This book is about re-examining our technology – not in the 10-month window of Silicon Valley cycles,
but in the context of 10,000 years of civilizations. We will widen our lens to encompass the globe and lengthen our timescales to think about millennia.
From that vantage point, we'll see ourselves in a new light in which we are just starting to open our eyes
and blink in the dawn of a new millennium that has changed all of the old equations.
The Safety Net: Surviving Pandemics and Other Disasters is an upcoming e-book and audiobook, due for release in July 2020. This book originally debuted some years ago as an iPad app called Why The Net Matters, and in that form it introduced a novel way to navigate a non-fiction argument, to zoom in and out on 3D interactive figures, and to navigate with random-access chapters. Alas, the iPad app is no longer available, but in 2020 we have put out a fully updated and revised version of the book.
Why the Net Matters was a finalist for the Digital Book World Innovation Awards.
What's the book about? The Safety Net argues that the advent of the internet sidesteps the dangers that brought down previous civilizations. If you'd like a taste of the content, here's a talk I delivered at the Long Now Foundation. (For over a week this was the most watched video on fora.tv, and was ranked the #8 technology talk of 2010)
Six Easy Steps to Avert the Collapse of Civilization from The Long Now Foundation
This thesis about the internet started life as a short piece I wrote in Nature in 2006 about the internet and epidemics, and then fleshed out in a short essay in WIRED and in the book Is the Internet Changing the Way You Think?
Although the app is no longer available on the iPad, here's a demonstration of the app in action:
Please click on the links on the right to read excerpts and see screenshots.
Sum was the only book of fiction in New Scientist magazine's selection of Best Books of 2009.
Click here to watch David's talk on possibilianism at PopTech. Executive director Andrew Zolli wrote: "This is one of the best talks ever at PopTech. Everyone should watch this."
In June, 2009, David Eagleman collaborated with musician/producer Brian Eno to perform a musical reading of Sum to 1,000 people at the Sydney Opera House. In May of 2010 they performed together again to 1,200 people at the Brighton Dome in England. Stay tuned for further performances.