MAN
DOUGAL DIXON
MAN
AN ANTHROPOLOGY OF THE FUTURE
FOREWORD BY BRIAN ALDISS
Illustrations by Philip Hood
St. Martin’s Press • New York
Copyright © 1990 by Dougal Dixon
Illustrations copyright © 1990 by Philip Hood
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.
For information, address St. Martin’s Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10010
Design by Ben Cracknell
ISBN 0-312-03560-8
First edition
First printing
Printed and bound in Italy
FOREWORD by Brian Aldiss
It has become necessary to look into the future.
There must have been a time, long past, when animals much like apes looked up into the night sky and wondered about the stars: what those pinpoints of light were, and what they were for. Only a brief while after that, the apelike things acquired language; then stories began to be told, and fantasies woven about the stars overhead.
That cluster resembled a hunter and, high above, the outlines of a great bear could be discerned. Such stories, told in the Pleistocene dark, kept the bogeyman away.Animals have no interest in stars. First speculations regarding the stars represented a revolution in thought. Speculations about the future, such as this book, mark another revolution.
Future speculation is of very recent origin. Yet today no man can call himself cultured who does not occasionally look beyond his own lifetime and his children’s, if only to worry about where the cancerous growth of world population is going. Dougal Dixon’s book is an ambitious attempt to view a future as far distant from us as those ramapithecine creatures whose fragmentary remains turn up in African fossil beds.
The ability to look into the future is a recently-acquired skill. It has, in fact, all been done by mirrors: there was no seeing into the future until we could see into the past. It is the ever-changing panorama of past time which we extrapolate into future time.
The business of comprehending bygone ages was a hard lesson to learn. Fossils, those coinages of past life, were always of interest to mankind. They are mentioned by Greek writers, for instance, and certainly Herodotus recognized them as being the remains of once-living creatures, understanding that their presence in the mountains of Upper Egypt was evidence that those areas had previously been under water. Lucretius, too, in his wonderful