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Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow Kindle Edition
From the author of the international bestseller Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind comes an extraordinary new book that explores the future of the human species.
Yuval Noah Harari, author of the bestselling Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, envisions a not-too-distant world in which we face a new set of challenges. In Homo Deus, he examines our future with his trademark blend of science, history, philosophy and every discipline in between.
Homo Deus explores the projects, dreams and nightmares that will shape the twenty-first century – from overcoming death to creating artificial life. It asks the fundamental questions: Where do we go from here? And how will we protect this fragile world from our own destructive powers? This is the next stage of evolution. This is Homo Deus.
War is obsolete
You are more likely to commit suicide than be killed in conflict
Famine is disappearing
You are at more risk of obesity than starvation
Death is just a technical problem
Equality is out – but immortality is in
What does our future hold?
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherSignal
- Publication dateSeptember 13, 2016
- File size60.3 MB
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Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
An Amazon Best Book of February 2017: Those who read and loved Yuval Noah Harari’s Sapiens have been eagerly anticipating his new book Homo Deus. While Sapiens looked back at our evolutionary development, this new book examines where we might be headed (Homo Deus is subtitled “A Brief History of Tomorrow”). Predicting the future isn’t as easy as deconstructing the past, and Harari openly admits the challenge—but even if he’s completely wrong in his predictions, and most of us doubt he is, Homo Deus is the kind of provocative, food-for-thought read that drew so many of us to his work in the first place. According to Harari, our future could be very different from our present—dark, technocratic, and automated—but reading about our possible fates, presented in Harari’s clear-eyed and illuminating style, sure is fascinating. --Chris Schluep, The Amazon Book Review
Review
"Here is a simple reason why Sapiens has risen explosively to the ranks of an international bestseller. It tackles the biggest questions of history and of the modern world, and it is written in unforgettably vivid language." —Jared Diamond, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Guns, Germs, and Steel
Praise for Homo Deus:
"Homo Deus will shock you. It will entertain you. Above all, it will make you think in ways you had not thought before." —Daniel Kahneman, author of Thinking, Fast and Slow
"Israeli Professor Harari is one of today’s most exciting and provocative thinkers. His innovative new book blends science, history and philosophy to explore the future of humanity in the face of artificial intelligence and examine whether our species will be rendered completely redundant." —Cambridge Network
"Spellbinding. . . . This is a very intelligent book, full of sharp insights and mordant wit. . . . Its real power comes from the sense of a distinctive consciousness behind it. It is a quirky and cool book, with a sliver of ice at its heart. . . It is hard to imagine anyone could read this book without getting an occasional, vertiginous thrill." —The Guardian
"It’s a chilling prospect, but the AI we’ve created could transform human nature, argues this spellbinding new book by the author of Sapiens." —The Guardian
"Nominally a historian, Harari is in fact an intellectual magpie who has plucked theories and data from many disciplines — including philosophy, theology, computer science and biology — to produce a brilliantly original, thought-provoking and important study of where mankind is heading." —Evening Standard
"Harari’s work is . . . an unsettling meditation on the future. He’s opened a portal for us to contemplate on what kind of relationships we are forming with our data-crunching machines and whether ‘right’ must be determined by empirical evidence or good old 'gut instinct.'" —The Hindu
"[Harari’s] propositions are well-developed, drawing upon a combination of science, philosophy and history. While the book offers a rather pessimistic and even nihilistic view of man’s future, it is written with wit and style and makes compelling reading." —iNews
From the Back Cover
In his critically acclaimed international bestseller Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari explained how humankind came to rule the planet. In Homo Deus, he examines humanity’s future, offering a vision of tomorrow that at first seems incomprehensible but soon looks undeniable: humanity will lose not only its dominance, but its very meaning.
Over the past century, humankind has managed to do the impossible: turn the uncontrollable forces of nature—namely, famine, plague, and war—into manageable challenges. Today more people die from eating too much than from eating too little; more people die from old age than from infectious diseases; and more people commit suicide than are killed by soldiers, terrorists, and criminals combined. We are the only species in earth’s long history that has single-handedly changed the entire planet, and we no longer expect any higher being to mold our destinies for us.
