Introduction
1. As a young child,
Michio Kaku had lofty dreams of what he wanted to be and do as an adult.
- During your
childhood, what did you dream of achieving as a grownup?
2. “The key to
understanding the future,” Kaku writes, “is to grasp the fundamental laws of
nature and then apply them to the inventions, machines, and therapies that will
redefine our civilization far into the future.”
- What makes Kaku’s
book different from most books that claim to predict the future?
3. “The prototypes of all these technologies
already exist. As William Gibson, the author of Neuromancer who coined the word cyberspace, once said, ‘The future
is already here. It’s just unevenly distributed.’”
-
What is meant by that statement, and where do we witness it?
4. Kaku introduces us to the four fundamental
forces in nature: gravity, the electromagnetic force, and the two nuclear
forces, weak and strong. (The recently
discovered fifth force of nature is
Donald Trump…but that’s a whole ‘nother discussion!)
-
How does the sum of these four forces of nature contribute to our lives
today?
-
What has our limited understanding of them allowed us to do…both for good and
for harm?
5. “Now
dare to imagine the world in the year 2100. By 2100, our destiny is to become
like the gods we once worshiped and feared. But our tools will not be magic
wands and potions, but the science of computers, nanotechnology, artificial
intelligence, biotechnology, and most of all, the quantum theory, which is the foundation
of the previous technologies.”
Kaku’s question: “But where is all this technological change leading? Where is the final destination in this long voyage into science and technology?”
Kaku’s
answer: “The culmination of all these
upheavals is the formation of a
planetary civilization, what physicists call a Type I civilization.”
What
might that Type 1 civilization look like to you?
6. Kaku
concludes his introduction: “The point is: whenever there is a conflict between
modern technology and the desires of our primitive ancestors, these primitive
desires win each time. That’s the Cave Man Principle.”
He concludes, “So unless we genetically change our basic
personality, we can expect that the power of entertainment, tabloid gossip, and
social networking will increase, not
decrease, in the future.”
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Seriously, can it get any worse?
7.
“Of course, science is a double-edged sword; it creates as many problems
as it solves, but always on a higher level. There are two competing trends in
the world today: one is to create a
planetary civilization that is tolerant, scientific, and prosperous, but the other glorifies anarchy and ignorance
that could rip the fabric of our society. We still have the same sectarian,
fundamentalist, irrational passions of our ancestors, but the difference is
that now we have nuclear, chemical, and biological weapons.”
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As Christians, what role will we play in addressing these two competing trends?
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How does our understanding of human nature (sin) and God’s redemptions through
the death and resurrection of Jesus (salvation) prepare us for the swift
currents of change ahead?
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