Available Formats
Paperback
Published: 13th May 2025
Paperback
Published: 13th August 2024
Hardback
Published: 13th August 2024
Wise Animals: How Technology Has Made Us What We Are
By (Author) Tom Chatfield
Pan Macmillan
Picador
13th August 2024
22nd February 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Impact of science and technology on society
303.483
Hardback
336
Width 163mm, Height 242mm, Spine 34mm
546g
'Combining compelling storytelling with erudite, compassionate and often profound insight about the human condition, this book will transform how you navigate the world.' - Richard Fisher, author of The Long View Wise Animals explores the history of our relationship with technology, and our deep involvement with our creations from the first use of tools and the taming of fire, via the invention of reading and printing, to the development of the computer, the creation of the internet and the emergence of AI. Human children know no more of modern technology than their ancestors did of older technologies thousands of years ago, and develop in relation to the technologies of their time. We co-evolve with technology as individuals as we have as a species over thousands of years. Rather than see technology as a threat, this deeply humanist contribution to the debate proposes that we are neither masters nor victims of our technologies. They are part of who we are, and our future - and theirs - is in our hands.
Combining compelling storytelling with erudite, compassionate and often profound insight about the human condition, this book will transform how you navigate the world. -- Richard Fisher, author of The Long View: Why We Need to Transform How the World Sees Time
Tom Chatfield is one of the smartest and most original tech thinkers writing today. Both thought-provoking and startlingly original, Wise Animals is his magnum opus. -- Roman Krznaric, author of The Good Ancestor
Powerful, profound and completely engrossing, this is a multitudinous meditation on not only technology but also history, culture, ideas, ethics, psychology and, above all, what it means to be human. It brims and fizzes with insight and argument, but never loses touch with that core attribute of its title: wisdom. In an age of intelligent machines, Tom Chatfield has written an essential handbook we will return to again and again -- Michael Bhaskar, New York Times bestselling author of Curation, Human Frontiers and co-author of The Coming Wave
A timely reflection about historical and technological time that is worthy of your precious hours, as erudite and thoughtful as a reader might expect from a leading philosopher of technology. -- Jonathan Rowson, author of The Moves That Matter
Writer and tech-philosopher Chatfield is my go-to thinker on making sense of humanitys relationship with technology. WISE ANIMALS is a highly readable exploration of just that relationship, from the emergence of our species to now. -- Caroline Sanderson, The Bookseller
Both thought-provoking and startlingly original, Wise Animals is Tom Chatfield's magnum opus. -- Roman Krznaric, author of The Good Ancestor: How to Think Long Term in a Short-Term World
Wise Animals is a profoundly human book that reveals us as we are: vulnerable and victorious, careless and careful, wayward and wise. In that context, the book discloses the dispositions and sensibilities we need to cultivate to protect what is best about ourselves and the world. Through its invitation to that adventure, Wise Animals offers a deepening relationship between writer and reader that recasts the human relationship with technology as something that is, for now, fundamentally in our control. -- Jonathan Rowson, Co-Founder and CEO of Perspectiva. Author of The Moves that Matter: Chess Grandmaster on the Game of Life.
Dr Tom Chatfield is a British writer, broadcaster and tech philosopher. His books exploring digital culture have been published in over thirty languages. He has spoken about AI, tech ethics and the future of authorship at venues ranging from the UK and European Parliaments to Google, Meta, the US National Academy of Sciences and TED Global. He lives in Kent.