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Clock Of The Long Now: Time And Responsibility: The Ideas Behind The World's Slowest Computer | Stewart Brand | Civilization's shortening attention span is mismatched with the pace of environmental problems
 
 


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 Clock Of The Long ...  

Clock Of The Long Now: Time And Responsibility: The Ideas Behind The World's Slowest Computer
Stewart Brand

Basic Books, 2000 - 208 pages

average customer review:based on 20 reviews
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     highly recommended  highly recommended



Using the designing and building of the Clock of the Long Now as a framework, this is a book about the practical use of long time perspective: how to get it, how to use it, how to keep it in and out of sight. Here are the central questions it inspires: How do we make long-term thinking automatic and common instead of difficult and rare? Discipline in thought allows freedom. One needs the space and reliability to predict continuity to have the confidence not to be afraid of revolutions Taking the time to think of the future is more essential now than ever, as culture accelerates beyond its ability to be measured Probable things are vastly outnumbered by countless near-impossible eventualities. Reality is statistically forced to be extraordinary; fiction is not allowed this freedom This is a potent book that combines the chronicling of fantastic technology with equally visionary philosophical inquiry.


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Truly Extraordinary--Core Reading for Future of Earth- Man


I confess to being dumb. Although I know and admire the author, who has spoken at my conference, when the book came out I thought--really dumb, but I mention it because others may have made the same mistake--that it was about building a cute clock in the middle of the desert.

Wrong, wrong, wrong (I was). Now, three years late but better late than never, on the recommendation of a very dear person I have read this book in detail and I find it to be one of the most extraordinary books--easily in the top ten of the 300+ books I have reviewed on Amazon.

At it's heart, this book, which reflects the cummulative commitment of not only the author but some other brilliant avant guarde mind including Danny Hillis, Kevin Kelly (WIRED, Out of Control, the Rise of Neo-Biological Civilization), Esther Dyson, Mitch Kapor (Lotus, Electronic Frontier Foundation) and a few others, is about reframing the way people--the entire population of the Earth--think, moving them from the big now toward the Long Here, taking responsibility for acting as it every behavior will impact on the 10,000 year long timeframe.

This book is in the best traditions of our native American forebears (as well as other cultures with a long view), always promoting a feedback-decision loop that carefully considered the impact on the "seventh generation." That's 235 years or so, or more.

The author has done a superb job of drawing on the thinking of others (e.g. Freeman Dyson, Esther's father) in considering the deep deep implications for mankind of thinking in time (a title popularized, brilliantly, by Ernest May and Richard Neustadt of Harvard), while adding his own integrative and expanding ideas.

He joints Lee Kuan Yew, brilliant and decades-long grand-father of Asian prosperity and cohesiveness, in focusing on culture and the long-term importance of culture as the glue for patience and sound long-term decision-making. His focus on the key principles of longevity, maintainability, transparency, evolvability, and scalability harken back to his early days as the editor of the Whole Earth Review (and Catalog) and one comes away from this book feeling that Stewart Brand is indeed the "first pilot" of Spaceship Earth.

It is not possible and would be inappropriate to try to summarize all the brilliant insights in this work. From the ideas of others to his own, from the "Responsibility Record" to using history as a foundation for dealing with rapid change, to the ideas for a millenium library to the experienced comments on how to use scenarios to reach consensus among conflicted parties as to mutual interests in the longer-term future, this is--the word cannot be overused in this case--an extraordinary book from an extraordinary mind.

This book is essential reading for every citizen-voter-taxpayer, and ends with an idea for holding politicians accountable for the impact of their decisions on the future. First class, world class. This is the book that sets the stage for the history of the future.


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Civilization's shortening attention span is mismatched with the pace of environmental problems

Steward Brand is a person who thinks 'big'. His major thought in this work is that "Civilization's shortening attention span is mismatched with the pace of environmental problems,." Thus he suggests that we begin to think about 'the long now' the next ten- thousand years. The ten- thousand has its partial origin in the fact that the agricultural revolution and with it much of our development began ten- thousand years back. Brand also hopes to set up an 'Information gathering project, a Library' which would include that which is worth keeping ten- thousand years from now.
All of this sounds a bit vague and abstract. And it seems to me that there must be better ways of moving people away with the kind of 'instant pleasure 'mind of our 'click- click present Internet culture.
My own sense is that all of us live within, and are bound up in a great variety of different interval lengths of time. And that our lives are processes in which there are long -terms, short- terms and in- between. And that if we need to think about 'ten- thousand years from now ' we will.
I hate to be skeptical here but I recently read an article by Jim Holt in which he talks to cosmologists about what is expected to happen when the universe ends. That is trillions of years from now, and no one has a very clear expectation. But the wisest remark made in regard to it was made by the philosopher Thomas Nagel who said "It doesn't matter now that what we do now will not matter in trillions of years from now". Well it now seems to me that ten- thousand years is such a long time from our now, and such an arbitrary time that there is not really much to be gained by counting time, or putting away information specifically in relation to it.


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A+++

Thank you for the book, it was exactly what was expected and come in the mail fast.


What's the Rush?

The Long Now Foundation has done some great work since this book was published back in 1999. The group's basic goal of alleviating humanity's destructively short attention span is a great one, and anyone who feels that the world is on the wrong course would find great enlightenment in the group's works. But interested persons would be better served to check out what the Long Now Foundation has accomplished since this very preliminary book was published. Stewart Brand merely compiled a not very robust collection of undeveloped musings and rhetorical questions that merely hint at the potential of the Long Now worldview. Also, I don't think any other reviewers caught the irony of a series of short and largely self-contained essays (averaging around 4-5 pages) collected in a book that's trying to increase humanity's attention span. Granted, there are many great insights in here, particularly how digitized information storage actually leads to the disappearance of more knowledge, and how humanity's worst problems are long term and are misunderstood with typical short term thinking. Once again, the Foundation's got incredible ideas. But this particular book, from early in the group's existence, shows only fragmented hints of a philosophy that hadn't yet come together. [~doomsdayer520~]


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reviews: page 1, 2, 3, 4



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