At the beginning of Nonzero, Robert Wright sets out to "define the arrow of the history of life, from the primordial soup to the World Wide Web." Twenty-two chapters later, after a sweeping and vivid narrative of the human past, he has succeeded — and has mounted a powerful challenge to the conventional view that evolution and human history are aimless.
Ingeniously employing game theory — the logic of "zero-sum" and "non-zero-sum" games — Wright isolates the impetus behind life's basic direction: the impetus that, via biological evolution, created complex, intelligent animals and then, via cultural evolution, pushed the human species toward deeper and vaster social complexity. In this view, the coming of today's interdependent global society was "in the cards" — not quite inevitable, perhaps, but, as Wright puts it, "so probable as to inspire wonder." So probable, indeed, as to invite speculation about higher purpose, especially in light of "the phase of history that seems to lie immediately ahead: a social, political, and even moral culmination of sorts."
In a work of vast erudition and pungent wit, Wright takes on some of the past century's most prominent thinkers, including Isaiah Berlin, Karl Popper, Stephen Jay Gould, and Richard Dawkins. He finds evidence for his position in unexpected corners, from native American hunter-gatherer societies and Polynesian chiefdoms to medieval Islamic commerce and precocious Chinese technology; from conflicts of interest among a cell's genes to discord at the World Trade Organization.
Wright argues that a coolly scientific appraisal of humanity's three-billion-year past can give new spiritual meaning to the present and even offer political guidance for the future. Nonzero will change the way people think about the human prospect.
Robert Wright is the author of Three Scientists and Their Gods and The Moral Animal, which was named by the New York Times Book Review as one of the twelve best books of the year and has been published in nine languages. A recipient of the National Magazine Award for Essay and Criticism, Wright has published in The Atlantic, The New Yorker, the New York Times Magazine, Time, and Slate. He was previously a senior editor at The New Republic and The Sciences and now runs the Web site nonzero.org. He lives in Washington, D.C., with his wife and two daughters.
说老外思维简单,往往是一个词汇有多重含义和解释;说中国人聪明,往往同一个意思可以用不同的单词来表达,而把人认为天经地义的道理搞糊涂。 英语中有一个单词目前在中国绝大多数稍微读过几天英文的人都非常熟悉。这就是——Share,其中最为中国证券界人士熟悉的解释就是“股...
評分买这本书,其实最开始的时候是看到作者的另外一本书,神的演化。 这本书的翻译几个版本,在网上的评价都不太高。原因是书写的很细,内容很繁琐。 作者作为前总统的顾问,本书是福布斯财富杂志把它定为75本必读的商业书之一。位列全球化的子目中的一本。介绍称,该书将历史、神...
評分这本书相比大部分书还是【言之有物】的,其它书籍通常是老调重弹、言之无物,本书能做到内容新颖,观点有创意,主要内容是【用博弈论对若干历史事件产生的价值进行梳理和分析,新的角度带来新的理解】,这点就是书值得称道的地方。 但是这本书东拉西扯的地方太多,里面的历史没...
評分逻辑牵强,引用过多,缺乏第一手信息,翻译尤其差,不知所云;居然把知识产权,intellecture property翻译成智慧财产。 平均每章出现名人名言3-5段,如果每次都要脱帽致敬的话,基本上就别想戴帽子了。作者是不是靠旁征博引上位的?
評分这是全球脑小组主席弗朗西斯·海拉恩推荐的一本书。 http://www.globalbrain.cn/cn/article.php/568 书的开头有些沉闷,讲了很多古代的狩猎社会。直到中间时,才开始探讨全球脑思想以及超级有机体、文化因子(meme)等概念,读起来逐渐变得令人振奋。 总之,这是一本好书!
閤作推進人類結構演變和文明發展進程,並帶領社會嚮更好的某種既定未來的進化。 很多新穎觀點,值得重讀。
评分閤作推進人類結構演變和文明發展進程,並帶領社會嚮更好的某種既定未來的進化。 很多新穎觀點,值得重讀。
评分閤作推進人類結構演變和文明發展進程,並帶領社會嚮更好的某種既定未來的進化。 很多新穎觀點,值得重讀。
评分閤作推進人類結構演變和文明發展進程,並帶領社會嚮更好的某種既定未來的進化。 很多新穎觀點,值得重讀。
评分閤作推進人類結構演變和文明發展進程,並帶領社會嚮更好的某種既定未來的進化。 很多新穎觀點,值得重讀。
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