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To varying degrees, loneliness has us all in its grip. In this
incisive and controversial book, Richard Stivers rejects the recent
emphasis on genetic explanations of psychological problems, arguing
that the very organization of technological societies is behind the
pervasive experience of loneliness. The extreme rationality that
governs our institutions and organizations results in abstract and
impersonal relationships in much of daily life. Moreover, as common
meaning is gradually eroded, our connections to others become vague
and tenuous. Our ensuing fear and loneliness, however, can be
masked by an outgoing, extroverted personality. In its extreme
form, loneliness assumes pathological dimensions in neurosis and
schizophrenia. Stivers maintains that even here the causes remain
social. The various forms of neuroses and psychoses follow the key
contradictions of a technological society. For instance, narcissism
and depression reflect the tension between power and
meaninglessness that characterizes modern societies. Stivers
demonstrates that there is a continuum from the normal
"technological personality" through the various neuroses to
full-blown schizophrenia. He argues that all forms of loneliness
emanate from the same cause; they likewise share a common dynamic
despite their differences. Loneliness, in its many manifestations,
seems to be the price we must pay for living in the modern world.
Yet nurturing family, friend, and community ties can mitigate its
culturally and psychologically disorganizing power. This book is a
clarion call for a renewal of moral awareness and custom to combat
the fragmentation and depersonalization of our technological
civilization.
Arguing that the ideology of freedom and equality today bears
little resemblance to its eighteenth-century counterpart, Richard
Stivers examines how these values have been radically transformed
in a technological civilization. Once thought of as a kind of
personal property and an aspect of the dignity of the individual,
the context of freedom and equality today is technological before
it is political and economic and is also now largely thought of in
collective terms. Focusing on the work of Jacques Ellul and Max
Weber, Stivers traces the development of freedom and equality in
Enlightenment thought and American history and then proceeds to
discuss their current ideologies, realities, and illusions.
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