Title: Transforming Environments from the Inside Out
1Transforming Environmentsfrom the Inside Out
- Arthur Lyon Dahl Ph.D.
- International Environment Forum (IEF)
- http//www.bcca.org/ief
- 13 August 2009
2Exploring the relationship between our outer and
inner environments
- the planet and
- our soul
- science and spirituality
3The Stateof the World
- the apex of human progress?
- wealth undreamed of by our forebears?
- the successful result of economic development?
- technological solutions to every problem?
- the greatest civilization the world has ever
known? - economic success proved that the system was right
4OR the State of the World - 2
- Half the world population lives on less than
2/day - Extremes of wealth and poverty widening
- Asian economic expansion has reduced poverty at
great environmental cost - Energy challenge / climate change threats
- Growing water shortages
- Loss of biodiversity and ecosystem services
- Food production capacity at risk
- Financial system has imploded
- We are living beyond our means
5Ecological footprint
- Surface needed to supply the needs and absorb the
wastes of an individual, community, or country - Global average 2.7 ha/person
- USA 9.4 ha/p Canada 7.1 ha/p. Mexico 3.4 ha/p.
- EU 4.7 ha/p Russia 3.7 ha/p. China 2.1 ha/p.
- Resources available 1.9 ha/person
- We overshot the earth's capacity in 1975
- http//www.globalfootprint.org/
- http//www.ecologicalfootprint.org/
- http//www.myfootprint.org
6Human Population Growth
7Human Population
- The world population has tripled in one lifetime,
and is expected by the UN to rise to 9.2 billion
by 2050 before stabilizing - By some estimates, world resources can only
sustainably support 500 million people - We seem to be following a classic ecological
pattern of overshoot and collapse - The planetary carrying capacity depends on
numbers versus standard of living increasing one
reduces the other - Science may find ways to increase carrying
capacity, but only at longer time scales
8Human Impact on the Carbon Cycle
- Extracting and burning fossil fuels is returning
to the atmosphere in two centuries the carbon
dioxide sequestered by hundreds of millions of
years of primitive biological activity
9Climate Change will bestronger and sooner
- Global carbon dioxide levels due to emissions
from fossil fuels have accelerated since 2000 - Rise in 1990s 0.7/yr 2.9 since 2000
- Three causes growth in world economy, rise of
coal use in China, weakening of natural carbon
sinks (forests, seas, soils) - Growth in atmospheric CO2 about 35 higher than
expected a few years ago
10Polar areas are changing fastest
- Half of the permafrost in the Arctic is expected
to melt by 2050 and 90 before 2100, releasing
methane - 14 of the permanent ice in the Arctic Ocean
melted in 2005 23 more in 2007 (worst melting
ever) nearly as much in 2008, opening the
North-West Passage permanent ice in the Arctic
Ocean may be gone by 2015-2030 - Greenland glaciers have doubled their rate of
flow in the last few years (6km/y 1997, 9km/y
2000, 13km/y 2003), now raising sea level 0.83 mm
per year - Similar melting of the West Antarctic ice sheet
is adding another 0.55 mm per year, and
accelerating
11There is little time left to act
- Global temperatures have already risen 0.6C and
will probably rise a further 3, or even up to
4.5-5 by 2100 - Ocean temperatures have risen at least 3 km deep
- Glaciers and snow cover have decreased cold
days, nights and frost have become rarer hot
days, nights and heat waves more frequent - Sea level rise has doubled in 150 years to 2
mm/year, and recent polar melting is adding
another 2 mm/year - Recent surge in CO2 levels from less uptake by
plants - We may soon be approaching a tipping point where
runaway climate change would be catastrophic
12The most vulnerable areas risking catastrophic
collapse this century
- Arctic Ocean and Greenland ice sheet
- Amazon rain forest
- Northern boreal forests
- El Nino affecting weather in North America,
South-East Asia and Africa (3C rise). - Collapse of West African monsoon
- Erratic Indian summer monsoon
13Climate changeeffect on the economy
- The Stern Report estimated the annual cost of
uncontrolled climate change at more than 660
billion (5 to 20 of global GDP, as compared to
1 for control measures for greenhouse gases). - Climate change represents the greatest market
failure in human history
