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施瓦布, Fourth Industrial Revolution

(2022-09-12 08:38:17) 下一个

第四次工业革命

林毅夫、姜建清、董明珠等鼎力推荐!中国制造2025,德国工业4.0美国智能制造的核心力量,一场席卷世界的社会大变革来了!
 

改变世界发展进程, 助力全人类发展目标,席卷世界的第四次工业革命来了!

  前三次工业革命酝酿了几十年之久,而如今这场革命如海啸一般迅速席卷了我们的生活。这一次工业革命不再局限于某一特定领域。无论是移动网络和传感器,还是纳米技术、大脑研究、3D打印技术、材料科学、计算机信息处理……甚至它们之间的相互作用和辅助效用均是此次工业革命涉足的领域,而这样的组合势必产生强大的联动力量。此外,此次工业革命不再是某一个产品或服务的革新,它是整个系统的创新。这场革命将对经济、商业、政府、包括个人带来巨大的影响。

  ★ 中国不能缺席的一场革命——第四次工业革命

  前两次工业革命让中国陷入了落后挨打的尴尬局面,第三次工业革命中国很早觉醒,但也只搭上了列车的后半节。面对第四次工业革命,中国拥有工程技术人才储备多、本土市场大、经济增长势头良好、储蓄率高等优势,但制度是否成为制约创新的桎梏,产业发展是否能跟上技术的步伐,能否在当下把握住机遇在此次革命浪潮中崛起至关重要。 了解第四次工业革命不可不读这本书。

  ★全方位,立体解读第四次工业革命

  世界经济论坛创始人、执行主席施瓦布教授解读第四次工业革命,详细介绍第四次工业革命的本质、后果和影响,以及我们应采取什么措施利用本次工业革命为共同利益服务。此外,它将帮助人们更好地认识技术革命的全面性、速度及其全 方位影响,构建技术革命的思维框架,列出核心问题与可能的应对措施;并提供一个平台,激励公共与私营部门就技术革命问题开展相关合作。

 

内容简介

  蒸汽机的发明驱动了第一次工业革命,流水线作业和电力的使用引发了第二次工业革命,半导体、计算机、互联网的发明和应用催生了第三次工业革命。

  在社会和技术指数级进步的推动下,第四次工业革命的进程又开始了!这一轮工业革命的核心是智能化与信息化,进而形成一个高度灵活、人性化、数字化的产品生产与服务模式。

  在这本《第四次工业革命》中,施瓦布认为,这场革命正以前所未有的态势向我们席卷而来,它发展速度之快、范围之广、程度之深丝毫不逊于前三次工业革命。它将数字技术、物理技术、生物技术有机融合在一起迸发出强大的力量影响着我们的经济和社会。

  施瓦布还详细阐述了可植入技术、数字化身份、物联网、3D打印、无人驾驶、人工智能、机器人、区块链、大数据、智慧城市等技术变革对我们这个社会的深刻影响。

  在当前阶段,中国也面临着传统企业转型、制造业升级等重大问题。不论是政府、企业还是个人,全面了解第四次工业革命的内涵和意义,必将是角逐未来世界的重要砝码。

  正如《第四次工业革命》作者所说,第四次工业革命正在到来,中国凭借其一系列开放创新,必将成为新一波经济活动和技术创新浪潮的“弄潮儿”。

 

作者简介

  克劳斯·施瓦布,世界经济论坛创始人兼执行主席。

  1971年,施瓦布在其出版的《机械工程领域的现代企业管理》一书中提出“多方利益相关者”概念。他认为现代企业管理不仅要为股东服务,也应兼顾所有相关方的利益,才可实现基业长青。同年,在此概念引导下,施瓦布创立世界经济论坛,并将其发展成为当今世界重要的公私合作平台。

  施瓦布拥有弗里堡大学经济学博士学位、瑞士苏黎世联邦理工学院工程学博士学位,以及哈佛大学约翰·F·肯尼迪政府学院公共管理硕士学位。1972年,他成为日内瓦大学年轻的教授,荣获多项国内外荣誉。

 

