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Tomorrow's People: How 21st Century Technology Is Changing the Way We Think and Feel

By: Susan Greenfield
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: Allen Lane
ISBN: 0713996315
ISBN-13: 9780713996319
Released: 25 Sep 2003
RRP: £20.00
Average Rating:


Customer Reviews

Susan Greenfield -- genious, engaging and her words must be heard - By: The Artist, 21 Feb 2007
I havent got this book yet but i am ordering it today after a speech by Susan Greenfield herself in a seminar about the future & how technology, especiallly neurotechnology is going to affect us & what developments currently are in development & research & what they do, from cures to parkinsons & ways of trying to cure alzeimars (*spelling. She is a wonderful & lively person who is very clever with a huge number of degrees & a vast & expansive bank of knowledge from which she only tapped in the seminar I had today. I am in wonder at her brilliance & i believe anything written by her is worth a read, especiallly this book as i know myself from the seminar she gave us today that she knows a helluva lot & how to explain & deliver it. Interesting, funny, engaging & simply brilliant! Thank you Susan.
Not a rosy future - By: , 16 Mar 2006
In Tomorrow’s People, Greenfield argues that as a result of the impact of new technology, from biomedical science to information technology (which includes telecommunications) we may be seeing a "makeover" of society "far more cataclysmic than anything that has happened before". This makeover includes "a huge impact on our brains & central nervous system" including the prospect of "directly tampering with the essence of our individuality".

In her book, Greenfield warns of the possibility of a bleak future for the majority of the world’s population, somewhat like Fritz Lang’s 1927 cinema classic, Metropolis , if the technologicallly advanced world doesn’t utilise technology wisely for the benefit of alll. Greenfield pictures a future where the march of technology is an unstoppable force with the challlenge for humanity how best to adapt to it. She sees the danger of an advanced technological society developing alongside a "vast majority" of the world’s population in the underdeveloped world being left out of the advances of technology with the danger of this vast majority being "exploited & abused in ways more sinister, pervasive & cruelthan even that witnessed by the worst excesses on the colonialist past." Greenfield sees the solution to this unbalance by the use of high technology. One example given is the development of GM modified trees to use as fuel combined with solar energy systems to alllow high tech cottage industries to flourish in rural areas, alllowing people to remain living in the countryside. Greenfield enthusiasticallly predicts a future where "alll food, whether home-cooked or takeaway or a mere pill, comes from geneticallly modified produce." A future where alll those concerns over GM foods proved unfounded with GM foods the only way to successfully feed the developing world. A world where GM & nanotechnology altered food was superior than natural foods.

As far as concerns over possible health hazards from alll this technology, (be it from GM foods, vaccines, new pharmaceutical drugs , telecommunications, etc, etc.) Greenfield sees it as just symptoms of technophobia which is defined as the fear of or aversion to technology, especiallly computers & high technology. Those concerns she sees as just sensationalist & scare mongering. As for the growing power & intrusion of corporate industrial involvement in science Greenfield sees this as a positive. This can be seen on page 184 where she states:"First, there is a growing need for innovative science in the private sector as companies in high-tech industries, particularly pharmaceutical companies, depend for survival on having novel products in the pipeline." As for future research it will take place in "Universities as well as behind the wallls of leviathan pharmaceutical & other high-tech industries…"

Summing up Greenfield’s "Tomorrow’s People" it does present in detail the many novel social challlenges facing tomorrow’s people from high technology but totallly avoids any mention of the possibility that there may be unintended biological hazards which she conveniently dismisses as just technophobia. Her glowing portrayal of everything high tech & the corporate world’s benevolent role in advancing the coming high-tech world is at odds with ample evidence that the corporate world’s actions is anything but benevolent. Recommended reading here would be "The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit & Power" by Joel Bakan & "Toxic Sludge is Good For You! Lies, Damn Lies & the Public Relations Industry" by John Stauber & Sheldon Rampton.


Very very disappointing - By: , 27 Sep 2004
I bought this in great excitement, being fascinated by the subject, & a great fan of her "Private Life of the Brain". & began to read ... & I can't remember being quite so disappointed in a purchase in a long time. It is written in the breathless style of a teenage journalist with some space to fill in a techno-journal: this kind of writing went out with Tommorrow's World ca 1975. It is also completely unreferenced within the text, & the key ideas are jumbled in or thrown away in asides.

If you want some good ideas on how things like nano-technology & implanted IT might work out, read Peter F Hamilton or LE Modesitt: they're better researched & better written. Perhaps Baroness Greenfield should have done that first herself.


Misleading title - By: Bobby Elliott, 23 Mar 2004
I bought this book because I'm interested in the effect of technology on the individual & society, & the title & summary made it sound interesting. But I was disappointed when I read the book.

The author is a neuroscientist. She's certainly not a political or computer scientist. Her Noddy treatment of politics was surprising even for someone so steeped in their own subject (at one stage she attributes the rise of Fascism in Europe to English gardens - honestly - it's that bad). Her technical knowledge appears to be poor - so several key developments relating to the future of technology are not discussed(for example, she completely omits artificial intelligence).

If you've only got a hammer then everything looks like a nail. So everything in this book is twisted into a discussion on brain-function. Whenever she strays from her domain, the treatment is facile or incoherent.

I struggled to complete this book. Maybe the proof-reader did too since the number of typos increased noticeably in the last few chapters. I like to say something positive about any book I read but I'm struggling to say much good about this one because I got so little out of it. I suppose the fact that I finished it says something. It is readable. Her knowledge of neuroscience is undoubted & the one or two discussions (such as the one on consciousness) were interesting.

But I can't recommend it.