14The energy challenge
- Industrial economy, agriculture, transportation,
communications, trade, urbanization, consumer
lifestyle all depend on cheap and abundant energy - Energy demand will grow 50 by 2030, but oil
production is peaking and will decline 75 in 30
years coal may also peak by then - Climate change requires a rapid halt to fossil
fuel use - Adaptation will be extremely expensive and the
struggle for diminishing resources globally
destabilizing - A fossil-fuel-based civilization is unsustainable
15Food Production
- The Green Revolution of the 1970s postponed food
supply as a limit to growth - Crop production has improved in the last 20 years
from 1.8 to 2.5 t/ha. but such intensive
agriculture requires high energy, fertilizer and
petrochemical inputs - World cereal production per person peaked in the
1980s and has decreased slowly since - Feeding the growing world population and reducing
hunger by half will require doubling world food
production by 2050 - Land, water, phosphate, energy are all limiting
16Soil degradation
17The coming soil crisis
- Many past civilizations collapsed because they
degraded their soil - Average global soil loss today is 10 to 100 times
the rate of soil formation - In Indiana, USA, for each ton of grain harvested,
a ton of soil is lost - Since 1945, erosion has degraded 1.2 billion
hectares, equal to China plus India, 38 of
global crop land - Annual soil loss is 75 billion tonnes, with 12
million ha abandoned, 1 of total
18Start of a Global Food Crisis
- In 2007, the price of wheat rose 100, maize 50,
rice 20, increasing staple food prices for the
poor over 10. By mid-2008 food prices up 78,
soybeans and rice up 130 - Global food reserves are lowest for 20 years,
with only 57 day grain reserve - Climate change, drought, floods, soil erosion,
overfishing are reducing food production - With grain being diverted for biofuel, 800 m
motorists are competing with 2 bn poor - There are 960 m hungry people, 40 m more in 2008
due to higher food prices - Food is being priced out of reach for the poor
19Resource Depletion
- Many key materials are being exhausted rapidly
(estimated years left predicted/today's rate)? - Phosphorus (fertilizer) 142-345
- Antimony (drugs) 15-30
- Copper (wire, coins, pipes) 40-60
- Hafnium, Indium (chips, LCDs) 5-15
- Platinum (catalysts, fuel cells) 15-360
- Silver (jewelry, catalysts) 15-30
- Tantalum (cellphones, cameras) 20-115
- Uranium (weapons, power stations) 30-60
- Zinc (galvanizing) 20-46
20The failure of social and economic development to
eliminate poverty
- - Development has been our largest collective
undertaking, with humanitarian aims and enormous
material and technological investment - - While it brought impressive benefits, it failed
to narrow the gap between rich and poor - - The gap has widen into an abyss
- (based on Baha'i International Community, 2005).
21Accumulating economic, socialand environmental
debt
- Financial crisis debt transferred to governments
- UK Chief Scientist (19 March 2009) the world
faces a 'perfect storm' of problems in 2030 as
food, energy and water shortages interact with
climate change to produce public unrest,
cross-border conflicts and mass migrations
22Scenariosplausible futures
- Business as usual in a materialistic society
ignoring the future - Retreating to a fortress world of old values
- Making a transition to sustainability
23Scenarios from World 3(Meadows et al. (1992)
Beyond the Limits)?
- Business as usual Transition 1995
Transition 2015
24ARE WE SEEING THE FIRST SIGNS OF THECOLLAPSE OF
CIVILIZATION? (image IKONOS Lang, ESRI 1998)?
25End of the growth paradigm
- Is endless growth realistic?
- Everything in nature follows cycles with optimal
sizes - Economic growth has depended on population
growth, fossil fuel energy subsidy, resource
discoveries and technological innovation - The first three all end in this century
- All that is left is our brains and heart
26Collapse of the financial system
- The 2007-2008 collapse of the financial system
was due to greed, herd behaviour, and
over-confidence in scientific approaches to risk
management - Complex statistical models do not work for
extreme events - Each vulnerability was evaluated independently
- Future projections were based on past experience
- There was no evaluation of overall systems
behaviour - Jamison 2008
27Where is the Economy going?
