PROUT

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

Thursday, August 18, 2016

Event: Public Screening of Michael Moore's Latest Movie: Where to Invade Next, Saturday, August 20

Event

Join us this Saturday for a FREE screening of Michael Moore's Latest Creation, Saturday, August 20th at 3:30PM


Academy Award®-winning director Michael Moore is back with WHERE TO INVADE NEXT:  a provocative and hilarious comedy in which Moore will stop at nothing to figure out how to actually make America great again.  
RSVP on our Event Page  [Required]

Just in time for election season, America's favorite political provocateur, Michael Moore, is back with his new film, WHERE TO INVADE NEXT.  Honored by festivals and critics' groups alike, WHERE TO INVADE NEXT is an expansive, hilarious, and subversive comedy in which the Academy Award®-winning director confronts the most pressing issues facing America today and finds solutions in the most unlikely places.  The creator of FAHRENHEIT 9/11 and BOWLING FOR COLUMBINE has returned with an epic movie that’s unlike anything he has done before—an eye-opening call to arms to capture the American Dream and restore it in, of all places, America.

"One of the most genuinely, and valuably, patriotic films any American has ever made... Optimistic and affirmative, it rests on one challenging but invaluable idea: we can do better."
Godfrey Cheshire, rogerebert.com  

Join Us!  RSVP on our Event Page

What are they saying?  

ONE OF MOORE’S BEST FILMS. A surprisingly endearing set of suggestions for a better tomorrow.  Eric Kohn, Indiewire

MOORE HAS MADE AN ACT OF GUERRILLA HUMANITY.  Owen Gleiberman, BBC

Undeniably SHARP AND BUOYANT… an impishly entertaining cinematic statement of ideological principles.  Justin Chang,  Variety

PROVOCATIVE, HILARIOUSLY FUNNY...MOORE’S LATEST FILM IS HIS MOST BOLD AND MOST SOPHISTICATED. Instead of pointing out our flaws, he imagines our possibilities. And instead of wallowing in fear and panic, he offers practical ideas for productive change.  Sophia A. McClennen, Salon

IMPASSIONED. WHERE TO INVADE NEXT offers hope and is MR. MOORE’S MOST FAR-REACHING FILM.  Stephen Holden, New York Times  

HEARTFELT. MOORE’S FILM IS FUNNY, but it’s also as SERIOUS AS A HEART ATTACK. There’s nothing mock about his outrage; IT’S SINCERE AND ULTIMATELY HOPEFUL.  Chris Nashawaty, Entertainment Weekly

Join us this Saturday for a FREE screening of Michael Moore's 

Where to Invade Next  


A powerful, eye-opening film on how to actually make America great! 


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  

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

How to Unite Human Society

by Prabhat Sarkar, Founder of PROUT  


While trying to bring about the development and prosperity of individuals and society, we should encourage the common points only among different communities – not the points of difference.  It is natural that there are differences in society concerning dress, customs, cultural expressions, food habits, language, etc.  Though, if these points of difference are given undue importance, social problems will only be aggravated, and as a result the unity and very existence of society will be jeopardized.  If nothing is done immediately to check the deterioration of contemporary society, then as a result of different factors, in due course society will automatically evolve some common principles.  So the points of difference should never be encouraged in any way.  

Social and political leaders should refrain from harping on the points of difference in society.  Rather, they should continually emphasize that it is not the appropriate time to bring up complicated divisive issues.  For example, take the case of Indian languages.  There are many people in India who unnecessarily fight over the issue of language, but is now the proper time to raise this issue when there are so many people suffering from hunger, famine, disease, educational backwardness, economic distress, etc.?  Can the people of India afford to waste their valuable time over the comparatively unimportant issue of language?  On the contrary, they should immediately launch a campaign against exploitation, as this will keep the divisive forces under control.  If this is not done, the fissiparous forces will create impediments and dissension in society, and the important burning issues confronting the people will remain unsolved.  


Points of Unity  

The progress of a country depends on unity, so emphasis should be placed only on unifying factors.  To eliminate fissiparous forces, we will have to fight a relentless war against disunity in the following three spheres.  


