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The Next Two Hundred Years: A Scenario for America and the World Paperback – January 1, 1976
- Print length241 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherWilliam Morrow & Co
- Publication dateJanuary 1, 1976
- ISBN-100688080294
- ISBN-13978-0688080297
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Product details
- Publisher : William Morrow & Co (January 1, 1976)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 241 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0688080294
- ISBN-13 : 978-0688080297
- Item Weight : 10.4 ounces
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,832,501 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,909 in History of Technology
- #3,707 in Economic History (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on June 3, 2011I must of read a different book than the one Mr. Vedda reviewed.
Kahn outlined how the various views perceive their world. These views are then tabled by subject. He presents the future based on the various beliefs and the evidence each view uses to substantiate their premises. He call these views perspectives on the future and on the extremes are the Convinced Neo-Malthusian and the Technology and Growth Enthusiast. There are two others in between the extremes. Kahn was not pushing one perspective over the other. In fact, he gave warnings about the dangers of a too rapid growth based on Technology. His book outlines how to define the present day and then the manner how the various views see the future. For example, how does a Neo-Malthusian see innovation and discovery affects the future differently from a Technology Enthusiast. All of this is put into a easy table format. These perspectives are as valid today as they were in 1976.
This book is a classic and much of his analysis is worthwhile for today's view of growth. Most certainly just his tables and his classifications, as stated by another reviewer, are worth the price of the book. He, at the least, puts a strategy and a structure on methods used to view growth and the future. I used his methods and his structure in strategic planning and with one paper I presented at a Futurist conference. His use of tables to provide an understanding of complex subjects is the work of a genius.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 19, 2008A wealth of futurist writing appeared from the 1950s to the 1970s, and Herman Kahn and his colleagues at the Hudson Institute were prominent contributors. I picked up this book because I've been studying what the futurists of that era were saying, and assessing what they got right and wrong (so far). I believe there may be value in analyzing why they got certain things wrong: Was it mainly due to faulty interpretation of available data, or to the impossibility of predicting the timing and consequences of disruptive events and technologies?
If your interest in futurism includes learning from its checkered past, this is a good read. If you're looking for something that's still valid today, this isn't it. Most of what's presented in this 1976 book turned out to be wrong. (The biggest exception is that they accurately pegged the evolution of computers and the information society.) That may seem like a rash judgment since the book's 200-year time horizon stretches to 2176. But much of the book dwells on what will come to pass by 1985, by 2000, or by early in the 21st century.
Kahn & Co. wrote this book specifically to counter the so-called "neo-Malthusian" perspective of the 1972 Limits to Growth study and similar efforts of that era. But the authors go to the opposite extreme, purporting to show that there will be abundant energy, raw materials, food, and living space; no unacceptable effects on the environment; and increasing affluence worldwide even if the population grows to 30 billion (almost five times today's population) and global economic activity reaches 60 times the level of the 1970s. This scenario, we are told, holds true even without considering any significant inputs of energy, materials, or manufactured products from beyond Earth.
The authors ignore, dispute, or oversimplify basic concepts of international economics and trade relations. They believe that the more consumption there is in developed countries, the better it is for developing countries because it provides them with markets and jobs. They are unaware of a well-known phenomenon called the "resource curse" and assume every country with natural resources will end up as rich as Middle East countries with oil. They seem to wish away inequitable trade policies, such as subsidies and protectionist measures that close off markets. They assume that new technologies will be easily and quickly transferred to and absorbed by those who need them.
The authors are big believers in the technological fix. Whether it's extraction of raw materials, the production of energy or goods, the harvesting and distribution of food, or the worldwide improvement of health, they assume the right technology will be available in plenty of time. There are many examples of this, but I'll just mention one: they foresee practical fusion energy by the 1990s.
