The Science Factory Autumn 2021 Rights List

Page 33

EXPONENTIAL How Accelerating Technology Is Leaving Us Behind and What to Do About It of Accelerating Change AZEEM AZHAR Praise for Azeem Azhar’s newsletter ‘Exponential View’

A sweeping, engaging, nuanced, and ultimately conflicted look at how recent innovations in computing and other emerging technologies have radically transformed human existence… Deft and clear-eyed – FINANCIAL TIMES Azhar has a knack for interrogating and inverting conventional thinking… A convincing case that something extraordinary is taking place in business and society – ECONOMIST

A refreshing lens on our near future from an influential tech entrepreneur, investor, advisor and communicator. At some point between 2016 and 2017, technology took over the public space. Mutterings about the application of new dark digital arts – the nefarious manipulation of our social media against us, the hacking of our very democracies – crescendoed. Computers got better at many things – playing games, translating between languages, describing what is in a picture – and we began to talk about AI taking our jobs, driving our cars and supplementing nearly all our human capabilities. Tech giants – Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon, Netflix – rose to impressive, then disturbing, new heights. At the time, Azeem Azhar had just sold PeerIndex, one of the startups he founded, and he went from being an overworked founder to a senior executive with a bit of time and space to look around. And he noticed something: across today’s disparate storylines – the political rifts, the rise of tech leviathans towering over civic life, the tsunami of AI development – there was a pattern. In short, a gap had opened between accelerating technological capability and incremental social adaptation, between everyday culture and the bubble of tech culture. Azeem dubbed this the ‘exponential gap’, and since then he has sought to find a way to bridge these two cultures, to unite technologists and humanists in a collective effort to shape our world for the better. Channelling the grand scope of Harari and Tegmark, the rigour of Zuboff and Mazzucato, and the entrepreneurial attitude of Brynjolfsson and McAfee, EXPONENTIAL is that bridge – across cultures, across the exponential gap – that offers readers a clear vista of our future. AZEEM AZHAR writes ‘Exponential View’, a widely acclaimed newsletter with over 55,000 subscribers. It deals with the impact of AI and exponential technologies on society and the economy and is accompanied by his highly lauded podcast, distributed by Harvard Business Review. Following an MA in politics, philosophy and economics from the University of Oxford, he started his career as a journalist with the Guardian and the Economist before founding PeerIndex, and is now a trusted advisor to firms such as PricewaterhouseCoopers, a venture partner at Kindred Capital, a board member of the Ada Lovelace Foundation and a regular international keynote speaker on topics such as AI, ethics and technology, exponential technologies and the human dimensions of technology. Agent: Jeff Shreve Publisher: Random House Business (UK)/Diversion (US) Publication: 7 September 2021 Length: 352 pages All rights available excluding UK & Commonwealth (Random House Business), US (Diversion), China (Cheers Publishing Company), Korea (Chungrim), Russia (MIF)

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Autumn Rights List 2021

RECENTLY PUBLISHED

The Science Factory


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Spike by Jeremy Farrar & Anjana Ahuja

2min
page 36

The Century of Deception by Ian Keable

2min
page 38

How to Make a Vaccine by John Rhodes

3min
pages 39-45

The Spike by Mark Humphries

2min
page 37

RECENT WORLD RIGHTS DEALS

1min
page 46

Reimagining Time by Tanya Bub & Jeffrey Bub

2min
page 35

Liftoff by Eric Berger

2min
page 34

The Invention of Tomorrow by Thomas Suddendorf, Jon Redshaw & Adam Bulley

2min
page 30

Exponential by Azeem Azhar

2min
page 33

The Patriarchs by Angela Saini

2min
page 28

A World Without Stars by Roberto Trotta

2min
page 31

The Elephant in the Universe by Govert Schilling

2min
page 29

Strike Patterns by Leah Zani

2min
page 32

What Every Woman Needs to Know About Her Gut by Barbara Ryan & Elaine McGowan

2min
page 27

Untitled on Socrates and Alcibiades by Massimo Pigliucci

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page 26

Trafficking Data by Aynne Kokas

1min
page 22

An Epidemiologist Reads the News by Cecile Janssens

3min
page 20

How to Think Like a Woman by Regan Penaluna

2min
page 25

Wondrous Transformations by Alison Li

2min
page 23

Why We Went Extinct by Tadaaki Imaizumi & Takashi Maruyama

2min
page 19

How to Interview Your Family by Elizabeth Keating

1min
page 21

Children of the Flood by Vann R. Newkirk II

1min
page 24

How To Be Authentic by Skye C. Cleary

2min
page 13

For the Culture by Marcus Collins

2min
page 14

Virtual You by Peter Coveney & Roger Highfield

2min
page 18

Untitled on Silicon Valley by Adam Becker

1min
page 12

Been There, Done That by Rachel Feltman

2min
page 15

Beyond the Hype by Fiona Fox

2min
page 17

Hijacked by Athena Aktipis

2min
page 11

Between Ape and Human by Gregory Forth

2min
page 16

How the Victorians Took Us to the Moon

2min
page 10

Spin by Roland Ennos

2min
page 6

Engineers of Human Souls by Simon Ings

2min
page 7

Borderline by Alexander Kriss

2min
page 9

Dead Minds by Jesse Bering

2min
page 4

Touchdown by Eric Berger

2min
page 3

The Beauty of Falling Claudia de Rham

2min
page 5

Six Things by Stephen Joseph

2min
page 8
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