Futurist offers peek into society's crystal ball I Photo by Mwi Widdrr Futurist Burke Raymond says society is leaving the industrial age and entering the information age, which will spell decreased emphasis on organizations and increased importance on individuals. By Michael Doke Of the Emrrdld Looking into the future is no longer a trick of gypsies and crystal balls, but a real concern for society, said Burke Raymond, a Portland futurist consultant, Mon day at the Valley River Inn. Future decisions must not be based on past trends, Raymond said. Society is moving away from the hierarchical industrial age toward the "information age," a period of more open communication. "It is our option, and duty, to choose the future we want," said Raymond, a consultant with the firm of Burke, Roth and Associates. "Choices we do not have the courage to make could spell the end of human history. "World institutions, like govern ments, are frozen," Raymond told officials at an annual meeting of the Oregon Public Health Associa tion and the Conference of Local Health. "We cannot rely on govern ments for control. We, the people. YOU'VE GOT TO PLAY HARDBALL WHEN IT COMES TO YOUR CAREER THAT'S WHY NSA OFFERS YOU THESE EXCITING CAREER OPPORTUNITIES ELECTRONIC ENGINEERING Thar* or* opportunities in a variety of research and development projects ranging from individual equipments to very complex interactive systems involving large numbers of microprocessors, mini computers and computer graphics. Professional growth is enhanced through interaction with highly experienced NSA professionals and through contacts in the industrial and academic worlds. Facilities for engineering onalysis and design automation are among the best available. MATHEMATICS You'll work on divers* agency problems applying a variety of mathematical disciplines. 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The new age will stress en trepreneurships, and the ac cumulation of capital will lose its prominence, he said. Knowledge will become the new raw material of the informa tion era. It is the single most im portant development individuals can have, Raymond said. In an age where information comes quickly, shared knowledge will benefit everyone. Conventional social structure will disband along with decen tralization, Raymond said. Organizations based on the hierarchy model cannot survive this transition. Movement into the new era will affect society's driving forces, in cluding values, learning, health, economics, governance and technology, he said. The overriding concern of the future, Raymond said, is the "very real prospect of nuclear war." Arms buildup is a holdover from the industral age, he said. Raymond called the peace movement the most important cause today because people are taking charge of their own destiny, thereby strengthening society. The women's movement is another strong sociological force that is changing values, Raymond said. Learning becomes more impor tant in the information age, too, he said. Instead of a time-frame structure where learning ends at a set age, education becomes a lifelonp nursuit. Raymond noted that the average age of college students is increas ing. More professional people are heading back to the classroom. And given the chance to par ticipate in the system more, high school students become more ac tive with studies. Health concerns are moving from repair-oriented service to preventative medicine. Physical fitness' increasing populararity is one sign of this, Raymond said. "However, an increase in physical awareness has grave con sequences for the established medical insitutions," he said. A trend toward higher drug dependency continues. Economics and working at titudes are changing as well, Ray mond said. Full consumption means full* employment but dwindling resources. Again, Ray mond cited knowledge as the "in finite solution." Governments will have a smaller role in the information age and soon it will be "absurd" for leaders to think they can make decisions without consulting the public, Raymond said. "We will have information just as fast as they will. This will mean real democracy," he said. Finally, technological advances will affect society profoundly, Ray mond said. Computers and robots are the issues of the 1980s, while genetic engineering will be the concern of the 1990s. "The ability to make changes in DNA will be a reality. Birth defects will be curbed. Real decisions will have to be made on sex and race quotas," he said. By moving toward education and medical research, Oregon's economy would benefit, Raymond said. High-technology soon will be passe. "The choices of the future are not clear. The ground continues to move. But we do control our own destiny and we must not be passive."