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Immoderate Greatness: Why Civilizations Fail
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Immoderate Greatness: Why Civilizations Fail Paperback - 2012

by Ophuls, William

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CreateSpace Publishing, 2012. Paperback. Good. *Immoderate Greatness* explains how a civilization's very magnitude conspir es against it to cause downfall. Civilizations are hard-wired for self-dest ruction. They travel an arc from initial success to terminal decay and ulti mate collapse due to intrinsic, inescapable biophysical limits combined wit h an inexorable trend toward moral decay and practical failure. Because our own civilization is global, its collapse will also be global, as well as u niquely devastating owing to the immensity of its population, complexity, a nd consumption. To avoid the common fate of all past civilizations will req uire a radical change in our ethos-to wit, the deliberate renunciation of g reatness-lest we precipitate a dark age in which the arts and adornments of civilization are partially or completely lost.
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  • Kirkus Reviews, 01/01/0001, Page 0

About the author

William Ophuls spent eight years in the U. S. Foreign Service, serving in Washington, Abidjan, and Tokyo, before receiving a PhD in political science from Yale University in 1973. In 1977, he published *Ecology and the Politics of Scarcity*. It won two prizes and was instrumental in establishing the field of environmental politics. After teaching briefly at Northwestern University, he became an independent scholar and author. He has since published three books on the ecological, social, and political challenges confronting modern industrial civilization. When not at his writing desk, he spends his time rambling in nature, either in his native California or in the mountains of Europe.