New World New Mind: Moving Toward Conscious EvolutionISHK, 2000 - 302 páginas There is no longer sufficient time to rely on the normal pace of cultural evolution to deal with today's dilemmas... Human beings have always been the most adaptable creatures on the planet, and they should be able to chart a new course for themselves. Some of that charting is already being done. The old mind today is being challenged and changed by many scattered efforts. Can we bring these efforts together to produce a large-scale program for a rapid "change of mind"? We know what the problem is. The "solution" is not simple--to generate the social and political will to move a program of conscious evolution to the top of the human agenda. |
Índice
1 | |
15 | |
17 | |
Chapter 3 THE WORLD WE MADE | 40 |
Section Two THE MATCHED AND THE MISMATCHED MIND | 67 |
Chapter 4 CARICATURES OF REALITY | 69 |
Chapter 5 WHERE DEFAULTS HARM | 94 |
Chapter 6 OUTGROWING THE TRUTH FAIRY | 119 |
Section Three NEW WORLD NEW MIND | 187 |
Chapter 8 THE BEGINNINGS OF REAL CHANGE | 189 |
Chapter 9 A CURRICULUM ABOUT HUMANITY | 197 |
Chapter 10 CHANGING THE WORLD AROUND US | 234 |
Appendix NOTES AND SOURCES | 267 |
287 | |
302 | |
Chapter 7 MANAGING A WORLD LONG GONE | 150 |
Términos y frases comunes
ability acid rain adapt Africa agriculture AIDS American ancestors animals basic become biological evolution brain caricatures century civilization Colin Turnbull computers conscious evolution cookies cultural evolution dangerous death decades decisions default positions detect disease drugs early Earth economic effect energy environment environmental Eskimos evolutionary evolved experience focus gradual growth hominids Homo sapiens human population immediate important increase individuals killed kind live long-term look mental military million mismatch missiles modern nations natural nervous system new-minded nuclear war nuclear weapons old mind organisms Paul Ehrlich perceive perceptions person physical plants political politicians probably problems produce programs psychotherapy Reagan respond Robert Ornstein Ronald Reagan scientists sensory sensory systems short-term small world social society Soviet Soviet Union species survival television therapy thousand threat tion trends ture understand United virus