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Potsdam Manifesto Component1 #393536 Based on similar considerations, a group of German researchers, led by Hans-Peter Dürr, developed the Potsdam Manifesto and Potsdamer Denkschrift, where an emerging transformative worldview is described | Read the Potsdam Denkschrift "We Must Learn to Think in a New Way" [1], or its Wikipedia page. [2] |
+Citaten (2) - CitatenVoeg citaat toeList by: CiterankMapLink[1] Potsdam "Denkschrift" 2005
Citerend uit: Hans-Peter Dürr, Daniel Dahm, Rudolf Prinz zur Lippe - Federation of German Scientists - Vereinigung Deutscher Wissenschaftler VDW e.V. V.i.S.d.P. Publication info: 2005, October, Berlin Geciteerd door: David Price 1:24 PM 26 May 2015 GMT URL: | Fragment- "The ground on which this new sustainable, organismic cultural diversity is to grow has been well prepared. For why do political and economic decision-makers invoke freedom and democracy, when most of them seem to have abandoned this trust in a fundamental commonality? Because they secretly know and feel that deeply anchored in people’s hearts is the longing to strengthen their own physical, emotional, and spiritual abilities and to further develop their personalities; and this is possible only in relative freedom. But the great majority of people do not want to use their empowerment against others who are trying to do similar things, but rather, together with them and motivated by the deeper connection, to create a more comprehensive commonality on a higher level. A new, but in truth long-proven view of the human beings is becoming visible, one that assumes a person capable of love and empathy. We should not be misled by the excesses of our modern civilization. The human being is capable of much more than being an aggressive, avaricious “wolf” (in Thomas Hobbes’ sense): freedom to strengthen oneself, not for the sake of victory in struggle against the others, but responsible for strengthening one’s own contribution in favor of the whole. Co-liberality is needed to achieve an optimal, vibrant coexistence in the sense implied by Albert Schweitzer’s remark, ”I am life that wants to live, amid life that wants to live.” |
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