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Global Religion

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 April 2010

Extract

The social and environmental problems that we face at this tail end of twentieth-century progress require us to identify some cause, some spirit that transcends the petty limits of our time and place. It is easy to believe (or to pretend to ourselves that we believe) that there is no crisis. We have been told too often that the oceans will soon die, the air be poisonous, our energy reserves run dry; that the world will grow warmer, coastlands be flooded and the climate change; that plague, famine and war will be the necessary checks on population growth. But here we are: sufficiently healthy and well-fed, connoisseurs of far-off catastrophe and horror movies, confident that something will turn up or that the prophecies of doom were only dreams. We are the descendants, after all, of creatures who did not despair, who hoped against hope that there would still be life tomorrow. We no more believe in the world's end than we believe that soldiers could break down the door and drag us off to torture and to death: we don't believe that they could even when we know that, somewhere altogether elsewhere, they did. Even if we can force ourselves to remember other ages, other lands or other classes, we are content enough.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy and the contributors 1994

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References

1 Most of the material in this paper is treated at greater length in my Scott Holland lectures (1992), published as Clark, 1993.

2 Callenbach, 1978, p. 29, a fairly conventional post-Morris utopia.

3 Michael Howard, Secretary of State for the Environment, to the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds/Green Alliance Conference, 30 October 1992. Quite what ‘sustainable development’ actually means in practice is another question.

4 Joseph, in this interpretation, is the villain, who sold the Egyptian people into slavery to Pharoah, and whose own people paid the price of it.

5 Chesterton, 1917, p. 59. Chesterton might now find it more appropriate to castigate certain once-fashionable French ideologues.

6 It is noteworthy that the one Biblical prophet to have clearly succeeded in reforming anyone is the one most obviously a fiction!