目录
致中国读者:
前言
第一章 第四次工业革命来了!
从工业4.0到第四次工业革命
一场深刻的系统性变革
第二章 驱动革命的三驾马车
大趋势,大机遇,大挑战
技术引爆点
第三章 颠覆性影响
经济:爆发式增长和就业困境
企业:不改变就灭亡
放眼国家和全球
前所未有的社会变革
无孔不入的技术
未来之路
迎战第四次工业革命的4种智慧
展望2025:深度变革
变革1:可植入技术
变革2:数字化身份
变革3:视觉成为新的交互界面
变革4:可穿戴设备联网
变革5:普适计算
变革6:便携式超级计算机
变革7:全民无限存储
变革8:万物互联
变革9:数字化家庭
变革10:智慧城市
变革11:运用大数据进行决策
变革12:无人驾驶汽车
变革13:人工智能与决策
变革14:人工智能与白领工作
变革15:机器人与服务
变革16:比特币和区块链
变革17:共享经济
变革18:政府和区块链
变革19:3D打印与制造业
变革20:3D打印与人类健康
变革21:3D打印与消费品
变革22:定制人类
变革23:神经技术
致谢
媒体评论

  以大数据为核心的第四次工业革命给我国的弯道超车提供了一个历史机遇。但像过去的工业革命一样,在推动生产力水平提高、物质丰富的同时,这次革命也给个人以及整体的经济、社会、文化和政治的发展带来新的挑战。这本由世界经济论坛创始人施瓦布教授撰写的新著是每个关心自己、中国乃至世界未来的人必须仔细阅读和深思的书。

  --北京大学教授,世界银行前高级副行长、首席经济学家 林毅夫

 

  正如施瓦布教授在书中指出的,在第四次工业革命的影响下,各行各业正在发生重大转变。从世界金融业的发展历史看,决定一家金融企业能否真正屹立不倒且基业长青的,不仅是技术本身,而是能否在恪守金融基本规则的前提下依托技术来变革思维、改进管理、创新模式,创造出新的核心竞争力。

  -- 中国工商银行董事长 姜建清

 

  企业不能急功近利,要脚踏实地掌握技术核心,正如施瓦布教授在书中指出的,如何利用第四次工业革命不断寻求创新,真正提高消费者的生活质量。

  -- 格力集团董事长 董明珠

 

  第四次工业革命的主要特征是技术的融合,消除物理世界、数字世界和生物世界之间的界限,认识和理解这次革命需要跨界思维,而克劳斯·施瓦布先生是很好的解读者。

  --财新传媒总编辑、世界经济论坛国际媒体理事会成员 胡舒立

 

  以互联网承载的新技术融合为典型特征的第四次工业革命将从速度、深度和广度上深刻地影响政治、经济、科技和文化的方方面面,以及政府、私营企业、民间机构、广大民众等各个主体。积极拥抱变革才能顺利赢得发展。施瓦布教授用他独特的视角和非凡的洞察力描绘了第四次工业革命对整个社会带来的冲击和变化、机遇与挑战。我们庆幸生活在这个变革的时代,更庆幸施瓦布教授及时为我们打开了一扇门,一扇可以让我们看到希望和未来的思考之门!

  --中国互联网络信息中心主任研究员、世界经济论坛 世界青年领袖 李晓东

 

  要想更加准确地把握第四次工业革命的趋势和影响,本书是值得细读的一部力作。

  -- 国务院发展研究中心副主任、世界经济论坛世界议程理事会中国议题组副主席 隆国强

 

  本书从世界视野观察新一轮工业革命的特点,预测其广泛和深入的影响,具有独特的视角,值得广大读者期待。

  --清华大学教授、世界经济论坛世界议程理事会“电子科技的未来”议题组成员 魏少军

 