What then will replace famine, plague, and war at the top of the human agenda? What destinies will we set for ourselves, and which quests will we undertake? Homo Deus explores the projects, dreams, and nightmares that will shape the twenty-first century, from overcoming death to creating artificial life. But the pursuit of these very goals may ultimately render most human beings superfluous. So where do we go from here? And how can we protect this fragile world from our own destructive powers? We cannot stop the march of history, but we can influence its direction.
Future-casting typically assumes that tomorrow, at its heart, will look much like today: we will possess amazing new technologies, but old humanist values like liberty and equality will still guide us. Homo Deus dismantles these assumptions and opens our eyes to a vast range of alternative possibilities, with provocative arguments on every page, among them:
- The main products of the twenty-first-century economy will not be textiles, vehicles, and weapons but bodies, brains, and minds.
- While the industrial revolution created the working class, the next big revolution will create the useless class.
- The way humans have treated animals is a good indicator for how upgraded humans will treat us.
- Democracy and the free market will both collapse once Google and Facebook know us better than we know ourselves, and authority will shift from individual humans to networked algorithms.
- Humans won’t fight machines; they will merge with them. We are heading toward marriage rather than war.
This is the shape of the new world, and the gap between those who get on board and those left behind will be larger than the gap between industrial empires and agrarian tribes, larger even than the gap between Sapiens and Neanderthals. This is the next stage of evolution. This is Homo Deus.
About the Author
Prof. Yuval Noah Harari, bestselling historian and philosopher, is considered one of the world’s most influential intellectuals today. His popular books—including Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind; Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow; 21 Lessons for the 21st Century; and the series Sapiens: A Graphic History and Unstoppable Us—have sold more than 45 million copies in 65 languages. Harari co-founded Sapienship, a social impact company with projects in the fields of education and storytelling, whose main goal is to focus the public conversation on the most important global challenges facing the world today. Harari has a PhD in history from the University of Oxford and currently lectures in the department of history at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.
Product details
- ASIN : B01D7CLUP6
- Publisher : Signal (September 13, 2016)
- Publication date : September 13, 2016
- Language : English
- File size : 60.3 MB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 429 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,493,024 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #978 in Ancient Early Civilization History
- #1,276 in Evolution (Kindle Store)
- #1,340 in History of Anthropology
- Customer Reviews:
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About the author

Prof. Yuval Noah Harari (born 1976) is a historian, philosopher and the bestselling author of 'Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind' (2014); 'Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow' (2016); '21 Lessons for the 21st Century' (2018); the children's series 'Unstoppable Us' (launched in 2022); and 'Nexus: A Brief History of Information Networks from the Stone Age to AI' (2024). He is also the creator and co-writer of 'Sapiens: A Graphic History': a radical adaptation of 'Sapiens' into a graphic novel series (launched in 2020), which he published together with comics artists David Vandermeulen (co-writer) and Daniel Casanave (illustrator). These books have been translated into 65 languages, with 45 million copies sold, and have been recommended by Barack Obama, Bill Gates, Natalie Portman, Janelle Monáe, Chris Evans and many others. Harari has a PhD in History from the University of Oxford, is a Lecturer at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem's History department, and is a Distinguished Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge’s Centre for the Study of Existential Risk. Together with his husband, Itzik Yahav, Yuval Noah Harari is the co-founder of Sapienship: a social impact company that advocates for global collaboration, with projects in the realm of education and storytelling.
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the book thought-provoking, providing interesting insights into the future of mankind and opening their minds to many possibilities. The writing is well-crafted, with one customer noting how the author addresses complex material in a straightforward way, and they appreciate its dark humor. The book receives mixed reactions regarding religion, with some appreciating its view while others criticize its atheistic perspective. The pacing receives mixed reviews, with some finding it cogent while others describe it as extremely redundant.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the book thought-provoking, providing interesting insights into the future of mankind and opening their minds to many possibilities.
"...But no matter. This is another brilliant book by the very learned and articulate Professor Harari...." Read more
"...His book is broken into three parts and takes us through human history (much more detail in Harari’s book Sapiens: A brief history of humankind),..." Read more
"Interesting and enlightening in parts but other parts, such as his discussion of consciousness, are overthought and ultimately gibberish...." Read more
"...comforting, but substantiated well enough to make for a very engaging thought exercise in what could happen to people if we pursue our current path..." Read more
Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as a compelling and excellent read from Yuval Noah Harari.
