt Ridley
  • Rats in a spherical trap / Gregory Benford
  • The danger from aliens / Seth Shostak
  • Augmented reality / William Poundstone
  • Too much coupling / Steven Strogatz
  • Homogenization of the human experience / Scott Atran
  • Are we homogenizing the global view of a normal mind? / P. Murali Doraiswamy
  • Social media : the more together, the more alone / Marcel Kinsbourne
  • Internet drivel / David Gelernter
  • Objects of desire / Sherry Turkle
  • Incompetent systems / John Naughton
  • Democracy is like the appendix / Dylan Evans
  • The is-ought fallacy of science and morality / Michael Shermer
  • What is a good life? / David Christian
  • A world without growth? / Satyajit Das
  • Human population, prosperity growth : one I fear, one I don't / Laurence C. Smith
  • The underpopulation bomb / Kevin Kelly
  • The loss of lust / Tor Nørretranders
  • Not enough robots / Rodney A. Brooks ; That we won't make use of the error catastrophe threshold / William McEwan
  • A fearful asymmetry : the worrying world of a would-be science / Helena Cronin
  • Misplaced worries / Dan Sperber
  • There is nothing to worry about, and there never was / Virginia Heffernan
  • Worries on the mystery of worry / Donald D. Hoffman
  • The disconnect / Barbara Strauch
  • Science by (social) media / Michael I. Norton
  • Unfriendly physics, monsters from the id, and self-organizing collective delusions / John Tooby
  • Myths about men / Helen Fisher
  • The mating wars / David M. Buss
  • We don't do politics / Brian Eno
  • The black hole of finance / Seth Lloyd
  • The opinions of search engines / W. Daniel Hillis
  • Technology-generated fascism / David Bodanis
  • Magic / Neil Gershenfeld
  • Data disenfranchisement / David Rowan
  • Big experiments won't happen / Lisa Randall
  • The nightmare scenario for fundamental physics / Peter Woit
  • No surprises from the LHC : no worries for theoretical physics / Amanda Fefter
  • Crisis at the foundations of physics / Steve Giddings
  • The end of fundamental science? / Mario Livio
  • Quantum mechanics / Lee Smolin
  • One universe / Lawrence M. Krauss
  • The dangerous fascination of imagination / Carlo Rovelli
  • What-- me worry? / J. Craig Venter
  • Our increased medical know-how / Esther Dyson
  • The promise of catharsis / Andrian Kreye
  • I've given up worrying / Terry Gilliam
  • Our blind spots / Daniel Goleman
  • The anthropocebo effect / Jennifer Jacquet
  • The relative obscurity of the writing of Édouard Glissant / Hans Ulrich Obrist
  • The danger of inadvertently praising zygomatic arches / Robert Sapolsky
  • The belief or lack of belief in free will is not a scientific matter / Howard Gardner
  • Natural death / Antony Garrett Lisi
  • The loss of death / Kate Jeffery
  • Global graying / David Berreby
  • All the T in China / Robert Kurzban
  • Technology may endanger democracy / Haim Harari
  • The fourth culture / Bruce Parker
  • Classic social sciences' failure to understand "modern" states shaped by crime / Eduardo Salcedo-Albarán
  • Is the new public sphere ... public? / Andrew Lih
  • Blown opportunities / Frank Wilczek
  • The power of bad incentives / Sam Harris
  • Science publishing / Marco Iacoboni
  • Excellence / Eric R. Weinstein
  • Unmitigated arrogance / Jessica L. Tracy
  • The decline of the scientific hero / Roger Highfield
  • Authoritarian submission / Michael Vassar
  • Are we becoming too connected? / Gino Segre
  • Stress / Ariana Huffington
  • Putting our anxieties to work / Joseph LeDoux
  • Science has not brought us close to understanding cancer / Xeni Jardin
