The Death of Industrial Civilization: The Limits to Economic Growth and the Repoliticization of Advanced Industrial Society

Pirmais vāks
SUNY Press, 1990. gada 1. janv. - 297 lappuses
The Death of Industrial Civilization explains how the contemporary ecological crisis within industrial society is caused by the values inherent in unlimited economic growth and competitive materialism. Kassiola shows that the limits-to-growth critique of industrial civilization is the most effective stance against what seems to be a dominant and invincible social order. He prescribes the social changes that must be implemented in order to transform industrial society into a sustainable and more satisfying one.
 

Atlasītās lappuses

Saturs

The Contemporary Industrial Crisis and the LimitstoGrowth Controversy
3
The Death of Industrial Illusions
31
Modern Economics as the Reductionism of Politics
51
The Modern Rise of Economics and the Demise of Politics
53
Industrial Economic Reductionism Depoliticization through the Addiction to Unlimited Growth
71
Liberalism and the Economic Reductionism of Politics
83
The Concept of Relative Wealth A Social Limit to Growth that Destroys the Addiction to Growth and Spurs Repoliticization
95
The Values of Industrialism Unlimited Competitive Materialism and the Normative Limits to Growth
109
Materialism and Modern Political Philosophy
125
Transindustrial Values Replacing the Addiction to Unlimited Economic Growth with Nonmaterialism Noncompetition Participatory Democracy and ...
151
Social Transformation into a Transindustrial Community
153
Conclusion Towards a New Transindustrial Society
199
Notes
219
Bibliography
261
Index
283
Autortiesības

Beyond the Biophysical Limits to Growth Assessing Industrial Values
111

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Par autoru (1990)

Joel Jay Kassiola is Professor of Political Science at Brooklyn College.

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