Politics, Ethics and Culture in Our Time
A Post-civilizational Perspective
Abstract
Global capitalism is effecting changes in human life as momentous as those that occurred during the Neolithic Revolution, the Axial Age (700-300 BC), and the modern era post-1500, when industrial capitalism, state power, and science reshaped the civilized world. The transformation is paradoxical, however. Science and technology ensure material progress but the market promotes cultural obsolescence and erodes belief in the Enlightenment ideals that inspired the quest for progress. In Western democracies, liberty and equality are proving irreconcilable, citizens becoming demoralized, fraternity fractured; meanwhile despotic Eurasian states are recycling old faiths and concocting neo-imperialist ideologies. These contradictions must be confronted if the cultural values that sustain civilized life are to be conserved.
Keywords
bureaucratic nation-state; consumer culture; contemporary society; deculturalization; demoralization; despotic capitalism; forces of modernity; globalization; liberal democracy; paradox of progressDOI
10.1163/9789004538177ISBN
9789004538177, 9789004538160, 9789004538177Publisher
BrillPublisher website
https://brill.com/Publication date and place
2023Series
Social and Critical Theory, 29Classification
Social and political philosophy
Ethics and moral philosophy