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RAFT 2035: Roadmap to Abundance, Flourishing, and Transcendence, by 2035 (English Edition) Versión Kindle
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Rapid technological change tends to provoke a turbulent social reaction. Old certainties fade. New winners arrive on the scene, flaunting their power, and upturning previous networks of relationships. Within the general public, a sense of alienation and disruption mingles with a sense of profound possibility. Due to the increased scale, speed, and global nature of the ongoing NBIC revolutions, the disruptions that followed in the wake of previous industrial revolutions – seismic though they were – are likely to be dwarfed in comparison to what lies ahead.
Amidst these turbulent waves, RAFT 2035 offers a Roadmap to Abundance, Flourishing, and Transcendence. RAFT issues a bold call to action, to encourage more people around the world to recognise the true scale of the opportunities ahead, to set aside distractions, and to build effective coalitions in pursuit of a set of 15 goals to be achieved by 2035.
Written by the Chair of London Futurists, David Wood, RAFT shows that futurism isn't just about describing futures that are likely or possible. It's also about highlighting futures that are highly desirable, and seeking to change the arc of human history in the light of that insight.
The 15 goals of RAFT range from significantly improved mental wellbeing, a radical new social contract, transformations in education and politics, a sustainable relationship with the environment, reductions in the threat of violence and crime both locally and internationally, and a renewed focus on humanity's journey into new realms of both inner and outer space. For each goal, two interim targets for 2025 are identified, as important steps towards the radically better future that is within our grasp.
“It’s often said that technology is poised to make humans stronger and more intelligent. But RAFT emphasises the possibility of a change that is much more important – the potential for technology to make us kinder and more empathetic. It’s a message that deserves to be widely heard.”
- David Pearce, Philosopher, and advocate of Paradise Engineering
“In RAFT, David Wood challenges all of us to reconsider how technology can best serve ethics, safety, and values that uplift the human spirit. A future that champions the very best aspects of what it means to be human is within our grasp, if we can humanise technology, and harmonize the interests of advanced civilization with nature.”
– Nell Watson, Chair of EthicsNet.org and IEEE’s Certification for Ethics in Transparency
“The need for a different set of politics is more pressing than ever. RAFT is a framework for the transition we need to make which is beyond the faultlines of traditional political positions.”
– Hannes Sjöblad, Co-founder DSruptive Sweden, and Chief Disruptive Officer of Epicenter Stockholm
“I’ve often enjoyed listening to David Wood set out his hopes and fears for the future. In RAFT 2035 he applies his formidable insight to the very important question of securing a truly great future, for the United Kingdom and beyond, by 2035.”
- Matt O’Neill, Futurist Keynote Speaker, Futurist.Matt
“RAFT 2035 maps out the possibilities and the trade-offs our exponential world is going to need. Continuing as before with tiny incremental steps is no longer an option: we need a RAFT of big ideas to make a step-change. Let’s pick up these ideas and get on board for a brave new 2035.”
Paul Imre, VP of Education, Data Science Speakers Club, Toastmasters International
- IdiomaInglés
- Fecha de publicación17 enero 2020
- Tamaño del archivo888 KB
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- ASIN : B08413SKHN
- Idioma : Inglés
- Tamaño del archivo : 888 KB
- Uso simultáneo de dispositivos : Sin límite
- Texto a voz : Activado
- Lector de pantalla : Compatibles
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- Notas adhesivas : En Kindle Scribe
- Longitud de impresión : 139 páginas
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I both love and hate Transhumanism and Transhumanists. There are so many Hallelujah Transhumanists who extrapolate “the now" to predict the future, often insisting on an inevitable end or transition point to technology like the Singularity. RAFT 2035 does not do this. It is not so religious as to talk about destinies in this way. David Wood is nice and lean and secular and is interested in possibilities more than destinies. He and Transhumanists like him, just want to raise the standard of living for us all. Some of the possibilities laid out in RAFT 2035 are fantastic, to be sure, but all technology is fantastic depending on your standpoint, and David Wood is careful to plot possibilities on foundations of actuality. Much of the technology is right here, right now! The only blocks are state fundamentalism and trying to get consensus from 8 Billion people. RAFT is written to build out from our chaotic and disparate world with what we have now! In that sense, it is trans-political as well as transhuman and is not confrontational, nor is it exclusively for intellectuals and scientists.
RAFT quietly dissolves the religiosity and fundamentalism that sometimes attaches itself to futurist thinking. RAFT concerns itself with incremental, sometimes seamless, sometimes radical changes to human and planetary health, by whatever means available and at a reduced cost to all, no exceptions – none! The book takes true and complete egalitarianism as a common-sense default. Transhumanists have high hopes on faraway planets or super realms of consciousness, which is off-putting to some, but again, David Wood in RAFT 2035, offers them as potentials of varying kinds not religious certainties. The book suggests that the big dreams are things we should aspire to, but minimum standards for us all should and can be met with relative ease – certainly technologically and relatively soon, and with prizes along the way.
