Events
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Start: 7:30 pm
Catch the amazingly crafted and funny video!
How and why do world-changing ideas surface? Johnson writes,
“The argument of this book is that a series of shared properties and patterns
recur again and again in unusually fertile environments. I have distilled them
down into seven patterns: the adjacent possible; liquid networks; the slow
hunch; serendipity; error; exaptation; and emergent platforms. The more we
embrace these patterns – in our private work habits and hobbies, in our office
environments, in the design of new software tools – the better we will be at
tapping our extraordinary capacity for innovative thinking.”
Johnson traces these patterns across centuries and
disciplines, from the FBI’s tragic failure to grasp the importance of
information that might have prevented the 9/11 terrorist attacks to Gutenberg’s
use of wine-press technology to build the world’s first printing press with
moveable type to the founding of Google on a Net-transforming hunch. But the
relevant question, Johnson insists, is not how these guys got to be so clever
(or not). Rather, what we need to ask is: What kind of environment fosters
remarkable innovation?
With four critically acclaimed books, the two most recent
being New York Times Notable Books,
Steven Johnson has demonstrated that he can pinpoint an urgent cultural issue
and illuminate it with dazzling cross-disciplinary insights. Whether tweaking
conventional wisdom in Everything Bad is
Good for You, offering captivating new perspectives on the conflict between
science and religion in The Invention of
Air, or debunking skepticism about the significance of Twitter in a cover
story for Time magazine, Johnson has
commanded a prominent perch in the public discourse. Now Johnson bridges natural science,
intellectual history, urban sociology, and cutting-edge technology to explore
one of our most pressing cultural questions, and to offer persuasive,
inspiring, and practical answers that readers can use to propel their lives and
careers forward.
“An infectiously exciting writer…Steven Johnson is that
rarest of commodities among twenty-first century public intellectuals…His is a
questing, limber intelligence, eager to consider opposing arguments, explore
new terrain, and notice underlying patterns he hasn’t seen before.” – Salon.com, reviewing The Invention of Air
Steven Johnson
is the founder of a variety of influential websites – most recently, outside.in
– and writes for Time, Wired, The New
York Times, and The Wall Street
Journal. With 1.5 million Twitter
followers, he is widely regarded as one of the world’s most perceptive and
thought-provoking thinkers on new media and the evolution of information
technology. His previous books are The
Invention of Air, The Ghost Map, Everything Bad is Good for You, Mind Wide Open,
Emergence, and Interface Culture.
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