Peace and Interdependence

This website is dedicated to the belief that peace will come from understanding and respecting the diverse and interdependent nature of life on earth.

Tuesday, April 10, 2007

Whitehead

Whitehead is an immensely difficult writer. Hosinski's Stubborn Fact and Creative Advance (1993) is a brilliant introductory work, and I highly recommend it, especially if you have to read Whitehead for a class Sherburne's Key is also very helpful, though you get a lot of Sherburne, too. At issue is usually Whitehead's neologisms. To draw another analogy between Heidegger and Whitehead, however, both men were notorious for creating new words because what they wanted to explain was both so uncanny and yet so obvious that the old words didn't work. Don't let the language scare you away. Whitehead rewards hard work, and you will likely never forget what you learn from him. The ideas that we are beginning to take much more seriously these days about holistic thinking, interconnectedness, interdisciplinarity, non-dualism, commensurability between science and religion, and creativity were all covered by him seventy years ago. Don't let your professors tell you that Whitehead is an outmoded metaphysician. His `philosophy of organism' is as inherently open-ended, properly understood, as anything passing today as postmodernism. Read Whitehead.
Posted by E.M. Dale

New Rules!

America could really use a few new myths, indeed, a whole new Story. Paeans to the rugged individualist recklessly braving the cutthroat competitions of life must give way to tales of groups, organizations, and governing bodies selflessly cooperating for the greater good. Celebrations of national independence should evolve into global celebrations of interdependence. The prevailing notion of personal profit as a fair and effective motivator in human endeavors needs the tempering influences of empathy, compassion, service, community, and a bottom-line concern for the most disadvantaged in society.

Money can no longer serve as the prime measure of a person's value or of the worthiness or lack thereof of social policies; instead, we need to view individuals and their governments through a universal prism of transcendent, ethical, and spiritual values. Nor can the use of force — power to the strongest, richest, and most capable of violence — continue as the primary way of making decisions and resolving conflicts. America needs to manifest nothing less than a genuine working democracy, where the most dominant force resides in the voice of the common people.

From P!

Wednesday, April 04, 2007

Lessons from the EU

But, while GDP per capita has been rising in the US, most Americans are worse off today than they were five years ago. An economy that, year after year, leaves most of its citizens worse off is not a success.

More importantly, the EU’s success should not be measured only by particular pieces of legislation and regulation, or even in the prosperity that economic integration has brought. After all, the driving motivation of the EU’s founders was long-lasting peace. Economic integration, it was hoped, would lead to greater understanding, underpinned by the many interactions that inevitably flow from commerce. Increased interdependence would make conflict unthinkable.

The EU has realised that dream. Nowhere in the world do neighbours live together more peacefully, and people move more freely and with greater security, than in Europe,….

In today’s world, too, there is much that is not working well. While economic integration helped achieve a broader set of goals in Europe, elsewhere, economic globalisation has contributed to widening the divide between rich and poor within countries and between rich and poor countries.

Joseph Stiglitz

Peace of Mind by Joshua Loth Liebman (1948)

Our interdependence with others is the most encompassing fact of human reality--our personalities are made by our contacts with others. There is, therefore, a duty which falls upon all of us--to become free, loving, warm, cooperative, affirmative personalities.

To love one's neighbors is to achieve an inner tolerance for the uniqueness of others, to resist the temptation to private imperialism. We must renounce undue possessiveness in relation to friends, children--yes, even our loves. The world is full of private imperialists--the father who forces his artistic son into business, or the mother who rivets her daughter to her service by chains of pity, subtly refusing the daughter a life of her own.
from Shels Blog

Sunday, December 17, 2006

Peacetakescourage.com

The following is from peacetakescourage.com. The video includes a plea from Rev. Jesse Jackson for peace and interdependence.

NEW VIDEO: UFPJ - Keep Hope Alive!


Help promote the massive march in Washington, D.C., that will take place on Saturday, January 27, 2007. It is my honor to help promote this soon-to-be historic event. It's time to call on Congress to take immediate action to end the war. Join us in D.C. on the 27th of January and help bring an end to this war! For more details visit:
http://www.unitedforpeace.org/


