A Fourth World
Editorial Reviews
Book Description
This book examines dominant beliefs in the West during the last three centuries and how they shape modernism and postmodernism. The implication of these beliefs from a cultural and ecological standpoint are examined with respect to the limits on rationalism, especially in the sciences, for the next century. This book is the first to tackle the idea of ecological limits and its implications for world cultures during the twenty-first century. This is neither a strict anthropological nor ecological examination of its subject but a combination of the two, as it concerns the post-modern world.Contents: Preface; Concerning Sin and Shadows; Elegant Amnesia; The First True Post-Modern; Denial's Undeniable Pleasures; Time, Place and Ego; I Feel, Therefore I am Afraid; "Damnable and Detestable Curiosity"; A Daunting Paradox; The Twenty-First Century as a Fourth World.
About the Author
Bernard J. James is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Wisconsin, jointly appointed at Milwaukee and Madison.
A Fourth World,Bernard J. James,University Press of America,0761807632,Anthropology,Archaeology / Anthropology,Civilization, Modern,Forecasts,Human ecology,New Age,Social Science,Sociology - General,Twenty-first century,World - General,Environmentalist thought & ideology,Pollution & threats to the environment,Social & cultural anthropology,Social Science / Anthropology / General
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