Читать онлайн «How We Got to Now: Six Innovations That Made the Modern World»

Автор Steven Johnson

ALSO BY STEVEN JOHNSON

Interface Culture:

How New Technology Transforms the Way We Create and Communicate

Emergence:

The Connected Lives of Ants, Brains, Cities, and Software

Mind Wide Open:

Your Brain and the Neuroscience of Everyday Life

Everything Bad Is Good for You:

How Today’s Popular Culture Is Actually Making Us Smarter

The Ghost Map:

The Story of London’s Most Terrifying Epidemic—and How It Changed Science, Cities, and the Modern World

The Invention of Air:

A Story of Science, Faith, Revolution, and the Birth of America

Where Good Ideas Come From:

The Natural History of Innovation

Future Perfect:

The Case for Progress in a Networked Age

RIVERHEAD BOOKS

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Copyright © 2014 by Steven Johnson and Nutopia Ltd.

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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Johnson, Steven, date.

How we got to now : six innovations that made the modern world / Steven Johnson.

p. cm.

Includes bibliographical references and index.

ISBN 978-0-698-15450-6

1. Technology—Social aspects. 2. Inventions—Social aspects. I. Title.

T14. 5. J64 2014 2014018412

338'. 064—dc23

Version_1

For Jane, who no doubt expected a three-volume treatise on nineteenth-century whaling

Contents

Also by Steven Johnson

Title Page

Copyright

Dedication

Introduction: Robot Historians and the Hummingbird’s Wing

1.

GLASS

2. COLD

3. SOUND

4. CLEAN

5. TIME

6. LIGHT

Conclusion: The Time Travelers

Acknowledgments

Notes

Bibliography

Credits

Index

Introduction

Robot Historians and the Hummingbird’s Wing

A little more than two decades ago, the Mexican-American artist and philosopher Manuel De Landa published a strange and wonderful book called War in the Age of Intelligent Machines. The book was, technically speaking, a history of military technology, but it had nothing in common with what you might naturally expect from the genre. Instead of heroic accounts of submarine engineering written by some Naval Academy professor, De Landa’s book wove chaos theory, evolutionary biology, and French post-structuralist philosophy into histories of the conoidal bullet, radar, and other military innovations. I remember reading it as a grad student in my early twenties and thinking that it was one of those books that seemed completely sui generis, as though De Landa had arrived on Earth from some other intellectual planet. It seemed mesmerizing and deeply confusing at the same time.

De Landa began the book with a brilliant interpretative twist. Imagine, he suggested, a work of history written sometime in the future by some form of artificial intelligence, mapping out the history of the preceding millennium. “We could imagine,” De Landa argued, “that such a robot historian would write a different kind of history than would its human counterpart. ” Events that loom large in human accounts—the European conquest of the Americas, the fall of the Roman Empire, the Magna Carta—would be footnotes from the robot’s perspective. Other events that seem marginal to traditional history—the toy automatons that pretended to play chess in the eighteenth century, the Jacquard loom that inspired the punch cards of early computing—would be watershed moments to the robot historian, turning points that trace a direct line to the present. “While a human historian might try to understand the way people assembled clockworks, motors and other physical contraptions,” De Landa explained, “a robot historian would likely place a stronger emphasis on the way these machines affected human evolution. The robot would stress the fact that when clockworks once represented the dominant technology on the planet, people imagined the world around them as a similar system of cogs and wheels. ”