Show Book List

Reviews from Amazon
Amazon.com (0192862103) 10 reviews
Amazon.co.uk (0192862103) 1 review
Amazon.ca (0192862103) 8 reviews
A selection of these reviews is given below

Reviews elsewhere on the web:
Infinitefutures.com
Foreword Magazine

Sian Griffiths

Predictions

Knowing someone's view of possible futures gives a deep insight into the way they think, and so a book containing essays on the future by well known thinkers would be very important indeed. Predictions: 30 great minds on the future is not such a book. Certainly they have contributions from eminent thinkers, but these are often only a page in length, which is only enough to repeat what we already know. Most of the space for each person is given to a biographical introduction written by a journalist who interviewed them.

However, this still leads to a book which is worth reading - it gives a taster of 30 significant writers, which the reader may then investigate further. I certainly intend to look into some of the works of Amartya Sen and his ideas on social welfare.

The book is also about postmodernism - clearly the interviewers wanted to find out how this affected their subjects. Some were unashamedly postmodernist, others thought that it was total nonsense. Perhaps more interesting are those such as Sen, who is criticised by postmodernists for not joining in with their ideas - but then he's a real challenge to the establishment rather than just its jester. Then again there's Sherry Turkle, who from a postmodernist background has developed some interesting insights into our relationship with computers.

Amazon.com info
Hardcover 352 pages  
ISBN: 0192862103
Salesrank: 1755468
Weight:0.85 lbs
Published: 2000 Oxford University Press, USA
Marketplace:New from $1.61:Used from $0.01
Buy from Amazon.com
Amazon.co.uk info
Hardcover 352 pages  
ISBN: 0192862103
Salesrank: 846925
Weight:0.85 lbs
Published: 2000 Oxford Paperbacks
Marketplace:New from £6.49:Used from £0.01
Buy from Amazon.co.uk
Amazon.ca info
Hardcover 352 pages  
ISBN: 0192862103
Salesrank:
Weight:0.85 lbs
Published: 1999 Oxford University Press UK
Marketplace:New from CDN$ 9.99:Used from CDN$ 0.01
Buy from Amazon.ca

Product Description
Here are a series of tantalizing predictions about the coming century, delivered by thirty of today's greatest minds--including Stephen Jay Gould, Daniel Dennett, Sherry Turkle, Steven Weinberg, Noam Chomsky, Umberto Eco, and John Kenneth Galbraith.
This glittering list of contributors includes Nobel laureates, bestselling writers, intellectual icons, and scientists at the cutting edge of research. Readers can sample everything from Nigerian novelist Chinua Achebe's hopes for the future of Africa in the next century, to feminist Andrea Dworkin's dream of a new Jerusalem for women. Science fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke serves up a series of startling visions, including the possibility that, by the year 2050, large sea creatures will be found beneath the ice-covered oceans of Jupiter's moon Europa. Steven Pinker suggests that the completion of the Humane Genome Project will lead to a sudden jump in our knowledge about the genetic basis of our emotions and our learning abilities. And Richard Dawkins believes that the ancient mind-body problem will be solved--not by philosophers but by scientists. Each prediction is preceded by an intriguing profile of the author--blending a lively interview with biographical data--which conveys a vivid sense of the individual while setting their work in context and explaining their theories or inventions. These fascinating interviews, previously published in The Times Higher Education Supplement, give us instant capsule portraits of some of our most brilliant living thinkers.
Predictions is an exciting roadmap to the future as well as a vivid snapshot of the state of human knowledge at the end of the millennium.
 
Predictions of the future are worth about the once cent the book costs on the used market ***
I am glad that I have this book. Not because I agree with very much of anything in this book or admire the thinking or stature of any of these thirty "great minds". This is such an exercise in arrogance and secularist delusion that it makes a wonderful way to get snapshots of the way such people think. I find much of the book disgusting, some of it laughable, and a bit of it frightening. A couple of the people chosen have useful things to say, but not many.

The format is that the editor spends more space writing a flattering introduction explaining the life work of the "great mind" than the mind gets for expounding what they predict and hope for the new century and millennium. Of course, these kinds of exercises are done each century and they are always embarrassing to look back on. Why? Because they are always an exercise in narcissism. The thinker is so in love with his own worldview that all future good is measured by how it conforms to that view. Isn't that overweening sense of self clearly a manifestation of narcissism (at least solipsism)? But we can take hope in the tendency of the ways in whic the future has ways of confounding the present.