  • Society's parlous inability to reason about uncertainty / Aubrey De Grey
  • The rise in genomic instability / Eric J. Topol, M.D.
  • Current sequencing strategies ignore the role of microorganisms in cancer / Azra Raza, M.D.
  • The failure of genomics for mental disorders / Terrence J. Sejnowski
  • Exaggerated expectations / Stuart Firestein
  • Losing our hands / Susan Backmore
  • Losing touch / Christine Finn
  • The human/nature divide / Scott Sampson
  • Power and the Internet / Bruce Schneier
  • Close to the Edge / Kai Krause
  • The paradox of material progress / Rolf Dobelli
  • Close observation and description / Ursula Martin
  • Impact / Bruce Hood
  • The complex, consequential, not-so-easy decisions about our water resources / Giulio Boccaletti
  • Children of Newton and modernity / Stuart A. Kauffman
  • Where did you get that fact? / Victoria Stodden
  • Is idiocracy looming? / Douglas T. Kenrick
  • The disconnect between news and understanding / Gavin Schmidt
  • Super-AIs won't rule the world (unless they get culture first) / Andy Clark
  • Posthuman geography / David Dalrymple
  • Being told that our destiny is among the stars / Ed Regis
  • Communities of fate / Margaret Levi
  • Working with others / Stephen M. Kosslyn and Robin S. Rosenberg
  • Global cooperation is failing and we don't know why / Daniel Haun
  • The behavior of normal people / Karl Sabbagh
  • Metaworry / Brian Knutson
  • Morbid anxiety / Joel Gold
  • The loss of our collective cognition and awareness / Douglas Rushkoff
  • Worrying about children / Alison Gopnik
  • The death of mathematics / Keith Devlin
  • Should we worry about being unable to understand everything? / Clifford Pickover
  • The demise of the scholar / Daniel L. Everett
  • Science is in danger of becoming the enemy of humankind / Colin Tudge
  • Illusions of understanding and the loss of intellectual humility / Tania Lombrozo
  • The end of hardship inoculation / Adam Alter
  • Internet silos / Larry Sanger
  • The new age of anxiety / Gary Klein
  • Does the human species have the will to survive? / Dave Winer
  • Neural data privacy rights / Melanie Swan
  • Can they read my brain? / Stanislas Dehaene
  • Losing completeness / Anton Zeilinger
  • C. P. Snow's two cultures and the nature-nurture debate / Simon Baron-Cohen
  • The unavoidable intrusion of sociopolitical forces into science / Nicholas A. Christakis
  • The growing gap between the scientific elite and the vast "scientifically challenged" majority / Leo M. Chalupa
  • Present-ism / Noga Arikha
  • Do we understand the dynamics of our emerging global culture? / Kirsten Bomblies
  • We worry too much about fictional violence / Jonathan Gottschall
  • A world of cascading crises / Peter Schwartz
  • Who gets to play in the science ballpark / Stephon H. Alexander
  • An exploding number of new illegal drugs / Thomas Metzinger
  • History and contingency / Paul Kedrosky
  • Unknown unknowns / Gary Marcus
  • Digital tats / Juan Enriquez
  • Fast knowledge / Nicholas Humphrey
  • Systematic thinking about how we package our worries / Mary Catherine Bateson
  • Worrying about stupid / Roger Schank
  • The cultural and cognitive consequences of electronics / Luca De Biase
  • What we learn from firefighters : how fat are the fat tails? / Nassim Nicholas Taleb
  • Lamplight probabilities / Bart Kosko
  • The world as we know it / Richard Foreman
  • Worrying-- the modern passion / James J. O'Donnell
  • The gift of worry / Robert Provine.
Review by Choice Review

