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Blink 3 von 12 - Eine kurze Geschichte der Menschheit
von Yuval Noah Harari
A Manifesto for a More Generous World
This Could Be Our Future by Yancey Strickler argues for a world beyond financial maximization, one where we prioritize our collective well-being, values, and meaning over profit. He offers a path towards a society centered on purpose and flourishing.
When Perry Chen, Charles Adler, and the author, Yancey Strickler, first started telling people about their idea, Kickstarter, in 2005, most of the people they told assumed they were crazy. A platform where people give other people money to make art? “That’s not how the world works!” people would say.
And they were sort of right. Back then, the term “crowdfunding” didn’t even exist. But, in 2009, Kickstarter launched anyway. And now, some ten years later, the platform is responsible for bringing to life more than 100,000 new creative ideas – among them Oscar-winning documentaries like Jehane Noujaim’s The Square, and the wildly popular card game Cards Against Humanity.
The key message here is: Our lives are governed by invisible ideas, and financial maximization is the biggest one of them.
Kickstarter proved something about human thought: most of our ideas about how the world works don’t reflect some immutable truth – they are just concepts we’ve invented. But many of these ideas are so deeply embedded in daily life that we cease to recognize them as the made-up concepts they truly are.
The notion that money is the be-all and end-all of human existence is one of these invisible ideas. The author calls this notion “financial maximization.” It’s the idea that, as a business, but also as an individual, nothing but money-making should guide your actions.
In the 1970s, star economist Milton Friedman became the first public figure to argue that businesses have no responsibility to society other than turning a profit. And companies truly took this to heart.
Today, the only standard most businesses hold themselves to is how much profit they can make for their shareholders. From mass firings to tax evasion to diminishing service quality, no strategy is off limits – if it’ll generate profit.
Indeed, for those at the top, all areas of human activity – our movies, our health care, our education, our communities – are nothing but different kinds of investment opportunities. And if it will make them more money, they will buy, sell, and trade those investments with no concern for the people affected.
Worst of all, we have come to expect this behavior. We emulate it in our private lives without questioning its wider utility. Of course people should do what makes them the most money. That’s just how things work. Or at least so the thinking goes. But that begs the question of whether things really are working.
This Could Be Our Future (2019) is a manifesto for a better tomorrow – a future world that isn’t ruled solely by money, but by all forms of value that humanity produces. Former Kickstarter CEO Yancey Strickler explains how our modern obsession with “financial maximization” has led society astray – bankrupting institutions, stifling innovation, and starving creativity – and what we can do to adjust our course.
Value is what something is worth. Values are whats worth something to somebody.
Ich bin begeistert. Ich liebe Bücher aber durch zwei kleine Kinder komme ich einfach nicht zum Lesen. Und ja, viele Bücher haben viel bla bla und die Quintessenz ist eigentlich ein Bruchteil.
Genau dafür ist Blinkist total genial! Es wird auf das Wesentliche reduziert, die Blinks sind gut verständlich, gut zusammengefasst und auch hörbar! Das ist super. 80 Euro für ein ganzes Jahr klingt viel, aber dafür unbegrenzt Zugriff auf 3000 Bücher. Und dieses Wissen und die Zeitersparnis ist unbezahlbar.
Extrem empfehlenswert. Statt sinnlos im Facebook zu scrollen höre ich jetzt täglich zwischen 3-4 "Bücher". Bei manchen wird schnelle klar, dass der Kauf unnötig ist, da schon das wichtigste zusammen gefasst wurde..bei anderen macht es Lust doch das Buch selbständig zu lesen. Wirklich toll
Einer der besten, bequemsten und sinnvollsten Apps die auf ein Handy gehören. Jeden morgen 15-20 Minuten für die eigene Weiterbildung/Entwicklung oder Wissen.
Viele tolle Bücher, auf deren Kernaussagen reduziert- präzise und ansprechend zusammengefasst. Endlich habe ich das Gefühl, Zeit für Bücher zu finden, für die ich sonst keine Zeit habe.
Hol dir mit Blinkist die besten Erkenntnisse aus mehr als 7.000 Sachbüchern und Podcasts. In 15 Minuten lesen oder anhören!
Jetzt kostenlos testenBlink 3 von 12 - Eine kurze Geschichte der Menschheit
von Yuval Noah Harari