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The Great Acceleration

How the World is Getting Faster, Faster

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
The Great Acceleration is an energizing account from a brilliant new writer of how our society is speeding up—and why we should embrace it.
In this revelatory study of modern living, Robert Colvile inspects the various ways in which the pace of life in our society is increasing and examines the evolutionary science behind our rapidly accelerating need for change, as well as why it's unlikely we'll be able to slow down . . . or even want to.
Exploring theories surrounding the effect of this speed on our minds and bodies, Colvile reveals how, contrary to gloomier predictions, living in a faster age might be beneficial for us, both physically and mentally. In addition to the universe of social media, he examines the opportunities that faster communication and operation could bring to everything from music, film, and books to transportation, politics, and government.
Comparing developments in cities and villages, advanced economies and underdeveloped countries, East and West, The Great Acceleration explains how the positives outnumber the negatives and, if this acceleration is truly inevitable, why we should rush to embrace it.
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    • Booklist

      Starred review from April 15, 2016
      In the way that almost $1 trillion of stock value disappeared in five minutes during the Flash Crash of 2010, Colville finds a compelling illustration of the perils we face in a world where everything runs at dizzying speed. Those perils extend well beyond Wall Street. Readers see incautious adolescents ruin their reputations in minutes through cyberdistribution of nude photos, movie-industry executives sucked into the sterility of comic-book blockbusters churned out hurriedly, journalists sliding into sensationalism and inaccuracy to meet tight deadlines, and politicians addicted to hyperspeed technologies powerful in campaigning but useless in governing. Perhaps most worrisome are the descriptions of Third World cities rapidly filling with displaced villagers, cities whose demands are swiftly depleting the planet's natural resources. Yet with surprising optimism, Colville affirms his belief that wise use of initially disruptive technologies can protectand actually improvesocial and political relationships, cultural creativity, and even the environment. Looking to a glowing future, Colville even anticipates a time when the rapidity of artificial intelligence will endow the human species with astonishing new powers. Traditionalists aligned with Jacques Ellul or Josef Pieper may find Colville implausibly cheery-minded, even utopian. But anyone worried about our increasingly frenetic lives will find food for thought.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2016, American Library Association.)

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  • English

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