Jacque Fresco
Jacque Fresco is an industrial engineer, architectural designer,
social engineer, and futurist based in Florida. His optimistic view and
desire to create solutions that maximally benefit the greatest number
of people stem from his formative years during the Great Depression. To
this day he writes and lectures extensively on subjects ranging from
the holistic design of sustainable cities, energy efficiency, natural
resource management and advanced automation, focusing on the benefits
it will bring to society.
Jacque has been a guest lecturer at many institutions of higher
learning. He was an active participant in discussions at the Center for
the Study of Democratic Institutions in Santa Barbara, California.
He has addressed students at the University of Miami, Princeton
University, University of Southern California, Dade Junior College,
Queens College, Presbyterian College, University of Southern Florida,
Nichols College, Columbia University, Instituto Tecnologico de Estudios
Superiores de Monterrey in Monterrey, Mexico and others. He and Ralph
Nader were featured guest lecturers at the University of South Florida.
At Princeton University, Jacque addressed the Department of
Sociology. His subject was Sociology of the Future. Along with the
well-known scientist Margaret Mead, he was extended an
invitation to address the college environment conference in Washington, DC.
He was a guest speaker for the Tenth Symposium for the Civil
Engineering Department of TEC de Monterrey University in Monterrey,
Mexico, Latin America’s top rated college. He was a guest
speaker at The Utopian Studies Conference in Orlando, FL and lectured
at several World Future Society Conferences.
We have all heard lectures that downgrade the present state of affairs.
They speak of such social problems as lawlessness, poverty, racial
tension and divorce. But how many of us can recall any of these
lectures offering creative solutions to these problems? Jacque’s
presentations reflect a serious attempt to illuminate the causes and
outline a wide range of constructive alternatives. He does this by
presenting a redesign of our culture, one that would emphasize the
intelligent use of science and technology to enhance the lives of all
people while protecting our environment. His subjects range from “New
Dimensions in Human Stupidity” to “Imagineering The Future”.A video
often
accompanies the lectures where his ideas are vividly brought to life
through animated models, illustrations and computer
animation.
His particular lecture technique enables uninformed audiences to grasp
the significance of complex social and technical innovations He speaks
dramatically and brilliantly about the urgent transitional problems
facing our contemporary society. His audiences find their attention
focused intensely and they closely follow his presentation from
beginning to end. His lectures have been consistently praised
and enthusiastically received.
Jacque is the founder of Sociocyberneering, Inc., now known as
The Venus Project.
With his associate Roxanne Meadows, he has designed and built the
entire twenty-five acre research facility. The function of this project
is to prepare approaches and solutions to the major problems that
confront the world today. Television and magazine coverage on the
project has been worldwide.
Jacque authored
The Best That Money Can’t Buy: Beyond Politics, Poverty, &
War,
The Venus Project: The Redesign of a Culture, and
the innovative Amazon download
Designing the future: a cybernetic city for the next
century, and
coauthored
the innovative Amazon download
Engineering a New Vision of Tomorrow: Jacque Fresco and Roxanne
Meadows, founders of The Venus Project in Florida, envision a
cybernated city of the future.
Listen to his
interview on the Jerry Pippin Show.
Watch his
YouTube videos.
Watch him on the Discovery
Channel.
Get the DVD Future by Design.
This movie was winner of the best documentary award at the Australian
International Film Festival in 2006 and was created by
Academy Award nominated director William Gazecki.
Check out his
MySpace page!