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The Next 500 Years: Life in the Coming Millennium
 
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The Next 500 Years: Life in the Coming Millennium [Hardcover]

Adrian Berry (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Berry is the science correspondent for the Daily Telegraph and writes a regular column for Astronomy Now magazine. This is not a Nostradamus book of predictions but an extrapolation of scientific fact. Stimulating and thought-provoking, it is divided into two sections: the future on earth and the future in space. Perhaps Berry's most unsettling prediction is the storage of human personalities on computer disk for retrieval after death. He also firmly believes that space?the Moon and Mars?will be settled by private industry and not by government-sponsored programs. Judging by the number of people who have inquired about my review copy, there is considerable interest in the future?a future that many of us will not live long enough to see. Four appendixes, a glossary, informative footnotes, and substantial notes and references round out this well-written tome. Recommended for public libraries and academic libraries that collect popular science works.?James Olson, Northeastern Illinois University Lib., Chicago
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 338 pages
  • Publisher: W H Freeman & Co (Sd); First Printing edition (February 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 071673009X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0716730095
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.2 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,834,352 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
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4 star:
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2 star:
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

12 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars R Hall (P. Eng), July 19, 2000
By 
Richard Hall (Calgary, Alberta Canada) - See all my reviews
In short, this book is freshly optimistic but (in my opinion) misguides it's audience about the crucial global issues in our time. Check out Michio Kaku's works - they're more detailed and much more fascinating looks at future technologies.

This book is highly optimistic, over simplified, and contains many logical errors. Although it is not detailed from a scientific point of view and is very conservative from a political point of view, it does provide a great deal of breadth. I must point out that his presumptions regarding the ozone layer, the greanhouse effect, population control and the social effect of high power computing and space travel seem either outdated and very superficial, to the point of being uninformed. For example, he states that the greenhouse effect is not truly a pressing global problem, yet he predicts that the terraforming of Mars within a century using the greanhouse effect: This should bring up the temperature of the red planet by 50 deg Centigrade. One can only wonder if he feels a raising of the temperature on Earth by a portion of that amount would be 'acceptable'. I find this type of uninformed, conservative, let's-just-keep-doing-it-until-it's-a-real-problem mentality unforgivable considering that our planet's future is at stake. That said, some of the chapters are very interesting, and it is fresh to read optimistically of the future. His chapter on the impending ice age and the potential calamity of an asteroid collision is fresh and rare look at some of the distant challenges our species may face. And his perspective of capitalism likely being the driving force behind the maturing of many future industries I believe to be a more likely future that not.

Some material that's more in depth on a more local future can be found in Michio Kaku's "Visions" - it is much more fascinating, informed and a much more focused work. If the future of computing is your thing, check out the compilation work - "Beyond Calculation : The Next Fifty Years of Computing" by Metcalfe - this is technical, but really pounds out the emerging directions of computation. Sagan does fantastic work on future space exploration, and the social implications of science.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Filled with interesting speculations- absurdities or not, February 27, 2006
In one sense it is impossible to take seriously a book which tells us what the future five - hundred years from now is going to look like. The author Adrian Berry claims the more distant the future the more likely the predictions about it will be true. But I somehow relying on perhaps a more primitive sense, and a knowledge of the unpredictability of human history , tend to think otherwise.
So I regard this work as a work of speculation- and I read it for interesting ideas of which there are many.
Berry predicts that the future will among other things contain the following: " The ever -increasing growth of wealth, the storage of human personalities on computer disks for retrieval after death, that we may be succeeded by intelligent robots; the farming of the sea, the coming of another Ice Age, the colonization of the Moon, of Mars and of the asteroids; and ultimately the building of starships"
Notice that Berry sneaks in here one most important prediction as if it were just another item on the list i.e. the prediction about personalities being stored on computer- disks. This is a prediction, I personally think is nonsense as I believe that the idea of a 'personality' without a body is an absurdity.
Berry considers the five hundred years in two parts- one as to what will happen on earth, and the second as to what will happen extraterrestially. Berry makes the prediction that there will be colonies on Mars, on the Moon, on asteroids. He believes it will give Mankind ( or its successor robotic - intelligence) a security we do not have today i.e. if one point is wiped out there will be no problems with the others in the distance going on. He believes by the way that these space- colonization efforts will be done privately, and that in the distant future there will be no government and politicians. This prospect is apparently an important element in his optimism about the human future. But it too seems to me more wishful thinking than anything else. For my sense is that any organization and use of resources will require policy, collective decision, some form of goverment and leadership.
One interesting chapter , the second from the end, is on the question of whether we are alone in the universe or not. The "Where are they?" question of Fermi. He provides Sagan's arguments as to why there are most likely billions of intelligent creatures. But also provides information and argument of the critics who say that we have absolutely no sign that there is anyone intelligent out there.
Berry also seems to feel that once we are all scientifically enlightened there will be no 'religion' as we know it today.
As with so many of these speculations there is a certain 'thinness' in the whole picture of human life presented. The actual texture and feel of human life with all its passions and pains , is not in this kind of literature. For that we need to read books about the past, the truly great books of mankind- and not the lesser ones about the future.
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Thought Provoking and Not Quite Sci-Fi, June 16, 2000
I was enjoying this book from the first chapter, where the author totally destroys the "greenhouse" effect from a purely scientific point of view. I was saying to myslef, 'hey, this guy is ok...'

Then, in chapter 2, he goes on to theorize that Jesus was not resurrected from the tomb, but was instead eaten by hungry dogs who were used to foraging for food among the recently departed. Oh boy. Did I finish the book, yes, and I read it with a bit more critical eye. In fact, I went back and re-read the first chapter. So, what does this past have to do with his observations of the next 500 years?

You'll have to read the book.

But, let me say that it was an enjoyable read, and I found his frequent validation of sci-fi writers ideas and theories, mixed in with pure sciece to be a fun way to have written the book.

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