Coverbild der Sendung Visions from Tomorrow: A Hundred Dreamscapes of the Future

Visions from Tomorrow: A Hundred Dreamscapes of the Future

Podcast von Parallel Futures Studio

Englisch

Geschichte & Religion

Begrenztes Angebot

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / MonatJederzeit kündbar.

  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts
Loslegen

Mehr Visions from Tomorrow: A Hundred Dreamscapes of the Future

Parallel Futures explores how imagined worlds shape tomorrow. Across evolving arcs, the series examines utopias, dystopias, spacefaring societies, AI governance, automation, future cities, biotechnology, energy systems, information networks, and post‑human ideas. Blending atmosphere and analysis, it maps the structures and possibilities of futures that are more organized, more thoughtful, and more humane.

Alle Folgen

5 Folgen

Episode Imagine Never Wondering If the Lights Will Stay On… The 1888 Utopia That Predicted Shared Power Grids Cover

Imagine Never Wondering If the Lights Will Stay On… The 1888 Utopia That Predicted Shared Power Grids

Imagine a city where you never wonder if the lights will stay on. No haggling with providers, no peak-hour anxiety, no fear that your neighborhood will be last in line when the grid fails. The city simply works — quietly, predictably, and fairly for everyone. This is the feeling at the heart of utopian energy systems, and Edward Bellamy captured it perfectly in his groundbreaking 1888 novel Looking Backward. In this episode of Visions from Tomorrow, we explore how Bellamy’s coordinated national system — the same logic that created public stores, equal distribution, and cultural evenings — naturally leads to a shared power grid where reliable energy becomes a civic right, not a commodity. We examine the feeling of predictability: how removing volatility from essentials also removes the social signals that reinforce class. We listen to the sound of energy — the civic hush that replaces the growl of uncoordinated engines and improvised infrastructure. We discover what the evenings reveal: when power is guaranteed after dark, human attention is freed for music, study, conversation, and public life. We translate Bellamy’s design into energy terms — national organization, synchronized distribution, and reliability as the normal condition — and contrast it with today’s modern shared models: microgrids, community solar, cooperative purchasing, and distributed storage. Different language, same ambition: treat energy as a public utility rather than a market prize, and you inherit predictability, fairness, and dramatically lower ambient stress. We dive into the ethics inside infrastructure: how a shared grid embeds dignity into the system itself. Everyone is worth uninterrupted light. Everyone is worth a comfortable home. Everyone is worth the quiet that comes from competent design. You no longer earn dignity each month — you simply live inside it. Finally, we confront the human question: if power is guaranteed, what happens to ambition? Bellamy’s answer is clear — ambition migrates from survival to mastery. People strive for craft, science, art, and public works. The more stable the floor, the higher the ceiling. Utopian energy is less a technology than a temperament: coordination at the scale of millions, where infrastructure carries ethical weight and the power you feel is not in the wires — it is in the people who stop worrying and start living. This is the fifth chapter in our Utopian Future Visions sub-series, part of the larger 100-episode project Visions from Tomorrow: A Hundred Dreamscapes of the Future. Drawing from public-domain primary sources, we compare historic predictions with today’s reality and deliver clear design-and-systems takeaways for modern thinkers. If you’re fascinated by utopian literature, shared energy systems, microgrids, community solar, post-scarcity infrastructure, equitable energy, or the psychology of predictable abundance, this episode is for you. Parallel Futures Studio — where yesterday’s boldest predictions meet today’s most important questions. References & Further Reading• Edward Bellamy, Looking Backward: 2000–1887 (1888) – Full public-domain text available at Project Gutenberg (gutenberg.org/ebooks/624) and Internet Archive• Bellamy’s public-domain editions (multiple scans and annotated versions) – used throughout this analysis for national organization, equal distribution, and civic hush descriptions• Contemporary context: U.S. Department of Energy reports on community solar and microgrids (energy.gov)• National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) studies on shared and distributed energy resources• Academic discussions of equitable energy infrastructure in utopian and systems-thinking literature

16. März 2026 - 12 min
Episode Imagine a World Without Money… The 1888 Vision That Could Change Humanity Forever Cover

Imagine a World Without Money… The 1888 Vision That Could Change Humanity Forever

