What
If -- Examples of Forcing Your Thinking |
 |
-- a university of arizona
course on methods and approaches for studying the future
|
Forcing
yourself to ask a series of 'what if' questions makes you think about new possibilities,
and that makes you think more fully about the future. Here are some examples
from the book "The 500 Year Delta: What Happens After What Comes Next".
1997. Jim Taylor and Watts Wacker. Harper Business. 302 p.
- The Next 500 Days (less
than 2 years)
- Your most important
employee will quit and go to work for your biggest competitor.
- You will have
a joint venture with your biggest competitor.
- You will be sued
for being right.
- Fat will be drug
controllable.
-
- The Next 500 Weeks (about
the year 2010)
- Multinational
corporations will have their own embassies.
- You will be in
a career for which you never had any formal training
- Being unknown
will be a status symbol
- A computer operated
by biomass will be fully functional
-
- The Next 500 Months (about
the year 2040)
- Most hydrocarbons
will come from the ocean floor.
- We will know that
we are not alone in the Universe.
- The leading cause
of death will be epidemics.
- A nuclear bomb
will have been set off by a terrorist organization.
-
- The Next 500 Years (about
the year 2500)
- There will be
fewer people alive than there are today
- The average age
of first marriage will be seventy-five years
- There will be
no money standard
- The five things
anyone can never have too much of will be unchanged from the time Aristotle
first identified them: health, knowledge, self-esteem, friends, and love.
Return to "Anticipating
the Future" course home page
Prepared by Roger L. Caldwell