Socio-Economic Sphere  

While some people are enormously rich, a large percentage of the population is languishing in poverty.  Naturally, to build up a strong society, socio-economic disparity must be completely eradicated.  

With the eradication of socio-economic disparity, the collective wealth of society will have to be increased progressively.  Only then can the growing demands of the population be successfully met.  Let us take the example of Orissa.  Agricultural production, particularly in the rainy season, depends almost entirely on the monsoons.  But if the irrigation system was properly developed, the total agricultural production in the state would increase 300 percent, and an additional 40 million people could be fed.  Today only 15 million people are being fed with the present levels of production.  Orissa is also rich in mineral resources.  Abundant coal, bauxite, manganese and other minerals are readily available in the state, but many of these minerals are being exported to other countries.  If these raw materials were properly utilized to manufacture finished goods in the state, Orissa could establish at least four large-scale steel plants.  This would substantially increased the purchasing power of the people.  Unfortunately, the incompetent political leaders of the country do not think in a rational way.  On the contrary, they formulate plans that neither remove socio-economic disparity nor increase collective wealth.  These leaders have committed a major blunder by placing the cart before the horse.  


In all countries of the world, economically deprived people can be united through a common programme of socio-economic struggle and by fighting against cruel capitalist exploitation on the one hand, and by implementing developmental programmes to enhance the amount of collective wealth on the other.  By undertaking extensive irrigation, mining, agriculture and industrial development, the collective wealth of a country can be easily increased.  


Self-sufficient socio-economic zones should be established throughout the world to smoothly eliminate social disparity and increase collective wealth.  The formation of states on political grounds should be carefully avoided.  In one political unit there may be several socio-economic zones which can live unitedly together with their respective problems.  For example, the state of Bihar is a political unit but while the Chotanagpur Hills are confronted with the problem of irrigation, the plains of North Bihar are suffering from the problem of drainage.  In Royalseema, Srikulam and Telengana areas of Andhra Pradesh are situated in the political unit of Andhra Pradesh, but their socio-economic potentialities are quite different.  To derive the maximum benefit from these areas, distinct socio-economic zones should be formed, regardless of whether or not they remain in the same political unit.  It is a great mistake to form states on the basis of politics or language.  If a capitalist and a labourer speaks the same language, who will think that they are friends because of their linguistic affinity?  


Psycho-Sentimental Sphere  

In the psychic sphere, there are certain factors that serve to unite different linguistic groups of people.  For example, all North Indian languages and a few South Indian languages originated and developed from Sańskrta.  These languages have been greatly influenced by Saḿskrta.  In such circumstances, the study of Saḿskrta should not be opposed by anybody.  This may appear to be a trivial matter, but if it is encouraged it will be a great unifying factor in Indian society.  

In social traditions also, some common points may be developed.  Research and archaeological excavation on glorious past civilizations and great personalities will help arouse a strong national sentiment.  For example, the excavation of the Mahenzodaro and Harappa civilizations highlighted the accomplishments of ancient Indian culture.

The study of history should also be encouraged.  Itihása is not synonymous with the Saḿskrta word itikathá which means “history” and is the chronological record of past events.  The word itihása means that part of history which has great educative value.  The study of itihása or the cultural history of a country arouses a sense of unity amongst the members of society, and they become aware of their impact on cultural legacy.  For example, the study of the historical epic Mahábhárata creates a sense of pride and inspiration in the minds of the people, and this fosters the spirit of collective unity.  

The memory of illustrious saints and sages also binds people together with common bonds of affinity.  When people cherish their past leaders and saints, it creates a strong foundation for collective unity.  


