The anthropologist Gregory Bateson has been called a lost giant of
twentieth-century thought. In the years following World War II,
Bateson was among the group of mathematicians, engineers, and
social scientists who laid the theoretical foundations of the
information age. In Palo Alto in 1956, he introduced the
double-bind theory of schizophrenia. By the sixties, he was in
Hawaii studying dolphin communication. Bateson's discipline hopping
made established experts wary, but he found an audience open to his
ideas in a generation of rebellious youth. To a gathering of
counterculturalists and revolutionaries in 1967 London, Bateson was
the first to warn of a "greenhouse effect" that could lead to
runaway climate change.
Blending intellectual biography with an ambitious reappraisal of
the 1960s, Anthony Chaney uses Bateson's life and work to explore
the idea that a postmodern ecological consciousness is the true
legacy of the decade. Surrounded by voices calling for liberation
of all kinds, Bateson spoke of limitation and dependence. But he
also offered an affirming new picture of human beings and their
place in the world—as ecologies knit together in a fabric of
meaning that, said Bateson, "we might as well call Mind."