Table of Contents
1 Cover
4 Foreword by Marc Luyckx Ghisi: Extending Ideas Already Present in European Thinking
5 Foreword by Éric Seulliet: Proposals Resulting from an Approach of a Cybernetic Futurologist
6 Preface
7 PART 1: The Driving Facts of Change Introduction to Part 1 1 Adapt or Dare? 1.1. Accepting to evolve 1.2. Change seen from afar to better understand it 1.3. Known risks of our model 1.4. Better than a revolution 2 Our Heritage of Experience Tested by New Knowledge 2.1. The common good as a new source of prosperity 2.2. Liberating values 2.3. Respect for life course 3 The Change of Era Beyond Our Will! 3.1. This new era: symbiotic or chaotic? 3.2. AI, the eye of Cain and democratic benevolence 3.3. Sovereignty in the 21st century 4 The Traces of Our Future Inscribed in Our Past 4.1. Controlling your destiny 4.2. Creative and responsible 4.3. World view and transmission of knowledge 4.4. Europe, a civilization in reconstruction? 4.5. More technology, therefore more humanity 4.6. Digital technology, a weapon but also a tool 4.7. Workaholics forever? 4.8. Sedentarization, spiritual at first 5 “To Make Society” Therefore “To Exchange” 5.1. Exchanges and specializations 5.2. Financial instruments over time
8 PART 2: Avenues to be Explored Introduction to Part 2 6 The Inevitable Reworking of the Social Pact 6.1. The world of work in revolution 6.2. Occupation/job and skills/talents/knowledge 6.3. End of the Jules Ferry school of thought 7 New Reward Tools 7.1. The end of liberalist doxa in favor of reciprocity 7.2. Shifting the focus between private property and the commons 8 Smart Currencies 8.1. Institutional money and contributory money 8.2. Monetary biodiversity 8.3. Moving to the sandbox 8.4. Do not deny the history of our currency 9 The New Priorities 9.1. Return of feminine values 9.2. A different relationship to innovation 9.3. Preparing for the “aftermath” of transnational corporations 9.4. Going digital 0.0 9.5. Data as important as money 9.6. A renewed idea of liberalism 10 Transition Without Chaos? 10.1. More complicated than sedentarization 10.2. A global but differentiated shift 10.3. Productive-contributory: Siamese economies 10.4. Tasks dedicated to the common good 11 No Societal Transformation Without Digital Sovereignty 11.1. Protecting land, but also souls and knowledge 11.2. The European opportunity 11.3. Data as important as money 11.4. The European digital age of the 21st century
10 References
11 Index
Guide
1 Cover