Spirituo-Sentimental Sphere  

The sentiments of a common spiritual heritage and a common spiritual goal are the only sentiments which can bind people together permanently.  Socio-economic and psycho-sentimental issues are extremely useful for creating social unity and cohesion, but the sentiments arising out of these issues are temporary.  Cosmic sentiments are permanent.  By inculcating universal sentiments, socio-economic unity and fraternity will be based on a strong fundament.  People will think in terms of cosmic paternity and universal fraternity.  My firm conviction that we have all come from the same Entity and we will all merge in the same Entity will generate a unique unifying sentiment.  All people will feel united by the ties of universal love and friendship, which will ultimately pave the way for a universal society.  The poet Satyendra Dutta, the great universalist, has eloquently expressed this sentiment in the following poem:  

Ráge anuráge nidrita jáge ásal mánuś prakat́ hay
Varńe varńe náhika visheś nikhil bhuvan Brahmamay!
Nivir aekye yáy mishe’ yáy sakal bhágya sab hrday
Mánuśe mánuśe náiko prabhed nikhil mánava Brahmamay.  

[When love awakens in sleeping souls, then true human beings will emerge.
There is no difference between one person, one race, and another, for the entire universe is pervaded by one Infinite Consciousness!]  

Wherever there is a common point among people it should be encouraged, while the points of difference have to be discouraged and eliminated.  For fostering unity and enhancing the prosperity of the people, this must be the fundamental approach.  We should always remember:  


Jagat juŕiyá ek ját áche
Se játir nám mánuś játi
Eki prthiviir stanye pálita
Eki ravi shashi moder sáthii.  

[There is only one race in the entire world,
And the name of that race is the human race.
We are bound together with the same breast milk of mother Earth,
And the same sun and moon are our common companions.]  


Points of Difference  

There are conspicuous variations in four main areas of human society – food, dress, language and religion.  

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 - 02 Spiritual Humanism


Find more about PROUT Study Guide Here

Sarkar's philosophy is founded on the assumption that matter is not separate from consciousness but is rather a metamorphosed form of it.  Similarly, consciousness is not the result of mental activity but rather thought is also a form of consciousness.  It is Consciousness that underlies psychophysical reality and provides the inspiration for a rational view of life, moral integrity, and spiritual wisdom.  


Spirituality and morality should not be equated with religious dogma and faith in God.  All religions are frankly dualist systems that separate humans from their progenitor and the manifest universe.  The rationalist rebels against theology – Descartes, Leibnitz, and Kant – also failed to escape the vicious circle of dualism.  To offer security, religion impressed upon people the need to submit before the imaginary will of God or a theological ethical code, sanctioned by the scriptures and defined by religious institutions.  Morality in this sense, however, is the absence of freedom.  


A philosophy based on spiritual and moral values, on the other hand, is able to explain human existence – including desire, emotion, instincts, intuition, will and reason – as an integrated framework and do so in a way that is accessible to human comprehension.  Such a philosophy is required to build the new social organism and political institutions that can foster not only the harmonious relations of all races and cultural groups, but also the harmonious relation of human beings with all animate and inanimate objects.  


For Sarkar, human existence is physical, mental and spiritual.  He defined progress as evolution to higher consciousness and ultimately to the state of absolute freedom.  Simultaneously, he explained that ”spiritual progress can only be attained on a firm physical and mental base.  … This physical and intellectual base has to be progressively adjusted to changing conditions of time and space.”  The natural human aspiration is to achieve freedom in all three spheres.  


In our march towards freedom we cannot neglect other living beings.  We have to develop a social system where all living beings can live securely, and where people can move towards emancipation by freeing their minds from superstition and dogma.  This universalistic spirit is Neo-Humanism or Spiritual Humanism.  Human history thus far is a story of ruling classes trying to enhance their own social and material wealth at the cost of human values.  This is why temples, churches, scriptures, laws, constitutions, corporations and international trade agreements have become more important than human beings.  To confront this, Sarkar maintains that a fundamental human philosophy is required to cement a new social system and not the changing social values based on self-interest that are embodied in ruling institutions.  


Human values find their root in spirituality.  Spirituality is not mystic speculation of life after death, but is realized in relation to the manifest universe.  The philosophy of monism, which postulates the self to be in union with the rest of the universe and responsible for its well-being, is the essence of spiritual humanism.  Sarkar wrote in his book Neo-Humanism in a Nutshell:  Part 1:  “What does the state stand for, what is the use of these regulations, and what is the march of civilization for, if human beings don't get a chance to build a good physical well-being, to invigorate their intelligence with knowledge, and to broaden their hearts with love and compassion?  Instead of leading humanity to the goal of life, if the State stands in the way, then it cannot command loyalty, because humanity is superior to the State.”  