The best advice I have heard about the future came from the economist Herb Stein. He said that if a trend can't continue it won't.

I think that you can get copies of this book for about one penny or not much more. That should tell what the book's future - just five years out - already thinks of their thinking.
 
Book sold out. Did not recieve. ***
This book was sold out. The bookstore did not charge me for the book and, of course, did not send it.
 
Great Minds Think... Ahead *****
"Predictions: Thirty Great Minds on the Future" is easily one of the most reader-friendly, chin-stroking collections of interviews and essays prognosticating time's arrow I've read, and I've read a lot (Tommorow Now, Metatrends, etc.) Nothing is expanded in depth here. It's more about breadth. If you don't necessarily agree with what Richard Dawkins thinks, then read the interview/essay from Lynn Margulis (re: Margulis, Dawkins once said he'd rather share a conference table with Attila the Hun!).

Some of the previous reviewers seem to hold Predictions up to some pre-conceived notion. Well, everyone has pre-conceptions. We don't come to books as tabula rasas. In fact, there's something funny about the person who had trouble with the lack of "God" in this collection. It's like going to St. Peter's Cathedral and complaining you can't find a good postcard. Ie. can't see the forest for the trees. Maybe that's not the best description, but I believe in God, and science, and the ability of deep thinkers to extrapolate upon the present to guide the future, and even intrigue our imaginations and... pre-conceptions. What's life without change?

As Umberto Eco says: "Don't fall in love with your own airship."

Recommended for general science fans, writers looking for good/new ideas, and anyone who wants to learn about the direction we're going in the time it takes to visit the watercloset.

 
Interesting, but narrow in focus and disdainful of God. ***
This book is an excellent introduction to the works and thoughts of some of the great minds in the world today--and particularly those that are housed at Oxford and M.I.T. The emphasis is upon human evolution; attempting to unravel the mystery of human consciousness; the human genome project; and, of course, the computer and it's interaction with us, its potential for achieving artificial intellegence, and the implications of the Internet. If your interests lie elsewhere, look elsewhere. In particular, if you happen be of a God-centered mindset, you will be dismayed--as I was--at the scepticism and even antipathy toward God and all things religious that many of these great minds share. In a hard fought fight, the winner of the award for the most offensive statement in this respect goes to molecular biologist James Watson, who reported,"People say we are playing God. My answer is, if we don't play God, who will?"

One hardly needs to be a religous fundamentalist to be disheartened by the attitudes of many of these gifted individuals.

 
Not so great minds ***
If these are 30 "great minds", then God help the human race.Most of the viewpoints are very narrow, with the thinker projecting his or her specialized ideas into the future.None mention the most important influence taking place today that will shape the future.This is the moral decline occurring due to excessive materialism and commercialism.These factors are causing the collapse of civilization.Nobody likes a Cassandra, but I predict increasing breakdown: of societies and the environment.
 
An excellent, thought-provoking work. Unmissable!!! *****
As we move into a new millenium, the worlds of academia and science, in many areas, are poised on the threshold of a host of great advances. 'Predictions' offers the reader a look into the minds of some of the world's most respected and well-known cognoscenti who put forward fascinating, and in some cases incredible theories that make up their personal visions of the future. Just to look at the list of contributors is impressive enough, and to read how they see their particular fields progressing over the coming years is equally compelling. Dive into this book with an open mind and you will be provoked into forming myriad opinions to keep even the most verbose relative quiet over Christmas.
 
I predict you might not like this book very much ***
When I saw the list of eminent minds that contributed to this volume in the index, I bought the book without further scrutiny. However, I was disappointed by most of the contributions. It seems the experts chose to save their best ideas for their own individual works. I enjoyed Umberto Eco, who always entertains doubts, Chomsky, Galbraith, Singer, Zizek and Dawkins. I found Achebe, Dworkin (particularly annoying), and Amartya sen to be repeating the same politically correct diatribes as always and lacking in real depth. The book is valuable, however, as a guide to seeking further understanding the ideas of the contributors. It provides bibliographies and biographies for each thinker. However, I suggest you look this up as brief refernce and then go out and buy the books from the thinkers you like.
 
Useful for the References ***
As with other reviewers, I agree that the format of this book results in many of the Great Minds coming across as dull and boring. However, if you treat the book as an introduction to the various authors, then you can use it to gain a list of references to books written by those Great Minds - and I assure you that most of them are far from banal.

Tachyos.org  |  Chronon Critical Points  |  Recent Science Book Reviews