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Why do we put so many resources into medicine, education and law
with so little apparent benefit? Why do we hold the professions in
awe and allow them to set up what are in effect monopolies? This
fascinating and controversial collection of essays challenges the
power and the mystique of the modern professions.
Illich's theories on the effectiveness of cars, air travel, and
energy showed that industrial progress actually hampers the speed
and effectiveness we have as people who were born capable of
walking to our desired destinations. Roads, airports, stations,
traffic jams, all take away the benefits of using complicated
engineered methods of travel, and make our actual travel times
longer.
A collection of 12 articles dealing with institutional authority
and its inadequacies.
Dalmatian-Austrian philosopher, Roman Catholic priest, and radical
cultural critic Ivan Illich is best known for polemical writings
such as Deschooling Society and Tools for Conviviality, which
decried Western institutions of the 1970s. This collection brings
together Illich's shorter writings from his early publications
through the rise of his remarkable intellectual career, making
available works that had fallen into undue obscurity. A fervent
critic of Western Catholicism, Illich also addressed contemporary
practices in fields from education and medicine to labor and
socioeconomic development. At the heart of his work is his
opposition to the imperialistic nature of state- and
Church-sponsored missionary activities. His deep understanding of
Church history, particularly the institutions of the thirteenth
century, lent a historian's perspective to his critique of the
Church and other twentieth-century institutions. The Powerless
Church and Other Selected Writings, 1955-1985 comprises some of
Illich's most salient and influential short works as well as a
foreword by philosopher Giorgio Agamben. Featuring writings that
had previously appeared in now-defunct publications, this volume is
an indispensable resource for readers of Illich's longer works and
for scholars of philosophy, religion, and cultural critique.
In this postscript to "Tools for Creativitiy," Illich calls for the
right to useful unemployment: a positive, constructive, and even
optimistic concept dealing with that activity by which people are
useful to themselves and others outside the production of
commodities for the market. Unfettered by managing professionals,
unmeasured and unmeasureable by economists, these activities truly
generate satisfaction, creativity, and freedom.
Dalmatian-Austrian philosopher, Roman Catholic priest, and radical
cultural critic Ivan Illich is best known for polemical writings
such as Deschooling Society and Tools for Conviviality, which
decried Western institutions of the 1970s. This collection brings
together Illich's shorter writings from his early publications
through the rise of his remarkable intellectual career, making
available works that had fallen into undue obscurity. A fervent
critic of Western Catholicism, Illich also addressed contemporary
practices in fields from education and medicine to labor and
socioeconomic development. At the heart of his work is his
opposition to the imperialistic nature of state- and
Church-sponsored missionary activities. His deep understanding of
Church history, particularly the institutions of the thirteenth
century, lent a historian's perspective to his critique of the
Church and other twentieth-century institutions. The Powerless
Church and Other Selected Writings, 1955-1985 comprises some of
Illich's most salient and influential short works as well as a
foreword by philosopher Giorgio Agamben. Featuring writings that
had previously appeared in now-defunct publications, this volume is
an indispensable resource for readers of Illich's longer works and
for scholars of philosophy, religion, and cultural critique.
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