The Ethical Crises of Civilization: Moral Meltdown Or AdvanceAccording to Lipson, we are at a critical stage in our history. It is clear that there has been a lowering of ethical standards in many sectors of our society. Both promise and peril confront humanity at this time. Along with the ability to annihilate the world, we have acquired the knowledge to improve the quality of life for more people than ever before. The author examines periods in history where similar conditions have existed, seeking to comprehend what is at stake in our present age, and calls for revolution in our ethical practices. Finally, he considers whether the current moral and ethical crisis will be resolved. |
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Page 11
... present and assessing the present so as to estimate what may be possible or probable in the future . Chapter 2 will examine the highly contrasted values Prologue : The Paradox of Our Time 11 Theme and Variations.
... present and assessing the present so as to estimate what may be possible or probable in the future . Chapter 2 will examine the highly contrasted values Prologue : The Paradox of Our Time 11 Theme and Variations.
Page 73
... present day . Such an interpretation of these two major civilizations is not universally held . Toynbee , for example , states another view in his table of " the civilizations of the world , 3500 B.C. to 2000 A.D. " Here , Western ...
... present day . Such an interpretation of these two major civilizations is not universally held . Toynbee , for example , states another view in his table of " the civilizations of the world , 3500 B.C. to 2000 A.D. " Here , Western ...
Page 104
... present that , except in the fields of science and technology , cannot be included among the great ones , we may wonder with some touch of envy what it must have felt like to be contemporaries participating in , or even witnessing , the ...
... present that , except in the fields of science and technology , cannot be included among the great ones , we may wonder with some touch of envy what it must have felt like to be contemporaries participating in , or even witnessing , the ...
Contents
The Primacy of Ethical Values | 9 |
ThisWorldly China OtherWorldly India | 15 |
The Split Personality of Western Civilization | 41 |
Copyright | |
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The Ethical Crises of Civilization: Moral Meltdown or Advance Leslie Lipson No preview available - 1993 |
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achievement Age of Progress Arabs arts Asia Athens Axial Age Barbara Tuchman basic beliefs breakthrough Buddhism central century B.C. Chapter China Chinese Christian church civiliza concept Confucianism Confucius contemporary contrast countries creative decades decline democracy doctrine dynasty economic effect eighteenth emperor Empire Enlightenment ethical Ethical and Cultural Europe European evil example existence fact Gautama Greeks happened Hindu Hinduism human humanistic Ibn Khaldun India individual influence institutions intellectual Islam Jesus Kenneth Clark L. T. Hobhouse later living major civilizations military millennium moral Muslim nature nineteenth century nowadays other-worldly past period person philosophy political population possible poverty practice question reason Reformation regimes religious Renaissance result revolution Roman Sinic social society Socrates sphere Sung Dynasty T'ang Taoism thinking this-worldly tion Toynbee traditional truth twentieth century United Nations University values wealth West Western civilization women Yahweh York Zoroaster