Please also visit:
http://www.ghandchi.com/368-transhumanismEng.htm
F.M. Esfandiary
http://www.ghandchi.com/esfandiary.htm
FM-2030, a noted author, lecturer and consultant to
business and industry died on July 8, 2000. FM was born with a conventional name
but changed both his first and last names to reflect his beliefs and his
confidence in the future. As he explains, "conventional names define a person's
past: ancestry, ethnicity, nationality, religion. I am not who I was ten years
ago and certainly not who I will be in twenty years. The name 2030 reflects my
conviction that the years around 2030 will be a magical time… In 2030 we will be
ageless and everyone will have an excellent chance to live forever. 2030 is a
dream and a goal."
His childhood was spent in consulates, embassies and government outposts around
the world. He was equally at home in London, New York, Miami, Jerusalem,
Damascus and Los Angeles. His formal education began in an Iranian primary
school, continued in an English school, a French Jesuit school in Jerusalem, and
a term in a girl's convent school in Lebanon where he was the only boy. In the
late 40s after attending schools in Europe he went to the United States and
attended Berkeley, then U.C.L.A. He came to London in 1948 as a member of the
Iranian team at the Olympic Games. FM served at the United Nations on the
Conciliation Commission for Palestine, later leaving to devote his time to
writing.
Day of Sacrifice, FM's first novel, was selected by the New York Herald Tribune
as one of the best novels of 1959. It has been translated into eleven languages
and is on the required reading list of the U.S. State Department. In an
interview with FM the writer noted: "…But there is a difference between
Esfandiary and Camus. The latter is essentially a pessimist. It is the human
condition that is absurd. Esfandiary is an optimist. He has hope, because he has
a deep faith in man. He is convinced that technological progress, the contact of
cultures, etc…. will free man from his present miseries. Given time, man will
even deliver himself from his supreme tragedy --- death. Man can be made
perfect."
FM moved from writing novels to writing non-fiction, changing his name along the
way, and dealing with the human condition and the central themes which engaged
him throughout his life.
FM appeared many times on network programs such as : The Today Show, Good
Morning America, Live with Larry King, Future Watch, Not for Women Only and many
others.
His views and forecasts were both provocative and visionary and uncannily right
on the mark. At the time he made his forecasts both in his books and in the
media they were controversial and viewed as impossible. Now we take many of them
for granted. Just an example of some of his forecasts: in the 1970s and 1980s as
everyone was concerned with the weapons race and security, FM's projections
showed the reasons for the de-acceleration of the arms race; as early as the
1970s he anticipated the breakdown of communism; while the Club de Rome and
others made dire predictions, worrying about and raising alarms regarding
scarcity of energy, resources, food and water, FM in an article published in The
New York Times wrote about the Age of Abundance; in the early 70s he carried out
and anticipated our current dress down mode; his book "Telespheres" anticipated
telemedicine, teleducation, telebanking, etc.; as early as 1974 he was lecturing
and writing articles about physical longevity and the possibility of physical
immortality.
Alvin Toeffler, a friend and colleague of FM's since the early 1960s, says about
FM: "He is gutsy and truly a visionary…One doesn't have to agree with everything
he says to be refreshed by it."
E-Reads books by F.M. Esfandiary