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El. knyga: End of the World: Civilization and Its Fate

  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jun-2024
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781538189016
  • Formatas: EPUB+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-Jun-2024
  • Leidėjas: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781538189016

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"Philosopher and psychoanalyst Jon Mills examines the ominous existential risks that could bring about the end of civilization. He draws on the psychological motivations, unconscious conflicts, and cultural complexes that drive human behavior and social relations to offer a fresh perspective on the looming fate of humanity"--

Philosopher and psychoanalyst Jon Mills examines the ominous existential risks that could bring about the end of civilization. He draws on the psychological motivations, unconscious conflicts, and cultural complexes that drive human behavior and social relations to offer a fresh perspective on the looming fate of humanity.



Famine. Extreme climate change. Threats of global war and nuclear annihilation. Obscene wealth disparities. Is civilization destined toward self-annihilation? In this timely book, philosopher and psychoanalyst Jon Mills explores the emergencies that could ignite an apocalypse. As we idly stand by in the face of ecological, economic, and societal collapse, we must seriously question whether humanity is under the sway of a collective unconscious death wish. Examining ominous existential risks and drawing on the psychological motivations, unconscious conflicts, and cultural complexes that drive human behavior and social relations, he offers fresh new perspectives on the looming fate of humanity based on a collective bystander disorder.

End of the World is a warning about the dangerous precipice we find ourselves careening toward, and a call to action to take control of our own fate.

Recenzijos

We are in a unique period in history in which we are simultaneously capable of understanding species extinctionincluding our own, which could be self-inflictedand able to do something about it. Will we? In this engrossing account of the many existential threats we facenuclear weapons are especially terrifyingJon Mills outlines the problems and possible solutions. A must-read for anyone who cares about the future of Homo sapiens, in which we do not always seem so wisebut we could be. -- Michael Shermer, publisher of Skeptic Magazine and author of Conspiracy: Why the Rational Believe the Irrational This book is a careful examination of the possible future of mankind. With examples from many parts of the world the reader learns about risk factors such as global warming, industrial pollution, overpopulation, food and water scarcity, infectious diseases and our not having oversight or the ability to control or regulate technological sources. The role of individual and large-group psychology, collective traumas, transgenerational transmissions and the prejudicial unconscious factors leading to wealth and social divisions, racism, wars and war-like situations are also explored soberly in thinking about what may occur. The author refers to collective moral actions for a better future and mentions that what we can do for the planet as individuals is fairly insignificant. However, what he has done as a single person by writing this timely book is very significant. -- Vamk D. Volkan, University of Virginia, author of "Enemies on the Couch: A Psychopolitical Journey Through War and Peace" Warnings of the end of the world are plentiful today. Jon Mills has not written another such warning. Instead, he has delved into the psychic barriers that have prevented people from taking action to fight widespread planetary devastation. End of the World is not just a stunningly insightful analysis of our capacity for unconscious self-destruction. There is an urgency attached to this book because it makes clear exactly why we arent equal to the catastrophe and how we might begin to respond to our own self-destructiveness. Sadly, given the state of things, this book qualifies as simply unavoidable. -- Todd McGowan, professor, University of Vermont; author of Capitalism and Desire Are we not currently witnessing a strange paradox? On the one hand, there is an increasing consciousness about the manifold dangers that threaten the future of human life on this planet. Yet on the other hand, there is decreasing readiness for action, and ever less ability to find solutions. Fear of death appears to paralyze our political capabilities. Now, as Sigmund Freud has taught us, it is precisely our disavowal of death that makes us so fearful of it.

As a psychoanalyst, Jon Mills is experienced with the mechanism of disavowal. His point therefore is not that we will die, but how our lives are affected by ecological damages. Thus, Jon Mills wisely circumvents the pitfalls of rigid panic. Instead, he redirects our displeasure to the precise point where it can translate into concrete political action. This is in accordance with a principle once formulated by poet Bertolt Brecht: political change is only possible for those who fear bad life more than death. -- Robert Pfaller, author of On the Pleasure Principle in Culture and Interpassivity

Preface

Prolegomenon: On the Brink of Extinction

1. Here on Earth

Global Bystanders in the Face of Ecological Crisis

The Revenge of Gaia

Too Big to Fix

2. 10 Billion

What can We Learn from Rats?

Overpopulation and the Food Supply

Withering Water

The Worse is yet to Come: Pandemics, Economic Paralysis, and Societal Collapse

3. The Evil that Men Do

The Need to Kill

The Ontology of Prejudice

On the Universality of Evil

The Ethics of Killing

Institutionalized Evil

4. The Doomsday Clock is Ticking

Dropping the Bomb

The Doomsday Argument

Existential Risks

Should we take the Doomsday Argument Seriously?

Our Final Century?

5. Apocalypse Now

On Sin

Apocalypse, Millennialism, and Eschaton

The (un)Holy Land

Apocalyptic Discourse in Post-Millennial Culture

Futuristic Fantasies

Disparities

The New After

6. Global Catastrophic Risks

Defining Risk

Big-Picture Hazards

Economic Disintegration

Techno Nihilism

Superintelligences

7. A World without Recognition

The Need to be Acknowledged

Dysrecognition as Social Pathology

Unconscious Politics and the Other

A Failure of Empathy

Transgenerational Transmission of Trauma

8. Living in the End Times

From a Plastic Island to a World Seed Vault

It Took a Child

Predicting the Future

Democracy Incorporated

From Catastrophe to Renewal

Environmental Conflict and Peacebuilding

The Last Resistance

References

Index

About the Author

Jon Mills, PsyD, PhD, ABPP is a philosopher, psychoanalyst, and clinical psychologist. He is Honorary Professor, Department of Psychosocial & Psychoanalytic Studies, University of Essex, UK, on Faculty in the Postgraduate Programs in Psychoanalysis & Psychotherapy, Gordon F. Derner School of Psychology, Adelphi University, USA, and on Faculty and is a Supervising Analyst at the New School for Existential Psychoanalysis, USA. Recipient of numerous awards for his scholarship including 5 Gradiva Awards, he is the author and/or editor of over 30 books in psychoanalysis, philosophy, psychology, and cultural studies including most recently Psyche, Culture, World. In 2015 he was given the Otto Weininger Memorial Award for Lifetime Achievement by the Canadian Psychological Association.