前言
  前言
  当今时代,我们面临着纷繁复杂的挑战,其中很严峻、很重大的挑战莫过于如何理解并塑造本次新技术革命,这不亚于人类的一次变革。这次革命刚刚开始,正在彻底颠覆我们的生活、工作和互相关联的方式。无论是规模、广度还是复杂程度,第四次工业革命都与人类过去经历的变革截然不同。
  我们尚未完全了解这次新技术革命的速度和广度。仅以移动设备为例,如今,移动设备将地球上几十亿人口连接到了一起,具有的处理和存储能力,并为人们提供获取知识的途径,由此创造了无限的可能性。另外,各种新兴突破性技术出人意料地集中出现,涵盖了诸如人工智能、机器人、物联网、无人驾驶交通工具、3D(三维)打印、纳米技术、生物技术、材料科学、能源储存、量子计算等诸多领域。尽管其中很多创新成果还处于初期阶段,但是在物理、数字和生物技术相结合的推动下,它们在发展过程中相互促进并不断融合,现在已经发展到了一个转折点。各行各业都在发生重大转变,主要表现为:新的商业模式出现,现有商业模式被颠覆,生产、消费、运输与交付体系被重塑。社会层面的一个范例是,我们的工作与沟通方式,以及自我表达、获取信息和娱乐的方式正在发生改变。同样,政府、各类组织机构以及教育、医疗和交通体系正在被重塑。如果我们用创新的方式利用技术,改变人们的行为和生产、消费体系,我们就有望为环境再生和保护提供支持,避免因外部效应产生隐性成本。无论从规模、速度还是广度来看,本次技术革命带来的变化都具有历史性意义。
  新兴技术的发展和运用还存在巨大的不确定性,这意味着我们尚不清楚本次工业革命将如何推动各行业变革,但变革的复杂性和各行业的互联性表明,国际社会所有利益相关者,包括政界、商界、学术界和公民社会在内,都有责任共同努力,加深对新兴趋势的理解。
  为了塑造一个反映我们共同目标和价值观的美好未来,共识至关重要。我们必须对下列问题形成全面了解并达成世界共识:技术正在如何改变当代人以及子孙后代的生活?技术正在如何重塑人类赖以生存的经济、社会、文化和环境?
  这些改变是如此深刻,以至于人类在其发展历史上从未迎来如此美好的前景,也从未面临如此严峻的风险。然而我担心的是,决策者们往往囿于传统的(非颠覆性)线性思维,或者过于关注眼前的危机,而难以对影响未来的各种颠覆和创新力量进行战略性思考。
  我知道,一些学者和专业人士认为我所讨论的这些进步只是第三次工业革命的延续。但在我看来,我们正在经历一场具有自身特性的第四次革命,主要有以下三大原因:
  速度:和前几次工业革命不同,本次革命呈现出指数级而非线性的发展速度,这是因为我们目前生活在一个高度互联、包罗万象的世界,而且新技术也在不断催生更新、更强大的技术。
  广度与深度:第四次工业革命建立在数字革命的基础之上,结合了各种各样的技术,这些技术正给我们的经济、商业、社会和个人带来前所未有的改变。它不仅改变着我们所做的事情和做事的方式,甚至在改变人类自身。
  系统性影响:它包含国家、公司、行业之间(和内部)以及整个社会所有体系的变革。
  我写这本书的目的是提供一本关于第四次工业革命的“入门读物”。本书介绍了此次工业革命的本质、后果和影响,以及我们应采取什么措施利用本次工业革命为共同利益服务。本书适用于所有对未来新事物有兴趣,并致力于利用本次颠覆性变革的机会,塑造一个更美好世界的人。
  《第四次工业革命》具有以下三个主要目标:
  ·帮助人们更好地认识技术革命的全面性、速度及其全方位影响;
  ·构建技术革命的思维框架,列出核心问题与可能的应对措施;
  ·提供一个平台,激励公共部门与私营部门就技术革命问题开展相关合作。
  总之,本书旨在强调技术与社会和谐共处的方式。技术并非是我们无法控制的一个外在因素。我们不必囿于“要么接受,要么拒绝”这样非此即彼的二元选择。相反,我们要把握这次剧烈的技术变革机会,反思我们的本质与世界观。我们越深入思考如何利用这场技术革命,就越能审视自身以及这些技术所催生的潜在社会模式,我们也就更有机会推动革命的发展,从而改善世界状况。
