Reviews

Homo Deus: A History of Tomorrow by Yuval Noah Harari

anna_pr's review against another edition

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challenging dark informative inspiring reflective medium-paced

4.0

jimbowen0306's review against another edition

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4.0

In his previous book, Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari looked at how people evolved into how we are today. It wasn't a biology treatise, more a take on human social interactions up till today. This book goes one step further it looks at what human's have believed in the past, relates the idea to the present, and uses the ideas to make predictions about the future.

In a way, this book this book reminds me of the Dawkins book The Selfish Gene. That book looks at the body, and biology clinically, and directly. This book does the same with social interactions, and it raises some interesting points along the way.

It's just when you replace passion and wonder with clinicality, you're left feeling a bit blah about the world, which is how I felt at the end of the book. It made interesting points, and I enjoyed them, but be warned you'll probably feel kind of sad after you've finished it too.

alex007sirois's review against another edition

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informative reflective medium-paced

3.0

reduck's review against another edition

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3.0

Far too much of this work retreads content from Sapiens.

anjaleer's review against another edition

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3.0

Yuval Noah Harari is a great captivating author, however I feel like he slightly missed his mark on this one. A lot of his insights were not that surprising and one could have probably gotten the same insights on the future by watching a few short video clips on new tech inventions on Facebook or LinkedIn.

vishwesh's review against another edition

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4.0

Great read.

carlos_p14's review against another edition

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informative slow-paced

2.5

Sapiens is better 

jozommm's review against another edition

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informative inspiring medium-paced

4.0

amarettto's review against another edition

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4.0

I already knew for the most part was I was in for with this book, since I read Sapiens and the last chapter(s) gave us a glimpse of what the author envisioned the future of humanity would look like. That part of the book was the most intriguing to me which is why I was really excited that there was a follow up to it.

There were some ideas that were reiterated in this book that were already covered in Sapiens, so I thought that was a bit unnecessary but I loved the parts that covered why he thinks humans are on the path that they are, and what we as a race think we are headed toward (vs. what we actually may be headed toward). At times when we struggle to find meaning in things because today is so different from centuries ago and what was meaningful then, precisely that is important to keep in mind - that we are in a different era altogether and are approaching a new religion that is dataism. It is acceptable to change your faith and have new beliefs. At the same time, it is perhaps time to accept that a future of intelligence without consciousness is very real. I particularly liked the example of the "stock market having no consciousness" because though it behaves like it has mood swings and really possesses an immense amount of information and intelligence, yes, it has no conscious mind and is the perfect example of what the new mind looks like.

There are perhaps too many notes and quotes I've bookmarked from the book, but one of my favorites was the idea that the source of meaning and authority has relocated from the sky to human feelings. What people saw as the universe teeming with gods and spirits before, people have now come to find within themselves. Being self aware and looking into an interior world has transformed heaven and hell from being "real" places to inner forces within our psyche, forms our brain tends to take up. Reading about shifts in thinking and what could be was amazing, I enjoyed the perspective the author brought, as always, and am comforted that this change in what is real and possible today is something that should be and is acknowledged, because now we know to change our ways of thinking too and not accept that what was meaningful or possible only back in time, is also so today.

mansikwatra's review against another edition

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3.0

I'd give it 3.5 actually. I loved the book, but this rating is relative to his other book, Sapiens. While Sapiens felt complete in itself, Homo Deus was a bit all over the place and repetitive at times. But it still presents some great ideas and makes for an eye-opening read. A must-read.