Dekorationsartikel gehören nicht zum Leistungsumfang.
Sprache:
Englisch
Regulärer Preis:
inkl. MwSt.
25,45 €
Versandkostenfrei per Post / DHL
Lieferzeit 1-2 Wochen
Kategorien:
Beschreibung
At two in the morning, a father holds his three-week-old daughter and scrolls with his free hand. The feed slides across her sleeping face in shades of blue and white. She is the most unmemed human on the planet. By the time she is sixteen, she will have been measured a thousand times by a mirror that is always measuring back.
For ten thousand years, the bargain of human culture was simple: making a thing cost a life, and looking at it was nearly free. A story had to be remembered. A book had to be copied. A belief had to pass through a body, a voice, a hand, a risk.
That ratio has inverted.
Today, generative machines can produce a sentence, an image, an argument, a song or a voice in milliseconds. Creation is cheap. The hour of human attention spent judging it is now the expensive side of the transaction.
The Great Inversion traces the history of cultural replication from the prehistoric fire to the printing press, the feed and the generative model. It asks why some ideas survive, why the mirror of the internet feels so personal, and what changes when the replicator no longer needs a human host in the old way.
This is not another book telling you to throw your phone into the sea. It is not a detox manual. It is a civilisational history that lands inside an ordinary life, and asks a harder question: what does a person still do when culture can make itself faster than people can choose?
The answer is not exit. It is attention, at cost, as the one move the machine cannot make.
For readers of Sapiens, Stolen Focus, The Shallows, Filterworld and The Anxious Generation.
For ten thousand years, the bargain of human culture was simple: making a thing cost a life, and looking at it was nearly free. A story had to be remembered. A book had to be copied. A belief had to pass through a body, a voice, a hand, a risk.
That ratio has inverted.
Today, generative machines can produce a sentence, an image, an argument, a song or a voice in milliseconds. Creation is cheap. The hour of human attention spent judging it is now the expensive side of the transaction.
The Great Inversion traces the history of cultural replication from the prehistoric fire to the printing press, the feed and the generative model. It asks why some ideas survive, why the mirror of the internet feels so personal, and what changes when the replicator no longer needs a human host in the old way.
This is not another book telling you to throw your phone into the sea. It is not a detox manual. It is a civilisational history that lands inside an ordinary life, and asks a harder question: what does a person still do when culture can make itself faster than people can choose?
The answer is not exit. It is attention, at cost, as the one move the machine cannot make.
For readers of Sapiens, Stolen Focus, The Shallows, Filterworld and The Anxious Generation.
At two in the morning, a father holds his three-week-old daughter and scrolls with his free hand. The feed slides across her sleeping face in shades of blue and white. She is the most unmemed human on the planet. By the time she is sixteen, she will have been measured a thousand times by a mirror that is always measuring back.
For ten thousand years, the bargain of human culture was simple: making a thing cost a life, and looking at it was nearly free. A story had to be remembered. A book had to be copied. A belief had to pass through a body, a voice, a hand, a risk.
That ratio has inverted.
Today, generative machines can produce a sentence, an image, an argument, a song or a voice in milliseconds. Creation is cheap. The hour of human attention spent judging it is now the expensive side of the transaction.
The Great Inversion traces the history of cultural replication from the prehistoric fire to the printing press, the feed and the generative model. It asks why some ideas survive, why the mirror of the internet feels so personal, and what changes when the replicator no longer needs a human host in the old way.
This is not another book telling you to throw your phone into the sea. It is not a detox manual. It is a civilisational history that lands inside an ordinary life, and asks a harder question: what does a person still do when culture can make itself faster than people can choose?
The answer is not exit. It is attention, at cost, as the one move the machine cannot make.
For readers of Sapiens, Stolen Focus, The Shallows, Filterworld and The Anxious Generation.
For ten thousand years, the bargain of human culture was simple: making a thing cost a life, and looking at it was nearly free. A story had to be remembered. A book had to be copied. A belief had to pass through a body, a voice, a hand, a risk.
That ratio has inverted.
Today, generative machines can produce a sentence, an image, an argument, a song or a voice in milliseconds. Creation is cheap. The hour of human attention spent judging it is now the expensive side of the transaction.
The Great Inversion traces the history of cultural replication from the prehistoric fire to the printing press, the feed and the generative model. It asks why some ideas survive, why the mirror of the internet feels so personal, and what changes when the replicator no longer needs a human host in the old way.
This is not another book telling you to throw your phone into the sea. It is not a detox manual. It is a civilisational history that lands inside an ordinary life, and asks a harder question: what does a person still do when culture can make itself faster than people can choose?
The answer is not exit. It is attention, at cost, as the one move the machine cannot make.
For readers of Sapiens, Stolen Focus, The Shallows, Filterworld and The Anxious Generation.
Details
| Erscheinungsjahr: | 2026 |
|---|---|
| Fachbereich: | Kommunikationswissenschaften |
| Genre: | Importe, Medienwissenschaften |
| Rubrik: | Wissenschaften |
| Medium: | Taschenbuch |
| ISBN-13: | 9789083736808 |
| ISBN-10: | 9083736806 |
| Sprache: | Englisch |
| Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
| Autor: | Woord, Jordi Ter |
| Hersteller: | Ter Woord |
| Verantwortliche Person für die EU: | Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, D-36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr@libri.de |
| Maße: | 229 x 152 x 15 mm |
| Von/Mit: | Jordi Ter Woord |
| Erscheinungsdatum: | 01.07.2026 |
| Gewicht: | 0,405 kg |