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Full Description
In Sustainable History and Human Dignity, Professor Nayef Al-Rodhan shows that it is the human quest for sustainable governance, balancing the ever-present tension between nine human dignity needs and three human nature attributes (emotionality, amorality & egoism), that has and will most profoundly shape the course of history. Beginning with an 'Ocean Model' of a single collective human civilisation, Al-Rodhan constructs a common human story comprised of multiple geo-cultural domains and sub-cultures with a history of mutual borrowing and synergies. If humanity as a whole is to flourish, all of these diverse geo-cultural domains must succeed. Only thus can lasting peace and prosperity be achieved for all, especially in the face of 'Civilisational Frontier Risks' and highly disruptive technologies in the twenty-first century.
Contents
List of Figures and Tables
Acknowledgements
1. Sustainable History with Dignity and without Directionality
Part 1. The Foundations of Life, Human Nature and Human Knowledge
2. Where Are We? Cosmology and the Big Universal Picture
3. Who Are We? Neurochemical Man and Emotional Amoral Egoism
4. What Motivates Us? The Neuro P5, Power and Sustainable History
5. Why Are We Here? The Sustainable Neurochemical Gratification Principle
6. What Do We Know for Certain? A Proposal for a Theory of Knowledge
Part 2. The Eight Prerequisites for Sustainable History
7. How Can Dignity Be Attained? Minimum Criteria for Human Dignity
8. How Can We Sustainably Govern Ourselves? Balancing the Attributes of Human Nature and the Requirements for Human Dignity
9. What Is Needed for Good National Governance? Minimum Criteria for Dignity-Based National Governance
10. What Is Needed for Good Global Governance? Minimum Criteria for Dignity- Based Good Global Governance
11. How Can We Shape a Fairer World? Minimum Criteria for Global Justice
12. How to Create a Safer World? The Five Dimensions of Global Security
13. How Should We Approach International Relations? Symbiotic Realism
14. How Should Statecraft Be Conducted? Twenty- First- Century Statecraft and Meta-Geopolitics
15. How Should Cultures Interrelate? Transcultural Security and Universal Axiology
16. How Can We Collectively Succeed? The Beneficial Development of Individual Geo-cultural Domains
Part 3. The History and the Future of Human, Trans-Human and Post-Human Civilisation
17. Where Are We Going? Sustainable History and the Future of Civilisation
Notes
Bibliography



