Is our inability to tackle climate change the fault of politicians? Corporations? Governments? Or is it because that's the way our brains have evolved, able to hold six contradictory ideas at once, and believe them all? Carol Linnitt met climate campaigner George Marshall, who thinks he is finally asking the right questions.
… past." Marshall said a lot of other climate psychology or theories of climate denial …
This day in 1945, the explosion of a nuclear bomb over Hiroshima, Japan, changed the world forever, writes Daniel Cordle. A remarkable article in the New Yorker by John Hersey has shaped the way the world perceives the event, and nuclear weapons generally, by illuminating the humanity of its victims in clear, simple prose.
Hiroshima: the 'blinding flash' that changed the world forever Daniel Cordle | 6th August 2015 Reviews War Nuclear Health Society Books hiroshima_girl-cut.jpg This day in 1945, the explosion of a …
Although arguably reductive in its initial analysis, Fleeing Vesuvius is a refreshingly uncompromising critique on almost every aspect of current global trends
… community organisation, energy, architecture, psychology and all the nooks in between, it is …
Naomi Klein finds kernels of hope amid the closely linked perils of climate change and untamed capitalism, writes Mike Berners-Lee. Ultimately it's down to us, the people, to come together and force the changes we need - but Klein's new book provides some valuable and timely inspiration.
… shortcomings. There is good focus on the psychology of denial, which is probably the …