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Barry Jones (1) (1932–)

Author of A Thinking Reed

For other authors named Barry Jones, see the disambiguation page.

13+ Works 306 Members 4 Reviews

About the Author

Image credit: Allen and Unwin Media Centre

Works by Barry Jones

Associated Works

Made in Australia: A sourcebook of all things Australian (1986) — Introduction — 12 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Jones, Barry Owen
Birthdate
1932-10-11
Gender
male
Education
University of Melbourne
Occupations
teacher
politician
Awards and honors
Australian Living Treasure
Order of Australia (Companion)
Nationality
Australia (birth)
Birthplace
Geelong, Victoria, Australia
Associated Place (for map)
Victoria, Australia

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
One of the several failed attempts to understand and forecast the socio-economic impacts of technological change, somewhat on the lines of Alvin Toffler's 'Future Shock'. The author, an Australian socialist politician falls into the usual trap of (a) not understanding how markets work and respond and (b) assuming (wrongly) that succeeding generations will become less and less able to cope with technological advances. All the evidence of history (over tens of thousands of years, not just show more recent centuries and decades) suggests that changes we see in the present make the future always look a tad fearsome even though as it becomes the present we respond and move on - albeit to a new set of concerns! Overall things have almost always got better. The author appears to seek political intervention in those things politicians are least competent to understand. He worries about the risk of 'technological determinism' because he doesn't see (or perhaps prefers not to see) that customers not technology and not suppliers determine how technology is used.
He does however come up with a few quotable lines, for example in his "seven laws" (most of which are nonsense): "The amount of time spent by generalists in making technically based decisions is in inverse proportion to the complexity of the subject matter".
I keep this book to remind me to be cautious in my own strategic forecasting!
show less
An excellent and honest story, but the encyclopaedic detail could be overwhelming for anyone not of similar nationality (Australian), age and interests
½
An autobiography in extreme "Barry Jones" detail.
Found on Southern verge corner of “x” and Station Street, Chelsea.

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Statistics

Works
13
Also by
1
Members
306
Popularity
#76,933
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
4
ISBNs
94
Languages
1

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