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Humanity - Glover, Jonathan - Yale University Press
  • Aug 06, 2001
    476 p., 5 x 7 3/4

    ISBN: 9780300087154
    ISBN-10: 0300087152
  • Paper: $15.95 
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Philosophy
Political Science
Psychology
Religion
Social Science
History

Humanity

A Moral History of the Twentieth Century

  • Jonathan Glover
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Selected as an outstanding book by University Press Books for Public and Secondary School Libraries

The twentieth century was the most brutal in human history, featuring a litany of shameful events that includes the Holocaust, Hiroshima, the Stalinist era, Cambodia, Yugoslavia, and Rwanda. This important book looks at the politics of our times and the roots of human nature to discover why so many atrocities were perpetuated and how we can create a social environment to prevent their recurrence.

Jonathan Glover finds similarities in the psychology of those who perpetuate, collaborate in, and are complicit with atrocities, uncovering some disturbing common elements—tribal hatred, blind adherence to ideology, diminished personal responsibility—as well as characteristics unique to each situation. Acknowledging that human nature has a dark and destructive side, he proposes that we encourage the development of a political and personal moral imagination that will compel us to refrain from and protest all acts of cruelty.

Jonathan Glover is director of the Centre of Medical Law and Ethics at King’s College, London. He is also the author of Causing Death and Saving Lives and What Sort of People Should There Be?


For sale in the U.S. and its dependencies and the Philippines only

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