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Future Perfect: The Case For Progress In A Networked Age Hardcover – 4 Oct. 2012
| Steven Johnson (Author) See search results for this author |
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What connects the "miracle on the Hudson" to the planning of the French railway system, or the mysterious outbreak of strange smells in downtown Manhattan to the invention of the Internet? With his characteristic flair for multidisciplinary storytelling, Steven Johnson shows in Future Perfect that what lies behind these and many other fascinating human stories is the concept of networked thinking.
Exploring a new vision of progress, Johnson argues that networked thinking holds the key to an incredible range of human achievements, and can transform everything from local government to drug research to arts funding and education. Future Perfect paints a compelling portrait of a new model of political change that is already on the rise, and shows that despite Western political systems hopelessly gridlocked by old ideas, change for the better can happen, and that new solutions are on the horizon.
'If you're a pessimist-and chances are you are-you should read Future Perfect. In fact, read it even if you're an optimist, because Mr. Johnson's book will give you lots of material to brighten the outlook of your gloomy friends...it envisions a new political movement' Wall Street Journal
'An informative, tech-savvy and provocative vision of a new and more democratic public philosophy. A breath of fresh air a breath of fresh air in an age of gridlock, cynicism and disillusionment' San Francisco Chronicle
'A buoyant and hopeful book ... Future Perfect reminds us we already have the treatment. We just need to use it' Boston Globe
Steven Johnson is the US bestselling author of Where Good Ideas Come From, The Invention of Air, The Ghost Map, and Everything Bad Is Good for You, and is the editor of the anthology The Innovator's Cookbook. He is the founder of a variety of influential websites - most recently, outside.in - and writes for Time, Wired, The New York Times, and The Wall Street Journal. He lives in Marin County, California, with his wife and three sons.
- Print length272 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAllen Lane
- Publication date4 Oct. 2012
- Dimensions16.2 x 2.7 x 24 cm
- ISBN-101846147115
- ISBN-13978-1846147111
Product description
Review
An informative, tech-savvy and provocative vision of a new and more democratic public philosophy. A breath of fresh air a breath of fresh air in an age of gridlock, cynicism and disillusionment (San Francisco Chronicle)
A buoyant and hopeful book ... Future Perfect reminds us we already have the treatment. We just need to use it (Boston Globe)
An articulate manifesto (Clive Cookson Financial Times)
About the Author
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Product details
- Publisher : Allen Lane (4 Oct. 2012)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 272 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1846147115
- ISBN-13 : 978-1846147111
- Dimensions : 16.2 x 2.7 x 24 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 1,176,538 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 37,179 in Engineering & Technology
- 60,824 in Government & Politics
- 143,705 in Social Sciences (Books)
- Customer reviews:
About the author

Steven Johnson is the best-selling author of seven books on the intersection of science, technology and personal experience. His writings have influenced everything from the way political campaigns use the Internet, to cutting-edge ideas in urban planning, to the battle against 21st-century terrorism. In 2010, he was chosen by Prospect magazine as one of the Top Ten Brains of the Digital Future.
His latest book, Where Good Ideas Come From: The Natural History of Innovation, was a finalist for the 800CEORead award for best business book of 2010, and was ranked as one of the year’s best books by The Economist. His book The Ghost Map was one of the ten best nonfiction books of 2006 according to Entertainment Weekly. His books have been translated into more than a dozen languages.
Steven has also co-created three influential web sites: the pioneering online magazine FEED, the Webby-Award-winning community site, Plastic.com, and most recently the hyperlocal media site outside.in, which was acquired by AOL in 2011. He serves on the advisory boards of a number of Internet-related companies, including Meetup.com, Betaworks, and Nerve.
Steven is a contributing editor to Wired magazine and is the 2009 Hearst New Media Professional-in-Residence at The Journalism School, Columbia University. He won the Newhouse School fourth annual Mirror Awards for his TIME magazine cover article titled "How Twitter Will Change the Way We Live." Steven has also written for The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Nation, and many other periodicals. He has appeared on many high-profile television programs, including The Charlie Rose Show, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, and The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. He lectures widely on technological, scientific, and cultural issues. He blogs at stevenberlinjohnson.com and is @stevenbjohnson on Twitter. He lives in Marin County, California with his wife and three sons.
