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Gerd leonhard
Gerd leonhard













“What cannot be digitised and/or automated could become extremely valuable.” “Megashifts” – facets of the transformation currently under way – include digitisation of everything that can be digitised, mobility, disintermediation, automation, virtualisation, and robotisation. Each of these aspects is examined from the dual perspective of its risks and its expected benefits. In his book, Gerd Leonhard lists the transformations now taking place.

Gerd leonhard free#

The futurist provides a starter set of humanist-inspired ideas to help us reap the benefits of technology without forfeiting what makes us human – first and foremost our free will. From artificial intelligence to human genome editing, “striking a balance will be key,” says Gerd Leonhard. Without fear of hyperbole, he warns that “Now is our last chance to question the nature of these coming challenges.”Īs he sees it, the issue is not so much the use of technology itself as the ever-deeper integration of technology in human life. Humanity is that we need to make choices, and we need to make them fast.

gerd leonhard

The main point he makes in his book Technology vs. In his books and lectures, the German futurist stresses the idea that technology is as much a threat as an opportunity for humanity, which it can equally serve and enslave. “Humanity will change more in the next 20 years than in the previous 300 years,” says Gerd Leonhard.

gerd leonhard

And the process is just getting under way.

gerd leonhard

Technology, including sensors, algorithms, cobots, cloud, automation and AI, is becoming increasingly widespread and spectacularly accelerating the transformation of the way we live, produce and consume. Technology is a great servant but a terrible master, says futurist Gerd Leonhard, who believes that its rollout entails ethical choices.













Gerd leonhard