Chapter One: Our Story
Chapter Two: Evolution, Ideology, and Human Nature
Chapter Three: Love, the Brain, and Becoming Human
Chapter Four: The Biology of Experience
Chapter Five: The Benefits of Partnership and the Costs of
Domination
Chapter Six: Two Alternative Social Possibilities
Chapter Seven: The Original Partnership Societies
Chapter Eight: Contracting or Expanding Consciousness
Chapter Nine: Touch, Intimacy, and Sexuality in Partnership and
Domination Environments
Chapter Ten: Love, Violence, and Socialization in Partnership and
Domination Environments
Chapter Eleven: The Real Culture Wars
Chapter Twelve: A New Beginning
Notes
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Index
Riane Eisler, JD, PhD (hon) is Adjunct Professor at California
Institute for Integral Studies Transformative Leadership Graduate
Program, San Francisco and a Research Associate at the Department
of Anthropology, University of Alabama at Birmingham. She is also
President of the Center for Partnership Studies, Editor-in-Chief of
the Interdisciplinary Journal of Partnership Studies,
internationally known as a systems scientist, cultural
historian, pioneering attorney working for women's and children's
human rights, and recipient of many awards. Her groundbreaking
books include The Chalice and the Blade, Tomorrow's Children, and
The Real Wealth of Nations. She
lectures worldwide, keynoting conferences, addressing the U.N.
General Assembly, U.S. State Department, corporations, and
universities. Her website is https://rianeeisler.com/.
Douglas P. Fry, PhD, is Professor and Chair of the Department of
Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of North Carolina at
Greensboro. He is internationally renowned as a peace
anthropologist. His previous books include Beyond War, Keeping the
Peace, The Human Potential for Peace, Cultural Variation in
Conflict Resolution, and War, Peace and Human Nature. His current
project, with colleague Geneviève Souillac, entails an in depth
exploration of
human capacities for survival in the Anthropocene.
"Nurturing our Humanity upends the very core of our notion that
humanity is, at heart, violent and greedy. Human nature holds just
as much potential for caring and partnership as war and domination.
Knowing that changes everything." -- Abigail Disney, President &
CEO, Fork Films, director/creator of Pray the Devil Back to Hell
and the PBS series Women, War, & Peace
"In a world that feels ever more dangerous, divided, and out of
balance, Nurturing Our Humanity outlines the roadmap for how we
raise a healthier generation of children and move away from a
punitive and domination based society to a world that leads with
partnership-where empathy, care, and community are valued above
all, and each can fulfill our full human potential." -- Jennifer
Siebel Newsom, First Partner of California, Filmmaker, Miss
Representation, The Mask you Live In, The Great American Lie
"This is the book for our time! Eisler and Fry have put their minds
and hearts together to provide an integrative vision of how
humanity's cooperative nature can be nurtured and supported...
Everyone should read this book... so together we can re-envision
our future!" -- Darcia Narvaez, Professor of Psychology, University
of Notre Dame
"This fearless, beautiful, and very timely book is a radical
reminder that humanity's truest nature is oriented toward love,
partnership, gender equality, and peace. It is essential and
transformative reading for every policymaker, philanthropist,
activist, and change-maker interested in a more just, balanced, and
peaceful world." -- Jennifer Buffett, Co-President, NoVo
Foundation
"This path-breaking book goes beyond the conventional divides
hurting today's civilizations... It is essential that the virtues
of partnership get stronger and the vices of domination are
controlled." -- Ernst von Weizsäcker, Honorary President, Club of
Rome
"Nurturing Our Humanity explores the capacity for human happiness
and its relationship to the development of sustainable cultures at
a political and environmental point in history when we need it the
most." -- James McClintock, Author, Lost Antarctica
"Eisler and Fry show how we lived without war thousands of years
ago, and how we can do so again. This groundbreaking book should be
required reading for all world leaders and decision makers." --
Sarah Parcak, Author, Archaeology from Space
"The central message of this hugely important and widely referenced
book could not be more timely...I urge you to read this seminal
cultural contribution for yourselves." -- David Lorimer, Paradigm
Explorer
"What does it mean to be human? And how can we construct a
sustainable world where we might all flourish? This book addresses
these universal questions at our particular historical moment of
anxiety and uncertainty about the future, offering a
counter-narrative to the outburst of dystopias over the past few
decades...it makes a persuasive case for adopting a new narrative
about human beings and human possibilities. It contains a message
of hope for the future,
a future which is dependent on the choices we make now." -- Coral
Ann Howells, Professor Emerita of English and Canadian Literature,
University of Reading, Le Simplegadi
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