'Requiem
for a Species'
ProfessorClive Hamilton public lecture and book launch at The Australian National University on 29 March, 2010. The lecture is introduced by Professor Will Steffen, Executive Director of the ANU Climate Change Institute.
Clive
Hamilton launches his book at ANU
ProfessorClive Hamilton public lecture and book launch at The Australian National University on 29 March, 2010. The lecture is introduced by Professor Will Steffen, Executive Director of the ANU Climate Change Institute.
Clive
Hamiltons book, Requiem for a Species is about why we have ignored
the climate change warnings. It is a book about the frailties of the
human species: our strange obsessions, our hubris, and our penchant
for avoiding the facts. It is the story of a battle within us between
the forces that should have caused us to protect the earth, like our
capacity to reason and our connection to nature, and our greed,
materialism and alienation from nature, which, in the end, have won
out.
And
it is about the 21st century consequences of these failures, and what
we can do now.
Clive
Hamilton is Charles Sturt Professor of Public Ethics at the Centre
for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics. He is based at The
Australian National University. For 14 years until early 2008 he was
the Executive Director of The Australia Institute, Australias leading
progressive think tank, which he founded in 1993. He has held a
number of visiting academic positions, including at the University of
Cambridge and Yale University and is a Fellow of the Royal Society of
the Arts. He is the author of a number of best-selling books,
including Growth Fetish, Affluenza (with Richard Denniss), Silencing
Dissent (with Sarah Maddison) and The Freedom Paradox. His new book,
Requiem for a Species: Why we resist the truth about climate change,
has just been published by Allen & Unwin.
This
launch is presented by the ANU Climate Change Institute and the
Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, a joint centre of
the ANU, Charles Sturt University and the University of Melbourne.
Introduced
by Professor Will Steffen, Executive Director of the ANU Climate
Change Institute.
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