Future consciousness is the total set of psychological abilities,
processes, and experiences that humans use to understand and deal with
the future. We first become aware of the future along with the past and
present through our perception of time--of change, duration, and
stability; of becoming and passing away; of patterns, rhythms, and forms
of change.
We expand and enrich our consciousness of the future by building up
the mental framework of images, concepts, and principles through which
we understand and experience time. We do this not only through memories
of our own personal experiences but through learning history, observing
and studying contemporary trends, and imagining possible futures.
Without anticipation, hope, goal setting, and planning--all features of
future consciousness--we would be aimless, lost, mentally deficient,
passive, and reactive. On the other hand, we can develop all these
capacities and in so doing improve the total make-up of our mind and
character. A growing understanding of the future fosters intellectual
synthesis and higher-level thinking and contributes to the development
of ethics, character virtues, and--most broadly of all--the multifaceted
capacity of wisdom.
Developing Our Foresight
All adult humans possess some capacity of foresight--the ability to
imagine the future. We could not intentionally develop and act on
conscious future goals unless we possessed a minimal ability to imagine
the future and see in our "mind's eye" our goals and
aspirations. But people differ greatly in their ability to think ahead.
Some people have trouble thinking of what might happen tomorrow while
others can imagine all kinds of richly defined alternative futures,
sometimes extending centuries or even millennia into the future.
Few of us develop our foresight capacity as much as we can and
should. We may envision only very short-term goals, or we may routinely
direct our lives toward longstanding goals that are rarely questioned or
altered. We may put little effort into attempting to imagine goals that
are different from those we have pursued in the past. We may just never
think much about changing our goals. Yet, if we simply target the same
goals over and over again, our lives will remain stuck in the past.
There are many benefits associated with expanding our capacity for
foresight, and we can do it by learning how to imagine many
possibilities when we are thinking about the future. One simple
technique is to repeatedly pose the question "What if?" and
then visualize whatever possibilities occur to us. Developing our
foresight in this manner can amplify our power to envision new and
more-complex goals. Even if we simply engage in speculative visioning
about the future, with no thought of practical or personal relevance, we
will nourish our imaginative powers. By enriching our minds with new
possibilities and expanding the psychological space in which we think,
we increase our mental and behavioral freedom.
When we use our imagination to envision future possibilities, we
bring our creativity into play. Human creativity is the ability to
produce novel ideas, inventions, and behaviors. There are many ways to
foster creativity in people, and exercising and developing foresight is
definitely one of the best, because foresight is not bound by the
constraints of the present. Imagining possible futures helps us to break
out of mental boxes in which our thoughts are confined.
Self-Narratives: The "Stories" Of Our Lives
In thinking about ourselves, we do not see ourselves as static
beings; rather, our lives are an ongoing story that we tell ourselves.
We are both the narrator and the main character--the author and the
hero--of our own story. We make of ourselves a self-created creation, or
what psychologist Antonio Damasio calls "an autobiographical
self."
Our self-narratives include both the past and the future of
significant events and themes that summarize our life journey up to the
present, as well as our hopes and aspirations for the future. These
self-narratives give temporal coherence to our lives, connecting
together causally our past, present, and future. In this way, our
self-narratives give us a sense of how we have come to be where we are
and where this ongoing journey is heading in the future. As the creator
of this narrative, we interpret and shape the meaning and substance of
the journey and, consequently, who we are and who we want to become.
One highly significant theme in our self-narratives is the relative
strength of optimism and pessimism in how we view the story of our
lives. Psychologist Martin Seligman argues that the belief that one can
positively affect the future is critical to optimistic thinking.
Seligman defines optimism as a way of thinking involving the beliefs
that misfortunes are relatively short-lived, limited in their effect,
and due to external circumstances. By contrast, pessimists not only have
negative images about the future but also believe that they cannot
effect any positive change in what is to come. Pessimists believe that
they are doomed to failure.
