Home
/
Non-Fiction
/
Dawn of the New Everything
Dawn of the New Everything
Oct 26, 2024 7:16 PM

Author:Jaron Lanier

Dawn of the New Everything

Named a Best Book of the Year by the Economist, Wall Street Journal & Vox

‘The father of virtual reality’ (Sunday Times) explains why virtual reality presents the ultimate test for humanity.

‘Essential reading, not just for VR-watchers but for anyone interested in how society came to be how it is, and what it might yet become’ Economist

Welcome to a mind-expanding, life-enhancing, world-changing adventure.

Virtual reality has long been one of the dominant clichés of science fiction. Now virtual reality is a reality: from the startling beauty of lifelike video games to the place where war veterans overcome PTSD, surgeries are trialled, and aircraft and cities are designed. VR is, in fact now, the most effective device ever invented for researching what a human being actually is – and how we think and feel.

More than thirty years ago, legendary computer scientist, visionary and artist Jaron Lanier pioneered its invention. Here he blends scientific investigation, philosophical thought experiment and his memoir of a life lived at the centre of digital innovation to explain what VR really is: the science of comprehensive illusion; the extension of the intimate magic of earliest childhood into adulthood; a hint of what life would be like without any limits.

We are standing on the threshold of an entirely new realm of human creativity, expression, communication and experience, and as we use VR to test our relationship with reality, it may test us in return.

Vivid and absolutely extraordinary’ Evening Standard

Reviews

A terrific book by a supremely intelligent guy ... vivid and absolutely extraordinary

—— Evening Standard

Essential reading, not just for VR-watchers but for anyone interested in how society came to be how it is, and what it might yet become

—— Economist

A studied and nuanced interrogation of VR’s potential, as well as a gentle critique of what he sees as a failure of imagination when it comes to the medium’s current proponents ... interspersing the general ideas, principles and promise of VR with intimate autobiography ... aided by the fact that Lanier's childhood was preposterously unusual … combin[ing] tragedy, whimsy and peril in ways that might seem far-fetched for even a David Lynch film

—— Observer

Lanier is a visionary who sees a world suffused with the possibility of good ... As with William Blake, you might first be repelled by the strangeness of it all, the sense of teetering on the edge of madness, but, on looking closer, you realise you are in the presence of a gifted truth-teller

—— Brian Appleyard , Sunday Times

Fascinating as life itself … a modern history of the industry that changed the world

—— Hugo Rifkind , The Times

Lanier beautifully describes his fascination with VR as the technology that 'highlights the existence of your subjective experience. It proves you are real'

—— Nature

A tech futurist, researcher and writer, he is well placed to act as guide to the world described in Dawn of the New Everything… A lot of the charm of this highly personal account turns on his description of a childhood that reads like something out of a magical realist novel

—— Financial Times

A deeply human, highly personal and beautifully told story

—— Dave Eggers

It's entirely unexpected and disarming to read about these fascinating ideas about technology and the future from such a personal, unabashedly subjective point of view. Lanier has thoroughly convinced me that Virtual Reality is the beginning of an enormous paradigm shift in the way humans relate and communicate

—— Joseph Gordon-Levitt

Fascinating

—— i

Foer’s writing is deft enough to make this a polemic in the best sense of the word, which is to say a relentless intellectual argument, executed in the tradition of George Orwell and Christopher Hitchens.

—— Jon Gertner , Washington Post Sunday

An uncanny prophecy of big tech’s public reckoning.

—— Tom McCarthy , Guardian

Now, suddenly, it’s open season in Silicon Valley… Franklin Foer’s World Without Mind belongs to this turn. And it couldn’t have appeared at more opportune moment… Foer is writing for a readership that is ready to re-evaluate the role technology plays in their lives, and to pay closer, less credulous attention to the companies that are building it… Your receptiveness to these claims will probably have a lot to do with how technology has touched your life. Foer is candid about how it’s touched him. He writes as someone with skin in the game.

