Description

Book Synopsis
Our wants for food, housing, medicine, transportation, luxuries, and all the other benefits of industrialisation have resulted in the exploitation of our natural surroundings. We know our actions affect the physical world we depend on, so why must we be faced with catastrophic problems - overpopulation, the loss of bio-diversity, global warming, and the like - before we act to protect the planet's ecosystem - and then often inadequately?With astute analysis, Peter Seidel explores the complex convergence of psychological, social, economic, and political factors that keep us from acting in our own self-interest. An environmental and human relations visionary, Seidel proposes adoption of a new 'world model', a 'universal ethic', and long-term societal goals. Educators and journalists must give us a better understanding of ourselves-creatures evolved to function in a hunter-gatherer society, not in the complex, hazardous world we have created. We must learn to use our minds to control our primitive drives rather than to satisfy them.

Trade Review
"This book is remarkable... [It] might well lead to the turnaround in public awareness and attitudes that are needed to lead mankind to its survival in the coming century." -- John H Herz, Graduate School, City College of New York

Invisible Walls: Why We Ignore the Damage We

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    A Hardback by Peter Seidel

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      View other formats and editions of Invisible Walls: Why We Ignore the Damage We by Peter Seidel

      Publisher: Prometheus Books
      Publication Date: 01/06/1998
      ISBN13: 9781573922173, 978-1573922173
      ISBN10: 157392217X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Our wants for food, housing, medicine, transportation, luxuries, and all the other benefits of industrialisation have resulted in the exploitation of our natural surroundings. We know our actions affect the physical world we depend on, so why must we be faced with catastrophic problems - overpopulation, the loss of bio-diversity, global warming, and the like - before we act to protect the planet's ecosystem - and then often inadequately?With astute analysis, Peter Seidel explores the complex convergence of psychological, social, economic, and political factors that keep us from acting in our own self-interest. An environmental and human relations visionary, Seidel proposes adoption of a new 'world model', a 'universal ethic', and long-term societal goals. Educators and journalists must give us a better understanding of ourselves-creatures evolved to function in a hunter-gatherer society, not in the complex, hazardous world we have created. We must learn to use our minds to control our primitive drives rather than to satisfy them.

      Trade Review
      "This book is remarkable... [It] might well lead to the turnaround in public awareness and attitudes that are needed to lead mankind to its survival in the coming century." -- John H Herz, Graduate School, City College of New York

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