Human Nature: Oops, My Bad
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13,50 |
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14,89 |
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Beschrijving
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Human Nature: Oops, My Bad explores the invisible psychological patterns that shape how modern humans interact with the natural world. Rather than approaching environmental crisis through alarm or technical abstraction, the book examines the subtle behavioural systems - convenience, invisibility, digital performance, emotional relief, infrastructure design, and identity - that quietly distance individuals from ecological consequences.Blending narrative reflection with behavioural science, the book asks questions such as: Why does convenience override intention? Why does water become a crisis only when it reaches the glass? How do cities reshape environmental perception? Why does "green" consumption sometimes ease guilt without changing systems? And how do social media and identity performance influence environmental engagement?Each chapter opens and closes with reflective narration from the voice of Nature, creating a literary frame around evidence-based psychological insight. This structure allows readers to move between atmosphere and analysis - feeling first, then understanding.Drawing on the author's background in environmental biotechnology and psychology, the book connects ecological systems with cognitive bias, behavioural economics, emotional regulation, and social identity. At its core, it argues that environmental crisis is not only technological or political - it is behavioural, shaped by the everyday habits through which humans experience the world.
Human Nature: Oops, My Bad explores the invisible psychological patterns that shape how modern humans interact with the natural world. Rather than approaching environmental crisis through alarm or technical abstraction, the book examines the subtle behavioural systems - convenience, invisibility, digital performance, emotional relief, infrastructure design, and identity - that quietly distance individuals from ecological consequences.Blending narrative reflection with behavioural science, the book asks questions such as: Why does convenience override intention? Why does water become a crisis only when it reaches the glass? How do cities reshape environmental perception? Why does "green" consumption sometimes ease guilt without changing systems? And how do social media and identity performance influence environmental engagement?Each chapter opens and closes with reflective narration from the voice of Nature, creating a literary frame around evidence-based psychological insight. This structure allows readers to move between atmosphere and analysis - feeling first, then understanding.Drawing on the author's background in environmental biotechnology and psychology, the book connects ecological systems with cognitive bias, behavioural economics, emotional regulation, and social identity. At its core, it argues that environmental crisis is not only technological or political - it is behavioural, shaped by the everyday habits through which humans experience the world.
AmazonPages: 342, Paperback, PenAime Private Limited
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