What Are the Biggest Problems Facing Us in the 21st Century?
The
human mind wants to worry. This is not necessarily a bad thing — after
all, if a bear is stalking you, worrying about it may well save your
life. Although most of us don’t need to lose too much sleep over bears
these days, modern life does present plenty of other reasons for
concern: terrorism, climate change, the rise of A.I., encroachments on
our privacy, even the apparent decline of international cooperation.
In
his fascinating new book, “21 Lessons for the 21st Century,” the
historian Yuval Noah Harari creates a useful framework for confronting
these fears. While his previous best sellers, “Sapiens” and “Homo Deus,”
covered the past and future respectively, his new book is all about the
present. The trick for putting an end to our anxieties, he suggests, is
not to stop worrying. It’s to know which things to worry about, and how
much to worry about them. As he writes in his introduction: “What are
today’s greatest challenges and most important changes? What should we
pay attention to? What should we teach our kids?”
These are
admittedly big questions, and this is a sweeping book. There are
chapters on work, war, nationalism, religion, immigration, education and
15 other weighty matters. But its title is a misnomer. Although you
will find a few concrete lessons scattered throughout, Harari mostly
resists handy prescriptions. He’s more interested in defining the terms
of the discussion and giving you historical and philosophical
perspective.
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Yuval Noah HarariCreditOlivier MiddendorpHe
deploys, for example, a clever thought experiment to underscore how far
humans have come in creating a global civilization. Imagine, he says,
trying to organize an Olympic Games in 1016. It’s clearly impossible.
Asians, Africans and Europeans don’t know that the Americas exist. The
Chinese Song Empire doesn’t think any other political entity in the
world is even close to being its equal. No one even has a flag to fly or
anthem to play at the awards ceremony.
The
point is that today’s competition among nations — whether on an
athletic field or the trading floor — “actually represents an
astonishing global agreement.” And that global agreement makes it easier
to cooperate as well as compete. Keep this in mind the next time you
start to doubt whether we can solve a global problem like climate
change. Our global cooperation may have taken a couple of steps back in
the past two years, but before that we took a thousand steps forward.
So
why does it seem as if the world is in decline? Largely because we are
much less willing to tolerate misfortune and misery. Even though the
amount of violence in the world has greatly decreased, we focus on the
number of people who die each year in wars because our outrage at
injustice has grown. As it should.
Here’s another worry that
Harari deals with: In an increasingly complex world, how can any of us
have enough information to make educated decisions? It’s tempting to
turn to experts, but how do you know they’re not just following the
herd? “The problem of groupthink and individual ignorance besets not
just ordinary voters and customers,” he writes, “but also presidents and
C.E.O.s.” That rang true to me from my experience at both Microsoft and
the Gates Foundation. I have to be careful not to fool myself into
thinking things are better — or worse — than they actually are.
What
does Harari think we should do about all this? Sprinkled throughout is
some practical advice, including a three-prong strategy for fighting
terrorism and a few tips for dealing with fake news. But his big idea
boils down to this: Meditate. Of course he isn’t suggesting that the
world’s problems will vanish if enough of us start sitting in the lotus
position and chanting om. But he does insist that life in the
21st century demands mindfulness — getting to know ourselves better and
seeing how we contribute to suffering in our own lives. This is easy to
mock, but as someone who’s taking a course on mindfulness and
meditation, I found it compelling.
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As
much as I admire Harari and enjoyed “21 Lessons,” I didn’t agree with
everything in the book. I was glad to see the chapter on inequality, but
I’m skeptical about his prediction that in the 21st century “data will
eclipse both land and machinery as the most important asset” separating
rich people from everyone else. Land will always be hugely important,
especially as the global population nears 10 billion. Meanwhile, data on
key human endeavors — how to grow food or produce energy, for example —
will become even more widely available. Simply having information won’t
offer a competitive edge; knowing what to do with it will.
Similarly,
I wanted to see more nuance in Harari’s discussion of data and privacy.
He rightly notes that more information is being gathered on individuals
than ever before. But he doesn’t distinguish among the types of data
being collected — the kind of shoes you like to buy versus which
diseases you’re genetically predisposed to — or who is gathering it, or
how they’re using it. Your shopping history and your medical history
aren’t collected by the same people, protected by the same safeguards or
used for the same purposes. Recognizing this distinction would have
made his discussion more enlightening.
I was also dissatisfied
with the chapter on community. Harari argues that social media including
Facebook have contributed to political polarization by allowing users
to cocoon themselves, interacting only with those who share their views.
It’s a fair point, but he undersells the benefits of connecting family
and friends around the world. He also creates a straw man by asking
whether Facebook alone can solve the problem of polarization. On its
own, of course it can’t — but that’s not surprising, considering how
deep the problem cuts. Governments, civil society and the private sector
all have a role to play, and I wish Harari had said more about them.
But
Harari is such a stimulating writer that even when I disagreed, I
wanted to keep reading and thinking. All three of his books wrestle with
some version of the same question: What will give our lives meaning in
the decades and centuries ahead? So far, human history has been driven
by a desire to live longer, healthier, happier lives. If science is
eventually able to give that dream to most people, and large numbers of
people no longer need to work in order to feed and clothe everyone, what
reason will we have to get up in the morning?
It’s no criticism
to say that Harari hasn’t produced a satisfying answer yet. Neither has
anyone else. So I hope he turns more fully to this question in the
future. In the meantime, he has teed up a crucial global conversation
about how to take on the problems of the 21st century.
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Source: http://www.bbc.com/news/health-43308729 http://cafebiz.vn/vi-giao-su-82-tuoi-nay-van-so-huu-mot-he-mien-dich-o-tuoi-20-bi-quyet-cua-ong-la-gi-2018031313283768.chn Doing lots of exercise in older age can prevent the immune system from declining and protect people against infections, scientists say. They followed 125 long-distance cyclists, some now in their 80s, and found they had the immune systems of 20-year-olds.Prof Norman Lazarus, 82, of King's College London, who took part in and co-authored the research, said: "If exercise was a pill, everyone would be taking it. "It has wide-ranging benefits for the body, the mind, for our muscles and our immune system." The research was published in the journal Aging Cell. Prof Janet Lord, director of the Institute of Inflammation and Ageing , at the University of Birmingham, and co-author of the research, said: "The immune system declines by about 2-3% a year from our 20s, which is why older peop...
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