PROUT

PROUT
For a More Progressively Evolving Society
Showing posts with label power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label power. Show all posts

Monday, April 11, 2016

PROUT Study Guide - 01 Introduction


Find more about PROUT Study Guide Here

Prabhat Ranjan Sarkar propounded the Progressive Utilization Theory (PROUT) in 1959 as an alternative to capitalism and communism.  His ideas on this subject are enunciated in Proutist Economics, Prout in a Nutshell, Neo-Humanism in a Nutshell, Human Society, Part One, Human Society, Part Two, and A Few Problems Solved.

The experience of contemporary history has exposed the fallacies of cherished social, political and economic ideas, classical as well as revolutionary.  The world is full of opportunities – material, mental and spiritual – and so to build a better and freer society is a practical possibility.  Yet we are observing a process of social decadence, moral degeneration and the collapse of values which is corroding the springs of human action and corrupting the ideals of a civilized life.  Failure and disappointment are bound to follow from attempts to solve the problems of our time with the ideas of previous centuries.  These ideas emphasized material progress and scientific development. However, the mental makeup and moral standard of the civilized community have not matched the level of material progress.  In other words, the development of civilization – refined cultural progress – has proven far slower than material scientific development.

Communism, which promised material well-being and security in an atheistic and socially regimented life has collapsed, creating disillusionment about revolutionary ideals.  The great promise of the industrial nations has also remained unfulfilled despite enormous accumulation of wealth, because of the underlying psychology of individualistic hedonism.  This radical hedonism postulates that happiness can be achieved by the fulfilment of any material or sensual desire whatsoever, and that in order to fulfil these desires, egotism, greed and selfishness have to be encouraged.  The achievement of sensory pleasure has been sold as the achievement of harmony and peace.  Radical hedonism, it should be known, is the philosophy of rich people.

The ideals of intellectual liberalism and intellectual refinement have also failed us.  The cherished belief that the spread of reason would abolish our irrational outbursts toward each other has all but disappeared.  Antagonism between ethnic, racial, and religious groups has become the fundamental reality of the nation-state.  When human security becomes threatened, social, ethical and religious energies get expressed through unprecedented oppression, violence and enmity.  The disconcerting experiences of the contemporary world compel thoughtful people to reconsider the fundamental philosophical principles from which different political theories – of the Right and the Left, conservative and liberal, reactionary and revolutionary – are alike deduced.

The capture of power, irrespective of the diversity of the means that are advocated, is the common postulate of all political theories.  Today, the so-called free world heralds the victory of liberal democracy and its corollary the capitalist economic system.  Through modern liberalism the individual has become 'economic man', lured by the glittering projections of a consumer psychology.  In the context of capitalist society, people exist mainly as units in the work force, with our thoughts, feelings and tastes manipulated by the government and industry and the mass communications they control.

Simultaneously, gaining momentum among the poor and disenfranchised is a tendency to relapse into medieval obscurantism in search of an illusory safety in the backwaters of dogmatic faith.  With the collapse of the Soviet Empire, movements for self-reliance are being sentimentalized with slogans from religious fundamentalism, slogans presented to the innocent person as an antithesis to pseudo-culture, economic domination and Western values.

This represents a new flare-up in the age-old struggle between religion and science – between faith and reason, and between mystic agnosticism and empirical knowledge.  Probably the last gasp of a life and death struggle, it has lasted long, and has always placed civilized humanity in the breach. The material scientific mode of thought, having driven religion from pillar to post over a period of several centuries, is meeting the final assault of a hitherto vanquished adversary.  Denying humans the possibility of ever knowing reality through experience, religions preach a neo-mysticism and a teleological view of life, which is the expression of humanity's loss of faith in itself.  This is in contradiction to spiritual enlightenment, which leads the human mind to experience the real essence of freedom and the organic wholeness of the Universe.

Science, attempting to free the mind from the shackles of dogma, emphasized that truth is contained only in that which can be recognized clearly and distinctively through physics and physical laws.  Knowledge is defined as the result of the intellectual analysis of our sense experience.  In this way, however, science created a new barrier beyond which the mind could not elevate itself to greater thresholds of consciousness.  Hence, science could not prevent the emergence of a materialistic dogma that devalues human potential, encourages the mechanization of life, and curtails freedom of thought.

