Reproduced from: http://www.globalresearch.ca/understanding-the-cancer-stage-of-capitalism/5349620 While US President Barack Obama bangs loud drums of war, the Pope (the first of the Catholic Church to choose the name of Francis) accuses “the great ones of the earth [to] want to solve” the world’s crises “with a war… Because, for them, money is more important than people! And war… Read More
Category: Philosophy
Collection of articles by Prof John McMurtry from Global Research on Life Value, Human Rights, Civil Commons, Economic Efficiency and Social Justice
Part 1 – The Rights of the “Human” over the “Non-Human”: The Undeclared World War of Human Rights versus Corporate Rights. – 31 December 2011 Part 2 – Life Value, The Common Life Interest of Legitimate Rights and Social Justice – 8 January 2012 Part 3 – Human Life: Beyond Money, Ideology and Productive Forces – 11 January 2012 Part 4 – The Universal… Read More
Corporate Globalization versus The Civil Commons by which People’s Lives are Sustained by Prof John McMurtry
Reproduced from: http://www.globalresearch.ca/corporate-globalization-versus-the-civil-commons-by-which-people-s-lives-are-sustained/29236 EVOLVED CIVIL COMMONS VERSUS CORPORATE GLOBALIZATION: A PERFORMANCE EVALUATION ACROSS UNIVERSAL LIFE GOODS by John McMurtry The facts of daily life in developed society have been so painstakingly and historically constructed across generations to enable universal access to the life goods of evolved humanity that we need systematic understanding of how provision of… Read More
Individuals Within Society: Human Vocation, Civil Commons and Social Justice by Prof John McMurtry
Reproduced from: http://www.globalresearch.ca/individuals-within-society-human-vocation-civil-commons-and-social-justice/28805 RECOVERING THE BASES OF OUR LIVES FROM SILENCE AND OCCUPATION: THE HUMAN VOCATION, THE CIVIL COMMONS AND SOCIAL JUSTICE by John McMurtry A human vocation comes in as many forms as there are ways of contributing one’s share to society by expressing one’s own capabilities as a human being. It enables and obliges… Read More
The President of Belgian Magistrates: Neoliberalism is a form of Fascism
Reproduced from: http://www.defenddemocracy.press/president-belgian-magistrates-neoliberalism-form-fascism/ The President of Belgian Magistrates: Neoliberalism is a form of Fascism Neoliberalism is a species of fascism By Manuela Cadelli, President of the Magistrates’ Union of Belgium The time for rhetorical reservations is over. Things have to be called by their name to make it possible for a co-ordinated democratic reaction to be initiated,… Read More
The Existential Crisis of Market Fundamentalism: From Socio-Environmental Dangers to Life-Valued Opportunities
“Fundamentalist movements in all faiths share certain characteristics. They reveal a deep disappointment and disenchantment with the modern experiment, which has not fulfilled all that it promised. They also express real fear. Every single fundamentalist movement that I have studied is convinced that the secular establishment is determined to wipe religion out. This is not… Read More
Our social immune system is being overwhelmed by growing out-of-control money market cancer By John McMurtry 1996
Reproduced from: http://www.islandnet.com/plethora/mai/cancer.html Our social immune system is being overwhelmed by growing out-of-control money market cancer By John McMurtry [John McMurtry, professor of philosophy at the University of Guelph, uses the metaphor of modern capitalism as a cancer to describe the recent uncontrolled spread of global capitalism. Its invasive growth, he argues, threatens to break down… Read More
Beyond Greed and Scarcity by Bernard Lietaer – Yes! Magazine 1997
Reproduced from: http://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/money-print-your-own/beyond-greed-and-scarcity Beyond Greed and Scarcity Few people have worked in and on the money system in as many different capacities as Bernard Lietaer. He spent five years at the Central Bank in Belgium, and he was president of Belgium’s Electronic Payment System. Bernard Lietaer posted Jun 30, 1997 He has helped developing countries improve… Read More
The Mystery of Money – Beyond Greed and Scarcity | Bernard Lietaer (2002)
Bernard Lietaer’s The Mystery of Money: Beyond Greed and Scarcity reframes money not merely as an economic instrument but as a profound cultural, psychological, and archetypal force shaping human societies and collective emotions. Drawing from archetypal psychology, anthropology, history, and systems theory, Lietaer explores how money functions as an unconscious agreement encoded with deep emotional patterns—particularly those linked to the repression of the Great Mother archetype, which manifests collectively as cycles of greed and fear of scarcity. By integrating Ken Wilber’s four-quadrant epistemology with Jungian archetypes, the book reveals how monetary systems both reflect and perpetuate collective shadows, influencing behaviors, social norms, and even spiritual narratives. Through historical case studies — from ancient Egypt to medieval Europe — and analyses of contemporary crises, Lietaer demonstrates that our current scarcity-based monetary paradigm is neither inevitable nor natural but the result of historically contingent choices. He advocates for a conscious redesign of money systems, highlighting complementary currencies, demurrage models, and community-based innovations as pathways to ecological sustainability, social cohesion, and a more balanced integration of masculine and feminine energies. The book invites readers to confront money’s hidden taboos and reclaim agency over one of society’s most powerful collective agreements.
Susan Blackmore – From Genes to Memes to T(r)emes
Uploaded on Jun 4, 2008 Susan Blackmore studies memes: ideas that replicate themselves from brain to brain like a virus. She makes a bold new argument: Humanity has spawned a new kind of meme, the teme, which spreads itself via technology — and invents ways to keep itself alive. https://www.ted.com/talks/susan_blackmore_on_memes_and_temes https://www.ted.com/speakers/susan_blackmore Published on Nov 27,… Read More










