The prophet’s warning Yuval Noah Harari is one of the most fashionable thinkers on the planet right now – and some of his thoughts are deeply disturbing, says Cole Moreton in The Mail on Sunday. The academic has written two bestselling books about the evolution of the human race: the first, Sapiens, described our history to date, and the second, Homo Deus, predicts our future – which, he believes, is already upon us. “We’re going to become cyborgs, combining organic and inorganic parts,” says Harari. “The human brain will still be the command-and controlled centre, but you’ll connect it more and more directly to all kinds of devices, whether it’s bionic arms or direct brain-computer interfaces.” Some of this is happening right now, he points out. “People already have bionic arms and legs that work by the power of thought. And we increasingly outsource mental and communicative activities to computers. We are merging with our smartphones. Very soon they will just be part of the body.”
This story is from the The Week 168 edition of The Week Middle East.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the The Week 168 edition of The Week Middle East.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Osborne: Bowing Out – “For Now”
“We’re all in this together.” That was George Osborne’s slogan, and until he trashed it in 2012 – by cutting taxes for the rich – he assumed the title of Britain’s next Conservative prime minister, said John Rentoul in The Independent.
This Week's Dream: Kilimanjaro's Peaceful Cousin
As the continent’s highest mountain, at around 19,000ft, Kilimanjaro is the African climb “everyone talks about”.
What The Scientists Are Saying...
Coffee and health: jury still out
The Making Of A Prime Minister
The churchgoing, grammar school-educated daughter of a vicar, Theresa May could hardly be more different to her predecessor at No. 10. Yet their lives have parallels, says David Runciman in his review of a new biography of the PM.
The Age Of Rage
Controversy of the week.
The Injured Bird That Inspired Bates
A tribute to the pro-democracy activist in Hong Kong.
Was Liu Xiaobo A Patriot Or A Patsy?
A tribute to the pro-democracy activist in Hong Kong.
The Russian Connection: Will It Bring Down Trump?
Trump Jr: the Fredo Corleone of the family.
The May Supremacy
The British “like a warrior queen”, said A.N. Wilson in The Spectator.
Firing Comey: The 'Blunder Of The Decade?
“It was a blatant abuse of executive power: a ‘thuggish, venal act’ of the like not seen since Nixon”