- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Humanities, Arts & Music
- > Philosophy
Description
Novelty is fragile. The ultimate test of any technology, idea, or system is not its immediate popularity, but its brutal mathematical survival over time. The constant influx of new concepts and technologies creates an illusion of rapid progress, convincing us that the newest idea is inherently the best. However, history demonstrates a counterintuitive reality: the older an idea, technology, or cultural artifact is, the longer it is likely to survive into the future. This phenomenon is known as the Lindy Effect.While we scramble to adopt the latest management fad or dietary trend, robust longevity is quietly governed by survival mathematics. A concept that has endured for fifty years has proven its resilience against societal shifts and practical friction, essentially guaranteeing its relevance for another fifty. Novelty, by contrast, is fragile and untested."Surviving Time" explores the underlying mechanics of cultural and technological endurance. It analyzes why ancient philosophical principles outlast modern self-help movements and why certain classical architectures withstand the test of time while futuristic designs crumble.Stop chasing the exhausting treadmill of temporary trends. Anchor your decisions, investments, and mental models in the profound stability of time-tested resilience, and learn to identify the ideas that will truly shape the next century.