Explore one of the most radical ideas in utopian thought: a future without money. In this episode of Visions from Tomorrow, we journey from Edward Bellamy’s groundbreaking 1888 novel Looking Backward to the modern resource-based economy concepts exemplified by The Venus Project. Discover how Bellamy imagined a world of coordinated abundance where the Industrial Army organizes production, the National Credit System replaces currency, and engineered sufficiency replaces scarcity. We examine how this visionary system creates psychological liberation — freeing people from fear, hoarding, and status competition so evenings become spaces for reflection, study, music, and genuine community. We then trace the leap from Bellamy’s human-managed national framework to today’s global-scale visions. Contemporary resource-based thinking replaces national industrial armies with automated systems, ecological data, and technological oversight that eliminate exchange entirely. Resources flow according to need, not profit — turning the entire planet into one coordinated household. Throughout the episode, we unpack the core shared convictions of both eras: • Inequality is not inevitable — it is a symptom of inefficient or adversarial systems • Abundance is achievable when production aligns with human need rather than endless profit • Emotional well-being is inseparable from material sufficiency We confront the human question: What happens to ambition in a post-scarcity world? Bellamy’s answer — and the answer echoed by modern thinkers — is that ambition does not vanish; it simply changes direction. People pursue mastery in craft, knowledge, art, engineering, creativity, scientific exploration, and ecological restoration instead of wealth and possession. We also address the practicality-versus-imagination debate. Although Bellamy’s novel never claimed to be a technical manual, it sparked real-world clubs, movements, and policy discussions. Today’s resource-based concepts serve the same purpose: they are frameworks of possibility that challenge our assumptions about how society must function. At the heart of every vision lies one central idea: economic systems can — and should — be deliberately designed to serve human well-being rather than the other way around. A future without money is not a future without value. It is a future where value is measured in comfort, stability, creativity, time, and the freedom to live without fear. Primary Public‑Domain Sources (19th–20th Century): Edward Bellamy — Looking Backward, 2000–1887 (1888)Boston: Ticknor & Co. Edward Bellamy — Equality (1897) New York: D. Appleton & Co. William Morris — News from Nowhere (1890) London: Reeves & Turner. Edward Carpenter — Civilisation: Its Cause and Cure (1889) London: Swan Sonnenschein. Thorstein Veblen — The Theory of the Leisure Class (1899)New York: Macmillan. Peter Kropotkin — Fields, Factories, and Workshops (1898) London: Swan Sonnenschein. Jacque Fresco — The Venus Project (est. 1995) Roxanne Meadows — The Venus Project

14. März 2026 - 12 min
Episode Biological–Social Harmony: A Crystal Age and Life Beyond Industrial Change Cover

Biological–Social Harmony: A Crystal Age and Life Beyond Industrial Change

This episode explores W. H. Hudson’s A Crystal Age (1887)—a vision of a post‑industrial world where social order follows biological rhythms, kinship, seasonal labor, and ecological balance rather than machines or markets. We compare Hudson’s biologically aligned society with modern debates around slow living, bioregionalism, regenerative agriculture, low‑tech resilience, and eco‑humanist models of community life. We examine how A Crystal Age reimagines family structure, agriculture, gendered labor roles, education through ritual and apprenticeship, and non‑monetary status systems. The episode asks what aged well, what failed, and where today’s sustainability and degrowth movements echo 19th‑century predictions. Key Concepts Discussed • Biological time vs. industrial time • Kinship as civic infrastructure • Seasonal labor & ecological cycles • Ritual, apprenticeship & place‑based learning • Regenerative agriculture & stewardship• Non‑monetary status systems • Pastoral governance & communal stability • Limits of anti‑industrial social design • Bioregional & eco‑humanist parallels today  Primary Sources (Public Domain) • W. H. Hudson — A Crystal Age (1887) • William Morris — News from Nowhere (1890) • Edward Carpenter — Civilisation: Its Cause and Cure (1889)

12. März 2026 - 13 min
Episode Post‑Industrial Pastoralism — Inside Morris’s Anti‑Technological Utopia Cover

Post‑Industrial Pastoralism — Inside Morris’s Anti‑Technological Utopia

This episode explores William Morris’s News from Nowhere (1890), a pastoral vision where industrial machinery disappears, cities soften into villages, and social life reorganizes around craft, community, and decentralized simplicity. We compare Morris’s anti‑technological future with today’s world: What happens when a society rejects mass production? How does labor change when work becomes pleasure? What parts of Morris’s predictions failed, and which ideas echo in modern sustainability, localism, and slow‑tech movements? We examine key themes: post‑industrial agrarianism, voluntary simplicity, communal governance, hand‑craft culture, anti‑factory sentiment, and the rejection of centralized infrastructure. Along the way, we contrast Morris’s hopes with real 21st‑century trends — sustainable design, degrowth debates, eco‑villages, maker culture, and low‑tech resilience. Primary Sources (Public Domain) • William Morris — News from Nowhere (1890) • Edward Carpenter — Civilisation: Its Cause and Cure (1889) • Related 19th‑century pastoral and anti‑industrial movements

