Product details
- Categories: Foreign and Security Policy
- Publisher: OUP - Oxford University Press
- ISBN: 9780199606504
- Publication Date: 01/06/2011
- Binding: Paperback
- Number of pages: 576
- Language: English
Summary
* Chapters from leading experts and thinkers covering some of the biggest risks facing the world today
* Covers astronomical and Earth-based natural catastrophes, nuclear war, terrorism, biological weapons, totalitarianism, advanced nanotechnology, artificial intelligence, and social collapse
* Highly topical area with frequent media coverage
* Addresses the key methodological, ethical, and policy issues arising from the study of Global Catastrophic Risks
* Includes a comprehensive introductory section
A global catastrophic risk is one with the potential to wreak death and destruction on a global scale. In human history, wars and plagues have done so on more than one occasion, and misguided ideologies and totalitarian regimes have darkened an entire era or a region. Advances in technology are adding dangers of a new kind. It could happen again.
In Global Catastrophic Risks 25 leading experts look at the gravest risks facing humanity in the 21st century, including asteroid impacts, gamma-ray bursts, Earth-based natural catastrophes, nuclear war, terrorism, global warming, biological weapons, totalitarianism, advanced nanotechnology, general artificial intelligence, and social collapse. The book also addresses over-arching issues - policy responses and methods for predicting and managing catastrophes.
This is invaluable reading for anyone interested in the big issues of our time; for students focusing on science, society, technology, and public policy; and for academics, policy-makers, and professionals working in these acutely important fields.
Readership: A must-read book for anyone interested in the big issues of our time; for students focusing on science, society, technology, and public policy; and for academics and professionals working in these highly topical areas. Readers of popular science.
Table of contents
Acknowledgements
Sir Martin J. Rees: Foreword
Nick Bostrom and Milan M. Cirkovic: Introduction
I Background
Fred C. Adams: Long-term astrophysical processes
Christopher Wills: Evolution theory and the future of humanity
James J. Hughes: Millenial tendencies in responses to apocalyptic threats
Eliezer Yudkowsky: Cognitive biases potentially affecting judgement of global risks
Milan M. Cirkovic: Observation selection effects and global catastrophic risks
Yacov Y. Haimes: Systems-based risk analysis
Peter Taylor: Catastrophes and insurance
Richard A. Posner: Public policy towards catastrophe
II Risks from Nature
Michael R. Rampino: Super-volcanism and other geophysical processes of catastrophic import
William Napier: Hazards from comets and asteroids
Arnon Dar: Influence of Supernovae, gamma-ray bursts, solar flares, and cosmic rays on the terrestrial environment
III Risks from Unintended Consequences
David Frame and Myles R. Allen: Climate change and global risk
Edwin Dennis Kilbourne: Plagues and pandemics: past, present, and future
Eliezer Yudkowsky: Artificial Intelligence as a positive and negative factor in global risk
Frank Wilczek: Big troubles, imagined and real
IV Risks from hostile acts
Robin Hanson: Catastrophe, social collapse, and and human extinction
Joseph Cirincione: The continuing threat of nuclear war
Gary Ackerman and William C. Potter: Catastrophic nuclear terrorism: a preventable peril
Ali Nouri and Christopher F. Chyba: Biotechnology and biosecurity
Chris Phoenix and Mike Treder: Nanotechnology as global catastrophic risk
Bryan Caplan: The totalitarian threat
Author's biographies
Index