Scott Doorley '96

Posted On - April 12, 2024


Scott Doorley '96 - photo credit - Patrick BeaudouinPhoto credit: Patrick Beaudouin

A new book by Scott Doorley '96, "Assembling Tomorrow: A Guide to Designing a Thriving Future" (co-authored with Carissa Carter), blends speculative science fiction with prose to create a powerful guide to why even the most well-intentioned innovations go haywire, and the surprising ways we can use design to create a more positive future. Doorley is now creative director at Stanford's d.school where he draws on his motion picture and television degree from UCLA to teach classes at the intersection of media and design.

From the book's website:

In "Assembling Tomorrow," authors Scott Doorley and Carissa Carter explore the intangible forces that prevent us from anticipating just how fantastically technology can get out of control, and what might be in store for us if we don't start using new tools and tactics. Despite our best intentions, our most transformative innovations tend to have consequences we can't always predict. From the effects of social media to the uncertainty of AI and the consequences of climate change, the outcomes of our creations ripple across our lives. Time and again, our seemingly ceaseless capacity to create rubs up against our limited capacity to understand our impact.

"Assembling Tomorrow" explores how to use readily accessible tools to both mend the mistakes of our past and shape our future for the better. We live in an era of "runaway design," where innovations tangle with our lives in unpredictable ways. This book explores the off-­­kilter feelings of today and follows up with actionables to alter your perspective and help you find opportunities in these turbulent times.

Mixed throughout are histories of the future, short pieces of speculative fiction that imagine the future as if it has already happened and consider the past with a critical yet hopeful eye so that all of us — as designers of our own futures — can create a better world for generations to come.

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