Amazon.co.uk
He's been called the postmodern Chicken Licken, but it so happens that the sky
really is falling down. Jeremy Rifkin pulls the plug on the trend away from
property ownership and free public life in The Age of Access: The New
Culture of Hypercapitalism, Where All of Life is a Paid-For Experience. As
usual, he's a bit ahead of the curve--most of us aren't yet fully immersed in
the sea of leased products and packaged experiences that he sees awaiting us.
Still, his eerie visions of a world of gatekeepers paying each other for access
to nearly every aspect of human life brings a chilling new meaning to the
phrase "pay to play" and should spark some debate over our new
cultural revolution.
Using examples from business and government experiments with just-in-time
access to goods and services and resource sharing, Rifkin defines a new society
of renters too busy breaking the shackles of material possessions to mourn the
passing of public property. Are we encouraging alienation or participation? Can
we trust corporations with stewardship of our social lives? True to form, the
author asks more questions than he answers--a sign of an open mind. If property
is theft, leased access is extortion, and The Age of Access warns us of
the complex changes coming in our relationships with our homes, our
communities, and our world. --Rob Lightner, Amazon.com
Amazon.com
He's been called the postmodern Chicken Little, but it happens that the sky
really is falling. Jeremy Rifkin pulls the plug on the trend away from property
ownership and free public life in The Age of Access: The New Culture of
Hypercapitalism Where All of Life Is a Paid-For Experience. As usual, he's
a bit ahead of the curve--most of us aren't fully immersed yet in the sea of
leased products and packaged experiences that he sees awaiting us. Still, his
eerie vision of a world of... Lesen
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From
Booklist
Rifkin's many books include Beyond Beef: The Rise and Fall of the Cattle
Culture (1992) and The Biotech Century: Harnessing the Gene and Remaking
the World (1998). He has been dismissed as a gadfly and an alarmist by
those who do not agree with him, but what he does do most successfully is
popularize the debate over the ethical and moral dilemmas posed by the
information revolution, genetic engineering, and other scientific advances. For
years, Rifkin has been asking what the ultimate price will... Lesen
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