Even "Paris in the 21st Century" wasn't as prescient as Verne's other lost work 
"Le Telephon-Photographique" (http://tinyurl.com/2k6ko5). The article includes 
an interesting drawing of the contraption from the original manuscript.

Rick

Dr. Rick Froman, Chair
Division of Humanities and Social Sciences
Box 3055
x7295
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.jbu.edu/academics/hss/faculty/rfroman.asp

Proverbs 14:15 "A simple man believes anything, but a prudent man gives thought 
to his steps."


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, December 14, 2007 10:06 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: Re: [tips] House of the Future

On 14 Dec 2007 at 1:00, Christopher D. Green wrote:
>
> Every now and again the futurists get it right. Check out this film form the 
> late 1950s "House of the Future" which strikingly correctly
> predicted e-mail, internet shopping, computer-mediated education, and
> a bunch of other stuff we now take for granted. It was all predicted to
> be in place by 1999.
>
> http://cbs2.com/video/[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>

I'd make it somewhat later than that. "Four decades ago" would date it as
1967, not too shabby but less prescient than if it were from the late
1950s. A quick Google shows one website claiming that Honeywell marketed
a "Kitchen computer" (which included a cutting board ) in 1966, and as
early as 1950 something like a home computer called the "Simon" (see
http://www.blinkenlights.com/pc.shtml) was available.

"House of the Future" didn't do too well in predicting liberation for
women from traditional household chores, though.

The real champ at this sort of thing is Jules Verne, especially his lost
novel _Paris in the 21st centrury_, written in 1863 but not published
until 1989, which predicted Paris of the 1960s. Apparently he envisioned
feminism, e-mail, burglar alarms, mass-produced higher education
(including the closure of Humanities departments), "cars, fax machines,
the city's elaborate metro and train system, gigantic cargo-carrying
vessels... the Eiffel Tower" (built 1889), not to mention " a world where
everyone is literate but doesn't read", "entire forests are not only used
for heating but also for paper",  the rise of English as the language of
science, buildings going as high as 12 stories, and the TV sitcom, with
fake audience response even.

Now there's a man who knew something about predicting.

See:  http://tinyurl.com/252w8s   (New Scientist)
http://jv.gilead.org.il/sfs/taves.71.html

Stephen

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Stephen L. Black, Ph.D.
Professor of Psychology, Emeritus
Bishop's University                e-mail:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
2600 College St.
Sherbrooke QC  J1M 1Z7
Canada

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