Team Human Free Pdf

ISBN: 039365169X
Title: Team Human Pdf
Author: Douglas Rushkoff
Published Date: 2019-01-22
Page: 256

“Original and uplifting. Just the book America needs right now. In his unique and engaging style, Rushkoff reminds us of our human essence: we are social creatures, and if we trust this truth about ourselves we can accomplish the seemingly impossible.” - Frances Moore Lappé, author of Diet for a Small Planet and Daring Democracy“Rushkoff is the gold standard. He always knows what tech is up to―and he’s usually prophetic. Now he’s here to tell us how our Silicon masters are attempting to pit us against one another for their own gain. Go Team Human.” - Walter Kirn, author of Blood Will Out and Up in the Air“A vivid thinker, Rushkoff is an insightful and acerbic antidote to Facebook, cultural hegemony, and the corporatization of everything.” - Seth Godin, bestselling author of The Dip, Linchpin, and What to Do When It’s Your Turn (and It’s Always Your Turn)“Can the revolution start already? This book will help us. Thank God for Douglas Rushkoff.” - Parker Posey“Technology can be a force for good or amplify our self-destructive capacities. In Team Human, the always-brilliant Douglas Rushkoff reminds us that the tools we design design us in turn, and offers a vision to invert our tools and make them better.” - Jason Silva, host of National Geographic’s Brain Games“An astonishing, paradigm-shifting must-read for all inhabitants of the twenty-first century. Precisely and cogently written. Rushkoff’s best work so far.” - Grant Morrison“A searing critique…Visionary, original, and inspirational. If you’re not already a member of Team Human, you will be once you’ve finished reading it.” - Jeremy Lent, author of The Patterning Instinct“[A] catalyst for conversations on what it means to be human.” - Booklist Named one of the world’s ten most influential intellectuals by MIT, Douglas Rushkoff is an award-winning author, broadcaster, and documentarian who studies human autonomy in the digital age. The host of the popular Team Human podcast, Rushkoff has written twenty books, including the bestsellers Present Shock and Program or Be Programmed; written regular columns for Medium, CNN, Daily Beast, and the Guardian; and made the PBS Frontline documentaries “Generation Like” and “Merchants of Cool.” Rushkoff coined such concepts as “viral media” and “social currency,” and has been a leading voice for applying digital media toward social and economic justice. He is a research fellow of the Institute for the Future, and founder of the Laboratory for Digital Humanism at CUNY/Queens, where he is a professor of media theory and digital economics. He lives in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York.

“A provocative, exciting, and important rallying cry to reassert our human spirit of community and teamwork.”―Walter Isaacson

Team Human is a manifesto―a fiery distillation of preeminent digital theorist Douglas Rushkoff’s most urgent thoughts on civilization and human nature. In one hundred lean and incisive statements, he argues that we are essentially social creatures, and that we achieve our greatest aspirations when we work together―not as individuals. Yet today society is threatened by a vast antihuman infrastructure that undermines our ability to connect. Money, once a means of exchange, is now a means of exploitation; education, conceived as way to elevate the working class, has become another assembly line; and the internet has only further divided us into increasingly atomized and radicalized groups.

Team Human delivers a call to arms. If we are to resist and survive these destructive forces, we must recognize that being human is a team sport. In Rushkoff’s own words: “Being social may be the whole point.” Harnessing wide-ranging research on human evolution, biology, and psychology, Rushkoff shows that when we work together we realize greater happiness, productivity, and peace. If we can find the others who understand this fundamental truth and reassert our humanity―together―we can make the world a better place to be human.

How to think constructively, connect meaningfully, and act purposefully Douglas Rushkoff wrote this book to help as many people as possible who now struggle in a world in which "autonomous technologies, runaway markets, and weaponized media seem to have overturned civil society, paralyzing our ability to think constructively, connect meaningfully, and act purposefully. It feels as if civilization itself were on the brink, and that we lack the collective willpower and coordination necessary to address issues of vital importance to the very survival of our species." He then asserts, "It doesn't have to be this way."I agree with Rushkoff while also agreeing with him and countless others that it is far more difficult to remake society together today, not as individual players but as the team we actually are, than at any prior time. As a team? "The first step toward reversing our predicament is to recognize that being human is a team sport. We cannot be fully human alone. Anything that brings us together fosters our humanity. Likewise, anything that separates us makes us less human, and less able to exercise our individual or collective will."These are among the passages that caught my eye, also shared with you to suggest the thrust and flavor of Rushkoff's perspectives on civilization and human nature:These are among the passages that caught my eye, shared with you to suggest the thrust and flavor of Rushkoff's perspectives on society and human nature:o "Nature is a collaborative act. If humans are the most evolved species, it is only because we have developed the most advanced ways of working and playing together...The most successful of biology's creatures coexist in mutually beneficial ecosystems. It's hard for us to recognize such widespread cooperation. We tend to look at life forms as isolated from another: a tree is a tree and a cow is a cow. But a tree is not a singular tree at all; it is the tip of the forest. Pull back far enough to see the whole, and one tree's struggle for survival merges with the more relevant story of its role in sustaining the larger system."o "The more advanced the primate, the bigger its social groups. That's the easiest and most accurate way to understand evolution's trajectory, and the relationship of humans to it. Even if we don't agree that social organization is evolution's master plan, we must accept that it is -- at the very least -- a large part of what makes humans human."o "Being social may be the whole point. The things we learn from one another are helpful with the logistics of mutual survival, but the process of learning itself -- the sense of connection, rapport, and comaradarie we develop while communicating -- may be the greatest prize. We may not socialize in order to live more than we live in order to socialize."o "Spoken language could be considered the first communication technology."o "Human inventions often end up at cross purposes with their original intentions -- or even at cross purposes with humans, ourselves. Once an idea or an institution gains enough influence, it changes the basic landscape. Instead of the invention serving people in some way, people spend their time and resources serving it. The original subject becomes the new object."o "Living in a digitally enforced attention economy means being subjected to a constant assault of automated manipulation...The goal [of persuasive technology] is to generate 'behavioral change' and 'habit formation,' most often wityhouyt the user's knowledge or consent."o "People are at best an asset to be exploited, and at worst a cost to be endured. Everything is optimized for capital, until it runs out of world to consume."o "The economy needn't be a war; it can be a common. To get there, we must retrieve our innate good will."o "The long-term danger is not that we will lose our jobs to robots. We can contend with joblessness if it happens. The real threat is that we'll lose our humanity to the value system we embed in our robots, and that they in turn impose on us."o "This is the true meaning of 'the singularity': it's the moment when computers make humans obsolete. At that point, we humans will face a stark choice. Either we enhance ourselves with chips, nanotechnology, and genetic engineering to keep up with our digital superiors; or we upload our brains to the network."o "We mistakenly treat the future as something to prepare for...But the future is not something we arrive at so much as something we create through our actions in the present. Even the weather, at this point, is subject to the choices we make today about energy, consumption, and waste."o "As much as we think we're separate individuals, we're wired from birth and before to share, bond, learn from, and even heal one another. We humans are all part of the same collective nervous system. This is not a religious conviction but an increasingly accepted biological fact."There are dozens of other passages I could also have selected from a lively narrative that offers an abundance of indictments, affirmations, reassurances, and concerns that emanate from Douglas Rushkoff's heart as well as his mind. "We can't go it alone, even if we wanted to. The only way to heal" our wounds from autonomous technologies, runaway markets, and weaponized media "is by connecting to someone else." In fact, connecting to as many other people as possible. "We are not perfect, by any means. But we are not alone. We are Team Human. Find the others."

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