Posterity Lost: Progress, Ideology, and the Decline of the American FamilyRowman & Littlefield, 1997 - 353 páginas In this pathbreaking study that has earned the praise of scholars, family advocates, and policymakers, Richard T. Gill does more than illuminate the multiple causes and devastating effects of America's diminishing spirit of optimism. In order to reverse this disturbing trend, Gill urges Americans to reject short-term solutions, expand their time horizons, and, above all, give increasing care and attention to their children. |
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Página 6
... trends involving scientific , technological , economic , political , and cultural changes that are sometimes grouped ... trends observable in the United States are present in all these different contexts . A suitable explanation of those ...
... trends involving scientific , technological , economic , political , and cultural changes that are sometimes grouped ... trends observable in the United States are present in all these different contexts . A suitable explanation of those ...
Página 7
... trends must be rooted in the common scientific - technological - socioeco- nomic background that these otherwise diverse nations share . Already we can see a potential problem here . If the empirical proc- ess of progress is somehow ...
... trends must be rooted in the common scientific - technological - socioeco- nomic background that these otherwise diverse nations share . Already we can see a potential problem here . If the empirical proc- ess of progress is somehow ...
Página 9
... trend toward family breakdown . Interestingly , there is in the preceding analysis one general reason to be hopeful . Since the vast expansion of individual choice accruing from the process of progress is one of the major components of ...
... trend toward family breakdown . Interestingly , there is in the preceding analysis one general reason to be hopeful . Since the vast expansion of individual choice accruing from the process of progress is one of the major components of ...
Página 23
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
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Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Lo sentimos, el contenido de esta página está restringido..
Contenido
In Disarray The American Family Approaching Year 2000 | 13 |
The Future at Risk The Consequences of Family Breakdown | 33 |
Why Conventional Explanations Are Incomplete | 57 |
The Crucial Role of the Ideology of Progress | 83 |
How the Process Gave Rise and Fall of the Idea of Progress | 103 |
The First Great Predicament of Progress | 119 |
A Horrible Capacity for Mass Annihilation | 135 |
LimitstoGrowth Predicaments | 151 |
Family values Evolution or Revolution? | 219 |
A Major Battleground Self vs Posterity | 237 |
Equality Family Advantages and Moral Relativism | 257 |
Reclaiming the Family Principles and Programs | 275 |
We Can Act But Will We? | 297 |
Notes | 315 |
345 | |
About the Author | |
The Fundamental Predicament of Progress | 171 |
Decline and Fall of the Idea of Progress | 189 |
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Posterity Lost: Progress, Ideology, and the Decline of the American Family Richard Thomas Gill Vista de fragmentos - 1997 |
Posterity Lost: Progress, Ideology, and the Decline of the American Family Richard Thomas Gill Vista de fragmentos - 1997 |
Posterity Lost: Progress, Ideology, and the Decline of the American Family Richard Thomas Gill Vista de fragmentos - 1997 |
Términos y frases comunes
actually agnosticism analysis attitudes Baby Boom basic behavior believe Boomers capital certainly chapter child clearly course cultural day care decades decline divorce economic effect example fact faith family breakdown family values fathers fundamental predicament growth human Idea of Progress illegitimacy income increase increasingly Industrial Industrial Revolution infants institution interest involved labor force latchkey kids least less living long-run major marriage married matter ment moral relativism mothers nature never-married nineteenth and early nineteenth century nomic one's Parental Bill particular past percent period population possible posterity predicament of progress present problem process of progress prog psychological question recent ress revolution role sense single-parent social society specific stepfamilies suggest technological teenage tend things tion today's trend ultimately United Victorian Victorian morality Wall Street Journal welfare women World War II York young