The culture gap and its needed closures

| August 17, 2012 | Leave a Comment

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Date of Publication: August 2010

Year of Publication: 2010

Author(s): Ehrlich PR, Ehrlich AH

Journal: International Journal of Environmental Studies

Volume: 67, no. 4,

Pages: 481-492

Paul and Anne Ehrlich discuss the culture gap that is occurring as knowledge is divided into smaller and smaller units by modern society that inhibit our ability to see and understand obvious and crucial connections.

ABSTRACT: The development of an enormous culture gap, in which no individuals of advanced societies possess even a billionth of the non‐genetic information possessed by their entire society, has threatened a global collapse of civilisation. Critical parts of that gap must be rapidly bridged so that problems such as climate disruption, toxification of the Earth, loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services, and the decay of the epidemiological environment can be satisfactorily attacked. The essential need is to alter human behaviour to put society on a route to sustainability; one cheering development is a growing interest in the Millennium Assessment of Human Behaviour (MAHB), whose goal is to do just that.

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