Breakneck And The Real Contest Over The Future

Dan Wang’s Breakneck: China’s Quest to Engineer the Future is not just a book about China. It is a book about what happens when a society decides that building matters more than debating, that execution matters more than process, and that national ambition should show up in steel, concrete, factories, power systems, and supply chains. Wang’s central argument is memorable because it is so simple: China operates as an engineering state, while the United States has drifted into what he calls a lawyerly society. In his framing, China’s governing class tends to think like builders, while America’s elite class increasingly thinks like litigators, gatekeepers, and procedural managers. The result is not merely a difference in politics. It is a difference in what each society can actually get done.

Continue reading

Early 2018 Reading List

Update January 22nd: I am adding a book just released to this short list – Shaping the Fourth Industrial Revolution

I’m often asked for book recommendations that aid with future thinking exercises. A good source in 2018 for this type of exercise is Fast Future Publishing, whose goal is to profile the latest thinking of established and emerging futurists, foresight researchers and future thinkers from around the world, and to make that thinking accessible to the widest possible audience. Their innovative publishing model bypasses most traditional publishing channels and accelerates time to market. Two books that I’d recommend for early 2018 are described below, and a new book due out in the spring is also included.

Continue reading