Against Apocalypse
Recovering Humanity's Wholeness
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Lexington Books
Published:24th Dec '15
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This hardback is available in another edition too:
- Paperback£39.00(9781498524469)
The book denounces the irresponsible recklessness of some geopolitical agendas which are pushing the world relentlessly toward a major global war, and possibly toward nuclear destruction or apocalypse. The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists has recently placed the "Doomsday Clock" at three minutes to midnight. Signs pointing toward a possible grand disaster are multiple: everywhere one looks in our world today one finds ethnic and religious conflicts, bloody mayhem, incipient genocide, proxy wars and "hybrid" wars", renewal of the Cold War. Add to these ills global economic crises, massive streams of refugees, and the threats posed by global warming - and the picture of a world in complete disorder is complete. Thus, it is high time for humankind to wake up. Starting from the portrayal of global "anomie", the book issues a call to people everywhere to oppose the rush to destruction and to return to political sanity and the quest for peace. This is a call to global public responsibility. In ethical terms, it says that people everywhere have an obligation to prevent apocalypse and to "maintain" our world or "hold the world together" in all its dimensions - including the dimensions of human and social life, natural ecology, and human spiritual aspirations (or openness to the divine). Differently out: in lieu of the prevailing disorder and brokenness, the book urges us to search for a new "wholeness" and just peace. The book is intercultural and also inter-disciplinary. Since the aim is holistic - to hold the world together - the book necessarily has to draw on many disciplines: including philosophy, theology, social science, history, and literature. In terms of Western philosophical and intellectual legacies, it draws mainly on the teachings of Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Derrida. It also offers a completely new interpretation of the work of Thomas Hobbes, unearthing in this work an ethical demand to exit from the state of perpetual warfare in the direction of a shared commonwealth. The text also relies on the teachings of Christian theology (both Catholic and Protestant), invoking at crucial junctures the works of Karl Barth, Raimon Panikkar, and others. In terms of non-Western intellectual and spiritual legacies, the book offers new interpretations of leading texts in the Indian and Chinese traditions. Thus, emphasis is placed on...
Fred Dallmayr’s new book is an extraordinary contribution to political theory and philosophy. In Against Apocalypse: Recovering Humanity’s Wholeness, Dallmayr develops an ontological conception of human solidarity which allows him to put into question and also reconfigure some of the most basic notions of political theory such as freedom, individuality, and solidarity. By so doing, he calls for no less than entirely new beginnings of the political imagination. This is a must read for all who continue to heed the call of justice for a better world—for all of the inhabitants, human and nonhuman, of this planet. -- Drucilla Cornell, Rutgers University
Moved by his relentless passion for global peace and justice, Fred Dallmayr has, over many years, engaged in an extraordinary intellectual journey of cross-cultural dialogue. When the world seems to be in an unprecedented state of conflict, disorder and injustice, Against Apocalypse reminds us that a different, more humane and peaceful world needs also something of a Heideggerian Abendland (evening land) attitude: the patient cultivation of a new humanism of dialogue between the philosophical and religious traditions of the world, in dialogue with nature and the divine, to recover the deep relational sense of humankind's wholeness and unity. -- Fabio Petito, University of Sussex
ISBN: 9781498524445
Dimensions: 238mm x 157mm x 15mm
Weight: 349g
148 pages