In 1964, in what most of us look back on as a simpler time, Marshall McLuhan gave us the slogan, "The medium is the message."

McLuhan was talking primarily about television, which in the 1960s was viewable on three channels, all of which delivered approximately the same slightly left-leaning view of the world. But McLuhan wasn't talking about what was on television, he was talking about television itself. The point of the slogan is that the content the medium conveys is not nearly as transformational as the medium itself. It was not what was on television, it was the existence of television that was changing us.

Fast forward to the twenty-first century and the truth of McLuhan's thesis is inescapable. The Internet changed everything. And then smartphones changed everything again. Social media is upending childhood and politics. And prophets of artificial intelligence assure us that we haven't seen anything yet.

The books in this list explore the theme of how technologies change us. And not just new technologies. There's a fascinating chapter in Yuval Noah Harari's Sapiens about the changes wrought upon us by the technology of agriculture. His conclusion is that — in many ways and for many centuries — humans were better off without it.

Similar arguments are being made about artificial intelligence.

But it isn't all about the technology. It's also about what we do with it. Agriculture didn't have to lead to malnutrition, disease, and huge concentrations of wealth. Social media doesn't have to be the destructive force it now appears to be. AI doesn't have to marginalize human beings. Technology is a tool. If you understand the tool and if you use it wisely it can help you.

The first step, as always, is understanding. Happy reading!

N.B. There is one controversial book in here, which is Technological Slavery by Ted Kaczynski. Readers of a certain age will remember him as the "Unabomber." While deploring his crimes, smart people have concluded that he has an argument worth reading.