Future primal
How our wilderness origins show us the way forward
Louis G. Herman.
puke
Nā Kumuhana: San (African people); Sustainability; Political science; Environmental aspects; Anthropological aspects
Ka Hōʻuluʻulu Manaʻo: "How should we respond to our converging crises of violent conflict, political corruption, and global ecological devastation? In this sweeping, big-picture synthesis, Louis G. Herman argues that for us to create a sustainable, fulfilling future, we need to first look back into our deepest past to recover our core humanity. Important clues for recovery can be found in the lives of traditional San Bushman hunter-gatherers of South Africa, the closest living relatives to the ancestral African population from which all humans descended. Their culture can give us a sense of what life was like during the tens of thousands of years when humans lived in wilderness, without warfare, walled cities, or slavery. Herman suggests we draw from the experience of the San and other earth-based cultures and weave their wisdom together with the scientific story of an evolving universe to help create something radically new -- an earth-centered, planetary politics with the personal truth quest at its heart." -- From publisher description."To address global political unrest and ecological collapse, political science professor Herman presents ways to incorporate the wisdom of the hunter-gatherer culture of the San Bushmen of southern Africa into modern Western culture"--
- helu_kuhikuhi: 1234
- inoa: Future primal
- hope_inoa: How our wilderness origins show us the way forward
- inoa_wae: Future primal
- ʻōlelo_koʻikoʻi: Louis G. Herman.
- hulu: puke
- kumuhana: San (African people)|Sustainability|Political science|Environmental aspects|Anthropological aspects
- haku: Louis G. Herman
- haku_wae: Herman, Louis G.
- hōʻuluʻulu_manaʻo: "How should we respond to our converging crises of violent conflict, political corruption, and global ecological devastation? In this sweeping, big-picture synthesis, Louis G. Herman argues that for us to create a sustainable, fulfilling future, we need to first look back into our deepest past to recover our core humanity. Important clues for recovery can be found in the lives of traditional San Bushman hunter-gatherers of South Africa, the closest living relatives to the ancestral African population from which all humans descended. Their culture can give us a sense of what life was like during the tens of thousands of years when humans lived in wilderness, without warfare, walled cities, or slavery. Herman suggests we draw from the experience of the San and other earth-based cultures and weave their wisdom together with the scientific story of an evolving universe to help create something radically new -- an earth-centered, planetary politics with the personal truth quest at its heart." -- From publisher description."To address global political unrest and ecological collapse, political science professor Herman presents ways to incorporate the wisdom of the hunter-gatherer culture of the San Bushmen of southern Africa into modern Western culture"--
- papa_kuhikuhi: Pt. I.Where are we?. The truth quest -- Abandonment of the quest -- Recovery of the quest, I -- Recovery of the quest, II -- pt. II. Where do we come from?. Out of wilderness -- Lost worlds -- Primal politics -- "If you don't dance, you die" -- Boundary crossing -- The outer reaches of inner wilderness -- The primal polis: Socrates as shaman -- pt. III. Where should we be going?. Our primal future -- Epilogue.
- lā: 2013
- ʻōlelo: ʻŌlelo Haole
Edition Info
Future primal
. New World Library (Novato, CA), 2013
1st ed.
isbn: 9781608681150- helu_kuhikuhi: 236
- helu_kuhikuhi_ʻiʻo: 1234
- hoʻopuka_ʻana: 1st ed.
- mea_paʻi: New World Library
- wahi_paʻi: Novato, CA
- ana_ʻaoʻao: xxv, 466 p.
- lā_hpʻ: 2013
- ʻōlelo_hpʻ: ʻŌlelo Haole
- isbn_13: 9781608681150
- lc_class: GN492.H44 2013
Holdings