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 - 03 Society and State


Find more about PROUT Study Guide Here

In Human Society:  Part 2, Sarkar described the inner spirit of 'society' as to ”move together.”  Society originated as a family in the early phase, and was strengthened subsequently under the guidance of group mothers and group fathers.  Later, with growing social complexity, group leaders emerged as queens and kings during the age of empires.  The emergence of classical religion strengthened political power and under the dominance of the priest class the Church State arose.  In modern times, under the rise of the capitalist class, the Nation State has become the norm.  In this proces, Society itself has lost its identity and importance, and social laws, norms and values possess little meaning.  All social structures have been politicized both in democratic countries and totalitarian countries.  Nevertheless, realistic relations between society and State could be formulated to create a congenial atmosphere for security and freedom.


Sarkar's main goal was to revitalize society, and through his writings and action he clearly demonstrated that he wanted to establish a 'moral society' which he termed 'Sadvipra Samaj'.  He was not so concerned with the political structure because he concluded that it will continue to evolve and change its character in different phases of history.  On the other hand, he felt that in the absence of a strong society, neither moral standards nor strong social relations could be realized or maintained.  He also believed that a strong society would balance the power of the political structure.  He considered human society to be one and indivisible; hence, he emphasized the formation of a social structure from the village to the global level.


When he laid the foundation of his own organisation, for example, he set up a structure that consists of 35 branches, each extending from the village to the global level.  This means that each locality should have at least 35 persons to take decisions on multifarious activities without being dependent on the dictates of the political structure.


Considering the above, the relation between Society and State can be defined as follows:  

• Society has a wider scope than the State.  As an assemblage of human beings, society should be considered one and indivisible without any boundaries of race, religion or nation.  The State is a political machinery within society to maintain law and order and other co-related functions delegated by society.   


• The State refers only to the politically organized portion of society.  Society takes priority over the State.  A sense of collective living creates society, and society in turn creates the State.   


• The State needs an organized government to enforce its will.  Society also needs a structure to regenerate moral and social values and maintain social cohesiveness free from the influence of the State machinery.   


• Society is universal and without any boundaries.  But the State may have specific boundaries flexible enough to be changed when there is need.   


It is necessary to define the relation between the two structures in the clearest language to be able to set goals and coordinate between the two.  Ultimately, however, the success of socially benevolent institutions will depend on the evolution of a proper social culture based on the values of spiritual humanism.  The materialistic orientation of life and the marketing character of modern industrial religion has created extreme forms of alienation, isolation and identity crisis in the affluent Western world.  Third World countries, besides suffering economic crisis, carry the psychological burdens of passive psychology, inferiority complex, religious dogma and other group sentiments.  These narrow and stagnant ideas damage social integration.


The creation of social institutions on the world level with organs on the lower levels can eliminate threats from political and economic oligarchies and religious fanatics.  Members of the social institutions should be established in the spirit of universalism.  Sarkar explained that to be established in cardinal moral principles is essential for the qualitative transformation of the personality as well as society.  He frequently used the term 'sadvipra' in this regard.  Value-oriented intellectuals and spiritually free persons, who have moral integrity and are not motivated by selfinterest, are the best persons to organize themselves to form the new social structure.  Their leadership is vital in creating social unity.   


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 - 04 PROUT's Political Objectives


Find more about PROUT Study Guide Here

Security for all members of society must be ensured, without depending on the bureaucratic structure.  Security includes not only a guarantee of food, clothes, housing, health care, education and other minimum requirements of life, but also security in the psychological sense.  In Third World countries, the cause of insecurity is the economy.  Western countries face a sense of psychic insecurity due to the influence of a quantitative, materialistic monoculture.  Overemphasis on materialistic values has created an identity crisis.  Extremely alienated, an individual standing before the high wall of organized power structures feels helpless.  To eradicate this sense of insecurity and alienation, spiritual awakening of the self is essential.  Human beings must restore the sense of unity with their fellow beings, other living beings, nature, society etc.  Secondly, the bureaucratic power structure should be replaced by humanistic management.

