Larger Than Life: Injecting Hope into the Planetary Health Paradigm
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“When it comes to Hope ... the journals are silent … are we not now duty-bound to speak up as scientists, not about a new rocket … but about this ancient but rediscovered truth, the validity of Hope in human development?”Karl Menninger, MD, 1959 [1]
2. Roadmap to the Commentary
3. What Is Planetary Health, Really?
“Friends of the Earth therefore believes that health is a state of complete physical, mental, social and ecological well-being and not merely the absence of disease—that personal health involves planetary health.”[30]
“These problems are adisciplinary. That is, they relate at once to no particular discipline, yet involve many, perhaps all disciplines. The major problems of the sciences concerned with environment make meaningless the traditional boundaries that have separated [human] compartmentalization … apparently, some scientists are ready to leave their feudal baronies and join in innovative configurations specifically focused on solving definitive problems, however complex they may be”.[46]
4. Hope in Planetary Health
5. What Kind of Civilization?
“When we leave its general, or abstract, signification, we find that it shows itself under an innumerable variety of shades: for almost every man has his own idea of Civilization, and would willingly impose it on his neighbors. “If a prince”, says (Jonathan) Swift “sends forces into a nation where the people are poor and ignorant, he may lawfully put half of them to death, and make slaves of the rest, in order to ‘civilize’ and reduce them from their barbarous ways”.[57]
“Despite our pathetic attempt at objectivity, we as scientists are in fact highly subjective in the selection of our activities, and we have goals in mind when we plan our work. We make a priori decisions concerning the kind of facts worth looking for; we arrange these facts according to certain patterns of thought that we find congenial ... a more disturbing aspect of modern science is that the specialist himself commonly loses contact with the aspect of reality which was his primary concern, whether it was matter, life or man … science and the technologies derived from it now often function as forces independent of human goals … all too often, knowledge and technology pursue a course which is not guided by pre-determined social philosophy”.[59]
6. Positive Psychology, Symbiotopia
‘The field of positive psychology at the subjective level is about valued subjective experiences: well-being, contentment, and satisfaction (in the past); hope and optimism (for the future); and flow and happiness (in the present). At the individual level, it is about positive individual traits: the capacity for love and vocation, courage, interpersonal skill, aesthetic sensibility, perseverance, forgiveness, originality, future mindedness, spirituality, high talent, and wisdom. At the group level, it is about the civic virtues and the institutions that move individuals toward better citizenship: responsibility, nurturance, altruism, civility, moderation, tolerance, and work ethic’.[76]
7. Hope as an Asset in Human Health
8. Moving Upstream—The Psyche of Planetary Health
9. Dangers of Hope as Universal Nostrum
“In the view of Epicurus, the chief miseries of life arose, not from bodily pains, but partly from delusions of hope, and exaggerated aspirations for wealth, honors, power etc. (and) from delusions of fear.”[177]
10. Chalice of Technology
11. Academic Planetary Health, Expanding the Discourse
12. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Prescott, S.L.; Logan, A.C. Larger Than Life: Injecting Hope into the Planetary Health Paradigm. Challenges 2018, 9, 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe9010013
Prescott SL, Logan AC. Larger Than Life: Injecting Hope into the Planetary Health Paradigm. Challenges. 2018; 9(1):13. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe9010013
Chicago/Turabian StylePrescott, Susan L., and Alan C. Logan. 2018. "Larger Than Life: Injecting Hope into the Planetary Health Paradigm" Challenges 9, no. 1: 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe9010013
APA StylePrescott, S. L., & Logan, A. C. (2018). Larger Than Life: Injecting Hope into the Planetary Health Paradigm. Challenges, 9(1), 13. https://doi.org/10.3390/challe9010013