If you accept Daniel Pink's view of the future, then the entertainment industry should have a bright future...
In an age where Asia and Automation does just about every manufacturing task, Daniel Pink in his book A Whole New Mind asks "what do humans have to do now?" That is, what's left now that we've made ourselves obsolete. He answers by proposing a move away from logical, systematic, left-brain ways of being, toward a more "right-brain" intuitive existence - a natural move from the bonds of industrialization.
Here are Pink's Six Critical Competencies for the "conceptual age." I was struck by how closely they parallel the essential elements of writing a good story:
I don't see the human brain evolving completely away from toolmaking (there's always a need for a bigger weapon), but it is interesting to ponder what will we do with all this extra free time made possible by robotics and automation.
In an age where Asia and Automation does just about every manufacturing task, Daniel Pink in his book A Whole New Mind asks "what do humans have to do now?" That is, what's left now that we've made ourselves obsolete. He answers by proposing a move away from logical, systematic, left-brain ways of being, toward a more "right-brain" intuitive existence - a natural move from the bonds of industrialization.
Here are Pink's Six Critical Competencies for the "conceptual age." I was struck by how closely they parallel the essential elements of writing a good story:
- Design
- Story
- Symphony
- Empathy
- Play
- Meaning
I don't see the human brain evolving completely away from toolmaking (there's always a need for a bigger weapon), but it is interesting to ponder what will we do with all this extra free time made possible by robotics and automation.
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