Судя по всему, вам лишь бы ляпнуть не разобравшись и даже не пройдя по ссылке:
Специально для вас последние ответы. Ху из ху из учёных смотрите сами.
125. That authorities and companies will soon be able to read people’s brains. –Stanislas Dehaene, neuroscientist
126. That economic growth will halt. –Satyajit Das, financial expert
127. “I worry that free imagination is overvalued, and I think this carries risks.” –Carlo Rovelli, theoretical physicist
128. That we worry too much. –James J. O’Donnell, classical scholar
129. That we worry too much. –Robert Provine, neuroscientist
130. That we won’t have enough robots to do all the jobs we’ll need them to do in coming decades. –Rodney A. Brooks, roboticist
131. That we will have no Plan B when the internet inevitably breaks down. –George Dyson, science historian
132. The Singularity. That we “are curiously complacent about life as we know it getting transformed. What we should be worried about is that we're not worried.” –Max Tegmark, MIT physicist
133. “There are known knowns and known unknowns, but what we should be worried about most is the unknown unknowns.” –Gary Marcus, cognitive scientist
134. That the brain is unable to conceive of our most serious problems. –Daniel Goleman, psychologist
135. “We should be worried that scientists have given up the search for determining right and wrong and which values lead to human flourishing just as the research tools for doing so are coming online” –Michael Shermer, publisher, Skeptic magazine
136. The loss of our collective cognition and awareness. –Douglass Rushkoff, media analyst
137. The decline of the science hero. –Roger Highfield, Director, Science Museum Group
138. That we are unable to identify “the good life.” –David Christian, historian
139. Electric tattooing on Facebook and beyond. –Juan Enriquez
140. Federal regulatory capture—ie, the fox watching the hen house in industries like oil and coal extraction. –Charles Seife, journalism professor
141. “Society's Parlous Inability To Reason About Uncertainty” –Aubrey De Grey, Gerontologist
142. That knowledge is getting too fast. –Nicholas Humphrey, prof. at the London School of Economics
143. The "Nightmare Scenario" For Fundamental Physics. Peter Woit, mathematical physicist
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144. The homogenization of the human experience. –Scott Atran, anthropologist
145. That we won’t be able to understand everything. –Clifford Pickover, math author
146. That we worry too much, and “package our worries” in a deleterious fashion. –Mary Catherine Bateson, professor emerita
147. That because of climate change, resource shortages, drones, or other unanticipated reasons, a major war will arise. –Steven Pinker, psychologist
148. Stupidity. –Roger Schank, psychologist
149. I have stopped worrying about the problem of free will, because it will never be settled. –Howard Gardner, Hobbs Professor of Cognition and Education
150. That science is in danger of becoming the enemy of humankind. –Colin Tudge, biologist, editor at New Scientist
151. That we will be unable to live without the internet. –Daniel C. Dennet, philosopher
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