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Tomorrow's People: How 21st-Century Technology is Changing the Way We Think and Feel Paperback – 30 Sep 2004

2.7 out of 5 stars 9 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Paperback: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Penguin (30 Sept. 2004)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0141008881
  • ISBN-13: 978-0141008882
  • Product Dimensions: 12.9 x 1.7 x 19.8 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 69,013 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Amazon Review

Tomorrow's People is Susan Greenfield's bold attempt to describe how 21st-century technology is changing the way we think and feel. Our increasing ability to manipulate electronic media, robots, genes, reproductive biology and minds is indeed dramatically changing the way some of us live. Susan Greenfield gets to grip with the most important of these changes and most importantly with the effects they are going to have on future generations.

Baroness Greenfield, Professor of Pharmacology at Oxford and Director of the Royal Institution of Great Britain is very well placed and qualified as a neuroscientist and acclaimed writer (The Private Life of the Brain) to do some serious star-gazing, only what she is looking at is very grounded at the personal level and the here and now. Her wide and informed perspective runs from gadgets and gizmos to terrorism via DNA and the cyberworld. According to our response to such future changes we can be categorised as technophiles, technophobes or cynics according to Susan Greenfield. But as she rightly points out, the main danger is going to be the growing divide between the technologically advanced world and the rest which will, as she says, be the vast majority. The great challenge for the future is how to avoid the descent into a very dangerous schism between a relatively small developed world locked into economic growth to feed its lifestyle and the ever-growing underdeveloped world that will be increasingly excluded by poverty.

Tomorrow's People is a thought-provoking and challenging book. It can be uncomfortable reading especially as it demands that we think about and make personal decisions about these hugely important issues that will increasingly impact on future generations. As Susan Greenfield warns, "the bottom line of this book is that the private ego is the most precious thing we each have, and it is far more vulnerable now than ever before". --Douglas Palmer --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

About the Author

Baroness Greenfield is a distinguished scientist, broadcaster, writer and best selling author of Private Life of the Brain (2000) Penguin. She is a Professor of Pharmacology at Oxford, which she holds jointly with her position as Director of the Royal Institution of Great Britain.


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Customer Reviews

2.7 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
I bought this in great excitement, being fascinated by the subject, and a great fan of her "Private Life of the Brain". and began to read ... and I can't remember being quite so disappointed in a purchase in a long time. It is written in the breathless style of a teenage journalist with some space to fill in a techno-journal: this kind of writing went out with Tommorrow's World ca 1975. It is also completely unreferenced within the text, and the key ideas are jumbled in or thrown away in asides.
If you want some good ideas on how things like nano-technology and implanted IT might work out, read Peter F Hamilton or LE Modesitt: they're better researched and better written. Perhaps Baroness Greenfield should have done that first herself.
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Format: Paperback
This book is described as a "bold attempt to describe how 21st-century technology is changing the way we think and feel", but the reality couldn't be further from the truth. I found this book to be utterly disappointing, and struggled to reach the end of it. With each chapter, I had renewed hope that the book would improve, and I was left sadly lacking right up until the back cover.

The 21st century technology she describes may seem "out there", but to anyone who has ever dabbled in role-play gaming, or who has delved into a collection of sci-fi books, what she describes is nothing new. Essentially, she has rewritten the kind of information you would expect to find in any number of fiction books based in the near future or "cyberpunk" genre - excellent examples of same include Neuromancer and Snow Crash, as well as the role-playing game, Cyberpunk. Greenfield rehashes this information as if it is brand new, and as if she is indeed the first person to have conceived of this technology, and throughout the book there is an air of superiority that makes it genuinely difficult to read.

Perhaps worse still, there is no real examination of what the impact of this speculative technology will have on the human mind, on society, or on the world as a whole. Even the most basic of sci-fi novels or games go into more detail in this respect.

Overall, I found the book to be a frustrating, disappointing, and frankly condescending read.
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Format: Hardcover
I bought this book because I'm interested in the effect of technology on the individual and society, and the title and summary made it sound interesting. But I was disappointed when I read the book.
The author is a neuroscientist. She's certainly not a political or computer scientist. Her Noddy treatment of politics was surprising even for someone so steeped in their own subject (at one stage she attributes the rise of Fascism in Europe to English gardens - honestly - it's that bad). Her technical knowledge appears to be poor - so several key developments relating to the future of technology are not discussed(for example, she completely omits artificial intelligence).
If you've only got a hammer then everything looks like a nail. So everything in this book is twisted into a discussion on brain-function. Whenever she strays from her domain, the treatment is facile or incoherent.
I struggled to complete this book. Maybe the proof-reader did too since the number of typos increased noticeably in the last few chapters. I like to say something positive about any book I read but I'm struggling to say much good about this one because I got so little out of it. I suppose the fact that I finished it says something. It is readable. Her knowledge of neuroscience is undoubted and the one or two discussions (such as the one on consciousness) were interesting.
But I can't recommend it.
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By A Customer on 16 Mar. 2006
Format: Paperback
In Tomorrow’s People, Greenfield argues that as a result of the impact of new technology, from biomedical science to information technology (which includes telecommunications) we may be seeing a "makeover" of society "far more cataclysmic than anything that has happened before". This makeover includes "a huge impact on our brains and central nervous system" including the prospect of "directly tampering with the essence of our individuality".
In her book, Greenfield warns of the possibility of a bleak future for the majority of the world’s population, somewhat like Fritz Lang’s 1927 cinema classic, Metropolis , if the technologically advanced world doesn’t utilise technology wisely for the benefit of all. Greenfield pictures a future where the march of technology is an unstoppable force with the challenge for humanity how best to adapt to it. She sees the danger of an advanced technological society developing alongside a "vast majority" of the world’s population in the underdeveloped world being left out of the advances of technology with the danger of this vast majority being "exploited and abused in ways more sinister, pervasive and cruelthan even that witnessed by the worst excesses on the colonialist past." Greenfield sees the solution to this unbalance by the use of high technology. One example given is the development of GM modified trees to use as fuel combined with solar energy systems to allow high tech cottage industries to flourish in rural areas, allowing people to remain living in the countryside. Greenfield enthusiastically predicts a future where "all food, whether home-cooked or takeaway or a mere pill, comes from genetically modified produce.
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