Beyond Ideologies: The Meaning of Life in the Historical and Psychological Perspective

Beyond Ideologies: The Meaning of Life in the Historical and Psychological Perspective

DOI: 10.11621/pir.2010.0029

Nazaretyan, A.P. Institute of Psychology of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia

Abstract

Throughout human history, in-group solidarity has been achieved at the price of confrontation with out-group individuals ("them vs. us" mental scheme); this has been guaranteed by religious or quasi-religious ideologies. However, in compli­ance with some basic evolutionary patterns, the traditional mechanism of social aggression-regulation is actually becoming counter-productive and threatens to destroy planetary civilization during the next decades. The author argues that the perspectives of global viability essentially depend on whether or not the human mind develops new mechanisms of strategic meaning-construction and solidarity regardless of large-group (confessional, national or class) mythologies.

Themes: Psychology and culture; Personality psychology

PDF: http://psychologyinrussia.com/volumes/pdf/2010/29_2010_nazaretyan.pdf

Pages: 581-610

DOI: 10.11621/pir.2010.0029

Keywords: crisis, civilization, techno-humanitarian balance, worldview, meaning of life, ideology, religion, knowledge-enabled destruction, Anthropic principle, synergetics, universal natural selection

To cite this article: Nazaretyan A.P. (2010). Beyond Ideologies: The Meaning of Life in the Historical and Psychological Perspective. Psychology in Russia: State of the Art, 3, 581- 610

The journal content is licensed with CC BY-NC “Attribution-NonCommercial” Creative Commons license.

Back to the list