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Unlimited Learning,
Unpredictable Future

Critical Questions that challenge how we learn, earn, and live beyond a 100 years in the future due to emerging and multiple technological innovations.

Kenny Ramanand
Critical Thinker | Inventor | Global Visionary
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Unlimited Learning, Unpredictable Future Book

Introduction of the Book

As we stand at the edge of a radically different tomorrow, the very foundations of how we learn, earn, and live are being reshaped by technologies that, until recently, belonged to the realm of imagination. Unlimited Learning, Unpredictable Future is a journey through the defining questions that will shape our next century—especially as human lifespans extend beyond 100 years and the old scripts of "education, job, retirement" begin to crumble. This book asks whether our inherited models of schooling, work, and success are still relevant, or whether we are clinging to systems that cannot prepare us for a future we barely understand. Below are the questions we need to ask as a civilised society.

Rethinking Learning in an Age of Longevity

In a world where knowledge is abundant and instantly accessible, the idea of education as a one-time phase in youth is dangerously outdated. This chapter examines how lifelong learning must evolve when careers multiply, identities shift, and life itself may span more than a century. It challenges the notion of degrees as final destinations, instead proposing learning as an ongoing practice—fluid, self-directed, and deeply personal. The central question: are we redesigning learning for a 100-year life, or are we stretching a 20th-century model far beyond its breaking point?

Is Technology Warming a Bigger Threat Than Global Warming?

Here, the book takes on a provocative comparison: is “technology warming”—our accelerating dependence on digital systems—ultimately more corrosive to human life than global warming? Without trivialising the climate crisis, this chapter explores how technology reshapes attention, relationships, politics, and even our relationship with nature. It asks whether the same tools that promise progress also risk hollowing out our capacity for empathy, reflection, and stewardship. We probe a difficult tension: can we harness technology without allowing it to quietly reprogram what we value?

AI, Intelligence, and the Future of the Human Mind

Artificial intelligence does not merely automate tasks; it interrogates our very idea of intelligence. This chapter frames two unsettling possibilities: is AI making naturally intelligent people artificially stupid by outsourcing their thinking, or is it enabling normally limited minds to become artificially intelligent? We explore how algorithmic guidance affects memory, reasoning, creativity, and judgment. When every answer is a click away, do we deepen understanding or merely accumulate information? This chapter invites readers to defend and redesign human cognition in an era when machines increasingly simulate it.

The Olympics of Distraction and the Business of Education

Our tools have become our trainers. Remote controls, smartphones, endless feeds, and notifications are not neutral devices; they are infrastructures of distraction. This chapter asks: have remotes and mobiles been preparing us for an “Olympics of distraction,” where our attention is the gold medal everyone is competing for? We examine the rise of attention economics and its subtle invasion into classrooms, homes, and workplaces.
From there, we turn to a deeper structural question: why has education itself become a business model? When schools, colleges, and ed-tech platforms are driven by revenue targets, do learners become customers rather than seekers of knowledge? This chapter interrogates fee structures, credential inflation, coaching cultures, and the commodification of aspirations. It urges a shift from education as an industry to education as an ecosystem—where access, equity, and genuine learning take precedence over profit.

Who Will Decide What We Learn?

In the final chapter, we confront a looming reality: as big tech platforms control our search results, content feeds, and learning apps, will they also dictate what we learn and how? When algorithms curate information, recommend courses, and optimise engagement, what happens to curricular autonomy, cultural diversity, and independent thought? Have we as parents defined a business model for our kids and made them viable business models for the time spent during their education period?
This chapter urges readers, educators, and policymakers to resist a future in which a handful of corporations silently script the intellectual diet of billions. It calls for public debate, transparent regulation, and a renewed commitment to human agency in designing learning pathways. The goal is not to reject technology, but to ensure that tools serve human development rather than the other way around.

Conclusion: Toward Truly Unlimited Learning

Unlimited Learning, Unpredictable Future is an invitation to reclaim authorship over our lives in a time of dizzying change. It asks us to imagine a future where learning is continuous, not compulsory; where engagement is deep, not distracted; where technology amplifies, rather than erodes, our humanity. Above all, it calls for a generation of readers who refuse to be passive consumers of pre-designed futures and instead become active creators of new possibilities—for themselves, their societies, and the century ahead.

Kenny Ramanand reading a book

Review

Unlimited Learning Unpredictable Future is an Unbelievable Book which grabs your degree, sets it on fire, and says this is just tissue paper in AI times. It laughs at your so-called "secure job" while handing you a crash course in unlearning.

Ganesh Bangah

Founder, MOL Global; Founder & Executive Chairman, Commerce. Asia.
AKA - Bill Gates of Malaysia

Often when a child asks a question, an adult tends to shut her up in exasperation. The spirit of enquiry is thus discouraged. A book like this one opens up the mind through a barrage of questions which all of us want to ask but are often embarrassed to - for fear of being judged. Written in a readable enjoyable way, this book starts us thinking without limiting ourselves. I commend the effort.

Dr. Anuradha Balaram

Board of Governors Member, IIM Indore | Former Economic Advisor, Government of India

Unskilled is vital. Not just because ignorance isn't bliss if you seek employment but also just to survive. This is your wished-for manual... the one they never gave you, probably because some of them were too forwarding their version of WhatsApp wisdom. Read it, you'll need it.

Dilip Cherian

Image Guru

What was looking difficult is not possible - Longevity till 100. With this kind of lifespan possibilities, learning agility needs to keep pace to yoube with the pace and change of life. This is not a book but crystallization of learning's from serial failures and success - a self defence art to shield your future

Vikrant Shrotriya

MD Novo Nordisk India

This book makes you rethink school, your job, and even your retirement plan, also may need redesign for your children's dream process, all before your morning coffee gets cold. Kenny inspires me with numerous questions even during his accidental recovery period last few years with strong mentality. Hats off to my dear friend Kenny from India.

Jong Kim

Former CSO, KIA Motors & Start-up Member Hyundai India

Unlimited Learning Unpredictable Future is like Kenny kicking your lazy brain off the sofa, making it do push-ups with quantum physics, and then slapping you with AI until you beg for more. Painful? Yes. Worth it? Hell, yes.

Lucky Ali

Global Musician