Archive for publications, January 2025

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[Commlist] New book: Quantum Ecology: Why and How New Information Technologies Will Reshape Societies

Tue Jan 07 18:21:19 GMT 2025





A recent open-access book (MIT Press) that might be of interest to many here: "Quantum Ecology: Why and How New Information Technologies Will Reshape Societies", co-authored by Dr Stefano Calzati (TU Delft) and Derrick de Kerckhove (Polytechnic University of Milan).

Here the synopsis and the link for download:
https://direct.mit.edu/books/oa-monograph/5872/Quantum-EcologyWhy-and-How-New-Information

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Quantum Ecology: Why and How New Information Technologies Will Reshape Societies
By
Stefano Calzati,
Derrick de Kerckhove
The MIT Press
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7551/mitpress/14061.001.0001
ISBN electronic:
9780262375405
Publication date:
2024



An exploration of the emerging quantum technological paradigm and its effects on human consciousness and cultures.

In Quantum Ecology, Stefano Calzati and Derrick de Kerckhove identify three technological ecologies—linguistic, digital, and quantum—to better understand today's shattered globalized contemporaneity and navigate the impact of soon-to-come quantum information technologies. Today's societies, based as they are on language and writing, face disruption brought on by digital transformation, which is not predicated on sharing meaning but on sheer computability. This produces what the authors call an “epistemological crisis.” From here, the book explores how emerging quantum computers and communication will trigger an even deeper existential shift based on quantum physics' principles of discreteness, uncertainty, and entanglement.

Enriched with evidence from biology, anthropology, sociolinguistics, and information and cognitive sciences, the authors draw upon diverse case studies to sustain a convincing philosophical and political argument. The book's chapters move from a discussion about the coevolution of humans and language to the codependence of writing, thinking, and innovation, then proceed to investigate “datacracy,” the power of algorithms. Finally, the authors outline the looming psychocultural effects and geopolitical challenges of the nascent quantum technological paradigm.

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