Bővebb ismertető
In his highly impressive book, "The Unknown Man", written in the
forties, Alexis Carel, a medical doctor and Nobel Laureate, analyses the fact
that, while medical science and technology have developed to an incredible
extent in the last century, and we know more and more about human cells,
organs and elements of psychic function, we understand very little about the
determinants of the behaviour of human individuals and human groups.
Millions of people stumble and suffer in mental and social traps, many of
which, if recognised in time, would be avoidable. The human being has
become an experimental subject in a world-wide laboratory. While many
modern developments, such as in health and communications, have generally
improved living standards, others have created levels of change, uncertainty
and loss of individual and local control that amount to widespread trauma.
Animal protection leagues would have protested had such cruel experiments
been performed on animals. The conditions in which we live have been turned
upside down many times over by developments in science, technology and
urbanisation, as well as by war and politics. During all this we have paid the
least possible attention to whether the individual, the family or the human
community is able to accommodate to the changing conditions.
As an example, throughout human history it has been natural for parents
and grandparents to pass down values, behaviour patterns and norms to the
next generation. Young people acquired abilities and found colleagues
through an organic network of relationships with friends and relatives.
Husbands and wives carried out the tasks of the extended family according to
traditional rules for the division of labour. In modern society this process has
been drastically changed. Children who grow up in kindergartens, or for
whom extended families are unknown, or who grow up in broken families
rarely receive the continuity of patterns and values with which they can
identify themselves. While there are undeniable benefits to many in the move
away from more tightly-knit rule-bound traditional societies we have not
sufficiently studied the damage such conditions do to the development of a
mature personality and sociocultural identity.
Who then is "the unknown man" who remains in the spreading shadow of
our incredible technological development? What are the psychological effects