Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

A WORLD OF POSSIBILIT­IES

Who do you rely on, in an everchangi­ng world? How much scepticism is enough? An exclusive excerpt from Yuval Noah Harari’s 21 Lessons for the 21st Century

- (21 Lessons for the 21st Century is set for release on August 30)

The best advice I could give a fifteen-year-old stuck in an outdated school somewhere in Mexico, India or Alabama is: don’t rely on the adults too much. Most of them mean well, but they just don’t understand the world. In the past, it was a relatively safe bet to follow the adults, because they knew the world quite well, and the world changed slowly. But the twenty-first century is going to be different. Due to the growing pace of change you can never be certain whether what the adults are telling you is timeless wisdom or outdated bias.

So on what can you rely instead? Perhaps on technology? That’s an even riskier gamble. Technology can help you a lot, but if technology gains too much power over your life, you might become a hostage to its agenda. Thousands of years ago humans invented agricultur­e, but this technology enriched just a tiny elite, while enslaving the majority of humans. Most people found themselves working from sunrise till sunset plucking weeds, carrying water buckets and harvesting corn under a blazing sun. It can happen to you too.

Technology isn’t bad. If you know what you want in life, technology can help you get it. But if you don’t know what you want in life, it will be all too easy for technology to shape your aims for you and take control of your life. Especially as technology gets better at understand­ing humans, you might increasing­ly find yourself serving it, instead of it serving you. Have you seen those zombies who roam the streets with their faces glued to their smartphone­s? Do you think they control the technology, or does the technology control them?

Should you rely on yourself, then? That sounds great on Sesame Street or in an old-fashioned Disney film, but in real life it doesn’t work so well. Even Disney is coming to realise it. Just like Riley Andersen, most people hardly know themselves, and when they try to ‘listen to themselves’ they easily become prey to external manipulati­ons. The voice we hear inside our heads was never trustworth­y, because it always reflected state propaganda, ideologica­l brainwashi­ng and commercial advertisem­ent, not to mention biochemica­l bugs.

As biotechnol­ogy and machine learning improve, it will become easier to manipulate people’s deepest emotions and desires, and it will become more danger- ous than ever to just follow your heart. When Coca-Cola, Amazon, Baidu or the government knows how to pull the strings of your heart and press the buttons of your brain, could you still tell the difference between your self and their marketing experts?

To succeed in such a daunting task, you will need to work very hard on getting to know your operating system better. To know what you are, and what you want from life. This is, of course, the oldest advice in the book: know thyself. For thousands of years philosophe­rs and prophets have urged people to know themselves. But this advice was never more urgent than in the twenty-first century, because unlike in the days of Laozi or Socrates, now you have serious competitio­n. Coca-Cola, Amazon, Baidu and the government are all racing to hack you. Not your smartphone, not your computer, and not your bank account – they are in a race to hack you and your organic operating system. You might have heard that we are living in the era of hacking computers, but that’s hardly half the truth. In fact, we are living in the era of hacking humans.

The algorithms are watching you right now. They are watching where you go, what you buy, who you meet. Soon they will monitor all your steps, all your breaths, all your heartbeats. They are relying on Big Data and machine learning to get to know you better and better. And once these algorithms know you better than you know yourself, they could control and manipulate you, and you won’t be able to do much about it. You will live in the matrix, or in The Truman Show. In the end, it’s a simple empirical matter: if the algorithms indeed understand what’s happening within you better than you understand it, authority will shift to them.

Of course, you might be perfectly happy ceding all authority to the algorithms and trusting them to decide things for you and for the rest of the world. If so, just relax and enjoy the ride. You don’t need to do anything about it. The algorithms will take care of everything. If, however, you want to retain some control of your personal existence and of the future of life, you have to run faster than the algorithms, faster than Amazon and the government, and get to know yourself before they do. To run fast, don’t take much luggage with you. Leave all your illusions behind. They are very heavy.

 ?? KATE GREENAWAY / GETTY IMAGES ?? WATCH WHO■YOU FOLLOW: Vintage engraving of a scene from the Pied Piper of Hamelin. (Left) Author Yuval Noah Harari
KATE GREENAWAY / GETTY IMAGES WATCH WHO■YOU FOLLOW: Vintage engraving of a scene from the Pied Piper of Hamelin. (Left) Author Yuval Noah Harari
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 ??  ?? 21 Lessons for the 21st CenturyYuv­al Noah Harari 368pp, ₹799Penguin Random House
21 Lessons for the 21st CenturyYuv­al Noah Harari 368pp, ₹799Penguin Random House

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