  推动第四次工业革命的发展,赋权于民并以人为本,而不是去人性化并造成社会分裂,这绝非是某一个利益相关群体或行业靠一己之力就能完成的工作,也不是某一个国家或地区单枪匹马就能完成的任务。这次工业革命的本质和世界性,意味着它会对所有国家、经济体、行业和公众产生影响,同时也会受到他们的影响。因此,我们必须跨越学术、社会、政治、国家和行业的界限,投入大量精力开展多方合作。这样的互动与合作,对于国际社会就第四次工业革命形成充满正能量和希望的统一认识必不可少,它能让所有个体、群体和地区都能参与当前的转型进程,并从中受益。
  本书包含的许多信息和我本人的分析都基于世界经济论坛持续开展的项目与倡议,并且在论坛近期的活动中得以完善、探讨和质疑。因此,本书也为世界经济论坛提供了一个未来行动框架。我也从与很多人的对话中获得了灵感,他们有的是商界、政界和公民社会领袖,有的是技术先锋与年轻人。从这个意义上来说,本书是一本源于群体智慧的书,是世界经济论坛众多社区共同的智慧结晶。
  本书前半部分有三章:第一章概括介绍了第四次工业革命的整体情况;第二章介绍了一些具有变革能力的主要技术;第三章深入分析了第四次工业革命的影响及其带来的政策挑战。在本书后半部分,我针对如何更好地适应、塑造并掌控第四次工业革命,提出了一些具有实际意义的建议与解决方案。
精彩书摘
  “革命”一词指的是突然出现的剧变。革命伴随着人类历史的始终:每每出现新技术,出现看待世界的新视角,人类的经济体制和社会结构便会发生深刻变革。如果以历史的长河作为参照,这些突然发生的变革可能要持续很多年才能全面展开。
  人类生活方式的首次深度转变大约发生在10000年前。当时,通过驯养动物,我们从采集时代过渡到了农耕时代。这次农业革命使畜力和人力得到了结合,推动了生产、运输和交通的发展。此后,粮食产量逐步增加,有效促进了人口增长和人类聚居地面积的扩大,并由此催生了城市化和城市的崛起。
  继农业革命之后,到了18世纪下半叶,一系列工业革命相继而来。这些革命标志着肌肉力量逐渐被机械力量取代,发展到今天的第四次工业革命时代,认知能力的提高正在促进人类生产力的进一步提升。
  第一次工业革命大约从1760年延续至1840年。由铁路建设和蒸汽机的发明触发的这次革命,引领人类进入机械生产的时代。第二次工业革命始于19世纪末,延续至20世纪初,随着电力和生产线的出现,规模化生产应运而生。第三次工业革命始于20世纪60年代。这一次革命通常被称为计算机革命、数字革命,因为催生这场革命的是半导体技术、大型计算机(60年代)、个人计算机(七八十年代)和互联网(90年代)的发展。
  基于前三次工业革命的各种定义和学术观点,我有理由认为,我们当前正处在第四次工业革命的开端。第四次工业革命始于这个世纪之交,是在数字革命的基础上发展起来的,其特点是:同过去相比,互联网变得无所不在,移动性大幅提高;传感器体积变得更小、性能更强大、成本也更低;与此同时,人工智能和机器学习也开始崭露锋芒。
  以计算机软硬件和网络为核心的数字技术早已不是什么新鲜事物,但与第三次工业革命不同的是,数字技术正变得更为精深,一体化程度更高,由此正在引起各国社会和世界经济发生变革。麻省理工学院(MIT)的埃里克·布莱恩约弗森(Erik Brynjolfsson)和安德鲁·麦卡菲(Andrew Mcafee)两位教授在2014年合著的同名著作中,将本阶段称为“第二次机器革命”。书中指出,当今世界正处在一个拐点上,通过发展自动化和生产“前所未有的事物”,这些数字技术的影响力将得到全面发挥。
  在德国,关于工业4.0的探讨方兴未艾。这一概念很早是在2011年的汉诺威工业展上提出,它描绘了世界价值链将发生怎样的变革。第四次工业革命通过推动“智能工厂”的发展,在世界范围实现虚拟和实体生产体系的灵活协作。这有助于实现产品生产的彻底定制化,并催生新的运营模式。