- Origins in American consumer society living
beyond its means, accumulating debt - UK minister "worst recession in 100 years"
- The challenge to economic assumptions
- Head of European Central Bank "We live in
non-linear times the classic economic models and
theories cannot be applied, and future
development cannot be foreseen." - Derivatives over 500 trillion by 2008 (x4 5y).
- European countries on brink of insolvency
- Warnings of hyperinflation
28CAUSESANDBARRIERSHow did we get ourselves
into such a situation?What is preventing us from
solving it?
29Compartmentalized view of the worldThe
environment is outside of us(Mark Tobey,
Head of Boy, 1955).
30Economic ThinkingDisjunction with Reality
- The planet's resources are free for the taking
- Short term perspective the quarterly balance
sheet the next election - Herd mentality of investors and speculators
- Expectation that things will always get better
(growth). - In nature, cycles and optimal sizes uncontrolled
growth is like a cancer
31Disjunction with reality
- - Economic thinking is challenged by the
environmental crisis - - It can no longer insist that there is no limit
to nature's capacity to fulfil any demand made on
it - - Attaching absolute value to growth, to
acquisition, and to the satisfaction of people's
wants is no longer a realistic guide to policy - - Economic decision-making tools cannot deal with
the fact that most of the major challenges are
global - (based on The Prosperity of Humankind, Bahá'í
International Community, Office of Public
Information, Haifa, 1995)
32A self-centred materialism
- The early twentieth century materialistic
interpretation of reality has become the dominant
world faith in the direction of society - Rational experimentation and discussion are
expected to solve all the issues of human
governance and development - Dogmatic materialism has captured all
significant centres of power and information at
the global level, ensuring that no competing
voices can challenge projects of world wide
economic exploitation - (based on Bahá'í International Community, One
Common Faith, 2005).
33The wealthy live unsustainable lifestyles
34The unsustainable consumer culture
- - Materialism's vision of human progress produced
today's consumer culture with its ephemeral goals - - For the small minority of people who can afford
them, the benefits it offers are immediate - - The breakdown of traditional morality has led
to the triumph of animal impulses and hedonism - - Selfishness has become a prized commercial
resource falsehood reinvents itself as public
information greed, lust, indolence, pride,
violence are broadly accepted and have social and
economic value - - Yet it is a culture without meaning
- (based on Bahá'í International Community, One
Common Faith, 2005, p. 10).
35Barriers to change
- No politician will sacrifice short-term economic
welfare, even while agreeing that sustainability
is essential in the long term - Deep social divisions within societies and
between countries prevent united action in the
common interest - Primacy of self interest over solidarity
36Business as usual is not an optionbut how will
we respond to
- Climate change?
- Changes in energy systems and use?
- Food shortages and price rises?
- Forced migrations of environmental refugees?
- Reform of the economic system?
37Global land grab
- Wealthy governments and large companies are
buying/leasing large areas of land in poor
countries for food export to ensure their own
food security - 10 m ha were bought in 2008, 20m in first half of
2009 ( half all arable land in Europe). - South Korea 690,000ha and UAE and Egypt 400,000ha
each in Sudan Saudi Arabia 500,000ha in
Tanzania Daewoo 1.3m ha in Madagascar Libya
100,000ha in Mali South African businesses 8m ha
in DR Congo China 2.8m ha in Congo and 2m ha in
Zambia, with 1 m Chinese farm labourers in Africa
in 2009
38The main danger
- "The main danger we face is... that by late 2009
the global economy will be perking up again
(because the housing sectors will have bottomed
and the unwinding of commodity prices will boost
consumption among oil importers) and governments
will go back to business as usual, missing a
once-in-a-life-time opportunity to address the
serious vulnerabilities in the worlds financial
system which the current crisis has revealed. In
that scenario, the next crisis would find us with
little ammunition left. That is the real danger." - Augusto Lopez Claros, letter to the Financial
Times, 4 December 2008
39Denial, Depression or Action?Do we have a
choice?
- Can we go and hide on a remote island?
40The Transformation of Human Society(Mark Tobey,
The New Day, 1945).
41How do we achieve a transformation in values?
