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Drawing by Jesse Bransford

A Society of Seers

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Can Thomas Homer-Dixon’s “prospective mind” help us thrive after global crises?

by Daniel Baird

Drawing by Jesse Bransford

Published in the December/January 2007 issue.  » BUY ISSUE     

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BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ESSAY:

The Upside of Down: Catastrophe, Creativity,
and the Renewal of Civilization

by Thomas Homer-Dixon
Alfred A. Knopf Canada, 2006
429 pp., $37

The Ingenuity Gap: Can We Solve the
Problems of the Future?

by Thomas Homer-Dixon
Vintage Canada, 2001
486 pp., $23

Environment, Scarcity, and Violence
by Thomas Homer-Dixon
Princeton University Press, 1999
253 pp., $30

Built in the mid-nineteenth century and once home to a country doctor, Thomas Homer-Dixon’s house in Fergus, Ontario, has an austere yet stately dignity, its exterior walls a blue-grey stone, its windows tall. And at first meeting, Homer-Dixon himself has something of the reserved, morally serious demeanour of a Presbyterian minister. The fifty-year-old director of the Trudeau Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Toronto and author of the Governor General’s Award-winning The Ingenuity Gap is classically handsome, tall and rail thin, his hair greying, and his eyes a fierce blue.

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