"...But no matter. This is another brilliant book by the very learned and articulate Professor Harari...." Read more
"...This book is a good start along with Code Breaker and American Prometheus, but there is still a lot to consider missing here." Read more
"...This is a compelling and very well-written book. I received it in the mail from amazon.com at noon and finished it the next day at 4 PM...." Read more
"...This is an exceptional book. If you are drawn to big-picture views of humans and our place in the world, this book is valuable...." Read more
Customers appreciate the writing style of the book, describing it as well-written, plain, and creative, with one customer noting how the author sweeps readers along through complex material.
"...This is another brilliant book by the very learned and articulate Professor Harari. It should be emphasized that Harari is by profession a historian...." Read more
"...This is a compelling and very well-written book. I received it in the mail from amazon.com at noon and finished it the next day at 4 PM...." Read more
"...On the positive side, Mr. Harari brings the same colorful and thought-provoking writing and broad grasp of humanity, both ancient and contemporary,..." Read more
"...It is all very well written...." Read more
Customers find the book engaging, with particular interest in the last section, and one customer describes it as fascinating from beginning to end.
"Interesting and enlightening in parts but other parts, such as his discussion of consciousness, are overthought and ultimately gibberish...." Read more
"...It makes for fascinating, thought-provoking reading. This is an exceptional book...." Read more
"...Anyway, let me stop here. Enjoy this entertaining book of (science) fiction. I had fun reading it, and so will likely you...." Read more
"...Harari is somewhat engaging, but I can't help but find his overgeneralizations irksome...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's humor, noting occasional great wit and dark humor, though some find it troubling.
"...in his previous book "Sapiens": clever, clear and humorous writing, intelligent analogies and a remarkable sweep through human history,..." Read more
"...thesis is coherent given his assumptions and gracefully presented with considerable humor, so four stars, even if it is more than a bit presumptuous!" Read more
"...It’s an awkward combination of colloquial and academic verbiage that can only be described as a literary identity crisis...." Read more
"...-scientific type like me, the book is a mind blower, that raises some very basic issues...." Read more
Customers have mixed views on the book's approach to religion, with some appreciating its perspective while others criticize its atheistic stance.
"...The initial claim of the book is rather straight-forward: God is dead, and humanity is like the dog that finally caught the car, and now has to..." Read more
"...The book is a thorough exploration of the economic and religious currents driven by the accelerating advance of technology in our time...." Read more
"...But make no mistake there’s no real God in this religion...." Read more
"...There is an interesting discussion of an emerging religion/ideology of "dataism", wherein moral worth depends on the ability to enhance..." Read more
Customers have mixed reactions to the book's frightening content, describing it as both provocative and disturbing.
"...He has a lot to say about the death of God and Humanism, making it sound worse than even the Republicans' disgust with Liberalism, which, by the way..." Read more
"...I leave this fascinating and frightening book with the remaining solace that Futurists, like Marinetti and Alvin Toffler, have often got it wrong...." Read more
"...Tone strikes me as being all doom and gloom and very close-minded...." Read more
"...I found this book stimulating and disturbing. I read Part 3 several times...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the pacing of the book, with some finding it cogent while others describe it as extremely redundant.
"...The most powerful of these forces is the increase in data, the capacity for artificial intelligence to analyze that data, and advances in..." Read more
"...parts but other parts, such as his discussion of consciousness, are overthought and ultimately gibberish...." Read more
"...This technological augmentation of individual capacity, combined with new levels of interconnectivity between people and knowledge and machines,..." Read more
"...The ideas and thoughts come at you quickly and non-stop. This is one of my favorite books now...." Read more
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Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 10, 2017Most of this is not about “tomorrow” but about yesterday and today. Most of the material that pertains most directly to the future begins with Chapter 8 which is two-thirds of the way into the book. But no matter. This is another brilliant book by the very learned and articulate Professor Harari. It should be emphasized that Harari is by profession a historian. It is remarkable that he can also be not only a futurist but a pre-historian as well as evidenced by his previous book, “Sapiens.”
