Futurists, or futurologists, are those who speculate about the future.
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Futurologist Blog Entries // Blog Post Tag Search // BlogCatalog
Search Blogs. Search For: Tag Search Results For 'futurologist' (1) Conscious Computers? ... 18 Blog Entries containing the term: futurologist ...www.blogcatalog.com/post-tag/futurologist/Social Networking Bubbling to the Top, Says Futurologist | Blogs ...
Though being ... In an interview with silicon.com, futurologist Ian Pearson (whose job title we ... Blog: The Industry Takes an In-Depth Look at 3D ...www.itbusinessedge.com/blogs/tve/?p=162Rex Hammock's RexBlog.com " Blog Archive " Futurologist goes way out on ...
Rexblog ... " Cool stuff I can do with my phone. My Wal-Mart Space " Futurologist goes way out on a limb ... work with a noted futurologist who has been making ...www.rexblog.com/2006/07/17/15852CIO Blog: I want to be a futurologist
... one of the speakers was a futurologist which to be ... All views expressed in this blog are my own personal views and should not be ... Welcome to my blog. ...www.cioblog.co.uk/2008/07/i-want-to-be-futurologist.htmlMobHappy " Blog Archive " BT Futurologist Predicts Need for Privacy Bubble
BBC Covers Blogs " MoSoSo for Dogs. Analysis. BT Futurologist Predicts Need for Privacy Bubble ... Pearson, BT's much-quoted futurologist, has gone on record ...mobhappy.com/blog1/2005/05/25/bt-futurologist-predicts-need-...Futurists, or futurologists, are those who speculate about the future.
Definition
The Oxford English Dictionary traces earliest English usage of the term futurist to 1842, referring to Christian scriptural futurists. The next usage occurs with the Italian and Russian Futurists of the early 20th century (1900s-1930s), an artistic, literary, and political movement that sought to reject the past and rather uncritically embraced speed, technology, and violent change. Curiously, early modern visionary authors like Jules Verne, Edward Bellamy, and even H.G. Wells were not characterized as futurists in their day, but rather as philosophers of foresight, a closely related term.
The use of futurist and its synonym futurologist in the modern context of thinking about and analyzing the future began in the mid-1940s, when German professor Ossip K. Flechtheim coined the term futurology and proposed it as a new science of probability. Flechtheim argued that even if systematic forecasting did no more than unveil the subset of statistically highly probable processes of change and charted their advance, it would still be of crucial social value.
Also in the mid-1940s the first professional "futurist" consulting institutions like RAND and SRI began to engage in long-range planning, systematic trend watching, scenario development, and visioning, at first under WWII military and government contract and, beginning in the 1950s, for private institutions and corporations. The period from the late 1940s to the mid-1960s laid the conceptual and methodological foundations of the modern futures studies field. Bertrand de Jouvenel's The Art of Conjecture in 1963 and Dennis Gabor's Inventing the Future in 1964 are considered key early works, and the first U.S. university course devoted entirely to the future was taught by futurist Alvin Toffler at The New School in 1966.
Today the term futurist most commonly describes authors, consultants, organizational leaders and others who engage in interdisciplinary and systems thinking to advise private and public organizations on such matters as diverse global trends, plausible scenarios, emerging market opportunities, and risk management.
More generally, the label includes such disparate lay, professional, and academic groups as visionaries, foresight consultants, corporate strategists, policy analysts, cultural critics, planners, marketers, forecasters, prediction market developers, roadmappers, operations researchers, investment managers, actuaries and other risk analyzers, and future-oriented individuals educated in every academic discipline, including anthropology, complexity studies, computer science, economics, engineering, evolutionary biology, history, management, mathematics, philosophy, physical sciences, political science, psychology, sociology, systems theory, technology studies, and other disciplines.
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