Product Description
Economic collapse, deadly famine, political upheaval, catastrophic storms, religious fanaticism, lethal plagues, overcrowded cities -- is this what the future holds? The keys to our future, says author and "Time" magazine contributor Eugene Linden, are hidden in plain sight, obscured by the glare of the present and the tyranny of the recent past. Writes Linden: "We will know much if we can answer one question: Will life in the next century be less stable than it is now?"
Humans have prospered during the extraordinary stability of recent decades, but our very success carries with it the seeds of future upheaval. If we look carefully, we can see harbingers of the coming turmoil. But what can we do about it?
It is particularly difficult to imagine a return to instability today, since baby boomers have had the privilege of growing up in one of the most stable periods in the vast sweep of human history. More than fifty years have passed without catastrophic conflict between great powers; more than sixty years have passed since the end of the last great economic depression. This hiatus falls within a period of 150 years of good weather that is just beginning to change. Since our distant ancestors last saw real instability, more than 8,000 years ago, humans have invented agriculture, writing, cities, and commerce; we have flown to the moon and have multiplied from a few million souls to roughly 5.6 billion.
We have come to view stability as the norm, but it is not. For the first 95 percent of humanity's time on the planet, our ancestors regularly had to cope with rapid change brought about by abrupt climate shifts and their impact on the landscape and food supply. Even inthe brief snippet of time that constitutes recorded human history, civilizations have collapsed repeatedly because of droughts and plagues, and with the invasions of armies and ideas.
What would it mean if instability returned?
"The Future in Plain Sight" lays out nine clues to the answer. These include: the persistently widening gap between the rich and poor; the resurgence of infectious disease; the effects of a changing global climate on businesses and human attitudes; and the currency crises in Mexico and Asia. In each of the nine clues, Linden focuses on an overlooked aspect of familiar events. He looks past the immediate upheavals caused by the Mexican and Asian currency crises, for instance, to see an inherent volatility in the global market that these crises exposed. The book shows how each clue is symptomatic of ever-increasing instability in fundamental aspects of modern life, ranging from the world's financial markets to the natural systems that support our well-being.
How will we live in the year 2050? How can we plan for life in an unsettled and unsettling universe? Linden explores the frightening prospect of this world through a series of scenarios that dramatize the forces that will prevail in the coming decades. From London and New York to central Africa and Antarctica, these scenarios portray life in the unstable world of 2050.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From the Author
In this book I offer a way of thinking about the futureI'm as aware as anyone of the perils of predicting the future. Instead I offer a way of thinking about the future. If some genie popped out of a bottle and offered to answer one question about the future, I would want to know whether it was likely to be more or less stable than the present. Stability is fundamental -- in stable times, societies innovate and prosper; in unstable times people turn inward, innovation and investment contracts and people suffer. Thus if we could know whether the future was likely to be more or less stable than the present, we would know a lot about the future. With that in mind I offer nine clues, all of which connect to deep forces that affect stability. In choosing these clues I eliminated problems or trends that might be addressed through technological innovation or other easy fixes. Then, after trying to show how these clues presage a return to instability, I offer a series of scenarios, thought experiments set in the year 2050, that try to imagine how instability might rework the fabric of life in the coming decades. Finally, I address alternative visions of the future, and offer some humanity might moderate the effects of the coming instability.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.