TY - GEN N2 - This book challenges the hegemonic view that economic calculation represents the ultimate rationality. The West legitimises its global dominance by the claim to be a rational, democratic, science-based and progressive civilisation. Yet, over the past decades, the dogma of economic rationality has become an ideological black hole whose gravitational pull allows no public debate or policy to escape. Political leaders of all creeds are held in its orbit and public language is saturated by it. This dogma has pervaded all spheres of life, ushering the age of post-rationality, especially in English speaking countries. The authors discuss several aspects of post-rational global capitalism still dominated by the Anglosphere: hyper-competition, hyper-consumption, inequality, volatile global financial markets, environmental degradation and the unforeseen effects of the internet-mediated communication revolution. The book concludes by discussing some utopian and dystopian future scenarios and asking whether the West can transcend its crisis of rationality. DO - 10.1007/978-981-10-6259-9 DO - doi AB - This book challenges the hegemonic view that economic calculation represents the ultimate rationality. The West legitimises its global dominance by the claim to be a rational, democratic, science-based and progressive civilisation. Yet, over the past decades, the dogma of economic rationality has become an ideological black hole whose gravitational pull allows no public debate or policy to escape. Political leaders of all creeds are held in its orbit and public language is saturated by it. This dogma has pervaded all spheres of life, ushering the age of post-rationality, especially in English speaking countries. The authors discuss several aspects of post-rational global capitalism still dominated by the Anglosphere: hyper-competition, hyper-consumption, inequality, volatile global financial markets, environmental degradation and the unforeseen effects of the internet-mediated communication revolution. The book concludes by discussing some utopian and dystopian future scenarios and asking whether the West can transcend its crisis of rationality. T1 - The age of post-rationality :limits of economic reasoning in the 21st century / AU - Colic-Peisker, Val, AU - Flitney, Adrian, CN - HB172.5 ID - 824210 KW - Rational expectations (Economic theory) KW - Economics SN - 9789811062599 SN - 9811062595 TI - The age of post-rationality :limits of economic reasoning in the 21st century / LK - https://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-981-10-6259-9 UR - https://univsouthin.idm.oclc.org/login?url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-981-10-6259-9 ER -