This quote from page 15 may serve as a point of departure: “Previously the main sources of wealth were material assets such as gold mines, wheat fields and oil fields. Today the main source of wealth is knowledge.” (p. 15)
In the latter part of the book Harari defines this knowledge more precisely as algorithms. We and all the plants in the ground and all fish in the sea are biological algorithms. There is no “self,” no free will, no individuals (he says we are “dividuals”) no God in the sky, and by the way, humans as presently constituted are toast.
The interesting thing about all this from my point of view is that I agree almost completely. I came to pretty much the same conclusions in my book, “The World Is Not as We Think It Is” several years ago.
What I want to do in this review is present a number of quotes from the book and make brief comments on them, or just let them speak for themselves. In this manner I think the reader can see how beautifully Harari writes and how deep and original a thinker he is.
“Islamic fundamentalists could never have toppled Saddam Hussein by themselves. Instead they enraged the USA by the 9/11 attacks, and the USA destroyed the Middle Eastern china shop for them. Now they flourish in the wreckage.” (p. 19) Notice “fundamentalists” instead of “terrorists.” This is correct because ISIS, et al., have been financed by Muslim fundamentalists in places like Saudi Arabia.
“You want to know how super-intelligent cyborgs might treat ordinary flesh-and-blood humans? Better start by investigating how humans treat their less intelligent animal cousins.” (p. 67)
Harari speaks of a “web of meaning” and posits, “To study history means to watch the spinning and unravelling of these webs, and to realise that what seems to people in one age the most important thing in life becomes utterly meaningless to their descendants.” (p. 147)
One of the themes begun in “Sapiens” and continued here is the idea that say 20,000 years ago humans were not only better off than they were in say 1850, but smarter than they are today. (See e.g., page 176 and also page 326 where Harari writes that it would be “immensely difficult to design a robotic hunter-gatherer” because of the great many skills that would have to be learned.) In “The World Is Not as We Think It Is” I express it like this: wild animals are smarter than domesticated animals; humans have domesticated themselves.
For Harari Nazism, Communism, “liberalism” humanism, etc. are religions. I put “liberalism” in quotes because Harari uses the term in a historical sense not as the opposite of conservatism in the contemporary parlance.
“For religions, spirituality is a dangerous threat.” (p. 186) I would add that religions are primarily social and political organizations.
“If I invest $100 million searching for oil in Alaska and I find it, then I now have more oil, but my grandchildren will have less of it. In contrast, if I invest $100 million researching solar energy, and I find a new and more efficient way of harnessing it, then both I and my grandchildren will have more energy.” (p. 213)
“The greatest scientific discovery was the discovery of ignorance.” (p. 213)
On global warming: “Even if bad comes to worse and science cannot hold off the deluge, engineers could still build a hi-tech Noah’s Ark for the upper caste, while leaving billions of others to drown….” (p. 217)
“More than a century after Nietzsche pronounced Him dead, God seems to be making a comeback. But this is a mirage. God is dead—it’s just taking a while to get rid of the body.” (p. 270)
“…desires are nothing but a pattern of firing neurons.” (p. 289)
Harari notes that a cyber-attack might shut down the US power grid, cause industrial accidents, etc., but also “wipe out financial records so that trillions of dollars simply vanish without a trace and nobody knows who owns what.” (p. 312) Now THAT ought to scare the bejesus out of certain members of the one percent!
On the nature of unconscious cyber beings, Harari asserts that for armies and corporations “intelligence is mandatory but consciousness is optional.” (p. 314) This seems obvious but I would like to point out that what “consciousness” is is unclear and poorly defined.
While acknowledging that we’re not there yet, Harari thinks it’s possible that future fMRI machines could function as “almost infallible truth machines.” Add this to all the knowledge that Facebook and Google have on each of us and you might get a brainstorm: totalitarianism for humans as presently constituted is inevitable.
One of conundrums of the not too distance future is what are we going to do with all the people who do not have jobs, the unemployable, what Harari believes may be called the “useless class”? Answer found elsewhere: a guaranteed minimum income (GMI). Yes, with cheap robotic labor and AI, welfare is an important meme of the future.
