In The Symbiotic Man, de Rosnay expresses his persuasively optimistic view of how humans will learn how to evolve in harmony with our ecosystem, much as the cells of our body must work together for our continued health. "The great challenge of the future will not be technical," he writes; "it will be human." The challenge is for us to learn how we fit into a planetary macro-organism that includes all humans, machines, organisms, networks and nations.
In this exhilarating search for the outlines of the future, as de Rosnay shows, we will be using such emerging and evolving new disciplines as biotics, molecular electronics, neobiology, and cognitive sciences.
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Within the past four decades a powerful scientific methodology has emerged that promises to dramatically recast our concept of nature and mankind's place in it. Unlike the traditional analytical approach which breaks nature down into smaller and smaller constituent parts, chaos theory, the theory of self-organization, and other so-called sciences of complexity, explore dynamic systems in their totalities, so as to lay bare the great constants governing their emergence, organization, and evolution. Using the tools of complexity, researchers recently have made breakthroughs in the understanding of such divers phenomena such as weather systems, economies, and even the most daunting scientific mystery of all, the mind as an emergent property of the brain's dense neuronal mazes.
Organic chemist, computer scientist, visionary, Joël de Rosnay has been at the forefront of the complexity movement for nearly thirty years. In this elegant and daring book, he builds upon his early pioneering work in the application of the sciences of complexity to the study of living systems to persuasively argue that we are at the verge of a profound evolutionary leap, as monumental in its implications for life on Earth as was the emergence of multicelluar organisms. Just as importantly he explains how, in the face of sweeping changes to the very fabric of organic existence, we must conduct ourselves politically, economically, and ethically, in the years ahead, if we hope to vouchsafe our survival as species in the third millennium.
In a grand synthesis that unites modern cybernetics with the sciences of complexity, de Rosnay demonstrates that the next stage in the natural progression from lower to higher levels of organizationcell into organism, organism to population, population into ecosystemis the cybiont, a planetary superorganism made up of all humans, machines, organisms, networks, and nations. But, as intelligent beings, endowed with free will, human beings are, uniquely, more than just "cells" in the superorganism which is just coming into being. As de Rosnay is prompt to point out, we are also its facilitators, and, as such, we have it in our power to decide what form the cybiont takes, nurturing partner, or Frankenstein's monster inimical to all human life. As de Rosnay writes:
The great challenge of the future will not be technical. It will be human....The humans of the future will not be superhumans, bio-robots, supercomputers, or mega-machines. They will be simply symbiotic humans, in close partnershipif they succeed in building itwith the societal system that they've externalized out of their brains, their senses, and their muscles. A nurturing superorganism, living on the life of cells, these neurons of the Earth that we are now becoming.
Dr. de Rosnay leaves little doubt that our future survival depends upon whether or not we can, at last, discard our parasitical, egocentric stance toward the environment and to learn to live in symbiosis with it. He also makes a strong case for achieving the transition from adversary to partner through eco-centered public policy and the judicious use of emerging technologies such as nanotechnology, bioelectronics, molecular electronics or bioinformatics.
The international bestseller, now available in English for the first time, The Symbiotic Man is a fascinating exploration of the organization of life and a techno-environmental manifesto for the new millennium.
"Human beings are gradually becoming the neurons of the Earth, integrated into the nervous system they have created...Now emerging in the most advanced industrial societies, this new being is the symbiotic human."
Arno Penzias, Nobel Prize in Physics.
"Better and more than his Macroscope (1975), The Symbiotic Man is the vision of Joel de Rosnay regarding the reciprocal evolution (symbiosis) of biologic man and of the electronic world of cyberspace. One creates the other which allows him to live, think and act, soon indispensable, but which also has its own evolutive emergence. That is the new planetary organism which Joel de Rosnay calls the cybiont (from cy-ber-netic and bio-logy, the suffix -ont implying a whole realm)...A book to read, to understand, to reflect upon. Inescapable."
Roger Guillemin, Noble Prize in Biology.
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