Macroshift navigating the transformation to a sustainable world
(1994)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Berrett-Koehler Publishers : Made available through hoopla, 1994
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781609943660 (electronic bk.) MWT11282194, 160994366X (electronic bk.) 11282194
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

We live in the midst of one of the greatest technological revolutions in history, an era of deep-seated transformation-a macro shift in civilization, says preeminent scholar and futurist Ervin Laszlo. Its signs and manifestations are all around us, from the deadly HIV/AIDS epidemic sweeping Africa and the dangerous fire-trap sweatshops routinely killing workers in Bangladesh, to the environmental havoc created by genetic engineering, power plant pollution and mechanized agriculture. The application of new technologies has turned into a double-edged sword. The world is growing together in some respects, but is coming apart in others. Worldwide economic globalization, another sign of the macro shift, all too often benefits the few rather than the many. Hundreds of millions live at a higher material standard of living, but thousands of millions are pressed into abject poverty. The richest 20% earn ninety times the income of the poorest 20%, consumes 11 times as much energy, and eat eleven times as much meat. There have been other macro shifts in human history, but they spanned centuries, allowing cultural values, beliefs, and change to occur gradually. Today, technology has reduced our time to adapt; the entire critical period of change is compressed into the lifetime of a generation. Today's macro shift, explains Laszlo, harbors great promise, as well as grave danger. He outlines two possible scenarios: "The Breakdown," where we choose to drift without a change in our current direction toward chaos, anarchy, and destruction, or "The Breakthrough," where we collectively transform our thinking and behavior to produce creative, sustainable solutions to dangerous global problems. And he shows what each of us can do-politically, professionally, and privately-to bring about the Breakthrough and shape a humane and sustainable global future. While technology is what drives the unprecedented speed of this macro shift, it is our vision, values, and actions now that will ultimately determine the outcome. The choice is up to us-the power is in our hands

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