Yuval Noah Harari — "The future is not something we discover, it's something we create."
The future is not something we discover, it's something we create.
The future is not something we discover, it's something we create.
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"We study history not to know the future but to widen our horizons."
"We are moving from a world of 'truth' to a world of 'meaning'."
"It's easier to hack a living organism than to understand why it wanted to be hacked in the first place."
"The greatest danger is not that AI will become evil, but that it will become too good at optimizing for something we don't really want."
"The most important skill in the 21st century is the ability to reinvent yourself."
Israeli historian whose Sapiens (2011) and Homo Deus (2015) reframed big history for a mass audience and sold tens of millions of copies. Closely associated with Jared Diamond (Guns, Germs, and Steel author and Harari's clearest intellectual ancestor) and Steven Pinker (data-driven optimist contemporary). For an intellectual contrast, see Jordan Peterson, Canadian psychologist and Maps of Meaning author — Peterson's Maps of Meaning argues that religious-mythological structure is the load-bearing architecture of human meaning — exactly the framing Harari's 'religion as useful fiction' thesis treats as historically transitory. The two are the largest-platform popular intellectuals of the 2010s with opposite views on whether religion encodes deep truth.
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