Deep Futures: Our Prospects for SurvivalMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2003 - Всего страниц: 332 Deep Futures addresses many questions, largely about the future of humanity, such as: Will the human lineage survive, reasonably happily, the twenty-first century? Assuming we survive, will this millennium be particularly difficult ... or just plain difficult? Will we eventually become extinct (like most species) or continue to evolve? Deep Futures is divided into three parts. Part 1 looks at what serious futuregazers see as the prospects for the human and post-human lineage, looking at and beyond this century and this millennium, far into the future. Part 2 reflects on ideas for thinking about the future drawn from an array of disciplines and on broad questions that will continue to confront humanity. Part 3 identifies science-based strategies that may be adopted to maximise humanity's chances for surviving 'well', into the near future and beyond. Book jacket. |
Содержание
CHAPTER 2 | 73 |
Chapter 3 | 135 |
Chapter 4 | 148 |
Chapter 5 | 207 |
Managing unpredictability | 223 |
Chapter 7 | 234 |
Chapter 8 | 256 |
Chapter 9 | 294 |
321 | |
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Deep Futures: Our Prospects for Survival Kenneth Douglas Cocks,Doug Cocks Недоступно для просмотра - 2003 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
21st century achieve activities adaptive basic basin of attraction become behavioural rules biological capacity capitalism cent challenge chapter civilisations co-evolution co-operation collapse collective competitive complex complex adaptive systems complexification continue countries cultural cycle decline deep future democracy diseases dissipative systems diverse economic ecosystems emerging energy environment environmental eventually evolution evolutionary evolve example feedback genes genetic globalisation groups growth guidelines human hunter-gatherer ice age ideas important improve increasing increasingly individual industrial institutions interactions knowledge lineage live major managing million modern societies natural selection particular perhaps political population possible post-human priority issues problems production quality survival recognised reduce reorganisation response role scenarios self-organising senescence social contract social goals social learning social organisation societal change society's sociopathy species strategy structures subsystems suggests technologies thinking tion trend volcanic winter wicked problems world society
Ссылки на эту книгу
Exploring Resilience in Social-ecological Systems: Comparative Studies and ... Brian Harrison Walker Недоступно для просмотра - 2006 |