The authors find it hard to conceal their contempt for environmentalists, who they clearly see as mostly wrong-headed obstructionists. Some of the authors' ideas on the environment would be considered strange today. For example, they see the Amazon basin (among other locations) as a "relatively unused area" that should be converted to food production. Also, they acknowledge the possibility of global warming, but believe it could be a good thing - growing seasons in high latitudes would be longer, and even if the polar ice caps melted, it would only inconvenience a few coastal cities. (!)
I consider myself an optimist. The authors, however, go far beyond anything that could stand up to modern scrutiny. It would be nice to believe that conservation is not necessary and global solutions will come when needed if we just keep cruising on autopilot. But that's an irresponsible approach. The future is what we make it.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2019Excellent book for the research I am doing
- Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2002On page 22 of The Next 200 Years Herman Kahn said: "[We live in] a structural society which emphasizes organizational and professional pluralism in the distribution of power and presstige. Knowledge rather than experience becomes the major asset and there is the increasing problem of 'educated incapacity'. By 'educated incapacity' we mean an acquired or learned inability to understand or see a problem, much less a solution. Increasingly, the more expert, or at least the more educated, a person is, the more likely he is to be affected by this."
Remenber this the next time a PhD expounds on global warning.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 4, 1997This is an excellent book on the future for those who want to predict it and for those who are just curious. It was written during a time in which Americans were somewhat gloomy about over-population, depletion of resources, and future wars; and yet it predicted an optimistic scenario which history has proven correct over the last 20 years. Furthermore it gives some insight on how to make sucessful predictions for the long term. There are 18 tables and 11 figures illustrating how we (rich and poor alike) are likely to be better off in the future.
Top reviews from other countries
- SamReviewed in the United Kingdom on October 19, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent forecasts for your future, get ready to be rich and happy
Predicts that poverty will be eliminated by 2176 (400 years after Independence Day, and 200 years after this book was published), when the population will be 15 billion, each with an income of about $20,000, and living off pure food grown (using market garden style glasshouses) in deserts. Can't wait.
SamExcellent forecasts for your future, get ready to be rich and happy
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 19, 2015
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- AKReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 7, 2011
4.0 out of 5 stars Interesting look into the future, from a 1976 perspective
Herman Kahn has not been a renowned futurologist for nothing - and the book is a good example of his work. In it he stretches the view from 1976 - the American bicentenary to 2176 and explores the avenues of possible development over that period of time.
The two interesting facets of the book are looking at the future from the perspective of the mid 70s, and to see how right he ended up being. If one did not live through the time, it is easy to forget the draw exercised by the limits to growth perspective in that era. In fact, Kahn's book is a good complement to The Limits to Growth: The 30-year Update - the two not representing the most extreme points of the debate, but solid middle ground positions of the two schools of thinking.
Unlike the more extremist optimist technologist views, Kahn seems to be well aware of certain limitations of possible solutions of technology and he certainly acknowledges some aspects of the limits to growth thinking in principle but is confident of ways of overcoming them. He points out some valid weaknesses of the more pessimistic view of human development arguments, which one would not get reading the other side, without going nearly so far as dismissing the validity of the train of argumentation out of hand.
Looking at the ranges of outcomes he is offering, it is also clear that he is a trained futurologist and not a 'guru' - peddling a messianic message (of either doom, or salvation). Given that he is talking of a 200 year period, the possible end states are very far apart, from the most positive and optimistic one, to the most subdued, conservative one.
In terms of correctness, both his view, as well as that of Meadows' The Limits to Growth: The 30-year Update, ended up providing a pretty solid trend projection - not correct in all the details but a useful look into the future nevertheless. That he did not foresee the collapse of the Soviet Union in the relatively short run (mere 15 or so years after the book was written), is normal, overall it seems to still be tracking fairly well. And the fact that the antagonistic, cold war thinking was likely to be transformed eventually is an argument he was making towards the end of the book anyway, so while not correct in timing, he was in principle.
Overall, I feel that there is real value to reading this piece of futurology, even if it is 35 years old by now - lots can be learned about the approach, scenario thinking and the past from it. And while not page turning fiction, it is a pleasant read, too.