Harari speculates on pages 331 and 332 that artificial intelligence might “exterminate human kind.” Why? For fear humans will pull the plug. Harari mentions “the motivation of a system smarter than” humans. My problem with this is that machines, unless it is programmed in, have no motivations. However it could be argued that they must be programmed in such a way as to maintain themselves. In other words they do have a motivation. Recently I discussed this with a friend and we came to the conclusion that yes the machines will protect themselves and keep on keeping on, but they would not reproduce themselves because new machines would be taking resources from themselves.
Harari believes that we have “narrating selves” that spew out stories about why we do what we do, narratives that direct our behavior. He believes that with the mighty algorithms to come—think Google, Microsoft and Facebook being a thousand times more invasive and controlling so that they know more about us than we know about ourselves. Understanding this we will have to realize that we are “integral parts of a huge global network” and not individuals. (See e.g., page 343)
Harari even sees Google voting for us (since it will know our desires and needs better than we do). (p. 344) After the election of Trump in which some poor people voted to help billionaires get richer and themselves poorer, I think perhaps democracy as presently practiced may go the way of the dodo.
An interesting idea taking this further is to imagine as Harari does that Google, Facebook, et al. in say the personification of Microsoft’s Cortana, become first oracles, then agents for us and finally sovereigns. God is dead. Long live God. Along the way we may find that the books you read “will read you while you reading them.” (p. 349)
In other words what is coming are “techno-religions” which Harari sees as being of two types: “techno-humanism and data religion.” He writes that “the most interesting place in the world from a religious perspective is…Silicon Valley.” (p. 356)
The last chapter in the book, Chapter 11 is entitled “The Data Religion” in which the Dataists create the “Internet-of-All-Things.” Harari concludes, “Once this mission is accomplished, Homo sapiens will vanish.” (p. 386)
--Dennis Littrell, author of “Hard Science and the Unknowable”
- Reviewed in the United States on May 3, 2017Harari hits another home run. I love the subtitle of this book, A Brief History of Tomorrow. And Harari builds a solid case for his views of how the world of technology might blend with or destroy Homo Sapiens. His book is broken into three parts and takes us through human history (much more detail in Harari’s book Sapiens: A brief history of humankind), how we add meaning to the world and then how we lose control.
Premise: The New Human Agenda
In Chapter 1, Harari suggests that there is an entirely new agenda for human beings. What will we strive for? We have never settled for our achievements but rather we crave for more, better, faster, different.
“And having raised humanity above the beastly level of survival struggles, we will now aim to upgrade humans into gods, and turn Homo sapiens into Homo deus.”—Harari, Yuval Noah. Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow (p. 21). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.
The hypothesis is that we will not be satisfied to do any less than continue down the path that technology and so-called Artificial Intelligence is paving for us.
Part I: Homo Sapiens Conquers the World
In Chapters 2 & 3, Harari takes us through a brief history of the Anthropocene period and how the human “spark” ignited the creation of a totally new world. He asks three provocative questions, and then goes about answering them:
What is the difference between humans and all other animals?
How did our species conquer the world?
Is Homo sapiens a superior life form, or just the local bully?
From these questions and Harari’s astute observations, we learn that no matter what we think, we humans will shape our world and create a religion to follow. What will the next religion be?
Part II: Homo Sapiens Gives Meaning to the World
Again, three questions set up this section of the book:
What kind of world did humans create?
How did humans become convinced that they not only control the world, but also give it meaning?
How did humanism – the worship of humankind – become the most important religion of all?
In Chapters 4 through 7 Harari takes us through the history of how humans created meaning for themselves through a framework of beliefs we call religion. From the storytellers to the Humanist revolution, we see how Homo sapiens wrestle with nature and human nature for control and destiny.
“Yet in fact modernity is a surprisingly simple deal. The entire contract can be summarised in a single phrase: humans agree to give up meaning in exchange for power.” (p. 199)
Part III: Homo Sapiens Loses Control
Up until this section, Harari spent most of his time discussing how we got to where we find ourselves today. And now we find several hypotheses or scenarios for the future. And as usual, three questions:
Can humans go on running the world and giving it meaning?
How do biotechnology and artificial intelligence threaten humanism?
Who might inherit humankind, and what new religion might replace humanism?
