Author picture

For other authors named David Watson, see the disambiguation page.

2 Works 93 Members 3 Reviews

Works by David Watson

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1951
Gender
male
Nationality
USA
Associated Place (for map)
USA

Members

Reviews

3 reviews
This collection of essays compiles nearly 20 years of profoundly radical writing on society, the environment, and technology. Most of the contributions are from the newspaper The Fifth Estate, published in Detroit from 1965 to present. Many of the articles are full of references to social theorists, historians, philosophers, and radical thinkers throughout history, and there are many pages of dead-on analysis of current (now historical) events from Bhopal to Exxon-Valdez, from Vietnam to the show more (first) Gulf War, all very much relevant in 2011.

This is an important and overlooked document in the history of the last 30 years of radical thought, which asks questions few are willing to ask in a sincere, unflinching way. Are the problems of technology more deeply rooted and pervasive than we have previously been willing to consider? In a world system whose trajectory is clearly toward always increasing, always accelerating production, is capitalism more meaningfully understood as a mode of being than a narrowly-defined set of property relations? When will we stop thinking of environmental disasters as aberrations avoidable through regulation and recognize that they are an essential product of the megamachine?

As I write this Japan is probably about to experience a nuclear meltdown. I believe the tragic truth of this book is absolutely essential for our survival.
show less
A great little book on "progress and other mirages" by a sincere and harsh social critic.
Sisällysluettelosta:
Social ecology at an impasse; Of human hubris and cricket dreams; The wolf’s point of view; Progress and other mirages; The social ecologist as technocrat; Bookchin’s civitas: from her to where?; On dreams of reason and unbridgeable chasms; Social ecology and its discontents; Abbreviations for books by Murray Bookchin cited in this essay

Statistics

Works
2
Members
93
Popularity
#200,858
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
3
ISBNs
201
Languages
10

Charts & Graphs