Book description
The Internet, in the memorable words of EDGE founder John Brockman,
is 'the infinite oscillation of our collective consciousness
interacting with itself. It's not about computers. It's not about what
it means to be human - in fact, it challenges, renders trite, our
cherished assumptions on that score. It is about thinking'. In How is
the Internet Changing the Way you Think?, the latest volume in
Brockman's cutting-edge Edge questions series, 154 of the world's
leading intellectuals - scientists, artists and creative thinkers -
explore exactly what it means to think in the new age of the Internet:
from Nicholas Carr's reflections on what the Internet is doing to our
brains, to Richard Dawkins's sanguine assessment of its long-term
potential for good; and from Clay Shirky's assessment of the impact of
the Internet on the dissemination and sharing of knowledge, to Ian and
Joel Gold's observations on the seismic social changes it has brought
about. Editor John Brockman has assembled a world-class array of
contributors, which includes (in addition to those mentioned above)
Daniel C. Dennett, Martin Rees, Steven Pinker, Hans Ulrich Obrist,
Sean Carroll, Brian Eno, Douglas Coupland, Matt Ridley, and scores of
others at the epicentre of research in their respective disciplines.