The Fourth Industrial Revolution: what it means, how to respond

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2016/01/the-fourth-industrial-revolution-what-it-means-and-how-to-respond/

Klaus Schwab 

 

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Fourth Industrial Revolution

 

We stand on the brink of a technological revolution that will fundamentally alter the way we live, work, and relate to one another. In its scale, scope, and complexity, the transformation will be unlike anything humankind has experienced before. We do not yet know just how it will unfold, but one thing is clear: the response to it must be integrated and comprehensive, involving all stakeholders of the global polity, from the public and private sectors to academia and civil society.

The First Industrial Revolution used water and steam power to mechanize production. The Second used electric power to create mass production. The Third used electronics and information technology to automate production. Now a Fourth Industrial Revolution is building on the Third, the digital revolution that has been occurring since the middle of the last century. It is characterized by a fusion of technologies that is blurring the lines between the physical, digital, and biological spheres.

4th-industrial-revolution

There are three reasons why today’s transformations represent not merely a prolongation of the Third Industrial Revolution but rather the arrival of a Fourth and distinct one: velocity, scope, and systems impact. The speed of current breakthroughs has no historical precedent. When compared with previous industrial revolutions, the Fourth is evolving at an exponential rather than a linear pace. Moreover, it is disrupting almost every industry in every country. And the breadth and depth of these changes herald the transformation of entire systems of production, management, and governance.

The possibilities of billions of people connected by mobile devices, with unprecedented processing power, storage capacity, and access to knowledge, are unlimited. And these possibilities will be multiplied by emerging technology breakthroughs in fields such as artificial intelligence, robotics, the Internet of Things, autonomous vehicles, 3-D printing, nanotechnology, biotechnology, materials science, energy storage, and quantum computing.

Already, artificial intelligence is all around us, from self-driving cars and drones to virtual assistants and software that translate or invest. Impressive progress has been made in AI in recent years, driven by exponential increases in computing power and by the availability of vast amounts of data, from software used to discover new drugs to algorithms used to predict our cultural interests. Digital fabrication technologies, meanwhile, are interacting with the biological world on a daily basis. Engineers, designers, and architects are combining computational design, additive manufacturing, materials engineering, and synthetic biology to pioneer a symbiosis between microorganisms, our bodies, the products we consume, and even the buildings we inhabit.

Challenges and opportunities

Like the revolutions that preceded it, the Fourth Industrial Revolution has the potential to raise global income levels and improve the quality of life for populations around the world. To date, those who have gained the most from it have been consumers able to afford and access the digital world; technology has made possible new products and services that increase the efficiency and pleasure of our personal lives. Ordering a cab, booking a flight, buying a product, making a payment, listening to music, watching a film, or playing a game—any of these can now be done remotely.

In the future, technological innovation will also lead to a supply-side miracle, with long-term gains in efficiency and productivity. Transportation and communication costs will drop, logistics and global supply chains will become more effective, and the cost of trade will diminish, all of which will open new markets and drive economic growth.

At the same time, as the economists Erik Brynjolfsson and Andrew McAfee have pointed out, the revolution could yield greater inequality, particularly in its potential to disrupt labor markets. As automation substitutes for labor across the entire economy, the net displacement of workers by machines might exacerbate the gap between returns to capital and returns to labor. On the other hand, it is also possible that the displacement of workers by technology will, in aggregate, result in a net increase in safe and rewarding jobs.

We cannot foresee at this point which scenario is likely to emerge, and history suggests that the outcome is likely to be some combination of the two. However, I am convinced of one thing—that in the future, talent, more than capital, will represent the critical factor of production. This will give rise to a job market increasingly segregated into “low-skill/low-pay” and “high-skill/high-pay” segments, which in turn will lead to an increase in social tensions.

In addition to being a key economic concern, inequality represents the greatest societal concern associated with the Fourth Industrial Revolution. The largest beneficiaries of innovation tend to be the providers of intellectual and physical capital—the innovators, shareholders, and investors—which explains the rising gap in wealth between those dependent on capital versus labor. Technology is therefore one of the main reasons why incomes have stagnated, or even decreased, for a majority of the population in high-income countries: the demand for highly skilled workers has increased while the demand for workers with less education and lower skills has decreased. The result is a job market with a strong demand at the high and low ends, but a hollowing out of the middle.

