Dialectic vs. Technocracy : Higher Reasoning from Ancient Greek Rationalism to Modern German Idealism
(2022)

Nonfiction

eBook

Provider: hoopla

Details

PUBLISHED
[United States] : Algora Publishing, 2022
Made available through hoopla
DESCRIPTION

1 online resource

ISBN/ISSN
9781628945027 MWT19211247, 1628945028 19211247
LANGUAGE
English
NOTES

The Antidote to a Mechanized World In an age increasingly dominated by algorithms, artificial intelligence, and the relentless pursuit of efficiency, what becomes of the human mind? Are we destined to become predictable machines, content with the "low reason" of coping in a world on its own terms? In his vital and timely book, Dialectic vs. Technocracy, Dr. Tommi Juhani Hanhijärvi argues that this fate is not inevitable. He issues a powerful call to re-activate a profound, higher faculty of the mind that has been obscured by today's mechanistic thinking: dialectical reasoning. This is the reasoning of freedom, morality, and true enlightenment. It is the ability to question foundations, to see beyond the given, and to grasp the absolute principles that give life meaning. Hanhijärvi takes the reader on a masterful intellectual journey to rediscover this lost art. The exploration begins in ancient Athens with Socrates, whose relentless questioning exposed the limits of conventional wisdom. It continues with Plato, who envisioned a world of perfect Ideas-not as abstract concepts, but as the ultimate standards for beauty, goodness, and justice. The journey then moves to modern German Idealism, where Kant grappled with the mind's own limits through his famous Antinomies-the inescapable contradictions that arise when we ask the biggest questions about the universe, free will, and God. Finally, Hegel reveals a vision of history itself as a grand dialectical process, where ideas and cultures evolve through conflict and synthesis. With a clear and engaging style, Hanhijärvi acts as a "musicologist of thought," deciphering the deep, harmonious structures in the work of these geniuses. Dialectic vs. Technocracy is more than a history of philosophy; it is an urgent invitation to reclaim our intellectual sovereignty and prove that the human mind is infinitely more than a machine

Mode of access: World Wide Web

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