—— Ben Tarnoff , Guardian

The backlash against Silicon Valley has resulted in a flood of critical books, and Franklin Foers World Without Mind: The Existential Threat of Big Data is one of the most trenchant, with a sustained attempt to shed some light on the distinctive culture of the digital revolution.

—— John Fanning , Business Plus

An exemplary piece of medical journalism, and Wadman makes strikingly clear the human costs of medical developments as well as the roles of politics and economics.

—— Publishers Weekly

Wadman does a superb job of making the technical comprehensible to the lay reader and, more importantly, makes the science come to life by honing in on the brilliant men and women who were driven to create new, life-saving vaccines... While the science is fascinating, the foibles of the main characters are what keep the reader gripped

—— Globe and Mail

This is a story about the war against disease - a war without end - and the development of enormously important vaccines, but in telling that story, in showing how science works, Meredith Wadman reveals much more. Like all wars, that story includes heroism, risk-taking, persistence and fighting against the odds, and, like all wars, that story also includes politics, obtuseness, bureaucracy, and fights over money. It's very well-written and does not oversimplify yet explains clearly even the purely scientific parts of the story. In short, I loved this book.

—— John M. Barry, New York Times bestselling author of The Great Influenza

Reads like a good detective novel... Wadman’s great strength, in the end, is her uncanny ability to weave the multiple strands of a complicated story into a coherent narrative.

—— David Oshinsky, author of the Pulizer-prize-winning Polio - An American Story

Rivalries and shenanigans abound in Wadman’s complex story... An important story well told

—— Kirkus Reviews

Wadman tells the inspiring, and sometimes murky, story of the battle to protect the world from viral disease.

—— Daily Mail

Dazzling... There is nothing about Gene that is less than nuanced.

—— Sathnam Sanghera , The Times

A magnificent synthesis of the science of life, and forces all to confront the essence of that science as well as the ethical and philosophical challenges to our conception of what constitutes being human

—— Paul Berg, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry

Wise and lucid...excellent

—— Andrew Marr , BBC Radio 4 Start the Week

A tourist guide to the new Africa, the human genome… Mukherjee gives an exhaustive account of the development of the modern science of inheritance… Mukherjee does a good job of cutting away the web of ambiguity and complexity’

—— Steve Jones , New Statesman

Written with the rollicking enthusiasm of sports journalism… Mukherjee has an ear for his subject’s rhetorical brilliance.

—— Andrew Solomon , Guardian Weekly

Meticulous… Carefully constructed, deliberate prose.

—— Sumit Paul-Choudary , Literary Review

Makes a compelling case that our ability to harness the medical benefits of genomic science while avoiding its hazards promises to be among the defining challenges of the 21st century.

—— Andrew Ward , Financial Times

Mukherjee has done readers an admirable service, by turning one of the most important scientific sagas – arguably the most important – in history into a tale that is too good not to know

—— Globe and Mail

Rather wonderful book… All-encompassing and eye-opening and moving and amusing, at times, and endlessly fascinating and truly brilliant… As long as intelligent, empathetic, thoughtful people like himself are to the forefront, it should turn out alright.

—— Darragh McManus , Irish Independnet

An accessible and beautifully written overview of the complex field of genetics by the Indian-born doctor. It’s compellingly personal and provocative, too.

—— Telegraph

Mukherjee views his subject panoptically from a great and clarifying height, yet also intimately.

—— James Gleick , Scotland on Sunday

Dr Mukherjee uses personal experience to particularly good effect… He writes tenderly.

—— The Economist

[A] Magisterial historical survey.

—— Philip Ball , Chemistry World

Mukherjee has a gift for making gripping, vivid narrative out of the cataclysmic but largely invisible drama of molecular biology.

—— Lev Grossman , Time Magazine

Compelling

—— Stuart Ritchie , Spectator

Fascinating, complex and accessible.

—— Anna Carey , Irish Times

Intimate, insider’s account of the role that genetics.

