Growth and Guilt : Psychology and the Limits of Development
by
Luigi Zoja
Book Details
Format
Paperback / Softback
ISBN-10
0415116619
ISBN-13
9780415116619
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint
Routledge
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jan 5th, 1995
Print length
244 Pages
Weight
340 grams
Product Classification:
PhilosophyPsychological theory & schools of thoughtSocial, group or collective psychology
Ksh 8,100.00
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Luigi Zoja's work of outstanding scholarship provides a psychological exploration of civilization's obsession with relentless growth and it also brings to light a psychic wound and a feeling of guilt which are infinitely more ancient
The relentless exploitation of the earth''s resources and technologys boundless growth are a matter of urgent concern. When did this race towards the limitless begin?
The Greeks, who shaped the basis of Western thinking, lived in mortal fear of humanity''s hidden hunger for the infinite and referred to it as hubris, the one true sin in their moral code. Whoever desired or possessed too much was implacably punished by nemesis, yet the Greeks themselves were to pioneer an unprecedented level of ambition that began to reverse that tabu.
If it is true that no culture can truly repudiate its origins, and that gods who are no longer potent can vanish but still leave behind a body of myth which coninues to live and assert itself in modernized garb, then our concern with the limits of growth reflects something more than an awareness of new technological problems - it also brings to light a psychic wound a a feeling of guilt which are infinitely more ancient.
The Greeks, who shaped the basis of Western thinking, lived in mortal fear of humanity''s hidden hunger for the infinite and referred to it as hubris, the one true sin in their moral code. Whoever desired or possessed too much was implacably punished by nemesis, yet the Greeks themselves were to pioneer an unprecedented level of ambition that began to reverse that tabu.
If it is true that no culture can truly repudiate its origins, and that gods who are no longer potent can vanish but still leave behind a body of myth which coninues to live and assert itself in modernized garb, then our concern with the limits of growth reflects something more than an awareness of new technological problems - it also brings to light a psychic wound a a feeling of guilt which are infinitely more ancient.
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