ABSTRACT

First published in 1968, Yesterday’s Tomorrows elucidates on the favourite occupation of man: forecasting the future. By man’s predictions, he mirrors his own wish-fulfilments, displacements, projections, denials, evasions and withdrawals. These predications can take the form of countries of the imagination, ‘mirror worlds’ like Rabelais’ Ever-Ever lands or the Erewhon of Butler. Alternatively, they may spring from panic, reflecting fear rather than hope, often manifesting themselves, in our technological age, as reports of ‘flying saucers’ or invasions from another planet. In either form, they provide philosophers, scientists, doctors and sociologists with material for evaluating man’s future needs, offering both criticism of our present society, plans for our future, and release from tension and disequilibrium.

Professor Armytage shows in this book how such ‘visions’ can, and do, refresh minds for renewed grappling with the present by arming them with ideas for man’s future needs. He indicates that, out of an apparent welter of futuristic fantasies, a constructive debate about tomorrow is emerging, providing us with operational models of what tomorrow could be. This book will hold special interest for students of philosophy and of English literature.

chapter Chapter One|10 pages

The Mantic Heritage

chapter Chapter Two|16 pages

Extravagance to Extrapolation

chapter Chapter Three|15 pages

The Debate Begins: From Noble Savage to Last Man

chapter Chapter Four|14 pages

The Gothic Imagination

chapter Chapter Five|19 pages

The Other Side

chapter Chapter Six|16 pages

Bellamy and the Mechanical Millenarians

chapter Chapter Seven|21 pages

Superman and the System

chapter Chapter Eight|17 pages

The Disenchanted Mechanophobes

chapter Chapter Nine|18 pages

Virgils of the Dynamo

chapter Chapter Ten|23 pages

Sectarian Scientism

chapter Chapter Eleven|32 pages

Surmising Forums

chapter Chapter Twelve|20 pages

Operational Eschatologies