1. Antiutilitarismo
- Author
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Romano, Onofrio, Giacomo D’Alisa - David Bollier - Rita Calvário - Federico Demaria - Giorgos Kallis - Blake Alcott - Samuel Alexander - Diego Andreucci - Isabelle Anguelovski - Viviana Asara- Denis Bayon - Mauro Bonaiuti - Chris Carlsson - Claudio Cattaneo - Marta Conde - Chiara Corazza - Sergi Cutillas - Marco Deriu - Kristofer Dittmer - Arturo Escobar - Silke Helfrich - Joshua Farley - Mayo Fuster Morell - Erik Gómez-Baggethun - Eduardo Gudynas - Tim Jackson - Nadia Johanisova - Christian Kerschner - Serge Latouche - David Llistar - Sylvia Lorek - Joan Martinez-Alier - Terrence McDonough - Mary Mellor - Barbara Muraca - Daniel O’Neill - Iago Otero Armengol - Philippa Parry - Susan Paulson - Antonella Picchio - Mogobe B. Ramose - Xavier Renou - Onofrio Romano - Juliet Schor - Filka Sekulova - Alevgül H. Sorman - Ruben Suriñach Padilla - Erik Swyngedouw - Gemma Tarafa - Sergio Ulgiati - Brandon J. Unti - Peter A. Victor - Solomon Victus - Mariana Walter, G. D'Alisa F. Demaria G. Kallis, and Romano, Onofrio
- Subjects
MAUSS ,Antiutilitarismo ,Decrescita - Abstract
Anti-utilitarianism is a school of thought that critiques the hegemony of the epistemological postulates of economics in the humanities and social sciences. Anti-utilitarians assert the crucial importance of the social bond when compared to self-interest. They outline a gift exchange paradigm that aims to overstep two major frameworks of the social sciences: holism and methodological individualism. In 1981, the French sociologist, Alain Caillé, and the Swiss anthropologist, Gérald Berthoud, gave birth to MAUSS – Mouvement anti-utilitariste dans les sciences sociales (Anti-utilitarian Movement in the Social Sciences). This brilliant acronym reproduces the surname of the author of The Gift (1924), Marcel Mauss. Most anti-utilitarians reproach Latouche for the choice of the term “degrowth”: it implicitly embeds the alternative into the economic imaginary. They call, instead, for a “political” critique of boundlessness and excess, uprooting the discourse from an ethical level.
- Published
- 2018