Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

E-raamat: Intrinsic Sustainable Development: Epistemes, Science, Business and Sustainability [World Scientific e-raamat]

(Univ Of Sheffield, Uk), (Univ Of Gothenburg, Sweden)
  • Formaat: 368 pages, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Dec-2011
  • Kirjastus: World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9789814365017
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • World Scientific e-raamat
  • Hind: 71,15 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Formaat: 368 pages, Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 27-Dec-2011
  • Kirjastus: World Scientific Publishing Co Pte Ltd
  • ISBN-13: 9789814365017
Teised raamatud teemal:
"Sustainable development sets the agenda for the 21st century. Human technological capability and needs mean that nature is and will be challenged and damaged in many ways. Whilst many social and technological innovations are being made to improve our survival prospects, they are likely to be insufficient to avoid continued social and ecological stress and the prospect of global tension if significant changes do not come about. The ideas in this book offer a new solution to sustainable development problems. They are concerned not with what we know but how we know, or rather how we order knowledge and create understanding in the human world. This book shows that some of the fundamental practices that shape modern society, especially in the business world, are the unwitting cause of unsustainable development. By extrapolating the epistemic analysis of Michel Foucault, a major social scientist, this book identifies a new episteme. It outlines a new way of ordering knowledge that better serves sustainable development. This pioneering book synthesizes the sciences of human and natural worlds and applies the findings to the creation of sustainable business models and equitable lifestyles for all."--Publisher's website.



Sustainable development sets the agenda for the 21st century. Human technological capability and needs mean that nature is and will be challenged and damaged in many ways. Whilst many social and technological innovations are being made to improve our survival prospects, they are likely to be insufficient to avoid continued social and ecological stress and the prospect of global tension if significant changes do not come about.The ideas in this book offer a new solution to sustainable development problems. They are concerned not with what we know but how we know, or rather how we order knowledge and create understanding in the human world.This book shows that some of the fundamental practices that shape modern society, especially in the business world, are the unwitting cause of unsustainable development. By extrapolating the epistemic analysis of Michel Foucault, a major social scientist, this book identifies a new episteme. It outlines a new way of ordering knowledge that better serves sustainable development.This pioneering book synthesizes the sciences of human and natural worlds and applies the findings to the creation of sustainable business models and equitable lifestyles for all.
Preface ix
Acknowledgments xi
PART I Approach
1(110)
Chapter 1 Just Business
3(22)
Attitudes
3(4)
Origins
7(4)
Survival
11(9)
Just Business
20(5)
Chapter 2 Natural Momentum
25(26)
Relations
25(8)
Business Relations
30(3)
Memories
33(6)
The Best of Times
39(12)
Chapter 3 Accounting Constructions
51(30)
Day 1 Representations
51(8)
Day 2 Order
59(8)
Day 3 Knowledge
67(11)
Departing
78(3)
Chapter 4 Open Societies
81(30)
Place of Departure
81(10)
Things to Know
85(6)
Flight KL0897: Towards an Economic Ecology
91(6)
Beijing: Opening Societies
97(10)
Science in Ancient China
103(4)
Flight KL0898: Openness & Death
107(4)
PART II Modern Times
111(84)
Chapter 5 Passive Nature
113(18)
A Cold Start
113(18)
Working Paper: Passive Nature in European Thought
116(15)
Chapter 6 Modern Knowledge
131(30)
The Mystery of Reality
131(2)
After Thoughts
133(2)
Solving Mysteries
135(12)
The Modern Episteme
147(12)
The Process of Freedom
159(2)
Chapter 7 Square-Peg Business
161(34)
An Everyday Enormity
161(1)
The Religious Business
161(6)
Banker Business
167(4)
The Rationalising Business
171(9)
Thomas Hobbes
173(1)
John Locke
174(2)
David Hume
176(3)
The Liberty Business
179(1)
The Independent Organic Business
180(8)
Adam Smith
183(5)
Square-Peg Business
188(7)
PART III Primal Knowledge
195(114)
Chapter 8 Breaking Free
197(34)
Chongming Island
197(6)
Evidence for a New Episteme
203(28)
First File Biological Evolution
203(3)
Second File Ecology
206(2)
Third File Diversity
208(1)
Fourth File Entropy
209(2)
Fifth File Chaos Theory
211(4)
Sixth File Dissipative Systems
215(1)
Seventh File Bifurcation and Autopoiesis
216(4)
Eight File Complexity
220(5)
Ninth File Active Nature
225(6)
Chapter 9 The Primal Episteme
231(20)
Aristotle's Spring
231(7)
All Under Heaven
235(1)
Surface Sedimentation
236(1)
A Geological Find
236(2)
Unearthing a Buried Process: Genesis
238(2)
Episteme Change
239(1)
The Emerging Episteme
240(8)
Understanding the Primal Episteme
243(1)
Primal Episteme Properties
244(2)
Primal Episteme Analyses
246(2)
For Foucault
248(3)
Chapter 10 Primal Wisdom
251(22)
Primal Wisdom I Attitude
253(4)
Primal Wisdom II Self
257(6)
Primal Wisdom III Unity of Knowledge
263(1)
Primal Wisdom IV Ethics
264(5)
Primal Wisdom V Education
269(4)
Chapter 11 Primal Business
273(36)
"What have We Got?"
273(26)
QC had Morality
274(8)
Grey Beard had Typologies
282(7)
The Older Boy had Diagrams
289(10)
Discussed on Suomenlinna: The Import
299(7)
"What is Sustainable Development?"
300(3)
Why Intrinsic Sustainable Development?
303(3)
Table Talk
306(3)
PART IV Consequences
309(28)
Chapter 12 Resistance & Assistance
311(26)
Attitude
312(10)
Chinese Institutions
322(2)
Western Institutions
324(5)
World Institution
329(8)
References 337(12)
Index 349