Seligman contends that the emotional state of depression is
primarily due to pessimistic thinking. He also points out that optimism
and pessimism are self-fulfilling prophecies. Each mode of thinking
tends to reinforce the behavior that leads to the very results that are
anticipated. If you are pessimistic and expect to fail, you are likely
to do things that increase the likelihood that you will fail again; when
you do, it confirms your pessimistic outlook. But Seligman also believes
that pessimistic habits of thought can be changed through relearning,
education, and training.
Self-Efficacy vs. Helplessness
Another psychologist, Albert Bandura of Stanford University, has
studied the beliefs people have about their own
"self-efficacy" and the effects of those beliefs upon
behavior. Self-efficacy is belief in one's ability to achieve
one's goals. People with low self-efficacy believe they are
relatively powerless with respect to the future, whereas those with high
self-efficacy believe they have a high level of control or influence on
the future. High self-efficacy is the opposite of helplessness. People
with high self-efficacy set realistic goals and persist in achieving
these goals. People with low self-efficacy set unrealistic or minimal
goals and are very likely to give up as soon as challenges or
difficulties arise.
The goal of many forms of psychotherapy is to help people to see
that there are alternatives to the negative future scenarios they
foresee for themselves and that they have some power to change the
direction of their lives. Opening the mind to future possibilities and
raising one's perceived self-efficacy in realizing positive
possibilities is, in essence, what psychotherapy is all about; it is a
form of changing and expanding one's future consciousness.
Psychotherapy often involves helping clients to set new goals,
articulate plans, and monitor follow-through on these plans--all forms
of future consciousness. Psychotherapy also works toward helping people
to think differently about themselves--to see themselves as more capable
of change than they previously believed. Psychotherapy facilitates
changes in a person's self-narrative.
Mental health might be defined as the degree to which one's
behavior and personality are centered on hope and motivated by positive
goals; conversely, mental illness can be defined as the degree to which
a person's life revolves around fear, avoidance, and escape. Mental
health can therefore be described as a positive, goal-oriented mode of
future consciousness, while mental illness can be described as a
negative, avoidance-oriented mode of future consciousness.
Psychologist Wallace Wilkins has studied the emotional and
motivational effects of people's beliefs about the future. The
future, he says, consists of possibilities rather than certainties. We
will be better off if we anticipate positive rather than negative future
possibilities, because positive anticipations will increase the quality
of life now. According to Wilkins, these positive anticipations, which
should be acted upon, do not even need to be accurate. A positive
mind-set concerning where we are heading and the future consequences of
our actions makes us feel better today.
Another psychologist, Noelle Nelson, studied different types of
beliefs about the future and their effects on mental health and personal
success. She says that fear of the future produces negative emotional
states and inaction, but to think, uncritically, that the future will be
wonderful is unrealistic and will invariably lead to frustration and
disappointment. So Nelson argues for "Winner" beliefs about
the future.
"Winners" acknowledge the negative as well as positive
possibilities of tomorrow, but believe that we have considerable power
to determine which possibilities are realized. Though recognizing the
risks of the future, winners sense that they have appreciable control
over what happens. This perception generates good mental health and
emotional well-being. A sense of personal empowerment over the future
positively affects one's emotional state. Conversely, the belief
that the future is controlled by external forces beyond our control or
that the future is already determined generates apathy and other
negative emotional states.
Acting on the future proactively alters one's self-identity.
The future is a challenge, involving an element of risk and uncertainty,
and when people meet challenges rather than running from them, they
increase their self-confidence and self-esteem. Expanded foresight, goal
setting, planning, and goal-directed behavior give a person a sense of
increased empowerment. Developing one's capacity to think about the
future--to identify and seize opportunities and tackle
challenges--improves one's self-image and self-efficacy.
Future Consciousness and Wisdom
The development of future consciousness contributes to the growth
of a variety of different virtues, including courage, humility,
compassion, and especially wisdom. Wisdom is the capacity to apply
general knowledge gained in the past to challenging and novel problems
and situations. Wisdom can also be described as being able to grasp the
big picture of reality and use this knowledge for the betterment of
life. Wisdom connects the heritage and lessons of the past with the
thoughtfulness, openness, and creativity needed for the future. A person
cannot be wise without a strong sense of the future.