- Science has no particular competence
- Scientific information does not change behavior
- Chaos is an opportunity for spiritual and
intellectual leadership - Evolution with punctuated equilibrium
- Opportunities are opening before us
42Vision in Bahá'í writings and statements
- Integrated
- environmental
- social
- economic
- sustainability
43Sustainabilityis fundamentally anEthical
Challengeegotism versus altruismme first
versus all together
44Oneness of Humankind
- Acceptance of the oneness of mankind is the first
fundamental prerequisite for the reorganization
and administration of the world as one country,
the home of humankind. - (Universal House of Justice, The Promise of World
Peace, p. 13-14) - This requires a profound reconsideration of every
dimension of our lives and society, including the
environment.
45Transformation must startat the individual level
- We cannot segregate the human heart from the
environment outside us and say that once one of
these is reformed everything will be improved.
Man is organic with the world. His inner life
moulds the environment and is itself also deeply
affected by it. The one acts upon the other and
every abiding change in the life of man is the
result of these mutual reactions. - (Letter written on behalf of Shoghi Effendi, 17
February 1933, Compilation on Social and Economic
Development, p. 4)
46We must give a higher priority to the
environment in our community, economy and society
- ...sustainable environmental management must come
to be seen... as a fundamental responsibility
that must be shouldered - a pre-requisite for
spiritual development as well as the individual's
physical survival. - (Bahá'í International Community, Valuing
Spirituality in Development Initial
Considerations Regarding the Creation of
Spiritually Based Indicators for Development. A
concept paper written for the World Faiths and
Development Dialogue, Lambeth Palace, London,
18-19 February 1998)? - Both quotations imply an intimate link between
environment and spirituality
47TheInside(Mark Tobey, Meditative Series
No.VIII, 1954).
48Connection between spirituality and nature
- Environmental crisis the result of a spiritual
crisis. - We cut ourselves off from our spiritual nature
and from God, and from our roots in the natural
world
49No separation of natural environment and
spiritual reality
- Nature is God's Will and is its expression in and
through the contingent world. - (Bahá'u'lláh, Tablets of Bahá'u'lláh, p. 142)
50Contact with nature
- The country is the world of the soul, the city is
the world of bodies. -
- (Bahá'u'lláh, in J. E. Esslemont, Bahá'u'lláh and
the New Era. Chpt. 3, p. 35)
51Study of nature scientific and spiritual
- When... thou dost contemplate the innermost
essence of all things, and the individuality of
each, thou wilt behold the signs of thy Lord's
mercy in every created thing, and see the
spreading rays of His Names and Attributes
throughout all the realm of being.... Then wilt
thou observe that the universe is a scroll that
discloseth His hidden secrets, which are
preserved in the well-guarded Tablet. And not an
atom of all the atoms in existence, not a
creature from amongst the creatures but speaketh
His praise and telleth of His attributes and
names, revealeth the glory of His might and
guideth to His oneness and His mercy.... Look
thou upon the trees, upon the blossoms and
fruits, even upon the stones. Here too wilt thou
behold the Sun's rays shed upon them, clearly
visible within them, and manifested by them. - ('Abdu'l-Bahá, Selections from the Writings of
'Abdu'l-Bahá, p. 41-42)
52Individual spiritual effortto detach ourselves
fromthe consumer lifestyle
- We must avoid "the temptation to sacrifice the
well-being of most people -- and even of the
planet itself -- to the advantages which
technological breakthroughs can make available to
privileged minorities." - (based on Baha'i International Community,
Prosperity of Humankind)
53Detachment from material things
- The true seeker should be content with little,
and be freed from all inordinate desire. - (Bahá'u'lláh, Kitáb-i-Iqán, p. 193-194)
54Voluntary Simplicity
- Take from this world only to the measure of your
needs, and forego that which exceedeth them. - (Bahá'u'lláh, The Summons of the Lord of Hosts,
p. 193).
55Moderation in lifestyle
- It is unjust to allow people
- "to lay up riches for themselves, to deck their
persons, to embellish their homes, to acquire the
things that are of no benefit to them, and to be
numbered with the extravagant." - None should be allowed to "either suffer want, or
be pampered with luxuries." -
- (Bahá'u'lláh to the Sultan of Turkey, Gleanings
from the Writings of Bahá'u'lláh, CXIV, pp.
