Libro que me han prestado: Tomorrow Now por Bruce Sterling

por davidgp el 01/10/2007

Si, ya lo sé, la foto queda un poco fea, pero es que me lo prestaron sin las portadas, y era lo que había. Tormorrow Now es una especulación de hacia donde vamos teniendo en cuenta lo que vemos en nuestro presente. A ver que tal está.

Tomorrow Now

Como no tengo contraportada, copio estas críticas de Amazon

From Publishers Weekly
Sterling is best known for writing social satires disguised as science fiction, but over a decade ago, The Hacker Crackdown demonstrated his ability to apply his firm grasp on the cultural forces shaping today’s world to nonfiction as well. Now those analytical skills take on the future; although he can’t tell readers what will happen when, he does share good ideas about how to deal with it when it does. After a primer on the various forms of futurism, Sterling offers a seven-part consideration of the 21st century, with a conceptual structure inspired by the «seven ages of man» speech from Shakespeare’s As You Like It. Taking the infant, the student, the lover, the soldier, the justice, the pantaloon and «mere oblivion» each in turn, this sweeping vision encompasses everything from genetic engineering and ubiquitous computing to the real threats to world peace. (Sterling says we shouldn’t be as worried about ideological terrorists like Osama bin Laden, who create momentary disruptions, as about opportunistic thugs, such as Chechen warlord Shamil Basaev, who, according to Sterling, will gladly exploit chaos for profit.) There are constant reminders that progress is rarely, if ever, orderly and efficient, because «in the real world, technology ducks, dodges, and limps» its way forward. But steady, reliable technocratic societies, if they approach the future with «flexibility and patience,» should be able to weather even the most radical technological and cultural changes. Sterling’s breezy tone and insightful speculations reposition this «cyberpunk» hero as a fun hybrid of Robert Kaplan and Faith Popcorn, ready to join the punditocracy and reach out to a broader readership. Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Science fiction writer Sterling offers his unique nonfiction assessment of the future. Borrowing the seven stages of humanity cited by Shakespeare in As You Like It, he addresses the probable future of human beings as infants, students, lovers, soldiers, politicians, businessmen, and geriatrics. Issues discussed include genetics and reproduction, information networks, postindustrial design, the new world order, media and politics, information economics, and our ongoing struggle with mortality. Rather than predicting awesome and unheard-of wonders, Sterling believes that futurism consists of «recognizing and describing a small apparent oddity that is destined to become a great commonplace.» Using that definition as a springboard, he provides a variety of potential possibilities grounded in both common sense and present reality. Often surprising, always humorous, Sterling’s individual slant on what may evolve serves as a visionary overview of the twenty-first century. Margaret Flanagan
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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