The future is the most cosmic, mind-expanding, and philosophically
enlightening topic the human mind can entertain. Will we travel into
space and find new and strange worlds that possess life and
intelligence? Will we transcend our present biological bodies? What new
revelations and achievements will emerge, technologically,
scientifically, and even spiritually? The growth of future consciousness
facilitates the growth of cosmic consciousness.
At the same time, future consciousness is intimately tied to the
pragmatic concerns of life. The future is, in fact, the most pressing
practical issue of our time. It is of great importance both for humanity
as a whole and for each of us individually. For very practical reasons,
we need to further evolve our future consciousness.
Yet, we face a challenge. According to many writers, our conscious
sense of the future is weakening, and we are becoming lost in an
overpowering present.
Here are some of the things these thinkers are saying:
* Historian Robert Nisbet has argued that during the last century
the Western world has lost faith in a positive image of progress and now
is immersed in a "Cult of the Present" that is destroying both
the past and the future. (See History of the Idea of Progress,
Transaction Publishers, 1994.)
* Sociologist Stephen Bertman contends in his book Hyperculture:
The Human Cost of Speed (Praeger, 1998) that the fast-paced modern world
is destroying both historical and future consciousness. We are suffering
from "cultural amnesia," quickly forgetting the past and
having no time to think about the future.
* Philosophers Steven Best and Douglas Kellner say that the
positive and hopeful images of the future generated in the period of the
Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution came under critical attack
over the last century, often being replaced by disappointment, despair,
and nihilism regarding the promises and prospects of modern civilization
(The Postmodern Turn, Guilford Press, 1997).
* Futurist Michael Zey, author of The Future Factor (McGraw-Hill,
2000), is especially concerned about what he sees as a loss of positive
images of the future in modern times and about the replacement of the
positive with either negative visions or the total lack of any images.
Zey is not alone in this assessment of our contemporary depressive
mind-set regarding the future. He believes, as do many other futurists,
that modern society should find new positive images of the future to
create a renewed sense of hopefulness and counteract the prevalent sense
of negativity and nihilism in our world.
Given the increasing complexity and pace of change in the modern
world, it seems highly maladaptive for humans to be losing their sense
of the future. Without future consciousness, humans would become
disoriented and dysfunctional. Future consciousness should be expanding
rather than shrinking if we are to flourish or even survive as a species
in the future.
What seems paradoxical about this presumed deterioration of our
sense of both the future and the past is that it runs against
evolutionary and historical trends. Future consciousness has evolved
throughout the history of life. As a general evolutionary trend,
awareness and adaptive functioning have become increasingly less
egocentric and more expansive in both space and time. The mind's
eye has seen farther and farther.
The Future of Future Consciousness
So is future consciousness shrinking or will it continue to evolve?
The answer is probably both. While our knowledge of past and future
keeps growing through advances in science and history, we may not always
be using this knowledge in our everyday lives. We may be caught up in
the rush of the present. In spite of the fast pace of change, we may
have entered a regressive period in human history, having lost our hope
for a positive future. There are clearly many forward-looking
organizations and social movements around the world, but the general
population, both in modernized and undeveloped countries, may be caught
in either the madness or the impoverishment of the present. To whatever
degree and in whatever ways our consciousness is narrowing, we need to
understand why and find ways to reverse the process.
In the long run, I believe, future consciousness in humans will
evolve. If it doesn't, we are doomed. Perhaps then, a superior type
of mind will pick up the gauntlet.
One thing is certain: The future is the only reality that we can
actually do anything about. Though there is much to be learned about the
past that clearly can benefit us, we can do nothing to change it,
because it is already gone. Meanwhile, the present disappears quickly;
it is here and gone. But the future is a vast arena of
possibilities--and the only arena of existence over which we have any
practical influence or control. To whatever degree we can guide the
future in a constructive and informed way, we will benefit ourselves and
all those who are affected by our actions.
