Growth and Guilt: Psychology and the Limits of DevelopmentPsychology Press, 1995 - 235 pages 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. |
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... Daedalus 130-2 , 133 daimon 36 , 50 Dante , Alighieri : The Divine Comedy and Ulysses 146-51 Darius 68-9 , 176 Darwinism 190 death 185-9 , 200 , 217 Delos 83 Delphic oracle 17 , 104 democracy 107 , 203 ; Athenian 57 , 59-60 , 82 , 111 ...
... Daedalus 130-2 , 133 daimon 36 , 50 Dante , Alighieri : The Divine Comedy and Ulysses 146-51 Darius 68-9 , 176 Darwinism 190 death 185-9 , 200 , 217 Delos 83 Delphic oracle 17 , 104 democracy 107 , 203 ; Athenian 57 , 59-60 , 82 , 111 ...
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... Daedalus 130-2 , 133 ; Nietzsche's Overman 122 ; Persians 70 , 73 , 108-9 ; Phaeton 132-4 ; and phthónos 77 ; repressing death 187 ; Sorcerer's Apprentice 153 ; Spartans 110 ; technology 160 ; tragedy 98-103 Icarus 130-2 , 133 ideative ...
... Daedalus 130-2 , 133 ; Nietzsche's Overman 122 ; Persians 70 , 73 , 108-9 ; Phaeton 132-4 ; and phthónos 77 ; repressing death 187 ; Sorcerer's Apprentice 153 ; Spartans 110 ; technology 160 ; tragedy 98-103 Icarus 130-2 , 133 ideative ...
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... Daedalus 130-2 ; interior space 4 ; Jung 194 , 215 ; of limits and self - limitation 11 ; loss to science and philosophy 9-10 ; metaphorical exploration of psyche 13-19 ; modern destruction rather than construction 5-6 ; new 160 ; no ...
... Daedalus 130-2 ; interior space 4 ; Jung 194 , 215 ; of limits and self - limitation 11 ; loss to science and philosophy 9-10 ; metaphorical exploration of psyche 13-19 ; modern destruction rather than construction 5-6 ; new 160 ; no ...
Table des matières
THE MYTH OF GROWTH THE MYTH OF LIMITS | 3 |
TOWARDS A PSYCHOLOGICAL TERRITORY | 13 |
THE LIMITS OF ENDEAVOR IN NONWESTERN | 20 |
THE EGOISM OF THE ARCHAIC GODS | 35 |
THE GREEK SENSE OF LIMITS | 46 |
HISTORY BEGINS TO MOVE | 62 |
NEW HORIZONS | 81 |
FROM | 117 |
WESTERN | 142 |
THE SITE OF THE CRISIS | 159 |
ROUTES TOWARDS RECONSTRUCTION | 174 |
DEATH DEPRESSION AND GUILT | 185 |
Notes | 192 |
Primary sources and bibliographical note | 219 |
227 | |
GREEK | 130 |
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Expressions et termes fréquents
action Aeschylus already ancient Greece ancient Greeks Archaic Aristotle arrogance Athenians Athens attempt attitudes barbarians Chapter Christianity civilization Club of Rome concept conquest consciousness continued course cult culture death deity depth psychology destiny divine emotions enantiodromia enemy epic epoch ethics Euripides evil existence expansion fact faith feeling fifth century forces gods Greece Greeks growth guilt hand Hellenic Herodotus Hesiod Homer human hybris Ibid Iliad individual interior jealousy Jung justice knowledge less likewise limits lives lógos means mind modern modes monotheism moral myth mythic nature Nemesis never Nietzsche notion Odysseus Persian Persian Wars philosophy phthónos Plato point of view pólis political polytheism principle Prometheus psyche psychic psychology punishment rational reference religion religious secular seems seen sense society Socrates soul story things thinking thought Thucydides tradition tragedies transformed turn Ulysses unconscious victory western word Xerxes Zeus