A Brief History of The Future by Jacques Attali
A Brief History of The Future by Jacques Attali
A Brief History of The Future by Jacques Attali
www.DrDarryl.com
The back cover of the books says this: "What will planet Earth be like in twenty years?
At mid-century? In the year 2100? Prescient and convincing, this book is a must-read
for anyone concerned about the future. Never has the world offered more promise for
the future and been more fraught with dangers. Attali anticipates an unraveling of
American hegemony as transnational corporations sever the ties linking free enterprise
to democracy. World tensions will be primed for horrific warfare for resources and
dominance. The ultimate question is: Will we leave our children and grandchildren a
Positing that history flows in a single, stubborn, and very particular direction toward
man's progressive liberation, the author projects that course with surprising results.
Before mapping out the future, Attali grounds his chronology in patterns he perceives in
history and in the past. At the center of these patterns stand impulses that have
persistently fostered democratic governance and marketplace economics — in
thirteenth-century Bruges, in sixteenth-century Genoa, in nineteenth-century London. In
Attali’s analysis, Los Angeles emerges as the nexus of capitalist democracy today.
He therefore predicts that the mercantile order that prevails today will exhaust itself
within a generation or so and be replaced by a unified and stateless global market — a
super-empire controlled by an innovative class of selfish hyper-nomads. This super-
empire will lead to extreme imbalances of wealth and poverty that will cause its collapse
by 2050 — perhaps accompanied, as suggested, by a round of planetary warfare.
Humanity will emerge chastened from the wreckage and erect a utopia of hyper-
democracy led by a class of trans-humans — a new breed of altruistic citizens of the
world (in today's world for example, he cites Melinda Gates and Mother Teresa as tans-
humans). These trans-humans will usher in a new economy of altruism, of free
availability, of mutual giving, of public service, of the general interest. Their objective will
be to improve the world's lot. These altruistic individuals will give rise to what are called
relational businesses. Today, such examples would include The Red Cross, Doctors
Without Borders, Greenpeace and World Wildlife Fund.
The first portion of this book covers the historic rise and fall of previous economic
empires. It is not necessarily riveting reading, but it is informative. For avid historians, it
will be a nice refresher on the past.
However, the author uses this beginning to offer a base for his theory. As in all of the
The author goes all out in his futurist view in this book, courageous for a person with
many responsibilities and reputation to consider. It's a practical approach in leading you
from the basics of history, so you can naturally integrate the future as a part of the
continual history.
It takes the myth out of futurism, which is probably the point of this book. This book lets
you see the current economic-geographical-political history in a long range, diluting the
emotional reaction of people who want to believe that this way of life will last forever.
A readership anxious about the trajectory of world events will find much here to ponder
— and debate.
(Dr Darryl is a clinical and organizational psychologist as well as a credentialed executive and
personal coach. He is also an author, international speaker and university lecturer. Dr Darryl
assists people to find their strengths and reach their goals. Further information on Dr Darryl can
be accessed from www.DrDarryl.com.)