What Should We Be Worried About?
Real Scenarios That Keep Scientists Up at Night
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
February 19, 2014 -
Formats
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OverDrive Listen audiobook
- ISBN: 9781452699158
- File size: 399847 KB
- Duration: 13:53:00
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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AudioFile Magazine
The Edge Foundation, an association of science and technology intellectuals, offers an annual question to its members. The 2013 Edge Question was: "What should we be worried about?" This audiobook consists of more than 150 brief responses by science intellectuals--prominent and obscure. The essays are best enjoyed a handful at a time. The ensemble of narrators is excellent. Their pace is good, their diction is clear, and they have little difficulty with the sometimes challenging technical vocabulary. Peter Berkrot, perhaps, sounds a little too much like the narrator of a negative political ad. This will bother you only if you listen to too many essays at once. F.C. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine -
Publisher's Weekly
November 4, 2013
Those without enough to worry about will have fuel for many a future sleepless night after perusing this thick collection of concerns from 150 influential philosophers, futurists, and scientists compiled by Brockman, the CEO of literary agency Brockman Inc. and founder of online science salon Edge.org. The essays vary in length, from film director Terry Gilliam’s wry, sentence-long “I’ve Given Up Worrying,” to a handful of five- and six-page screeds. The subjects fall into predictable categories, from the dangers of our dependence on the Internet and the possibility of a technological Singularity, to concern for how technology could change children’s brains and reduce the overall level of general knowledge. Security technologist Bruce Schneier and others raise questions of privacy in a world of commodified information; others worry about the rise of superstition and anti-science sentiments and the growing lack of informed science coverage in the news. Contributors run the gamut from science fiction author Bruce Sterling and technological sociologist Sherry Turkle to composer Brian Eno and physicist Lisa Randall. While some arguments are more compelling than others, Brockman offers an impressive array of ideas from a diverse group that’s sure to make readers think, argue, and—presumably—worry.
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