New ideas continue to revolutionize the way we live - all of us young and old, rural and urban, all walks of life.
Lesson in Development Communication (UST Faculty of Arts and Letters): Explain what each of these ideas is all about - its relevance and application, impact and consequence - actual and projected; how one is affected according to his field and status. Cite actual cases, and relate the same to local conditions.
Dr Abe V Rotor
Is it time to revolutionize the educational system? What social media and distance education contribute?
Widespread marginalization in the midst of economic progress with half of the world's population having too little while the other half having too much of the resources. Can globalization ease this inequity?
World's population is young in developing countries, and old in developed countries. What is the implication of this disparity?
Decrease in natural immunity to diseases, and increase in virulence of pathogens, emergence of new and potent diseases notwithstanding. Is is world facing an Armageddon of pandemics?
I am summarizing the top ideas that are currently changing our world, the impact of which we can only guess and project with anxiety and awe and fear. These are ideas forged by modern man, ideas born from a foundation of knowledge and wisdom, ideas spawned by serendipity and unexpected events - nonetheless all reflecting the richness of our cultures amalgamated globally by no less than our inventions that have shrunk the world into a village, a village whose scale keeps us closer and united which is the essence of humanity.
1. Common Wealth - National interests aren't what they used to be. Our survival requires global solutions. The defining challenge of the 21st century will be to face the reality that humanity shares a common fate on a crowded planet.
2. The End of Customer Service - With self-service technology, you'll never have to see a clerk again.
3. The Post-Movie-Star Era. Get ready for more films in which the leading man is not "he" but "Who?"
4. Reverse Radicalism . Want to stop terrorism? Start talking to terrorists who stop themselves.
5. Kitchen Chemistry . Why the squishy art of cooking is giving way to cold, hard science.
6. Geoengineering . Messing with Nature caused global warming. Messing with it more might fix it.
7. Aging gracefully . Forget conventional wisdom; gravhaired societies aren't a problem.
8.Curing the "Dutch Disease." How resource-rich nations can unravel the paradox of plenty.
9. Women's Work. Tapping the female entrepreneurial; women now doing men's work.
10. Beyond the Olympics. Coming: Constant TV coverage of global sporting events.
11. Jobs Are the New Assets. A sampling of fast-growing occupations - Actuaries, financial analyst, computer programmer, fitness trainer, biophysicists, translators, manicurists, marriage counselors, radiologists.
12. Recycling the Suburbs. Environmentalists will celebrate the demise of sprawling suburbs, which left national addicted to cars. Infrastructures will be converted in favor of "green", town centers, public libraries, museums, sports centers, parks.
13. The New Calvinism. More moderate evangelicals are exploring cures for doctrinal drift, offering some assurance to " a lot of young people growing up in sub-cultures of brokenness, divorce, drugs, sexual temptations, etc."
14. Reinstating the Interstate, the Superhighways. These are becoming a new network of light rail and "smart power" electric grid. This is the alternative to car culture that thrives on fossil fuel and promotes suburban sprawl.
15. Amortality. Amortality - "non-moral sensitive" or "neutral morality' - whatever you may call it, this thinking has revolutionized our attitudes toward age. There are people who "refuse to grow old," people who wish to be resurrected from his cryonized corpse.
16. Africa , Business Destination. Next "economic miracle" is in the black continent. Actually it has began stirring the economic consciousness of investors and developers.
17. The Rent-a-Country. Corporate Farming, an approach pioneered by the Philippines in the 60's and 70s, is now adopted by giant companies to farm whole valleys, provinces, island, of countries other than their own. Call it neo-colonialism, - these are food contracts, the latest new green revolution, more reliable food security.
18. Biobanks. Safe deposits - freezers full of tissues for transplants, cryotude for blood samples, liquid nitrogen storage for sperms and eggs, test-tube baby laboratories and clinics. Welcome, surrogate motherhood, post-menopausal technology, in-situ cloning, multiple;e birth technology, and the like.