The basic human urge for freedom is the motivating force behind social evolution and progress.  Freedom should be considered in the physico-psycho-spiritual sense.  Physical freedom means the guarantee of the minimum requirements of life, and it cannot be unlimited.  Intellectual freedom implies an arrangement for the development of intellect that can overcome environmental and pseudo-cultural influences.  Freedom of thought is more important than freedom of expression.  In every society, education, culture, religious institutions and the mass media manipulate the collective mind.  Human values are distorted and pseudo-values are imposed.  To ensure real freedom in the intellectual realm, the education system should be reoriented to develop intuitional and creative consciousness.  'Freedom from' hunger, poverty, exploitation, oppression, superstition, dogma, etc. is not enough to guarantee freedom.  There must be an idea of 'freedom to'.


Spiritual liberation is a state where the individual mind realizes the sense of unity and harmony with the entire universe.  The awakening of this consciousness is the goal of freedom, not the expression of unbridled passion and any demand whatsoever of the limited ego.  It is the responsibility of society to create opportunities for every member to pursue their spiritual goal without hindrance.  In this regard Sarkar wrote, “I want that every person should be guaranteed the minimum physical requirements of life, every person should get scope for full exploitation of psychic potentiality, every person should get equal opportunity to attain absolute truth, and endowed with all the glories and achievements of the world, every person should march towards the Absolute.”  The 'Absolute', in a spiritual sense, is the state of total liberation.   

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  

Sunday, February 28, 2016

Evolution of World Government - Bicameral Congress

As nations reach toward each other to exercise their responsibilities in unity, inevitably the capacities of arriving at such unity and universal standards will result in world governance.  Arriving at such stasis is necessarily a slow process for such a grand scale, while doing so in an ethical and progressive manner is essential and necessary.  


by Prabhat Sarkar, Founder of PROUT

Two houses

Universalism does not depend upon any relative factor, hence it is free from the vices of ism.  Ism thrives on the angle of group interest.  Among many other factors, ism is a major factor in war.  War is not an ideological clash.  Those who are eager to establish peace should shake off nationalism and other allied isms.
If we are to shake off these isms, we have to organize a universal body and go on strengthening its power.  This will be the first phase in establishing a world government.  In the initial stage it will be a law-framing body.  The first beneficial effect of such a body will be that no country will be allowed to frame laws detrimental to the interests of its minorities.  The right to execute those laws will be vested with the local government and not with the world government.  The world government will decide the principles on the basis of which a particular law will be enforced in a particular country.
There will be two houses:  a lower house and an upper house.  In the lower house, representatives will be established according to the population of the country.  In the upper house, representatives will be country-wise.  First bills will be placed before the lower house, and before their final acceptance they will be duly discussed in the upper house.  Small countries which cannot send a single representative to the lower house will have the opportunity to discuss the merits and demerits of proposed acts with other countries in the upper house.
From Discourses on PROUT – 2

The Evolution of World Government

To run the world government, two houses may be maintained for an indefinite period.  The lower house will be composed of representatives from various parts [countries] of the world, elected on the basis of population.  The members of the upper house will be elected country-wise.  This will provide opportunities to those countries which cannot send even a single representative to the lower house due to their small population, because they will be able to express their opinions before the people of the world by sending their representatives to the upper house.  The upper house will not adopt any bill unless it has been passed by the lower house, but the upper house will reserve the right to reject the decisions of the lower house.
Initially the world government should go on working merely as a law-framing body.  The world government should also have the right to make decisions regarding the application or non-application of any law, for a limited period, in any particular region.
In the first phase of the establishment of the world government, the governments of different countries will have only administrative power.  As they will not have the authority to frame laws, it will be somewhat difficult for them to arbitrarily inflict atrocities on their linguistic, religious or political minorities.
From Problems of the Day

Copyright 2011

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  



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