A Brief History of Mind and Civilization

The rational mind is the highest evolved status of human consciousness. The evolution of mind and civilization has proceeded hand in hand for millennia. The development of new capacities of mind made possible the development of tools, language, agriculture, permanent settlements, towns, cities, reli...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Garry Jacobs
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Risk Institute, Trieste- Geneva 2016-05-01
Series:Cadmus
Online Access:http://cadmusjournal.org/article/volume-2/issue-6/brief-history-mind-and-civilization
id doaj-61c598d2ef6d454ca5a16c9ca76dc556
record_format Article
spelling doaj-61c598d2ef6d454ca5a16c9ca76dc5562020-11-24T20:41:43ZengRisk Institute, Trieste- GenevaCadmus2038-52422038-52502016-05-012671110A Brief History of Mind and CivilizationGarry Jacobs0CEO, World Academy of Art & ScienceThe rational mind is the highest evolved status of human consciousness. The evolution of mind and civilization has proceeded hand in hand for millennia. The development of new capacities of mind made possible the development of tools, language, agriculture, permanent settlements, towns, cities, religion, trade, transportation, communication, government, law, money, literature and the arts, education, nation states, scientific and technological research. So too, each stage in the development of civilization has shaped the evolution of the human mind and its faculties and the way they are applied in life. The limits to our knowledge and accomplishment reflect limits to our rationality and the utilization of our mental potential. Our knowledge consists of fragmented, piecemeal, compartmentalized theories, when the reality we seek to understand is inclusive, complex and integrated. Our conceptions are based on mechanistic, static, inflexible equilibrium models, whereas the world we live in is alive, dynamic, organic, conscious, responsive, creative and continuously evolving. Our science assumes the poise of an impartial observer of objective reality, whereas all knowledge without exception is colored by the subjective perspective of the observer. Our science strives to be neutral and value-free, whereas the knowledge we need should help us realize universal values. We need to evolve ways of thinking that reunite the objective and subjective dimensions of reality and reflect the integrality, dynamism and vibrancy of evolutionary nature. That is the challenge and adventure before us.http://cadmusjournal.org/article/volume-2/issue-6/brief-history-mind-and-civilization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Garry Jacobs
spellingShingle Garry Jacobs
A Brief History of Mind and Civilization
Cadmus
author_facet Garry Jacobs
author_sort Garry Jacobs
title A Brief History of Mind and Civilization
title_short A Brief History of Mind and Civilization
title_full A Brief History of Mind and Civilization
title_fullStr A Brief History of Mind and Civilization
title_full_unstemmed A Brief History of Mind and Civilization
title_sort brief history of mind and civilization
publisher Risk Institute, Trieste- Geneva
series Cadmus
issn 2038-5242
2038-5250
publishDate 2016-05-01
description The rational mind is the highest evolved status of human consciousness. The evolution of mind and civilization has proceeded hand in hand for millennia. The development of new capacities of mind made possible the development of tools, language, agriculture, permanent settlements, towns, cities, religion, trade, transportation, communication, government, law, money, literature and the arts, education, nation states, scientific and technological research. So too, each stage in the development of civilization has shaped the evolution of the human mind and its faculties and the way they are applied in life. The limits to our knowledge and accomplishment reflect limits to our rationality and the utilization of our mental potential. Our knowledge consists of fragmented, piecemeal, compartmentalized theories, when the reality we seek to understand is inclusive, complex and integrated. Our conceptions are based on mechanistic, static, inflexible equilibrium models, whereas the world we live in is alive, dynamic, organic, conscious, responsive, creative and continuously evolving. Our science assumes the poise of an impartial observer of objective reality, whereas all knowledge without exception is colored by the subjective perspective of the observer. Our science strives to be neutral and value-free, whereas the knowledge we need should help us realize universal values. We need to evolve ways of thinking that reunite the objective and subjective dimensions of reality and reflect the integrality, dynamism and vibrancy of evolutionary nature. That is the challenge and adventure before us.
url http://cadmusjournal.org/article/volume-2/issue-6/brief-history-mind-and-civilization
work_keys_str_mv AT garryjacobs abriefhistoryofmindandcivilization
AT garryjacobs briefhistoryofmindandcivilization
_version_ 1716824051855392768