Pages: 576 (Paperback) ISBN: 190391986X Pub: Eden Project Books Pub date: 2007-05-07 Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 11184
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Reader Reviews:Big disappointment - arrogant and naive. (1/2 people found this helpful)This is not a book for the scientifically aware free thinker. If you don't want a neo-Malthusian lecture about whatever doom is in store for the world then miss out the first 200 pages and a good proportion of the rest of this nonsense as well. From this, it comes as no surprise to learn that Mr. Martin is a "glowarmist" (global warming alarmist), although it is infuriating to then be subjected to the associated Litany.
Disappointing - needs a good editor (0/0 people found this helpful)I really wanted to like this book, but I found it a big disappointment.
Very good but too repetitive. (1/1 people found this helpful)Great, informative, enlightening about where we are and are potentially heading as a species on this earth.
An excellent introduction to the world. (0/0 people found this helpful)I found this book to be compelling, extremely interesting and motivating. It is simply a brief, non-political overview of our world, and some entirely forseeable possibilities for our future.
Ironically fat (1/3 people found this helpful)Given that this is a book about the tendency of our current virulent form of capitalism to waste materials and to encourage lifestyles without a view to their sustainability on a planet with, finally, finite resources, it is remarkably, indeed, scandalously, over-weight and baggy and with even cursorary editing might have been whittled down to one tenth its published volume. As well as being repetitive, it is, in places, banal, and when the author strays outside his area of expertise, i.e. computing technology, ludicrously naive. The sections on religion and on culture as drivers of human conduct and behaviour wouldn't pass muster in an A Level sociology or psychology class. He has very little plausible or interesting to say about the ways in which information and computer technology are likely to impact on cultural change, because his model of human motivation is so limited.
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