The quest for freedom is much more ancient than either religion or physical science and can be referred back to our earliest struggle for existence.  This quest accounts for the human triumph over nature in the course of efforts to satisfy biological needs.  It provides the basis for the constant search for knowledge, and it enables us to progressively free ourselves from the tyranny of natural phenomena and social environments.  If we are to be guided by this deep human longing, the philosophy of the future should judge the merit of any social organization or political institution by the actual measure of freedom it affords the individual in the physical, mental and spiritual spheres.   


A Comprehensive Guide to the Study of PROUT
By The Proutist Writers Group, New York Sector
© Proutist Universal, Inc.  1998
This edition published by Proutist Universal Global Office, March 2010
P.U.  Global Office
Platanvej 30
DK 1810 Frederiksberg C

Denmark


Political Democracy can and will be fortuitous
when Economic Democracy is established.  

Explore this and other articles covering alternative economics, ethical leadership, economic democracy, and a society without the weal and woe of social and economic vicissitudes HERE  
How does PROUT compare or contrast with capitalism or communism?  Explore the answers HERE

What are essential ingredients assuring progressive sustainability bereft of the vicissitudes of economic or political predation, privation or disparity?  Learn more HERE  

PROUT Study Guide Introduction - 05 PROUT's Economic Development



Find more about PROUT Study Guide Here


Ideas Worth Living


The idea that maximum consumption will create happiness has been challenged before.  Economist E. F. Schumacher states in his book Small is Beautiful
 “Economy as the content of life is a deadly illness, because infinite growth does not fit into a finite world.  That economy should not be the content of life, has been told to mankind by all its great teachers; that it cannot be, is evident today. If one wants to describe the deadly illness in more detail, one can say that it is similar to addiction, like alcoholism or drug addiction.  It does not matter too much whether this addiction appears in more egotistical, or more altruistic form, whether it seeks its satisfaction only in a crude materialistic way or also in an artistically, culturally or scientifically refined way.  Poison is poison, even if wrapped in a silver paper.  ...  If the spiritual value of inner man is neglected, then selfishness, like capitalism, fits the orientation better than a system of love for one's fellow beings.”
Sarkar asserted that economic development is only a means for survival and the fulfilment of physical needs.  The economy must maintain balance with Nature and other aspects of social and cultural development.  The spirit of all-round collective welfare, not limitless profit, should guide future economic development.


Considering the above, Sarkar's guidelines and goals for economic development are as follows:   


• The minimum requirements of all should be guaranteed.   


• Economic power should be decentralized and economic democracy should be introduced.   


• Production should be designed for meaningful consumption, not profit.   


• The gap between rich and poor nations should be narrowed.   


• Production should serve the real needs of people and not the demands of the economic system.   


• Harmonious relations of cooperation with Nature should be established.   


• The psychology of competition must be replaced by a psychology of cooperation.   


• It should be accepted that economic fulfilment cannot satisfy the infinite desire for happiness.   


• Supramundane and spiritual potentialities should be explored and utilized to balance the mundane, finite character of the economy.   


• Psycho-economy, which aims at neutralizing dehumanization by the economic system and effecting the progressive expansion of the individual and collective minds, should develop as a branch of the economy.   


This Study Guide is intended to provide an introduction to Sarkar’s philosophy of spiritual humanism, which he called NeoHumanism, and the political-economic theory of PROUT which addresses the practical application of this value system.  This introductory material has been presented in the form of a Study Guide because our objective is to do more than share ideas.  We want to create organizational cadre who will work to lay the groundwork for a new era in human society.   


We encourage the formation of Study Circles to “study” the requirements of a benevolent society.  It cannot be created by merely mouthing philosophy.  It requires that we first transform ourselves.  This is accomplished through spiritual practices and by studying and working together for the greater good we put meaning into our lives.   


Sincerely,  


The Proutist Writers Group of New York Sector

A Comprehensive Guide to the Study of PROUT
By The Proutist Writers Group, New York Sector
© Proutist Universal, Inc.  1998
This edition published by Proutist Universal Global Office, March 2010
P.U.  Global Office
Platanvej 30
DK 1810 Frederiksberg C
Denmark



Political Democracy can and will be fortuitous
when Economic Democracy is established.  

Explore this and other articles covering alternative economics, ethical leadership, economic democracy, and a society without the weal and woe of social and economic vicissitudes HERE  
How does PROUT compare or contrast with capitalism or communism?  Explore the answers HERE
What are essential ingredients assuring progressive sustainability bereft of the vicissitudes of economic or political predation, privation or disparity?  Learn more HERE