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- SPECIAL ISSUE: MILLENNIUM -- BEYOND THE YEAR 2000 FROM THE MANAGING EDITOR, Page 2
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- "We should all be concerned about the future because we
- will have to spend the rest of our lives there," said the
- inventor Charles Kettering. In our time, no symbol of the future
- has sparked more anticipation and mystery than the year 2000.
- And now the epic moment is close at hand. Lucky us: few people
- who ever walk the earth have had the opportunity to ring in, all
- at once, a new year, a new decade, a new century and a new
- millennium. The imminence of this extraordinary occasion
- inspired us to devote an entire special issue to the
- tantafuture before us and the great events that have set the
- stage for it. We are happy that our plans for this project
- appealed so much to IBM that it offered to become the sole
- advertiser for this issue.
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- A subject so monumental calls for some unusual approaches.
- In one such departure, we commissioned science-fiction master
- Arthur C. Clarke, the author of 2001: A Space Odyssey, to write a
- new story, set in the third millennium. His tale, The Hammer of
- God, about an asteroid that imperils the earth, is only the
- second piece of fiction ever to be published in TIME. (The first
- was a story by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in 1969.) The 74-year-old
- British futurist, who has written more than 50 books, is often
- as prescient as he is prolific. Clarke has long warned about
- humankind's vulnerability to asteroid impacts, a subject that
- is just now capturing the attention of the scientific
- mainstream. "I'm not a predictor," says Clarke. "I'm an
- extrapolator. Sometimes I hear of a scientific discovery or
- invention, and then I say, `What if? What would it imply?' "
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- The future may be fantastic, but it will also be funny,
- according to contribMerrill Markoe's portrayal of dating and
- marriage in the 21st century. Markoe, an Emmy-winning TV
- writer, is most recently the author of the essay collection What
- the Dogs Have Taught Me. We also resolved to challenge some
- assumptions about society's direction, a mission that historian
- ChristoLasch handles skillfully in an essay on the shortcomings
- of progress, which was the subject of his 1991 book, The True
- and Only Heaven.
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- All told, TIME journalists consulted more than 200
- futuristic thinkers to help shape this guide to the next
- millennium. We hope you agree that the result is an exciting
- preview of the world in which we will soon live.
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- Henry Muller
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