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Robert Theobald

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Cause of death
  
esophageal cancer

Partner
  
Anne Deveson

Role
  
Author

Name
  
Robert Theobald


Robert Theobald wwwscottlondoncomimagestheobaldjpg

Born
  
June 11, 1929
India

Died
  
November 27, 1999, Spokane, Washington, United States

Books
  
Reworking Success, The rapids of change

Occupation
  
Economist and Futurist

Robert theobald the guaranteed income 1960s


Robert Theobald (June 11, 1929 – November 27, 1999) was a private consulting economist and futurist author. In economics, he was best known for his writings on the economics of abundance and his advocacy of a Basic Income Guarantee. Theobald was a member of the Ad Hoc Committee on the Triple Revolution in 1964, and later listed in the top 10 most influential living futurists in The Encyclopedia of the Future.

Contents

Life and work

Robert Theobald was born in India in 1929, the son of a British businessman. He moved to England at age 16 (1945), and received his higher education in economics at Cambridge, then lived for three years in Paris. Eventually he continued his studies at Harvard University, in the late 1950s.

As an economist and futurist, Theobald had a global or planetary perspective. He wrote books, prepared and appeared on broadcasts, and lectured around the world to governments, businesses, and organizations.

Theobald questioned and criticized conventional confidence in economic growth, in technology, and in the culture of materialism - all of which he considered to be damaging to the environment while failing to provide opportunity and income for many of the world's people. He warned against trying to maintain, and to spread or mimic worldwide, the American standard of living of the late 20th century.

Despite his criticism of some aspects and effects of technology, Theobald saw tremendous potential in communications technology like on-line, personal computers (which in the 1980s he termed "micro-computers"), seeing these as tools for pooling the thoughts and opinions of very large numbers of individuals spread widely, geographically.

Theobald was an expositor and popularizer of such now-accepted concepts as "networking," "win/win," "systemic thinking," and "communications era."

Robert Theobald died of esophageal cancer at his home in Spokane, Washington, shortly after returning from Australia. Theobald moved to Spokane shortly after being diagnosed with esophageal cancer in the early fall of 1997. Long-time friends Bob Stilger and Susan Virnig invited him to join their community and their family for the last years of his life. Against the advice of his soon-to-be surgeon, Ryan Holbrook, Robert made a scheduled trip to Australia where his message about the world, society and economics was passionately received. It was the first of six trips to Australia in the last two years of his life, where he found love with journalist Anne Deveson and his strong voice again.

In the days before his death, his friend and partner of 30 years, Bob Stilger, realized it was time to step away from the organization he had co-founded in 1974, Northwest Regional Facilitations and to create a new organization to carry on the kinds of work he and Robert had been doing. In the waining years of his life, Robert was the co-founder of NewStories

Quotes

"What's startling to me is that when I started talking about ideas like these 30 years ago, they were so new and strange that people looked at me as if I had two heads. In retrospect, I think I was looked on as something of a cultural clown - a "crazy" who was fun to listen to. The reaction I get now worries me a lot more, because what most people say is "Bob, today you're right, but we're not going to do anything about it."' "My goal is to create a situation of full unemployment--a world in which people do not have to hold a job. And I believe that this kind of world can actually be achieved."

Literature

  • Deveson, Anne (2003). Resilience. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1-86448-634-1. 
  • Whiting, John (1971). The Economics of Human Energy in Brooks Adams, Ezra Pound and Robert Theobald. M.A. in Area Studies ( United States). University of London. 
  • References

    Robert Theobald Wikipedia