This helps explain why so many workers are disillusioned and fearful that their own real incomes and those of their children will continue to stagnate. It also helps explain why middle classes around the world are increasingly experiencing a pervasive sense of dissatisfaction and unfairness. A winner-takes-all economy that offers only limited access to the middle class is a recipe for democratic malaise and dereliction.

Discontent can also be fueled by the pervasiveness of digital technologies and the dynamics of information sharing typified by social media. More than 30 percent of the global population now uses social media platforms to connect, learn, and share information. In an ideal world, these interactions would provide an opportunity for cross-cultural understanding and cohesion. However, they can also create and propagate unrealistic expectations as to what constitutes success for an individual or a group, as well as offer opportunities for extreme ideas and ideologies to spread.

The impact on business

An underlying theme in my conversations with global CEOs and senior business executives is that the acceleration of innovation and the velocity of disruption are hard to comprehend or anticipate and that these drivers constitute a source of constant surprise, even for the best connected and most well informed. Indeed, across all industries, there is clear evidence that the technologies that underpin the Fourth Industrial Revolution are having a major impact on businesses.

On the supply side, many industries are seeing the introduction of new technologies that create entirely new ways of serving existing needs and significantly disrupt existing industry value chains. Disruption is also flowing from agile, innovative competitors who, thanks to access to global digital platforms for research, development, marketing, sales, and distribution, can oust well-established incumbents faster than ever by improving the quality, speed, or price at which value is delivered.

Major shifts on the demand side are also occurring, as growing transparency, consumer engagement, and new patterns of consumer behavior (increasingly built upon access to mobile networks and data) force companies to adapt the way they design, market, and deliver products and services.

A key trend is the development of technology-enabled platforms that combine both demand and supply to disrupt existing industry structures, such as those we see within the “sharing” or “on demand” economy. These technology platforms, rendered easy to use by the smartphone, convene people, assets, and data—thus creating entirely new ways of consuming goods and services in the process. In addition, they lower the barriers for businesses and individuals to create wealth, altering the personal and professional environments of workers. These new platform businesses are rapidly multiplying into many new services, ranging from laundry to shopping, from chores to parking, from massages to travel.

On the whole, there are four main effects that the Fourth Industrial Revolution has on business—on customer expectations, on product enhancement, on collaborative innovation, and on organizational forms. Whether consumers or businesses, customers are increasingly at the epicenter of the economy, which is all about improving how customers are served. Physical products and services, moreover, can now be enhanced with digital capabilities that increase their value. New technologies make assets more durable and resilient, while data and analytics are transforming how they are maintained. A world of customer experiences, data-based services, and asset performance through analytics, meanwhile, requires new forms of collaboration, particularly given the speed at which innovation and disruption are taking place. And the emergence of global platforms and other new business models, finally, means that talent, culture, and organizational forms will have to be rethought.

Overall, the inexorable shift from simple digitization (the Third Industrial Revolution) to innovation based on combinations of technologies (the Fourth Industrial Revolution) is forcing companies to reexamine the way they do business. The bottom line, however, is the same: business leaders and senior executives need to understand their changing environment, challenge the assumptions of their operating teams, and relentlessly and continuously innovate.

The impact on government

As the physical, digital, and biological worlds continue to converge, new technologies and platforms will increasingly enable citizens to engage with governments, voice their opinions, coordinate their efforts, and even circumvent the supervision of public authorities. Simultaneously, governments will gain new technological powers to increase their control over populations, based on pervasive surveillance systems and the ability to control digital infrastructure. On the whole, however, governments will increasingly face pressure to change their current approach to public engagement and policymaking, as their central role of conducting policy diminishes owing to new sources of competition and the redistribution and decentralization of power that new technologies make possible.

Ultimately, the ability of government systems and public authorities to adapt will determine their survival. If they prove capable of embracing a world of disruptive change, subjecting their structures to the levels of transparency and efficiency that will enable them to maintain their competitive edge, they will endure. If they cannot evolve, they will face increasing trouble.

This will be particularly true in the realm of regulation. Current systems of public policy and decision-making evolved alongside the Second Industrial Revolution, when decision-makers had time to study a specific issue and develop the necessary response or appropriate regulatory framework. The whole process was designed to be linear and mechanistic, following a strict “top down” approach.