9. März 2026 - 13 min
Episode The Architecture of Equality: How Classless Futures Were Imagined Cover

The Architecture of Equality: How Classless Futures Were Imagined

What would a city feel like if status signals disappeared and comfort was standardized by design? The Architecture of Equality explores the spatial logic behind classless futures—how streets, homes, and public systems might be arranged when the goal is balanced wellbeing rather than competitive display. Drawing on Edward Bellamy’s Looking Backward (1888) and Equality (1897), we examine the civic geometry of a society that organizes production, distribution, transport, and everyday life to minimize friction and maximize quiet dignity. This episode unpacks the visual grammar of that imagined city: mid‑rise housing with consistent comfort; symmetrical, legible civic buildings; quiet electric transit; and distribution hubs designed for accessibility over spectacle. We look at how these choices change behavior—reducing performative consumption, flattening status cues, and inviting people into a calmer social rhythm. We also consider trade‑offs: Where does standardization empower, and where might it feel constraining? How do equal systems make room for personal expression without re‑importing hierarchy? You’ll hear a slow, narrative walkthrough of a “day in the system”: morning mobility without noise, shared services that actually feel shared, and an evening public realm that is safe, predictable, and dignified. Along the way, we connect Bellamy’s ideas to later currents in urban thought—public ownership of utilities, fare‑less transit experiments, and the design of distribution spaces that prioritize clarity over branding. We close by mapping practical design questions for today: Which parts of equality‑by‑infrastructure can be prototyped now, and which require deeper cultural shifts? Key Questions we explore * What does “equality” mean when translated into buildings, routes, signage, and queues? * Can standardized comfort reduce social anxiety without erasing identity? * Where do logistics spaces become civic spaces—and how should they look and feel? * How do we preserve calm—soft light, low noise, predictable flows—without sacrificing adaptability? * If status markers recede, what becomes aspirational in public life? Episode structure (guide) 1. Context — Bellamy’s late‑19th‑century Boston and the promise of nationalized services. 2. Form‑Language — housing typologies, street sections, and the “quiet machine” aesthetic. 3. Systems — distribution hubs, mobility networks, and shared utilities as everyday architecture. 4. Human Factors — dignity, time perception, wayfinding clarity, and social comfort. 5. Trade‑offs — uniformity vs. expression; stability vs. innovation. 6. Today’s Prototypes — what can be trialed now in policy, planning, and public interiors. 7. Closing — orientation over prediction: designing for less noise, more care. Bibliography (Works referenced in this episode) Primary texts * Edward Bellamy, Looking Backward, 2000–1887. Boston: Ticknor and Company, 1888. (Public domain) * Edward Bellamy, Equality. New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1897. (Public domain) Comparative / context (mentioned for contrast or lineage) * William Morris, News from Nowhere; or, An Epoch of Rest. London: Reeves and Turner, 1890. (Public domain) * Edward Carpenter, Civilisation: Its Cause and Cure, and Other Essays. London: Swan Sonnenschein, 1889. (Public domain; for social‑industrial critique references) Secondary & design‑adjacent (concept bridges alluded to in the episode) * Historical discussions of public ownership of utilities and municipal services (late‑19th to early‑20th‑century reform literature; public domain corpora). * Early electric urban transit records and fare policy debates (public archives; cited in context, no single monograph emphasized). Note: All primary literary works referenced here are in the public domain. Listeners can access scanned editions via major digital libraries (e.g., Internet Archive or Project Gutenberg). If you’d like, I can provide direct links in your show notes format.

8. März 2026 - 15 min
Melde dich an, um zu hören
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Super gut, sehr abwechslungsreich Podimo kann man nur weiterempfehlen
Ich liebe Podcasts, Hörbücher u. -spiele, Dokus usw. Hier habe ich genügend Auswahl. Macht 👍 weiter so

Wähle dein Abonnement

Am beliebtesten

Begrenztes Angebot

Premium

20 Stunden Hörbücher

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo

  • Keine Werbung in Podimo Podcasts

  • Jederzeit kündbar

2 Monate für 1 €
Dann 4,99 € / Monat

Loslegen

Premium Plus

100 Stunden Hörbücher

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo

  • Keine Werbung in Podimo Podcasts

  • Jederzeit kündbar

30 Tage kostenlos testen
Dann 13,99 € / monat

Kostenlos testen

Nur bei Podimo

Beliebte Hörbücher

Häufig gestellte Fragen

Weitere Fragen und Antworten
Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €. Dann 4,99 € / Monat. Jederzeit kündbar.