Thread: Horse Race
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Old 01-28-2008, 10:10 PM   #5 (permalink)
Jude
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Join Date: Dec 2007
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Re: Horse Race

This was what I had in mind (from The Economist, Dec 14, 2007):

"We can see now that the golden age of blockbuster futurology in the 1960s and 1970s was caused, not by the onset of profound technological and social change (as its champions claimed), but by the absence of it. The great determining technologies—electricity, the telephone, the internal combustion engine, even manned flight—were the products of a previous century, and their applications were well understood. The geopolitical fundamentals were stable, too, thanks to the cold war. Futurologists extrapolated the most obvious possibilities, with computers and nuclear weapons as their wild cards. The big difference today is that we assume our determining forces to be ones that 99% of us do not understand at all: genetic engineering, nanotechnology, climate change, clashing cultures and seemingly limitless computing power. When the popular sense of direction is baffled, there is no conventional wisdom for futurologists to appropriate or contradict."

So - they're still around, but they've been so wrong so often since things started getting complicated that nobody pays much attention any more.
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