But such an approach is no longer feasible. Given the Fourth Industrial Revolution’s rapid pace of change and broad impacts, legislators and regulators are being challenged to an unprecedented degree and for the most part are proving unable to cope.

How, then, can they preserve the interest of the consumers and the public at large while continuing to support innovation and technological development? By embracing “agile” governance, just as the private sector has increasingly adopted agile responses to software development and business operations more generally. This means regulators must continuously adapt to a new, fast-changing environment, reinventing themselves so they can truly understand what it is they are regulating. To do so, governments and regulatory agencies will need to collaborate closely with business and civil society.

The Fourth Industrial Revolution will also profoundly impact the nature of national and international security, affecting both the probability and the nature of conflict. The history of warfare and international security is the history of technological innovation, and today is no exception. Modern conflicts involving states are increasingly “hybrid” in nature, combining traditional battlefield techniques with elements previously associated with nonstate actors. The distinction between war and peace, combatant and noncombatant, and even violence and nonviolence (think cyberwarfare) is becoming uncomfortably blurry.

As this process takes place and new technologies such as autonomous or biological weapons become easier to use, individuals and small groups will increasingly join states in being capable of causing mass harm. This new vulnerability will lead to new fears. But at the same time, advances in technology will create the potential to reduce the scale or impact of violence, through the development of new modes of protection, for example, or greater precision in targeting.

The impact on people

The Fourth Industrial Revolution, finally, will change not only what we do but also who we are. It will affect our identity and all the issues associated with it: our sense of privacy, our notions of ownership, our consumption patterns, the time we devote to work and leisure, and how we develop our careers, cultivate our skills, meet people, and nurture relationships. It is already changing our health and leading to a “quantified” self, and sooner than we think it may lead to human augmentation. The list is endless because it is bound only by our imagination.

I am a great enthusiast and early adopter of technology, but sometimes I wonder whether the inexorable integration of technology in our lives could diminish some of our quintessential human capacities, such as compassion and cooperation. Our relationship with our smartphones is a case in point. Constant connection may deprive us of one of life’s most important assets: the time to pause, reflect, and engage in meaningful conversation.

One of the greatest individual challenges posed by new information technologies is privacy. We instinctively understand why it is so essential, yet the tracking and sharing of information about us is a crucial part of the new connectivity. Debates about fundamental issues such as the impact on our inner lives of the loss of control over our data will only intensify in the years ahead. Similarly, the revolutions occurring in biotechnology and AI, which are redefining what it means to be human by pushing back the current thresholds of life span, health, cognition, and capabilities, will compel us to redefine our moral and ethical boundaries.

Shaping the future

Neither technology nor the disruption that comes with it is an exogenous force over which humans have no control. All of us are responsible for guiding its evolution, in the decisions we make on a daily basis as citizens, consumers, and investors. We should thus grasp the opportunity and power we have to shape the Fourth Industrial Revolution and direct it toward a future that reflects our common objectives and values.

To do this, however, we must develop a comprehensive and globally shared view of how technology is affecting our lives and reshaping our economic, social, cultural, and human environments. There has never been a time of greater promise, or one of greater potential peril. Today’s decision-makers, however, are too often trapped in traditional, linear thinking, or too absorbed by the multiple crises demanding their attention, to think strategically about the forces of disruption and innovation shaping our future.

In the end, it all comes down to people and values. We need to shape a future that works for all of us by putting people first and empowering them. In its most pessimistic, dehumanized form, the Fourth Industrial Revolution may indeed have the potential to “robotize” humanity and thus to deprive us of our heart and soul. But as a complement to the best parts of human nature—creativity, empathy, stewardship—it can also lift humanity into a new collective and moral consciousness based on a shared sense of destiny. It is incumbent on us all to make sure the latter prevails.

This article was first published in Foreign Affairs

Author: Klaus Schwab is Founder and Executive Chairman of the World Economic Forum

Image: An Aeronavics drone sits in a paddock near the town of Raglan, New Zealand, July 6, 2015. REUTERS/Naomi Tajitsu

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