
Managing Humanity’s Insanity – Talk by Graham Parkes
Talk title: Managing Humanity’s Insanity – Revisioning our Place in Nature through Classical Chinese Philosophy
Date & Time: Monday, 23.10.2023, 6pm-7.15pm (including Q&A). Followed by drinks reception
Location: Abden House, 1 Marchhall Crescent, Edinburgh, EH16 5HP
All Welcome. Book HERE.
Abstract
Why the extreme term ‘insanity’? Well, because the way that we in the developed countries are currently living is beginning, through its impact on the climate and the biosphere, to render the planet uninhabitable. And only a very few among the ultra-rich are going to be able (they hope) to go somewhere else to live. This presentation examines the roots of this insanity and proposes some ways of treating it. We know how risky global situation is thanks to the idea of ‘planetary boundaries’, elaborated by some of the world’s top climate and Earth System scientists. For nine of Earth’s subsystems they have identified a range of thresholds beyond which human pressure could trigger abrupt changes that would tip the entire system into a state that’s distinctly inhospitable for human existence. A large part of the problem is a prevalent idea of who we are as human beings. A right-wing libertarian (neoliberal) ideology has convinced many people that we are basically autonomous individuals at liberty to extract from the natural world whatever we need to satisfy our desires for material comfort, as assured by continued economic growth. Another factor behind our blindness to the severe risks of climate breakdown and the destruction of biosphere integrity is ‘the posthuman spectacle’. Our enthusiastic immersion in information technologies and social media tends to reinforce Cartesian ‘indivi-dualism’, keeping us narcotised in a virtual world of ‘representations’ and oblivious to the dangers of our physical situation. A more plausible and beneficial understanding of who we are regards us not as individuals but as relatives—related to other humans and myriad other beings on which we depend. Indigenous philosophies from numerous cultures share this kind of understanding, but for pragmatic reasons we do well to draw from the ancient Chinese philosophical tradition to heal our individualist derangement. After all, without enthusiastic cooperation from China it will be impossible to slow global heating and preserve the biosphere. While revising our self-understanding to a saner mode, we can be making major changes in our social, political, and economic institutions, which would let us avoid the worst—and live more fully human lives.
Professor Graham Parkes
Professor Graham Parkes was born and raised in Glasgow, Scotland, and was educated at Oxford and the University of California, Berkeley. He taught Asian and comparative philosophy at the University of Hawaii for twenty-five years, punctuated by three years as a visiting scholar and fellow at Harvard. After seven years as Professor of Philosophy at the National University of Ireland, he moved to Vienna, where he is Professorial Research Fellow in Philosophy at the University of Vienna. He has been a visiting professor at other universities in Europe, China, and Japan.