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It makes the case for a new kind of political outlook based on the progress that technology has provided, not technological utopia but more grounded. He uses the example of air travel safety to show how life has improved immeasurably thanks to constant iterations of technology.
But after a strong opening each chapter becomes less sure of itself, setting up a proposition then using an example of a study to prove it - but sometimes, in my opinion, missing the mark.
This is still a good book and an interesting read, but I wouldn't recommend it as highly as any of his past three.
Now, while these peer organisations don't currently complete with the traditional structures (top down, central government stars, or fully decentralised jungles like full on Hayek mythical free market, or real top down global industrial structures like the near monopolies of Apple, Google, etc), in some places they are growing very fast and successfully, plus he doesn't propose tearing down the government or free market structures - he says that he peer-structures should (and do) grow around the edges to act as more resilient safety nets than either of the incumbent systems - in my words, the new structures are there to "keep the old ones honest" - i.e. if you want government intervention, it should be light touch, minimalist, and should recede when no longer wanted If you want a market, it should be free, information rich, and anti-monopolistic, without perverse incentives, and should be regulated by government, or dismantled by a more efficient peer-network whenever (as recently) it goes astray..
As with Steve Pinker's recent excellent corrective on the real Better Angels of our Nature, this book is subversive and instructive. It is optimistic, as some other reviewers have written, but then those of us who worked on the Internet from the early days had to be optimists for quite a long time in the face of bell head misunderstanding:)
There are copious examples here and elsewhere of why this is right.
For me, a peer-network still has problems (for example, the dictatorship of the majority, or the undue influence of the charismatic player) but we can work on those problems using the peer net itself, so I buy this, and I recommend you do too:)
Aside from this, the author is not a good writer at all. Though, considering he is primarily a mainstream journalist, besides not being surprising, this should also be considered as expected.
There appears to be some naivety in Johnson's writing. However, it may be that he deliberately avoids certain problems with his paper-thin thesis in order to ensure his rhetoric is concise and streamlined. Journalists thrive on cynicism, afterall. The main problem with his standpoint is that the global domination of profiteering will severely restrict the application of distributed networks to those areas that cannot exist in harmony with the doctrine of profiteering.
Went into the bin.
Future Perfect by Steven Johnson is a book that captures the optimism behind those stock prices and despite its US focus provides some good pointers for small businesses everywhere.
At the heart of his argument to be optimistic is his belief that LeGrand stars will be replaced by Baran webs. No, I didn't know what he was on about either. But it is compelling to read on.
LeGrand stars are systems like big corporations and big government, named after the Frenchman who built France's railway network centred on Paris. It's super-efficient until the centre breaks down.
Paul Baran was an engineer who worked in the US defence industry and developed a communications web that the Soviets could not disable by knocking out the centre. It became the internet.
In his book. Johnson gives plenty of examples where ordinary people are able to collaborate in peer-to-peer networks to achieve great results.
For example, malnourished families in rural Vietnam were helped by outsiders who focussed on finding out how some families managed to feed their children and then on sharing their ideas in the villages. The consultants were "not there to provide outside expertise; they were there to amplify the expertise that already existed in the community."
This is a great example for independent retailers, who need to share best practice with each other. Some of the best symbol groups started out as peer-to-peer networks and many try to maintain strong information exchanges. But the importance of this activity is often underestimated by retailers who see a world dominated by big grocers, big suppliers and big government.
Those who campaign against the asymmetric control of information and power will find much encouragement in this book. They just need to find a different way to organise their arguments. Take inspiration from the defeat of SOPA by a collaboration of activists who spread the message to a billion people so that fast tracked legislation became toxic overnight.
"Over the next five years most industries are going to get rethought to be social, designed around people," says Mark Zuckerberg in a quote used by Johnson.
This is a book for people who want to make change happen. It's opening chapter is a must read for optimists. Things really are getting better all the time, says Johnson. If you like this worldview then Future Perfect will motivate you to do more.