What RAFT sets out to do, is to augment lives in pragmatic, nuanced, high-tech, low-tech and socio-tech ways. It sets out to repair and forwardly construct our world, working collaboratively with the technologies, subcultures, religions and politics we already have. It is relativistic and inclusive in this way. RAFT knows that technologies are disparate and have their own mutations, ceilings and portals. For a book that dreams so big, the language is conservative. Every far-flung possibility one cares to discuss with David Wood is appraised by both safety and reality checks. He won’t play the speculation game when it comes to fantastic futures unless he can plot a route to it from what we have now to what can be implemented within known science. To that end, I find him to be a trustworthy author and a reliable thinker.
RAFT 2035 has a TARDIS like quality to it – it’s bigger on the inside than it is on the outside! There is a WONDERFUL bibliography at the end of each section for which I was compelled to purchase a Kindle. RAFT itself, is written as a manifesto/philosophy, but the latter sections of the book is where the actionable initiatives are.
RAFT is written from a more conservative viewpoint compared to some Transhumanist literature and should therefore be the antidote for those of you who are intrigued but put off by New-Age quackery, conspiracy theories or other forms of Anorakism. RAFT is as distinct from Geek Rapture as SETI is from the Roswell Incident. I enjoyed reading RAFT, I enjoy owning it, I’m excited about using it and where it could lead. Last century, we put people on the Moon! Is eradicating a disease or significantly increasing human lifespans when we’ve done it with rats, or giving people night vision better than a cat’s really more difficult than last century spaceflight for humans? Reading RAFT 2035 has awakened me to greater wilder possibilities that somehow seem less fanciful. It has done what every book should do, it has changed my perspective on everything, but it has done so weirdly reasonably.


Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 27 de julio de 2020
I both love and hate Transhumanism and Transhumanists. There are so many Hallelujah Transhumanists who extrapolate “the now" to predict the future, often insisting on an inevitable end or transition point to technology like the Singularity. RAFT 2035 does not do this. It is not so religious as to talk about destinies in this way. David Wood is nice and lean and secular and is interested in possibilities more than destinies. He and Transhumanists like him, just want to raise the standard of living for us all. Some of the possibilities laid out in RAFT 2035 are fantastic, to be sure, but all technology is fantastic depending on your standpoint, and David Wood is careful to plot possibilities on foundations of actuality. Much of the technology is right here, right now! The only blocks are state fundamentalism and trying to get consensus from 8 Billion people. RAFT is written to build out from our chaotic and disparate world with what we have now! In that sense, it is trans-political as well as transhuman and is not confrontational, nor is it exclusively for intellectuals and scientists.
RAFT quietly dissolves the religiosity and fundamentalism that sometimes attaches itself to futurist thinking. RAFT concerns itself with incremental, sometimes seamless, sometimes radical changes to human and planetary health, by whatever means available and at a reduced cost to all, no exceptions – none! The book takes true and complete egalitarianism as a common-sense default. Transhumanists have high hopes on faraway planets or super realms of consciousness, which is off-putting to some, but again, David Wood in RAFT 2035, offers them as potentials of varying kinds not religious certainties. The book suggests that the big dreams are things we should aspire to, but minimum standards for us all should and can be met with relative ease – certainly technologically and relatively soon, and with prizes along the way.
What RAFT sets out to do, is to augment lives in pragmatic, nuanced, high-tech, low-tech and socio-tech ways. It sets out to repair and forwardly construct our world, working collaboratively with the technologies, subcultures, religions and politics we already have. It is relativistic and inclusive in this way. RAFT knows that technologies are disparate and have their own mutations, ceilings and portals. For a book that dreams so big, the language is conservative. Every far-flung possibility one cares to discuss with David Wood is appraised by both safety and reality checks. He won’t play the speculation game when it comes to fantastic futures unless he can plot a route to it from what we have now to what can be implemented within known science. To that end, I find him to be a trustworthy author and a reliable thinker.
RAFT 2035 has a TARDIS like quality to it – it’s bigger on the inside than it is on the outside! There is a WONDERFUL bibliography at the end of each section for which I was compelled to purchase a Kindle. RAFT itself, is written as a manifesto/philosophy, but the latter sections of the book is where the actionable initiatives are.
RAFT is written from a more conservative viewpoint compared to some Transhumanist literature and should therefore be the antidote for those of you who are intrigued but put off by New-Age quackery, conspiracy theories or other forms of Anorakism. RAFT is as distinct from Geek Rapture as SETI is from the Roswell Incident. I enjoyed reading RAFT, I enjoy owning it, I’m excited about using it and where it could lead. Last century, we put people on the Moon! Is eradicating a disease or significantly increasing human lifespans when we’ve done it with rats, or giving people night vision better than a cat’s really more difficult than last century spaceflight for humans? Reading RAFT 2035 has awakened me to greater wilder possibilities that somehow seem less fanciful. It has done what every book should do, it has changed my perspective on everything, but it has done so weirdly reasonably.




Revisado en el Reino Unido 🇬🇧 el 3 de mayo de 2020


