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CNoodle t1_j6ep57a wrote

I'm a graduate student at the University of Houston's M.S in Foresight program where they provide seminal books, ideas, and thinkers about the futures studies and foresight. I've completed 7/10 classes so I've got a high level understanding on the big ones.

The most influential book I've read so far was Richard Slaughter's The Biggest Wakeup Call in History. He names what the greatest civilizational challenge humanity faces. Spoiler: “humanity has become a global force in its own right but is still thinking and behaving as if it lived on a world without limits that can continue to absorb impacts and insults of all kinds without consequence.” The idea is that if society understands what is at stake, the prospects for dealing with the “civilizational challenge” is greatly improved.

Slaughter combines theory and framework like 2x2, Integral theory, worldviews, and spiral dynamics to map out paths to plausible, aspirational futures. One that at worst suggests a descent rather than a collapse. Where if we shift our priority from economic and technological investment towards cognitive and social investment, we can develop a society that can accept difference to move forward.

The book exemplifies the importance of applying foresight theory in creating novel insights and hope for the future when things only seem to get worse. If I can spend my life playing a part to translate and transform individuals in their pursuits, I can die fulfilled in a collapse scenario.

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