In the future, will humans become immortal, yet anxious, gods? Or will they become soulless devotees of data who worship at the altar of algorithms? Harari is an Israeli professor who set out to write ...
Vacations are all about reading fiction. Last week at the beach I raced through Winslow’s The Border (definitely read the trilogy) and Forsyth’s The Fox (mindless fun). Then my Kindle ran dry. My ...
Homo Deus is the sequel to Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari’s bestselling history of humanity. Our species, he argues, has finally tamed war, poverty and plague. Although they still threaten millions of ...
The epic, widely celebrated Sapiens gets the sequel it demanded: a breathless, compulsive inquiry into humanity’s apocalyptic, tech-driven future Yuval Noah Harari began his academic career as a ...
The human species is about to change dramatically. That's the argument Yuval Noah Harari makes in his new book, Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow. Harari is a history professor at Hebrew ...
Yuval Noah Harari’s "Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind," became a best-selling book after it was first published in 2011. He argued that people dominate life on earth because they are the only ...
At the dawn of the third millennium, humanity wakes up, stretching its limbs and rubbing its eyes. Remnants of some awful nightmare are still drifting across its mind. 1. Temporal setting: The first ...
Has death been reduced to a mere "technical problem" by Silicon Valley? Can we overcome death? In his new book, "Homo Deus," Professor Yuval Noah Harari says we will achieve immortality in increments.
What the critics thought of Yuval Noah Harari’s Homo Deus: A Brief History of Tomorrow; The Good Immigrant edited by Nikesh Shukla; and Holding by Graham Norton From snapshots of contemporary Britain ...
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