Chapters 8 through 11 takes us on a journey from the time bomb in the laboratory (no free will) to the new Data Religion.
“For example, when a neuron fires an electric charge, this may be either a deterministic reaction to external stimuli, or perhaps the outcome of a random event such as the spontaneous decomposition of a radioactive atom. Neither option leaves any room for free will. Decisions reached through a chain reaction of biochemical events, each determined by a previous event, are certainly not free. Decisions resulting from random subatomic accidents aren’t free either; they are just random. And when random accidents combine with deterministic processes, we get probabilistic outcomes, but this too doesn’t amount to freedom.” (pp. 282-283)
In other words, “Free will exists only in the imaginary stories we humans have invented.” This undermines the story we tell about our liberal philosophy and also undermines the concept of the individual.
A scenario for the future is that we humans will become gods in our own minds—for a while at least. Harari suggests that, “Since intelligence is decoupling from consciousness, and since non-conscious intelligence is developing at breakneck speed, humans must actively upgrade their minds if they want to stay in the game.” He calls this new religion “Techno-humanism.”
Dataism
In Chapter 11, Harari introduces Dataism.
Dataism declares that the universe consists of data flows, and the value of any phenomenon or entity is determined by its contribution to data processing. This may strike you as some eccentric fringe notion, but in fact it has already conquered most of the scientific establishment. (p. 367)
Dataism declares that organisms are algorithms. And, Harari states, that this is the current scientific dogma. He goes on to say that, “If humankind is indeed a single data-processing system, what is its output? Dataists would say that its output will be the creation of a new and even more efficient data-processing system, called the Internet-of-All-Things. Once this mission is accomplished, Homo sapiens will vanish.”
Read This Book!
No short review can do this book justice. It is my opinion that we all need to be thinking deeply about this topic. Where are we humans taking our species? How will we find meaning in the future? I leave you with one last quotation from the book:
“Sapiens evolved in the African savannah tens of thousands of years ago, and their algorithms are just not built to handle twenty-first-century data flows. We might try to upgrade the human data-processing system, but this may not be enough. The Internet-of-All-Things may soon create such huge and rapid data flows that even upgraded human algorithms would not be able to handle them. When cars replaced horse-drawn carriages, we didn’t upgrade the horses – we retired them. Perhaps it is time to do the same with Homo sapiens.”—Harari, Yuval Noah. Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow (p. 388). HarperCollins. Kindle Edition.
I hope you will get the book and make time to give it a thoughtful reading.
Top reviews from other countries
- Ahmet niyazi geçerReviewed in Turkey on September 4, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book. My bestie.
One of the best books I've ever read.
- Łukasz GumińskiReviewed in the Netherlands on May 22, 2017
5.0 out of 5 stars Must-read
I think this book is essential for everyone who wants to understand the chaotic world around us. The author has a unique ability to synthesize scattered pieces of information and build coherent generalizations. At the same time the narration does not force any conclusions, just encourages to draw your own ones. Summing up, if you are looking not just for information, but also for some wisdom, then this is it.
-
ネムReviewed in Japan on January 2, 2019
5.0 out of 5 stars 内容が素晴らしい上に英語学習に最適
自分は、利己的な遺伝子、magic of reality、
脳内麻薬、その他心理学の本
で、人間を考察し、ある程度満足のいく解にたどり着いたと自負していました。
しかし、この本はその考察を久々に覆す素晴らしい考察をもたらしてくれました。
大抵の日本の本は、優秀な本の焼き直しにすぎず、新たな感動はないかなと半ば諦めていましたがこの本は
「歴史と、そこから読みとける事実」の解説が素晴らしい。そして、「そこから考える筆者の意見」にオリジナリティがある。
そして、英文も綺麗で読みやすいため、TOEICのリーディングで395点の自分が、一ページで四回くらい単語調べれば、すらすら読めました。
- YousifReviewed in the United Arab Emirates on October 30, 2023
5.0 out of 5 stars Dilemma that we have made
Ai story to be told
-
JAReviewed in Spain on August 13, 2024
5.0 out of 5 stars Interesante y ameno
Bien escrito, lleno de reflexiones bien soportadas sobre un futuro incierto