An edition of The vanishing of a species? (2010)

The Vanishing of a Species?

A Look at Modern Man's Predicament by a Geologist

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Last edited by ISBNbot2
August 22, 2020 | History
An edition of The vanishing of a species? (2010)

The Vanishing of a Species?

A Look at Modern Man's Predicament by a Geologist

The Vanishing of a Species? is a serious treatise exploring the past evolution, present predicament and possible future extinction of a particular species on planet Earth. The species is Homo sapiens. The threat to the species is Homo sapiens.

The author, a former professor of geology and geophysics, starts his exploration by putting man in context, both in terms of space and time. We find that in either case, man is not as pre-eminent as he may believe. While man is the most accomplished toolmaker this planet has ever seen, his technical progress is overpowering his social progress—an imbalance that sets the stage for his vanishing act, absent quick, corrective action.

The author makes a compelling case that society’s unrestricted material growth is the challenge of our times. Modern man’s predicament refers broadly to man’s collision course with nature—his attitude of ruthless exploitation leading to depletion of non-renewable resources, pollution of the environment, overpopulation, with its accompanying increase in human aggression, and other effects.

After the agricultural and industrial-scientific revolutions, it is now time for the Human Revolution—a more realistic attitude on the part of man towards the universe, the earth and other forms of terrestrial life.

Vanishing covers a wide spectrum from man’s early beginnings to the modern problems of population increase, resource depletion, pollution, crime, and many more. The book addresses the roles that heredity (nature) and environment (nurture) play in shaping man’s nature, and in particular, his current high level of aggression—a trait that stands in the way of the Human Revolution. The author calls for the humanists to communicate with the technologists through an interdisciplinary dialogue that may pave the way to the Human Revolution.

Major works discussed in Vanishing include the Club of Rome’s much reviewed 1972 work The Limits to Growth and updates thereto, as well as C.P. Snow’s seminal 1959 lecture on The Two Cultures.

Vanishing concludes that without the Human Revolution in short order, Homo sapiens may well turn out to be an evolutionary flash in the pan—occupying a dominating but fleeting position in earth history.

Vanishing should appeal to all audiences. Recent economic turmoil around the globe, and increasing evidence of the serious strain placed on the earth by the demands of humankind, make the observations and recommendations raised within Vanishing deserving of the sober attention of all Homo sapiens interested in the survival and prosperity of their species.

Publish Date
Pages
280

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Edition Availability
Cover of: The vanishing of a species?
The vanishing of a species?: a look at modern man's predicament by a geologist
2010, Qualitas Pub.
in English
Cover of: The Vanishing of a Species?
The Vanishing of a Species?: A Look at Modern Man's Predicament by a Geologist
January 14, 2010, Qualitas Publishing
Hardcover

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Book Details


First Sentence

"To many, this book will make peculiar reading."

Table of Contents

1. Foreward
Page 1
1. Introduction
Page 7
1. YESTERDAY - Where we Were
Page 11
2. Man and Space
Page 13
3. Man and Time
Page 17
4. Further Implications of Long Time Spans: Awareness of Evolution and the Rare Event
Page 21
5. From Early Man the Toolmaker to Present Homo Technicus
Page 35
6. How Unique is Man?
Page 39
7. Man: A Product of his Nature and his Nurture
Page 41
8. The Quest for Man's Nature
Page 45
9. The Most Dominant Species Ever
Page 53
2. TODAY - Where We Are
Page 55
10. Modern Man's Predicament
Page 57
11. The Two Cultures
Page 59
12. On the Fragmentation of Knowledge
Page 79
13. The Central Problem: The Imbalance of Growth
Page 83
14. The Limits to Growth Reviewed
Page 87

Edition Notes

Published in
Calgary, Alberta
Genre
Science

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
304.2
Library of Congress
GN281.0734 2010

The Physical Object

Format
Hardcover
Pagination
280
Number of pages
280
Dimensions
6" x 9"
Weight
1.3 lb

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL23850683M
ISBN 13
9781897093825

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History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
August 22, 2020 Edited by ISBNbot2 normalize ISBN
July 31, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot associate edition with work OL16065324W
April 13, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Linked existing covers to the edition.
November 1, 2009 Edited by 174.0.240.44 Edited without comment.
November 1, 2009 Created by 174.0.240.44 Edited without comment.