Transcript
Page 1: O connell unuiversities and humankind

UNIVERSITIES and HUMANKIND

Our Responsibility

Page 2: O connell unuiversities and humankind

J Bruner

Cultures Are

Knowledge Amplification

Systems

Page 3: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Adam and Eve?

Page 4: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Our Evolutionary triumph?

Page 5: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Africa: The Cradle of Human Knowledge

Page 6: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Across Mediterranean To China Cultures Deeply Challenged: New Knowledge the Result

Page 7: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Ways of Knowing

• Philosophy (the abstract mind) • Rationalism/Scepticism (not accepting realities that

are not immediately evident) • Religion (faith in divine revelation and social tradition)• Mysticism (experiences based on spiritual techniques)• Esotericism (intuitive speculation on cosmological

world-views) • Occultism (using psycho-physical techniques to

access hidden realities) • Gnosis (innate wisdom and understanding) • Science (experimental approach to the physical

universe)

Page 8: O connell unuiversities and humankind

The Great Library In Alexandria

Page 9: O connell unuiversities and humankind

The Library In Timbuktu

Page 10: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Political MapScramble For Africa

Page 11: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Humankind’s Great Intellectual Leaps

• Classical antiquity

• Renaissance

• Agricultural revolution

• Scientific revolution

• Industrial revolution

• Digital revolution ******

Page 12: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Some Consequences for Africa

Page 13: O connell unuiversities and humankind

The Continents: To Scale

• The land area of each territory is shown here. • The total land area of these 200 territories is 13,056 million hectares. Divided up

equally that would be 2.1 hectares for each person. A hectare is 100 metres by 100 metres.

• However, population is not evenly spread: Australia's land area is 21 times bigger than Japan's, but Japan's population is more than six times bigger than Australia's.

Page 14: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Tertiary Education

• The highest percentage of the student aged population enrolled is in Finland. Finland is 3.6 times the world average, with 140 times the chance of a tertiary education than in Mozambique.

Page 15: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Science Research

• Scientific papers cover physics, biology, chemistry, mathematics, clinical medicine, biomedical research, engineering, technology, and earth and space sciences.

• The number of scientific papers published by researchers in the United States was more than three times as many as were published by the second highest-publishing population, Japan.

• There is more scientific research, or publication of results, in richer territories. This locational bias is such that roughly three times more scientific papers per person living there are published in Western Europe, North America, and Japan, than in any other region.

Page 16: O connell unuiversities and humankind

New Patents

• In 2002, 312 thousand patents were granted around the world. More than a third of these were granted in Japan. Just under a third were granted in the United States.

• A patent is supposed to protect the ideas and inventions that people have. Patenting something will then allow the owner of the patent to charge others for the usage of an idea or invention. The aim is to reward the creator for their hard work or intelligence. But patents can prevent people from using good ideas because they cannot afford to do so.

• A quarter of all territories had no new patents in 2002, so will not profit from these in future years as others will.

Page 17: O connell unuiversities and humankind

██ High income

██ Upper-middle income

██ Lower-middle income

██ Low income 

Un Poverty Index

Page 18: O connell unuiversities and humankind

One of Humankind’s Hopes

Page 19: O connell unuiversities and humankind

HOUSE

Page 20: O connell unuiversities and humankind

WORK

Page 21: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Family and Safety

Page 22: O connell unuiversities and humankind
Page 23: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Good Health

Page 24: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Potable Water

Page 25: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Transport

Page 26: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Renewable Energy

Page 27: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Street Children Begging

Page 28: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Child and Vulture

Page 29: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Child and Starvation

Page 30: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Environmental Challenges

Page 31: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Dennis Meadows: POPULATION

Page 32: O connell unuiversities and humankind

2030: A Watershed

“By 2030 the demand for resources will create a crisis with dire consequences

Demand for food and energy will jump 50% by 2030 and for fresh water by 30%, as the population tops 8.3 billion. Climate change will exacerbate matters in unpredictable ways”. Beddington.

“Change is now ubiquitous, non-linear and persistent Hargreaves

Page 33: O connell unuiversities and humankind

1994: South Africa’s Triple Challenge

• Build a democratic state• Integrate itself into the competitive arena of

international production and finance. • Reconstruct domestic social and economic

relations to eradicate and redress the inequitable patterns of ownership, wealth and social and economic practices that were shaped by segregation and apartheid

• All of this while the entire world is changing dramatically

Page 34: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Dalin’s 10 Revolutions

• 1. The knowledge and information revolution• 2. The population explosion• 3. Globalisation• 4. The economic revolution• 5. The technological revolution• 6. The ecological revolution• 7. The social/cultural revolution• 8. The aesthetic revolution• 9. The political revolution• 10. The values revolution. Per Dalin

Page 35: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Seven Strategic Partnerships with Our Species

There are at least seven human development challenges that universities must champion. Governments can’t or won’t. They are:

1. To move humans in developed countries to understand that they have lived beyond their means and they must prepare themselves for a more humble future.

2. To move humans in developing countries to understand that they cannot use the developed nations as points of reference for their material expectations

3. To move all humans to understand that we must develop a wise relationship with our natural environment

Page 36: O connell unuiversities and humankind

Seven Strategic Partnerships with Our Species

4. To move all humans to think of ourselves as earthlings who must work together to secure our future. This implies an internationalist perspective.

5. To move all humans to understand that there is a direct relationship between population growth and the availability of resources

6. To move all humans to understand that there is a direct relationship between ownership, competence and hard work on the one hand and development on the other

7. To move all humans to understand that safety lies in knowledge and partnerships

Page 37: O connell unuiversities and humankind

7

6

3

2

1

5

4

Service

Internal Cohesion

Transformation

Making a Difference

Stage 1: Personal MasteryDevelopment of a healthy

positive ego Need to overcome

deficiency perspectiveSurvival

Relationship

Self-Esteem

The I in relation to the We

Stage 2: Internal CohesionFinding meaning in existence

Balancing self-interest with group interest

Stage 3: External CohesionServing humanity and the planet

Collaborating with partners

7 LEVELS OF CONSCIOUSNESS

Barrett

Page 38: O connell unuiversities and humankind

uwcA METAPHOR AND

MODEL FOR AFRICA

Page 39: O connell unuiversities and humankind
Page 40: O connell unuiversities and humankind

“What” do we want to say?


Top Related