—— Nilanjana Roy , Financial Times

A tourist guide to the twenty-first century’s uncharted continent, the human genome... Gives a full and lively account of the development of the subject... He has talked to many of the main players and gives deep insights into their moments of discovery... Mukherjee does a good job of cutting away the web of ambiguity and complexity that scientists have woven.

—— Steve Jones , New Statesman

A daring and highly personal voyage into the future of genetic research

—— Vogue

The Gene’s dominant traits are historical breadth, clinical compassion, and Mukherjee’s characteristic graceful style… Mukherjee writes eloquently

—— Nathaniel Comfort , Atlantic

A fine read, with many fine stories.

—— David McConnell , Irish Times

[It is] accessible and beautifully written… It’s compellingly personal and provocative, too.

—— Daily Telegraph

The Gene is a staggeringly impressive piece of writing… [It] takes us on a fascinating journey through the world of genetics… Written with a clarity that brings the most complex concepts to life… An accessible, gripping and thought-provoking read. In short, this book is a masterpiece and you should read it.

—— Jamie Durrani , Chemistry World

An essential read.

—— Mail on Sunday

Inspiring and tremendously evocative

—— San Francisco Chronicle

A fascinating read

—— Hugh Jackman

You may think this book is not for you. Thing again… My only caution would be not to recommend it to too many people… So whether you’re a teacher or parent attempting to inspire…or you simply want an erudite anecdote, this book is for you. It’s a dazzling example of scientific story-telling and definitely my book of the year.

—— Cath Murray , School's Week

An epic 150-year, 500-plus page journey of genetic discovery… [An] excellent and authoritative account.

—— Charalambos Kyriacou , Times Higher Education

This is a brilliantly readable celebration of the science and scientists who have transformed out understanding of what it means to be human.

—— Nick Rennison , Daily Mail

The Gene is a truly impressive achievement… Mukherjee has created a masterwork of the history of the gene and its study. In this popular science book, scientist and non-scientist readers alike will feel they have a true understanding of the history, biology and ethics of genetics.

—— Bio News

He deftly lays out a history of the gene… One of the great science books of the decade with an engagingly enthusiastic personality at its heart.

—— Saga Magazine

[A]superbly written tale.

—— Stephen Meyler , RTE Guide

Mukherjee writes with clarity and passion… This should prove a fascinating read for anyone interested in understanding how far the study of the gene has taken us, particularly with respect to medicine, and where the future may lie.

—— Emma McConnell , Pharmaceutical Journal

Ambitious and honest, The Gene sheds light on both our past and future.

—— Kitty Knowles , Memo

Mukherjee’s text brims with potential… Surely The Gene has to be the new bible for a new generation of aspiring biologists, biochemists and, frankly, thinking people? So whether you’re a teacher or parent attempting to inspire a reluctant teen to get excited about science, or you simply want an erudite anecdote, this book is for you. It’s a dazzling example of scientific story-telling, and definitely my book of the year.

—— School's Week

If you want a good overview of the history of the gene, you can’t go wrong starting here.

—— Paul Cheney , Nudge

A provocative and engaging [read].

—— Independent Nurse

Mukherjee’s prose tends to be lavish, but this befits the weighty topic, and his explanatory style is clear yet enveloping… Compelling scientific and medical storytelling… A spectacular effort from an author I hopes has plenty more tales to tell.

—— Euan Ashley , Lancet

An essential guide to biology.

—— Gentleman's Journal, Book of the Year

A brilliant, chunky, study of genes.

—— William Leith , Evening Standard

This book captures the progression from that intuitive sense of genetics to its birth as a veritable science and, for better or for worse, its evolution into a powerful tool… The book ends not with a conclusion, but with a feeling of anticipation… In many ways, The Gene is a call for caution and for a thoughtful consideration of the possibilities that progress may bring… When genes become tools, what will those tools be used for? As we try to answer that question, Mukherjee’s book asks us to carefully look back before we continue to move forward

—— Claire McDaniel & Daniel Marchalik , British Medical Journal

A comprehensive – and gripping – history of the gene

—— Emma Finamore , Memo
Comments
Welcome to zzdbook comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments