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There are chapters on 'the way we weren't', 'is futurology bunk?', 'environment', 'human body', 'mind', 'home and work', 'leisure', 'travel' and a conclusion. This covers the key areas for futurism. The author makes the point that predicting the future is always fraught with peril because so many movements, ideas and inventions have come out of nowhere eg. electricity, feminism, theory of relativity, quantum theory, the internet etc.
It is generally an optimistic book despite the facts mentioned that the gap between the rich and poor is increasing and the large amount of people living close to starvation, he assumes that technological fixes will reduce hunger. There isn't much faith in the majority consensus of climate scientists that global warming is a serious problem, I assume he hasn't read enough of the relevant information. The author comes close to endorsing the views of Fukuyama that capitalism is the complete social system that the human race has been heading towards, but he is too realistic to totally endorse these views. There is a lot of interest, but for sheer futuristic leaps of imagination it doesn't quite match ' Great Mambo Chicken And The Transhuman Condition' by Ed Regis. However there are some important points made, the entertainment is kept at a premium and there is plenty of food for thought.
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I tried to give it zero stars, but the system wouldn't let me.
I understand that when Margolis announced he was doing a Cleese bio, Cleese asked his friends not to help Margolis in any way.
It shows. Margolis replaces insight and nuance with trivia and stupid research tricks. He digs up ancient, brief acquaintances of Cleese's and interviews them (like the girl who was an on-site nurse at one of his film sets, stuff like that).
But most of the book is cobbled together from newspaper and magazine articles, glued together with gobs of suspect, sometimes lurid speculation on the part of the author about Cleese's inner life and psychological motivations.
Oh, and did I mention that Margolis is a writer as smug as he is untalented?
Being an incurable Python fan, I could not resist buying this as a remaindered softback, despite being warned by Friends Who Knew Better.
I still felt as mightily snookered as I would have had I paid full retail hardback.
Run away! Run away!
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