Jeremy Rifkin Experiences the Future

"Breakthrough Technology"
   
 
"An Unbelievable Frontier"
 

 

Jeremy Rifkin, noted futurist, lecturer, author and President of the "The Foundation on Economic Trends", in Washington, DC, had the opportunity to experience the future, here in Ojai, California, which is an emerging center for complementary therapies and frontier medicine. Here is written commentary by Jeremy Rifkin (JR) following his visit to our studio last year.

 


 

 

by Jeremy Rifkin

President of the Foundation on Economic Trends

©2005 Jeremy Rifkin

 

 

The Multisensory Stimulation System provides an opportunity for people to reintegrate their senses and could play an important role as a new kind of learning tool (1) one designed to give the human brain a heightened sense of context. So much of contemporary learning relies almost exclusively on visual imagery and auditory signals that we risk a deep loss of the more intimate senses of taste, touch, and most importantly smell. While the visual sense is the most detached and objective of the senses, and the one most identified with aggression and expropriation, the much neglected intimate senses are far more important in establishing a sense of embeddedness between people and the larger communities and environments in which they live. (See Biosphere Politics (2))

 

In an era characterized by increasing globalization, complexity, and vulnerability, it is imperative to create new tools that help the individual develop a holistic mental framework. The Multisensory Stimulation System is a breakthrough technology that if used as a learning tool _ and not simply as an entertainment medium _ would help prepare us to more fully use the full range of senses and become more integrated with the life that surrounds.

 

 


Jeremy Rifkin Quoted

Excerpts from conversations regarding the aromaComposer and the Multisensory Stimulation System

 

JR: "This is exactly what you would see in a sci-fi movie. You want something like this to be an aid and an assist in everything from health to learning."

 

JR: "If this could be a tool in learning and in health, physical and mental health, "You've opened up an unbelievable frontier.

 


 

JR on Scent & Senses

 

JR: "They say that memory in the brain is triggered by smell."

 

JR: "The most intimate experiences in memory, when you're a little kid, always is conjured up by smell; it's the smell. If you go to the more intimate senses, smell would be first, then taste, then touch I guess, then sound, then visual. It's more powerful because it's a more intimate sense."

 

JR: "Music can create all the various moods, the way the body changes with the music - aroma would do the same thing."

 

JR: "How 'bout for patients who can't get out … (of a hospital) …In a hospital you're denied all the life affirming smells that integrate human nature."


 

JR on Digital Multisensory Control

 

Jeremy Rifkin: "It also has specific advantages that in a controlled situation that you can't do in nature. What Doug's got here that's important here, is that "If you can create different combinations and keep it digitally controlled, it allows you to do clinical studies of people, where you can start to see results in specific disorders. Because you got everything controlled digitally, it's quantifiable. That's a big deal, that just opens up an enormous new area."

 

JR:"The next step, bring people together. Need the disciplines to create programs. Educators too."

 

 

JR:"One of the best business plans that I have ever seen."

 

 


More about Jeremy Rifkin

 

Jeremy Rifkin, president of the Foundation on Economic Trends, is the author of seventeen books on the impact of scientific and technological changes on the economy, the workforce, society, and the environment. His books have been translated into more than twenty languages and are used in hundreds of universities around the world.

 

Jeremy Rifkin's newest book, The European Dream, published in September 2004, represents the culmination of two decades of intellectual and political work in Europe.

The New York Times notes, in an article on the new Europe, that Mr. Rifkin is one of a handful of American intellectuals whose economic and social ideas have been widely embraced in Europe by government, industry, and civil society.

Mr. Rifkin has spent nearly 20 years commuting back and forth between America and Europe—spending upwards of one-third of his time on the continent.  He has lectured and consulted with virtually every major corporation in Europe over the past two decades.  Mr. Rifkin has also served as an advisor to government leaders and heads of state and is currently serving as a personal advisor to Romano Prodi, the President of the European Commission, the governing body of the European Union.

Mr. Rifkin's world column appears in the leading newspapers and magazines in Europe including The Guardian in the U.K., Die Suddeutsche Zeitung and Welt am Sonntag in Germany, L'Espresso in Italy, El Pais in Spain, Le Monde in France, and Clarin in Argentina.

 

Many of the ideas put forth in Mr. Rifkin's past books have had a significant influence in shaping public opinion and public policy in Europe.  His 1980 book, Entropy, was instrumental in helping shape the intellectual debate that led to the rise of the Green parties in Germany, Italy, and elsewhere in Europe.

 

Mr. Rifkin's 1995 international bestseller, The End of Work, is widely credited with jump-starting the discussion on the shorter workweek in Europe.  The book and Mr. Rifkin's subsequent consultation with French industry and French political leaders helped facilitate the successful adoption of the 35-hour workweek in France.

Mr. Rifkin's 1998 book, The Biotech Century, has become the standard reference on critical issues surrounding biotechnology and is the most widely read book in Europe on the genetic engineering revolution.  Mr. Rifkin spearheaded the fight against genetically modified foods (GMOs) in Europe in the 1990s.  Europe's opposition to GM food has become one of the critical dividing lines between Europe and America in world trade in recent years (see enclosed lead story on page one of The Wall Street Journal on Mr. Rifkin's GMO work in Europe).

Mr. Rifkin's 2000 bestseller, The Age of Access, became a lightening rod in Europe on the impact of globalization on cultural identity.  The book has also been adopted by leading companies across the EU as a corporate primer for how to make the transition from a market economy to a global network economy.  The book was the recipient of two prestigious awards, the Fnac_Arthur Andersen Business Book Award for Best Essay of 2001, and the Bruno Kreisky Award for Best Political Book of 2000.

Mr. Rifkin's 2002 bestseller, The Hydrogen Economy, helped create a continental debate around the need to shift Europe's energy regime from dependency on fossil fuels to a renewable based hydrogen regime.  In his capacity as a personal advisor to President Prodi, Mr. Rifkin drafted the critical memorandum which led to the EU becoming the first superpower to implement a long-term plan to become a fully integrated hydrogen economy by mid-century.

 

 

 

Back to aromaComposer Index

 

Notes:

 

1) "Learning tools" can help us learn to feel good. They can teach us how to relax, how to let go of stress, how to heal ourselves, and can lead each of us toward realization of our authentic self.

 

2) These concepts are explored in depth within Jeremy Rifkin's book, "Biosphere Politics"

 

 

Return to Top

 

 
 
©2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006 R. D. Nelson. All Rights Reserved.