Farsight, Issue 16
Shipping Class 2 = 69 SEK
Shipping Class 3 = 89 SEK EUROPE SHIPPING #1 Shipping Class 1 = 100 SEK
Shipping Class 2 = 150 SEK
Shipping Class 3 = 200 SEK EUROPE SHIPPING #2 Shipping Class 1 = 150 SEK
Shipping Class 2 = 200 SEK
Shipping Class 3 = 250 SEK EUROPE SHIPPING #3 Shipping Class 1 = 150 SEK
Shipping Class 2 = 250 SEK
Shipping Class 3 = 350 SEK OUTSIDE EUROPE SHIPPING Shipping Class 1 = 150 SEK
Shipping Class 2 = 250 SEK
Shipping Class 3 = 350 SEK
NOTE: You can buy as many items you want within the same shipping class. Read more » ×
Farsight unpacks the most urgent issues shaping tomorrow, fusing analysis and speculation to spotlight emerging change and challenge assumptions about the future. Insights from our resident futurists are included alongside articles and interviews from an international network of journalists and expert contributors, all brought to life through striking illustration and design. Farsight is published by the Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies, a non-profit think-tank (NGO) founded with the principle that many futures are always in play, and that future thinking can help us better make sense of them. Farsight helps readers map out these worlds and understand their own agency in shaping the future that they desire.
In this issue:
FUTURE HOPES, FUTURE FEARS
People across the world’s richest countries no longer think the future will be better than the present. Progress has stalled, most now believe, and our descendants will be worse off than we are today.
The idea of progress as an inevitable historical force was born in the Western world. Is it drawing its last breath there, too? Belief in progress has never gone unchallenged. A strain of declininsm has always accompanied it, even in eras of confidence and expansion. For every enlightened rationalist, a romantic pessimist; for every techno-utopian, a climate-doomer. Still, the degree to which the contemporary West is steeped in a mood of decline is striking. Pessimists seem to have crowded out the optimists.
Is this situation merely a blip – a reaction to turbulent times – or is it becoming a semi-permanent condition? In this issue, we explore how our hopes and fears shape our ability to imagine future utopias, collapse, and dystopias in an age of pessimism.
Related products
-
Business & Current Affairs - Design - Society
The Wired World in 2026
Wired World in 2026 is WIRED’s annual trends briefing, offering a forward-looking snapshot of the ideas, technologies, and cultural shifts set to define the year ahead. This special edition spans 120 pages of expert insights and predictions, curated by leading voices in science, business, technology, and design. The magazine serves as a roadmap for innovators, […]
249 SEK -
Business & Current Affairs - Culture & Lifestyle - Design - Home & Living - TravelMonocle, December/January 2025 – Issue 189
Not the Harvard-produced satire of the ’60s, Monocle reports the parts of international affairs, policy, culture and social trends that are relevant to people also interested in furniture design, exotic travel…..
169 SEK -
Technology
Digital Frontier, Issue 5
Introducing an exciting new launch – Digital Frontier– a brand new magazine reporting on technology and culture. Digital Frontier is a physical manifestation of the biggest forces impacting the digital world. It’s filled with deeply reported stories that explore how technology is influencing how we live, work and spend our money, complemented by arresting visuals. […]
295 SEK -
Mind - Photography - Self-Help & Personal Development
New Philosopher, Issue 49 – Observation
For curious people interested in the fundamental issues facing humankind. New Philosopher is an independent publication devoted to exploring philosophical ideas from past and present thinkers on ways to live a more fulfilling life. New Philosopher aims to guide readers into living a happier and freer mode of existence. New Philosopher caters to those who […]
215 SEK