When we imagine ten years out, we tend to imagine things that are really core to or our most authentic values and hopes and needs. And i would say, feel free to change as many of the details as you like. You might picture a different person, or creat with you a different hoot. What pet might you have in ten years that you don't have to day? I think it's really telling you imagine your children as a parent. Are'm a parent as well, and i imagined what kind of future alarm clock i would have. Clearly, you're a better parent that i am.
Future forecaster and game designer Jane McGonigal ran a social simulation game in 2008 that had players dealing with the effects of a respiratory pandemic set to happen in the next decade. She wasn’t literally predicting the 2020 pandemic—but she got eerily close. Her game, set in 2019, featured scenarios we're now familiar with (like masking and social distancing), and participant reactions gave her a sense of what the world could—and eventually, did—look like. How did she do it? And what can we learn from this experiment to predict—and prepare for—the future ourselves? In this episode, Jane teaches us how to be futurists, and talks about the role of imagination—and gaming—in shaping a future that we’re truly excited about. Jane’s new book, Imaginable: How to See the Future Coming and Feel Ready for Anything―Even Things That Seem Impossible Today is available now.
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