Cover Stories: The New Media Age: End of the Written Word? edited by
FUTURIST
assistant editor Patrick Tucker
With the increasing dominance of multimedia communications, many are
predicting the end of the written word. But is it really happening? And
what would be the likely impacts to our ability to understand complex
ideas in a world without words? THE FUTURIST solicited the reflections
of several leading experts:
In The Postliterate Future, Megatrends author John
Naisbitt describes some of the forces contributing to the rise of a
visual culture, including the slow demise of newspaper readership and
the phenomenal success of visually based media such as music videos and
video games. [adapted from the book Mindset: Reset Your Thinking and
See the Future]
The rise of a more visual (and visceral) culture will increasingly
cost us critical thinking skills, such as the ability to recognize
satire, suggests Michael Rogers, Futurist in Residence, New York
Times Co., and columnist for MSNBC.com ("The Practical
Futurist"), who recounts the reaction to one of his own satirical
pieces.
Other contributors to this special section include William
Crossman, author of
VIVO [Voice-In/Voice Out]: The Coming Age of Talking
Computers; Christine Rosen, senior editor of The
New Atlantis; Joe Lambert, executive director of the Center for
Digital Storytelling; Peter Wagschal, author of a prescient 1978
FUTURIST article, "Illiterates with Doctorates"; and Edward N.
Luttwak, senior fellow at the Center for Strategic and International
Studies.
Foresight for Government
by David M. Walker, comptroller general of the United States,
U.S. Government Accountability Office
SUMMARY: Improvement in government's foresight capability will
require an overhaul of how agencies do business. The United States could
look to what other countries have begun to do to address problems such
as the aging of their populations, which is "a demographic tsunami
building silently offshore." Improving foresight will require
multilateral action at the international level and more interagency
cooperation at the national level.
The Coming Osteoporosis Epidemic: Trend Analysis
by Jay Herson, biostatistics scholar (Johns Hopkins
University adjunct faculty), statistical researcher in drug development,
and regulatory expert in clinical trials
SUMMARY: Osteoporosis is a growing problem worldwide as societies
age, and increases in bone fractures (especially hip, spine, and wrist)
are predicted. The article outlines the trends of the epidemic,
including its costs, to the year 2050, and reviews treatment strategies
and policy options under different scenarios ("challenging times,"
"business as usual"). Appropriate actions now for fracture prevention
could lead to much higher quality of life for those at risk by 2020.
The Search for Foresight (part 2): The World Future Society's
Emergence from Dream to Reality
by Edward Cornish
Founding WFS president and FUTURIST editor continues the narrative on
how the Society came into existence, recounting early achievements and
challenges, including the toll that this work took on his personal life.
Cornish describes producing the first issues of THE FUTURIST with few
resources, recruiting volunteer staff, membership promotions, inviting
advisers and board members, organizing international chapters, and
weighing the prospects for a conference about the future.