CIVILIZATIONAL THRESHOLDS AND THE TRANSFORMATION OF SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.30888/2709-2267.2025-33-00-043Keywords:
technogenic civilization, scientific rationality, global crises, ecological sustainability, anthropological crisisAbstract
This paper examines the epistemological and ethical implications of technogenic civilization’s accelerated development, focusing on three interrelated global crises: the threat of self-annihilation through weapons of mass destruction, the ecological destaMetrics
References
Shamsutdynova, M.-S. (2025). Education in the era of globalization: Between national interests and international cooperation. In ACTA NON VERBA. Ukrainian Yearbook of European Eurointegration Studies (pp. 175–178). Kyiv: Ukrainian Association of Teachers and Researchers of European Integration.
Cirkovic, E. (2025). The Law of Complex Earth and Outer Space Systems: The Cosmolegal Proposal. Taylor & Francis.
Mämmelä, A. (2025). Systems Thinking: Basics. In Unifying Systems: Information, Feedback, and Self-Organization (pp. 137-226). Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland.
Jaffe, K. (2025). Dynamics between Energy and Information: Infodynamics and the Economics of Life. This paper will eventually be published as a book.
Delaney, T. (2025). Social Physics and a Theory of Everything. McFarland.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2025 Authors

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.