The daily news, the Internet, and The Weather Channel inform people that not all is well for humanity. Whether the topic is politics, population, the stock market, or pollution, the outlook is dismal. Not since the gloomy predictions of medieval soothsayers has there been such concern about Earth as a habitat. This book by Brockman (literary agent; founder, Edge.org, CH, Jun'13, 50-5326) presents a whole range of matters to very much worry about, according to a group of thoughtful, well-informed scientists, economists, philosophers, and demographers. Some impending threats, like drastic climate change, can be staved off if society acts wisely and soon; others are curable malignancies, like superstition, illiteracy, and starvation; yet others seem irreversible, like the trend to homogenize cultures and the resurgence of religious frenzy. Sometimes even roads to solutions are wrought with undesirable side effects, like the "underpopulation bomb." Societies are now facing the possibility of extinction due to a slow decrease in population. This book is an eye-opener with unpleasant revelations that will make people worry even more than they currently do. Ignorance can indeed be bliss sometimes, for knowledge of this kind, especially when a reader can do little about it, can throw one into depression. --V. V. Raman, Rochester Institute of Technology

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Each year, Edge founder Brockman and Edge stalwarts mark the anniversary of the speculative online science salon by posing a far-reaching question as the catalyst for a multidisciplinary essay collection. Brockman introduces this year's substantial and engrossing anthology, What Should We Be Worried About?, by noting, Nothing can stop us from worrying, but science can teach us how to worry better, and when to stop worrying. The array of subjects 150 leading thinkers and scientists identify as worrisome is vast and varied, while the outlooks expressed in their pithy thought-pieces are provocative and enlightening. Psychologist Steven Pinker identifies hidden threats to peace. Cosmologist and astrophysicist Martin Rees shares his concern about climate change. Philosopher Daniel C. Dennett and science historian George Dyson ponder the risky vulnerability of the Internet. Biologist Seiran Sumner shudders over the dangers of synthetic biology. Neuroscientist Sarah-Jayne Blakemore considers how our rapidly changing world is shaping the developing teenage brain. Theoretical physicist Lisa Randall is one of many who fret that there won't be future funding for major long-term research projects. Water resources, viruses, low science literacy, and our failure to achieve global cooperation are all addressed with striking clarity. By taking this bold approach to significant quandaries, Brockman and the Edge contributors offer fresh and invaluable perspectives on crucial aspects of our lives.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist

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

Those without enough to worry about will have fuel for many a future sleepless night after perusing this thick collection of concerns from 150 influential philosophers, futurists, and scientists compiled by Brockman, the CEO of literary agency Brockman Inc. and founder of online science salon Edge.org. The essays vary in length, from film director Terry Gilliam's wry, sentence-long "I've Given Up Worrying," to a handful of five- and six-page screeds. The subjects fall into predictable categories, from the dangers of our dependence on the Internet and the possibility of a technological Singularity, to concern for how technology could change children's brains and reduce the overall level of general knowledge. Security technologist Bruce Schneier and others raise questions of privacy in a world of commodified information; others worry about the rise of superstition and anti-science sentiments and the growing lack of informed science coverage in the news. Contributors run the gamut from science fiction author Bruce Sterling and technological sociologist Sherry Turkle to composer Brian Eno and physicist Lisa Randall. While some arguments are more compelling than others, Brockman offers an impressive array of ideas from a diverse group that's sure to make readers think, argue, and-presumably-worry. (Feb.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Brockman, publisher of Edge.org, asked the planet's "most influential minds" to write a short essay on something that worries them, especially things that aren't on the popular radar. The book consists of about 150 of these essays, encompassing topics related to all aspects of science, plus psychology, education, and sociology. This very interesting work is well worth a listen for worriers and those interested in science. Readers Peter Berkrot, Antony Ferguson, Michelle Ford, and Jo Anna Perrin present the pieces in rotation and do a more than adequate job with the material; however, the content's implementation as an audiobook was not well conceived. Primarily, this is a title that many readers will want to dip into and read in a non-linear way, rather than power through from cover to cover, a type of book that generally doesn't work well in audiobook format. Also, some production issues were distracting: several essays are placed twice, and audio "wayfinding" snippets are misplaced on the discs ("this is the end of the CD..." and especially "this concludes What Should We Be Worried About?"., which inexplicably played on disc five, track 25). Verdict Not recommended.-Kristen L. Smith, Loras Coll. Lib., Dubuque, IA (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

As if we didn't have enough to worry about, an acclaimed website gleans sophisticated anxieties for our consideration from a cohort of well-educated, highly influential people. Each year, literary agent and Edge.org founder Brockman (Thinking: The New Science of Decision-Making, Problem-Solving, and Prediction, 2013, etc.) asks dozens of scientists, academics, authors and artists (in roughly declining order of representation) a thought-provoking question to which he invites a brief response. This year, the author asked what people should worry about that is "under the radar," or what is on the radar that isn't worth worrying about? In this collection, climate change and the impending collapse of the world financial system are relegated to supporting roles, giving way to a more eclectic hodgepodge of concerns, many reflecting their authors' professional backgrounds. The physicists tend to worry about the disastrous effect that the lack of public support for big science projects, like the Large Hadron Collider, is already having on future discoveries and theories. A number of neuroscientists are anxious about the effect of information technologies on the minds and language of young people. Few worry about overpopulation; in fact, several participants propose a projected collapse of the global population curve toward the end of the century as cause for worry about how the youthful minority will cope with a superabundance of seniors. A little of these worries goes a very long way, and reading this collection can soon oppress readers: Imagine 150 very smart people taking turns trying to outdo each other with bad scenarios no one else has thought of. Instead of reading straight through, dip in and sample the ideas of the likes of Steven Pinker, Daniel Dennett, Sam Harris, Mary Catherine Bateson, Evgeny Morozov, J. Craig Venter, Brian Eno and many more obscure but no less erudite thinkers. You will be surprised, you will learn a lot, and indeed, you will have a higher quality of things to worry about.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.