Review by Choice Review
Rosenthal argues that the rise of "choice"--having choices and making choices--is the most important and influential factor in life today. He traces how this state arose historically, and identifies the processes by which it has spread throughout the world. Two factors to which the author devotes considerable attention are the Industrial Revolution and mass production, resulting in the wide availability of goods and services; and a shift in attitude from moral and scientific absolutism to cultural relativism. Rosenthal suggests that choice will remain the primary feature in contemporary life. He proposes a framework and set of guidelines to be applied to public policies created to address the plethora of choices Americans face in such areas as health care and education. ^BSumming Up: Recommended. Graduate students, faculty, and specialists. J. R. Mitrano Central Connecticut State University
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
The roots of the word decide carry the sense of ?cutting off? something?that moment when roads diverge and we must move on without unchosen alternatives. We fear the contradictory tugs of many of these choices, and long for simplicity, less confusion, even less freedom?as Dostoevsky?s Inquisitor observed. In fact, we now have so much to choose from that a paradoxical ?inversion of choice? may be what we will be remembered for. Rosenthal believes this exhausting situation is the outcome of the ?acceleration of industrial growth? and ?the loss of the absolute,? and when he?s finished this survey of twentieth century thought, it?s hard not to agree. Rosenthal is a wonderful guide to intellectually demanding material, and he is equally surefooted among such dissimilar subjects as quantum physics, higher mathematics, Existentialism and Saussurean linguistics. And yet, despite the impressive scope of this book, he never indulges in academic preening (there is a good bibliography and index, but no footnotes). His arguments are engaging and almost always persuasive. This is an extremely readable cautionary tale about the ?vicious spiral of choice,? of how unresolved dualisms have informed modern life, all the way from light?s waves and particles and Schrodinger?s dead-and-alive cat to the somewhat less mysterious presence of exclusive boutiques inside large, inclusive malls. Some of this material has been covered in books like John Ralston Saul?s Voltaire?s Bastards or, more recently, in Thomas de Zengotita?s Mediated, but not as comprehensively, and hardly ever with such infectious curiosity. (Oct.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Review by Choice Review
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review