Futures, educations, novels, dystopia and utopia
[2023-10-25 23:43:32]
The Moonshot.edu project interviewed me about the future of education. Show creator and host Bernard Boole is an excellent host with a careful question and a sense of humor.
In the podcast, we talked about the futures industry. My unusual career is integrated there. And how do we balance and give advice about the future to people and try to change the future? I imagine the future of the difference between classical utopia / distant peers
Then we turn to literature and fiction. Bernard wants me to write a novel about the future of education (!), We want to know the appropriate type (science fiction, mystery, homeless, historical novel, growth novel). I recommend Rainbows End (this is the reading of our reading club)
Then I will refer to the peak hour of higher education and see the Queen's sacrifice. Bernard points out Brian Kaplan, a guest of a prominent future trend forum.
Bernard informed me of the future of near-mid-term education. Even in deck: We support lowering of the possibility of change of admission model, higher education, university sports etc. I offered some idea of moon shots; Please let me know what you think about them.
Utopia is paradise, fainting is paradise lost. Before Utopia and Destopia became the imaginary future, it was an imaginary farm or a place of imagination like the Garden of Eden. "We found a continent with a higher density and higher productivity than our Europe, Asia, or Africa, and the climate is more calm and fun than any other area," Amerigo Vespucci wrote. The letter explains in 1503 "Mundus Novus _" his voyage across the Atlantic, which was published as a new world. In 1516, Thomas More announced a fictitious story about seafarers of the Vespucci ship. I found a perfect republic. (I've created more terms: "Utopia" means "I can not go anywhere") "Gulliver's Travels" (1726) is a satire against enlightened utopianism
Utopia and dystopia are two types of society, usually seen in speculation and science fiction. The word utopia comes from Sir Thomas More's 1516 novel. There are thousands of examples of utopia and distant peers, but I hope the example described here, such as dinosaurs and hunger games, will help you understand the difference between utopia and distant peers. Remember that Utopia and Dystopia are two types of society. If you are confused as to which, which one is, look at the different prefix being used. Utopia's u means no or good, but not good. The main characteristics of these two worlds are at the edge of the spectrum. For example, utopia does not fight war, but distant peers continue war. Utopia is not sick, meanwhile, vision abnormality continues to be sick. Even in the novel, it is difficult to create a utopia. For this reason, there are usually more stories about distant peers than utopia.
Utopia and its branches, schizophrenia are literary genres that explore social and political structures. Utopia fiction is the ideal world as the background of novels, or the creation of utopia. This distant novel is exactly the opposite. It creates a world of nightmares and overturns utopia ideals. Many novels combine the two as a metaphor in many ways, in various ways that can end with one of the two possible future that humans can adopt at their choice. Example: Use quotes at the beginning of the work urging that subject. Example: Hemingway started sunning and raised two quotes. One of them is what Gertrude Stein said. Mark Twain's "The Adventure of The Huckleberry Finn" starts with two, one and more specifically warning. "People trying to find motivation in this story will be prosecuted, trying to find morality among them, people will be exiled; those who will try to find a plot in them will be shot