The Most Important Crisis Facing the 21St Century
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This book both describes this phenomenon and evaluates whether there are good reasons to accept it.
The author argues that if we adopt such a philosophy, then we have no basis for upholding the dignity of each human being, and this has vast and frightening consequences for human beings.
This book is not just timely, but absolutely critical for everybody to read. It is not presented in dry, abstract terms, but in the language of humanity. It is a cry from a human heart, deeply concerned about what is taking place in the world. It is one of the most important books of our time.
Arnold A. McMahon
I have spent most of my adult life being a professor of philosophy. Teaching it was seventh heaven for me, and I felt that I could keep on teaching till I was 300. But, gradually, the realization dawned on me that I needed to write about the above important issue, and that the demands of a teaching schedule would not give me the extended periods of time to write this book. Now that it is finished, I would love to go back teaching if anybody will have me. I was born in England, but have spent most of my adult life in California. But where one lives is not as important as who one is and what one does. We are all part of the one human family. I hope my book does some good in this world.
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The Most Important Crisis Facing the 21St Century - Arnold A. McMahon
The Most
Important Crisis
Facing the
21st Century
Arnold A. McMahon
US%26UKLogoB%26Wnew.aiAuthorHouse™
1663 Liberty Drive
Bloomington, IN 47403
www.authorhouse.com
Phone: 1-800-839-8640
© 2012 by Arnold A. McMahon. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
Published by AuthorHouse 07/26/2012
ISBN: 978-1-4772-4794-5 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-4772-4796-9 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-4772-4795-2 (e)
Library of Congress Control Number: 2012912794
Any people depicted in stock imagery provided by Thinkstock are models, and such images are being used for illustrative purposes only.
Certain stock imagery © Thinkstock.
Because of the dynamic nature of the Internet, any web addresses or links contained in this book may have changed since publication and may no longer be valid. The views expressed in this work are solely those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the publisher, and the publisher hereby disclaims any responsibility for them.
Contents
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 1 THE WEST
CHAPTER 2 THE ECONOMY
CHAPTER 3 POLITICS
CHAPTER 4 GOD AND RELIGION
CHAPTER 5 LOVE AND SEX
CHAPTER 6 ART
CHAPTER 7 EDUCATION
CHAPTER 8 HISTORY
CHAPTER 9 SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
CHAPTER 10 PSYCHOLOGY
CHAPTER 11 DEATH
CHAPTER 12 THE WAY FORWARD
To
My first wife of 43 years, Elizabeth,
who died before her time,
My children Shiante and Edward and
daughter-in-law, Monique
My second wife, Sabrina
Their love and sense of justice has made this book possible
INTRODUCTION
The most important crisis facing the 21st. century is something deeper than economics, politics, war, poverty, injustice, climate change or a whole host of things. These are all affected by something much deeper. But unless we understand the fundamental cancer, we will be just putting a band-aid over these surface problems. This is not to say that each of these problems is insignificant. Indeed, they press down on humanity with a great urgency, and have always pressed down on humanity with a great urgency. Today, however, something else is in play that threatens to make these problems even more acute than before.
In the last 400 years or so, the West—and much of the rest of the world—has gone through the most significant cultural change in human history. In brief, a materialistic conception of reality has replaced one that claims there is more to reality than what we hear or see or feel or touch or taste. Not everybody, of course, accepts a materialistic conception of reality, and not everybody who does accept such a view, accepts it 100%. But it has become the dominant philosophy in much of the West, and has been seeping into the rest of the world.
Is the materialist correct? Are there any good reasons for or against it?
This book will tackle those questions, and seek to see how such a conception plays out in some of the major areas of human activity—for example, in the economy, politics, religion, love, art, education, history, science, psychology and our views on death.
I will argue that we have made a wrong turn in the road, and that this turn will eventually lead to our destruction in one form or another. The existence of nuclear weapons that can destroy planet earth 100 times over is a vivid testament to this. It is my contention that this materialistic view of reality is not only wrong, but also the root cause of much of the malaise that infects the West, whether in economics, politics, love, art—the whole gamut of human experience. Unless and until we confront this serious error, we will careen from crisis to crisis, and undermine the entire fabric of humanity’s existence.
Atrocities and injustices have existed for a long time, but the current materialistic mindset undercuts and undermines one of the bulwarks against such horrors. The holocaust is but one example of that. One of mankind’s central tasks has always been to treat each human being as a being of infinite worth, never merely as a means only, but always as an end in itself—as Kant would say. This is a hard and tremendous task in and of itself. The materialistic mindset makes it impossible. That is one reason why this fundamental cultural change in the last 400 years is so important—and devastating.
As I have always refrained from writing because I thought that too much was being written, a few words of explanation are now in order.
For some time as I watched crises upon crises engulf the human race, I was struck repeatedly by the superficiality of the analyses that were done on them. Whether this was due to a limited historical perspective, or to the fact that the analyzer was part of the very system that generated the crisis—or some other reason—the fact remains that I felt that none of them came to grips with the real problem.
I do not know all the answers. Nobody does. But I hope to advance the discussion in at least a small way, and help relieve a situation where an estimated 15,000 children die every day on this earth who do not have to die, where an estimated 3 billion people live on less than $2 a day—one billion of whom live in extreme poverty (which was defined by the World Bank in 2005 as living in the U.S. on $1.25 a day, buying U.S. goods)—where war is as American as apple pie, where this little piece of land called planet earth could be destroyed by humans.
Unfortunately, more has to be left out of this book than could be put in. But I will try to present some of the more important themes, and hope that others more qualified than I will expand on those and will articulate the others.
This book Is not just an intellectual exercise. It is above all a cry from a human heart, a cry for a decent, just, loving, kind world. The heartache that is caused to billions because of hunger, cruelty, greed, discrimination—and a host of other factors—is something that we feel in our own hearts. I also feel in my heart that it does not have to be this way, that there can be justice, peace, love, kindness, creativity, courage and much, much more. Humanity can be human. It is something that I will work for till my dying day. I hope that this book will advance that goal in whole or in part.
CHAPTER 1
THE WEST
As the West has in significant part dominated the world militarily, politically and culturally for the past several hundred years, it might be fruitful to begin our exploration here. This is not to slight or downplay the magnificent contributions of countries such as India or China. There can be only so much on ones plate at any given moment.
The West—and much of the rest of the world—has gone through what can well be described as the greatest cultural change in history during the last 400 years or so. This change affects the very marrow of the culture, and to understand it, we must look at what went before.
For simplicity’s sake, the period from approximately 400 B.C. to 1,400 A.D. can be called Culture 1. It held three fundamental beliefs.
First—and foremost—it claimed that what is truly real is not what we can see, or hear, or feel or touch or taste. What is truly real are—in Plato’s terminology—the forms. They are non-spatial, non-temporal, non-physical realities which shape the world of matter. They can be perceived by the mind only. For example, consider an ethical law. Is it ever right to molest a child? No, you will say. But why? One can cite various reasons why, but at the end of the day, you are left espousing a principle which says simply that it is wrong. End of story.
Now an ethical law is not something that you can put under a microscope. You cannot take a photograph of a principle. Yet, they are real in every sense of that term. They are things that you perceive with the heart and mind and soul alone. They are—in Plato’s words—the forms.
The significance of this claim cannot be overstated. It is the defining difference between a materialist philosophy and a