Our culture has no concept of stopping. We continue to build motorways
and airports for a future in which cars and planes may no longer
exist. We’re converting our planet from a natural one to an
artificial one in which the quantity of man-made objects – houses,
asphalt, cars, plastic, computers and so on – now exceeds the
totality of living matter. And while biomass continues to decline due
to deforestation and species extinction, the mass of man-made objects
is growing faster than ever. We’re on a treadmill to disaster. To
get off this treadmill, argues Harald Welzer, we need to learn how to
stop: as individuals and as societies, we need to stop doing what
we’re doing and say ‘enough’. We find it hard to do this because
our culture has trained us to regard endless escalation as desirable,
and we’re reluctant to surrender the material benefits of growth.
But as long as the expansive cultural model continues to prevail,
there will be no change of course in favour of sustainable and
climate-friendly practices and lifestyles. We need a cultural model in
which the beauty of stopping is given the recognition needed for the
project of civilization to continue. Optimizing processes that are
heading in the wrong direction only makes matters worse. Stopping is
imperative: it is a human cultural technique that we must re-learn.
Only then can we achieve a new beginning.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781509555888
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Polity
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter