As Bruce Sterling says in Tomorrow Now, “The future is a process, not a theme park.” What that means for Worldchanging, is that we don’t practice imagining the future in order to be right, we imagine it in order to think more clearly about the systems in which we find ourselves embedded. We think about the future not in order to predict it — that’s essentially impossible in any meaningful sense — but in order to see more clearly the ways in which we can act today to influence it. By using tools and modes of thought which encourage our foresight, we can anticipate new threats and opportunities, and better apprehend the nature of the tools we have at our disposal for acting in the face of those threats and opportunities. Imagining the future, then, paradoxically makes us more innovative and effective in the present. But imagining the future helps us with another important task, as well: remembering our duty to the people who will come after us. Many of the best things about our society are the legacies of people who came before us and made the conscious choice to leave the world a better place. On the other… (more)
(Posted by WorldChanging Team in Imagining the Future at 2:04 PM)