About the Author
Tom Lombardo is the faculty chair of psychology, philosophy, and
integrated studies at Rio Salado College in Tempe, Arizona. His Web site
"The Odyssey of the Future" (www.odysseyofthefuture.net)
contains a wealth of informational resources on the study of the future.
E-mail tlombardo1@cox.net.
For more on future consciousness, see Lombardo's essay,
"The Value of Future Consciousness," in Foresight, Innovation,
and Strategy: Toward a Wiser Future edited by Cynthia G. Wagner (World
Future Society, 2005). Available from www.wfs.org/vol2005.htm for $29.95
($24.95 for Society members). Also see his article "The Psychology
and Value of Future Consciousness" at
www.odysseyofthefuture.net/pdf_files/Readings/PsyValueFutConsArticle.pdf.
FEEDBACK: Send your comments about this article to letters@wfs.org.
RELATED ARTICLE: The Cognitive Dimension of Future Consciousness
All the major cognitive processes are involved in future
consciousness. I have summarized these different processes in the table
below.
Imagination The ability to create mental images and
hypothetical realities in our minds.
Foresight The ability to imagine or envision the future.
Goal Setting The ability to identify and conceptualize
desirable goals of action.
Possibility Thinking The ability to imagine multiple or alternative
hypothetical future realities.
Scenario Building The activity of imagining and describing
detailed, complex, and realistic hypothetical
future realities.
Critical Thinking The ability to apply principles of sound and
and Reasoning valid reasoning to logical inference, the
comparison and evaluation of different points of
view, and the development and expression of
theories and hypotheses--thinking about
thinking--the opposite of egocentric thinking.
Open-Mindedness The ability to be flexible, to evaluate with
and Creativity fairness other points of view besides one's own
view, and to be receptive to ideas that are
different from standard beliefs. The production
of novel ideas, inventions, and behaviors.
Problem Solving A form of thinking where some solution or answer
to a question, problem, or challenge is
identified and successfully enacted.
Decision Making The ability to make a choice among alternative
goals and courses of action and follow through on
the choice.
Planning The ability to construct a hypothetical series of
connected actions that lead to the realization of
an identified goal.
Hypothetical Thinking The ability to imagine and evaluate
possibilities.
Holistic Insight The ability to understand the "big picture"--to
see how the details of a situation fit together--
frequently experienced in a rather sudden flash
of comprehension.
Empirical Observation The ability to perceive and understand observable
facts or patterns of facts.
--Tom Lombardo
RELATED ARTICLE: Ways to Develop Future Consciousness
* Challenge existing habitual beliefs about the future.
* Brainstorm on alternative visions and beliefs about the future.
* Become familiar with many diverse visions of the future, from
both the sciences and the humanities.
* Challenge existing habitual beliefs about your ability to
influence the future.
* Clarify and assess your life plans and goals and imaginatively
and critically consider alternative possibilities.
* Clarify and assess your self-narrative and imaginatively and
critically consider alternative views of who you are, what you can
accomplish, and where you are heading.
* Learn about history and especially long-term trends that are
continuing in the present.
* Learn to better tolerate, if not appreciate, the uncertainties
and adventure of life--be willing to take calculated risks at
times--don't be ruled by a need for security and safety.
* Learn the psychological practices and techniques for enhancing
optimism.
* Learn the psychological practices and techniques for enhancing
thinking skills, visualization and imagination, and creativity.
--Tom Lombardo
RELATED ARTICLE: Benefits of Enhancing Future Consciousness
* Improves imagination, creativity, and flexibility.
* Fosters mental health.
* Improves higher-order thinking abilities, especially planning,
problem solving, critical thinking skills, and integrative
understanding.
* Raises self-consciousness.
* Expands mental and behavioral freedom.
* Expands consciousness.
* Can work against depression, fear, apathy, and perceived
helplessness.
* Gives meaning, purpose, and hope to life.
* Brings greater self-control over one's life.
* Is highly adaptive, especially in a world of rapid
change-maximizes the chances of survival and thriving in the future.
* Facilitates the development of courage and wisdom.
* Can improve ethical thinking and character.
--Tom Lombardo
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