Re: Non-Western Worldview - 4
Posted: 25 Jun 2008 18:12
Please ignore the rhetoric in the article. I post the article as I find fascinating insights into USA.
Why the US is an economic ...
My choice nuggets:
{Present forms of governments and economics have been lot influenced by the Western culture. Hopefully one day, when the East becomes a mighty entity, the Eastern values will influence these.}
Why the US is an economic ...
My choice nuggets:
{Present forms of governments and economics have been lot influenced by the Western culture. Hopefully one day, when the East becomes a mighty entity, the Eastern values will influence these.}
{It is touted, sometimes, that in the East the support structure from the family and the society is better than the West.}But the problem with understanding economics, especially when articulated by economists is that they understand and explain economics as a discipline completely disconnected with the larger question of how culture and civilisational values impact economics.
This revolution, he believes, has its roots in the Christian Protestantism which provided a moral basis for the promotion of individualist behaviour while simultaneously weakening other tendencies towards group life. This is evidenced by the disintegration of even the nuclear family and community with a concomitant rise in social isolation within the US.
{This is a great piece.... often our ancient texts talk about different roles and different kinds of duties in various stages of our lives. In the cycle of 'samsara' we all have our own duties to keep the society running. And they also prescribe ways to get the heck out of 'samsara'.}Subsequent thinkers have even suggested that not even the family is necessary for human sustenance. Based on such extreme ideas, constitutional experts in the US argue that parents and children may have mutual obligations of love and respect, but parental authority should end when the children are capable of reasoning things out on their own.
We in the East start from one end of the spectrum, the West starts from the other end; we meet somewhere between and hopefully we have our view points asserted as much the other.And the fundamental assumption that has driven such political thought has been that man is born not with duties but with rights and rights alone. Whatever duties he takes on, he acquires as a result of his free will -- neither necessitated by law nor expected by society.