Sunday, November 19, 2006

Scott Snibbe

My work explores how seemingly independent phenomena are, upon analysis, actually interdependent with their environments. Such interdependence may be understood in terms of the Buddhist notion of emptiness, which holds that no object, physical or mental, exists in isolation from the rest of reality. For example, humans often think of themselves as embodied individuals that act separately from their surroundings and other people. However, when people examine even the most basic unit of the individual self—the human body—they find it composed entirely of “non-self” physical elements such as their parents’ genetic material, food and water that all, ultimately, originate from ancient stellar explosions. These elements are in continual exchange with the environment and with others through eating, respiration, immunological and genetic processes. Similarly, human mental structures and processes, including languages, ideas, memories and preferences, all emerge from our interactions with other individuals and society. Even when alone, the imprints of these previous interactions drive our mental processes. Such a view of interdependence and emergence has gained widespread contemporary support in the fields of complexity theory, social psychology and network theory.
@ NY Arts

Jesuits release document advancing ‘ecological justice’

11/16/2006 Ed Langlois Catholic Sentinel
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Jesuits of the Northwest are adding the environment as a criterion for selecting ministries.

The largest Catholic men’s religious community in the region this month released a 17-page plan that defines sustainable development. The document is meant to guide Jesuits as they advance what many church leaders are calling “ecological justice.”

The move “simply widens our vision by bringing the critical problems of the environment into focus,” says Father Bill Watson, an official in the Portland-based Oregon Province of Jesuits. “Serious environmental degradation on land and sea threatens all life systems. The current challenges are so significant that our province apostolic efforts must be re-envisioned.”

The plan calls for the use of renewable resources, re-use, recycling and restoration of nature. Buildings at Jesuit institutions ought to meet high standards of sustainability, it says.

The plan also urges economics that take into account human and environmental costs of production. That means, for example, that the price of treating sickness caused by pesticides and fertilizers will be figured into the price of a crop.

“We believe the mandate for Catholics is clear: to become fully informed of the magnitude and seriousness of the problem, to acknowledge our interdependence and our responsibility for the well-being of others, and to work for lasting change that will benefit all within the community of life.”

Friday, November 10, 2006

Humanity's Interdependence

In today’s highly interdependent world, individuals and nations can no longer resolve many of their problems by themselves. We need one another. We must therefore develop a sense of universal responsibility... It is our collective and individual responsibility to protect and nurture the global family, to support its weaker members, and to preserve and tend to the environment in which we all live.
- His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama
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Orlando, Nov. 9, 2006--The General Assembly of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA (NCC) and Church World Service took on the issues of the world in the name of the gospel of Jesus Christ at its annual meeting that concluded today in Florida.
"As men and women of faith, we believe that freedom, along with genuine security, is based in God, and is served by the recognition of humanity's interdependence," said the message, "and by working with partners to bring about community, development, and reconciliation for all, and that such freedom and security is not served by this war in Iraq."

Tuesday, November 07, 2006

The new globalisation

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Anthony Giddens November 7, 2006.

Professor Gene Grossman, Alan Blinder and their colleagues, together with a British author working in Geneva, Richard Baldwin, who has commented usefully on their work.
They have produced what they call a "new paradigm" of globalisation, marking a distinct and challenging phase in the evolution of world economic interdependence. One can see globalisation as involving several distinct phases of the disentangling of previous integrated economic activities....But now a further phase of is occurring...Any service job can be outsourced that displays four characteristics - if it involves the heavy use of IT; its output is IT transmittable; it comprises tasks that can be codified; and if it needs little or no face-to-face interaction. Blinder believes that somewhere between 30 and 40 million service jobs in the US will be open to offshoring in the future.

Mandala's message: Nothing is permanent

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By Jennifer Reeger TRIBUNE-REVIEW Tuesday, November 7, 2006

...One of the monks, Thupten Chosan, said each mandala is built to a different Buddha. The one at IUP was built for the Buddha of Compassion. The use of sand signifies interdependence.

"Each one of these grains of sand in itself is pretty meaningless, but together they create something," he said. Each color, each design symbolizes something different. At the center of the IUP mandala was a lotus flower "which symbolizes the purity and clarity of basic human nature," Chosan said. "At birth, our nature of mind is not sullied by emotions."
"Mandala is one of the highest forms of meditation -- one of the most profound forms of meditation," Chosan said.

Monday, November 06, 2006

No more excuses on climate change - Philip Stephens writing in the Financial Express -
Some in the industrialised world will be tempted to inaction by the fact that the effects of climate change will fall sooner and hardest on the poorer countries of the south. Yet if we have learnt anything about global security during the past few years, it should have been that rich nations cannot avoid the consequences of chaos and poverty elsewhere. Britain's Tony Blair put it well when he said that climate change has become the definition of global interdependence. Sadly, that has yet to make it easier to reach equitable bargains between rich and poor.