19. Survival Stores. Sensible shops selling solar panels, electric bicycles, power generators, energy food bars, portable windmill, etc. Attributes: living off the grid, smart recycling, sustainability, consume less, self-sufficiency, basic+ useful, durable lifetime guarantee, hip + cool community, independent, responsible, co-op, brand-free, out of the oven, goodness-driven, health fitness, meditation, bartering, sharing, socialistic capitalism.
20. Ecological Intelligence. There are guidelines now available to judge products on their social and environmental impact. This is new culture characterized by environment-consciousness, environment-friendliness. Here life-cycle assessment and clean-up corporate ecology become an obligation. We are going back - happily and beautifully to a simple and natural lifestyle.
Reference: Time Magazine, Internet, Living with Nature Series
1. Common Wealth - National interests aren't what they used to be. Our survival requires global solutions. The defining challenge of the 21st century will be to face the reality that humanity shares a common fate on a crowded planet.
2. The End of Customer Service - With self-service technology, you'll never have to see a clerk again.
3. The Post-Movie-Star Era. Get ready for more films in which the leading man is not "he" but "Who?"
4. Reverse Radicalism . Want to stop terrorism? Start talking to terrorists who stop themselves.
5. Kitchen Chemistry . Why the squishy art of cooking is giving way to cold, hard science.
6. Geoengineering . Messing with Nature caused global warming. Messing with it more might fix it.
7. Aging gracefully . Forget conventional wisdom; gravhaired societies aren't a problem.
8.Curing the "Dutch Disease." How resource-rich nations can unravel the paradox of plenty.
9. Women's Work. Tapping the female entrepreneurial; women now doing men's work.
10. Beyond the Olympics. Coming: Constant TV coverage of global sporting events.
11. Jobs Are the New Assets. A sampling of fast-growing occupations - Actuaries, financial analyst, computer programmer, fitness trainer, biophysicists, translators, manicurists, marriage counselors, radiologists.
12. Recycling the Suburbs. Environmentalists will celebrate the demise of sprawling suburbs, which left national addicted to cars. Infrastructures will be converted in favor of "green", town centers, public libraries, museums, sports centers, parks.
13. The New Calvinism. More moderate evangelicals are exploring cures for doctrinal drift, offering some assurance to " a lot of young people growing up in sub-cultures of brokenness, divorce, drugs, sexual temptations, etc."
14. Reinstating the Interstate, the Superhighways. These are becoming a new network of light rail and "smart power" electric grid. This is the alternative to car culture that thrives on fossil fuel and promotes suburban sprawl.
15. Amortality. Amortality - "non-moral sensitive" or "neutral morality' - whatever you may call it, this thinking has revolutionized our attitudes toward age. There are people who "refuse to grow old," people who wish to be resurrected from his cryonized corpse.
16. Africa , Business Destination. Next "economic miracle" is in the black continent. Actually it has began stirring the economic consciousness of investors and developers.
17. The Rent-a-Country. Corporate Farming, an approach pioneered by the Philippines in the 60's and 70s, is now adopted by giant companies to farm whole valleys, provinces, island, of countries other than their own. Call it neo-colonialism, - these are food contracts, the latest new green revolution, more reliable food security.
18. Biobanks. Safe deposits - freezers full of tissues for transplants, cryotude for blood samples, liquid nitrogen storage for sperms and eggs, test-tube baby laboratories and clinics. Welcome, surrogate motherhood, post-menopausal technology, in-situ cloning, multiple;e birth technology, and the like.
19. Survival Stores. Sensible shops selling solar panels, electric bicycles, power generators, energy food bars, portable windmill, etc. Attributes: living off the grid, smart recycling, sustainability, consume less, self-sufficiency, basic+ useful, durable lifetime guarantee, hip + cool community, independent, responsible, co-op, brand-free, out of the oven, goodness-driven, health fitness, meditation, bartering, sharing, socialistic capitalism.
20. Ecological Intelligence. There are guidelines now available to judge products on their social and environmental impact. This is new culture characterized by environment-consciousness, environment-friendliness. Here life-cycle assessment and clean-up corporate ecology become an obligation. We are going back - happily and beautifully to a simple and natural lifestyle.
Reference: Time Magazine, Internet, Living with Nature Series
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