#PulpNonFiction: Pragmatic protopias and why everyone is a futurist – Bizcommunity.com

Posted: July 12, 2021 at 7:42 am

Almost exactly a year since the launch of our weekly #PulpNonFiction column, we are proud to share with you the review of a book by the columnist herself. Read this week as Bronwyn Williams of Flux Trends shares The Future Starts Now, a co-written collection of essays celebrating futurists from all over the world.

Instead of reading someone elses book this week, Im revisiting a book I co-wrote myself, The Future Starts Now.

The Future Starts Now is a collection of essays from futurists from all over the world; with a simple challenge to you, the reader, to change the things that we wrote about that make you uncomfortable.

Because that is what we need right now. People brave enough to actually do something about what we see and know is going wrong in the world.

Postalgia is similar to nostalgia; however, where nostalgia is a hankering after the lost past, postalgia is a hankering after the lost future. Postalgia is, in other words, the sense that things right now are as good as they will ever get.

This increasingly prevalent pessimistic worldview is the result of the long slow decline in productivity and equality of progress we have seen in much of the developed world in recent decades. It is the result of the hopelessness of postmodernism; the pointlessness of existence without belief in anything beyond the here and now; the trap of being caught in the endless now. Postalgia is the curse of a civilization without a past it can be proud of and without a future worth believing in; a society left without any unifying grand narrative to follow or substantial positive vision to work towards.

Right now, the world is desperate for good public and private sector leaders with clear and desirable visions of what the future could and should be. Humans have a deep desire for something worth believing in, something worth working towards, something worth building together. This means the future is a huge source of competition for individuals and organisations with the courage and the competence to both imagine it and inspire others to help them build it. The future has to be imagined and articulated before it can be actualised. I believe that, with enough of us doing that imagining and articulating, we can come up with some better ideas than the ones currently lying around.

Of course, this vacuum of new and interesting future ideas is both an opportunity and a threat. It is certainly an opportunity because it is open for anyone to claim as the future is uncharted territory. This means that your ideas of the future should they be big and bold enough have, in theory, as much a chance of changing the world as anyone elses.

At the same time, however, it is a threat, in that the future is constantly at risk of being hijacked by the personal agendas of powerful corporations and individuals. Since one persons idea of utopia could very well be your or my idea of a perfect dystopia, we must include more individuals, more communities, and more companies in conversations about where the world is heading, and if this is, indeed, where we want to go at all.

Human progress is a team sport. More perspectives result in more ideas to solve the worlds wicked problems. More collaborative conscious design of preferable futures that address the unique needs of individuals and communities will result in more stable and more sustainable societies and more equitably distributed progress for humanity.

This means everyone, including you, can (indeed should) become a futurist and begin to explore the limits of what is possible and what is preferable for you, your organisation, your communities, your nation, and for human civilisation at large.

You do not require a degree in future studies or official certification to become a futurist.

All you require is an enquiring mind, the courage to ask questions, and the willingness to let go of the probable to imagine the possibilities.

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#PulpNonFiction: Pragmatic protopias and why everyone is a futurist - Bizcommunity.com

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