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A New World View Struggles to Emerge. Richard Eckersley.

by Eckersley, Richard; ProQuest Information and Learning Company.
Series: SIRS Enduring Issues 2005Article 19Human Relations. Publisher: Futurist, 2004ISSN: 1522-3248;.Subject(s): Australians -- Attitudes | Avarice | Environmentalism | Ethics | Interpersonal relations | Materialism | Moral conditions | Quality of life | Spirituality | ValuesDDC classification: 050 Summary: "While most people profess to being happy and satisfied with their own lives, many surveys reveal widespread public disquiet about the modern way of life....Evidence of the moral tension in modern life is unequivocal, and evidence that people want to do, and are doing, something about it is growing." (FUTURIST) The author examines the growing trend of people "who have made a comprehensive shift in their world view, values, and way of life."
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REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 16 Why Are They Smiling?. REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 17 Stem Cell Dilemma. REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 18 "We Mean Business". REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 19 A New World View Struggles to Emerge. REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 2 The Disability Gulag. REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 20 Can the Sciences Help Us to Make Wise Ethical Judgments?. REF SIRS 2005 Human Relations Article 21 Who Counts As "Them?": Racism and Virtue in the United States and....

Articles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2005.

Originally Published: A New World View Struggles to Emerge, Sept./Oct. 2004; pp. 20-24.

"While most people profess to being happy and satisfied with their own lives, many surveys reveal widespread public disquiet about the modern way of life....Evidence of the moral tension in modern life is unequivocal, and evidence that people want to do, and are doing, something about it is growing." (FUTURIST) The author examines the growing trend of people "who have made a comprehensive shift in their world view, values, and way of life."

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