235-236)
56Moderation
- Shoghi Effendi called for
- "the exercise of moderation in all that pertains
to dress, language, amusements, and all artistic
and literary avocations" and "the abandonment of
a frivolous conduct, with its excessive
attachment to trivial and often misdirected
pleasures." - (Shoghi Effendi. The Advent of Divine Justice, p.
30).
57The spiritual danger of intellectual pride
- The desire to know everything
- The pride to think we can know everything through
science - "I think, therefore I am"
- Rationalist/individualist approach
- Individual is final arbiter of right or wrong
- We decide what is true
- Expression of egotism and self-centeredness
- Places us above nature, to exploit and destroy it
58"Opposing our passions"
- Desire is a flame that has reduced to ashes
uncounted lifetime harvests of the learned - ('Abdu'l-Bahá, Secret of Divine Civilization, p.
59).
59Transforming the inner environmenthumility to
acknowledge there is an unknowable essence we
must love and worship, though our minds cannot
grasp it nor our hearts contain it(Mark Tobey,
Aerial Centers, 1967).
60Humility and Environment
- Every man of discernment, while walking upon the
earth, feeleth indeed abashed, inasmuch as he is
fully aware that the thing which is the source of
his prosperity, his wealth, his might, his
exaltation, his advancement and power is, as
ordained by God, the very earth which is trodden
beneath the feet of all men. There can be no
doubt that whoever is cognizant of this truth, is
cleansed and sanctified from all pride,
arrogance, and vainglory.... - Bahá'u'lláh
61Science for Everyone
- The expansion of scientific and technological
activity... must cease to be the patrimony of
advantaged segments of society, and must be so
organised as to permit people everywhere to
participate in such activity on the basis of
capacity. Apart from the creation of programmes
that make the required education available to all
who are able to benefit from it, such
reorganisation will require the establishment of
viable centres of learning throughout the world,
institutions that will enhance the capability of
the world's peoples to participate in the
generation and application of knowledge. - (Baha'i International Community, Prosperity of
Humankind).
62Transforming Communities(Mark Tobey, Coliseum,
1942).
63The CommunityThe basic unit of social
organization
- Material needs
- Economic and educational activities
- Social and spiritual life
- Relationship with local environment
- Balance of local autonomy and larger integration
64The challenges forcommunities
- ...assisting in endeavours to conserve the
environment in ways which blend with the rhythm
of life of our community... - Universal House of Justice
- responding to the increasing mixing of the
peoples of the world by rebuilding human
communities in all their diversity
65Building unity in communities
- This is exactly what Baha'i communities are
developing through the institute process and the
core activities of devotional meetings, group
study, children's classes and pre-adolescent
activities. - "The ultimate testimony that the Baháí community
can summon in vindication of His mission is the
example of unity that His teachings have
produced." - (Bahá'í International Community, One Common
Faith, p. 43).
66Convincing leaders of thought ofthe power of
spiritual change
- A fair-minded observer is compelled to entertain
at least the possibility that the phenomenon may
represent the operation of influences entirely
different in nature from the familiar
onesinfluences that can properly be described
only as spiritualcapable of eliciting
extraordinary feats of sacrifice and
understanding from ordinary people of every
background. - (Bahá'í International Community, One Common
Faith, p. 44).
67Self-organizing transformation based on contact
with the creative Word
- The culture of systematic growth taking root in
the Baháí community would seem... by far the
most effective response the friends can make to
the challenge discussed in these pages. The
experience of an intense and ongoing immersion in
the Creative Word progressively frees one from
the grip of the materialistic assumptions... that
pervade society and paralyze impulses for change.
It develops in one a capacity to assist the
yearning for unity on the part of friends and
acquaintances to find mature and intelligent
expression. - (Bahá'í International Community, One Common
Faith, p. 51).
68Responding to the world'senvironmental problems
- ...the parallel efforts of promoting the
betterment of society and of teaching the Bahá'í
Faith are not activities competing for attention.
Rather, are they reciprocal features of one
coherent global programme.... The obligation of
the Bahá'í community is to do everything in its
power to assist all stages of humanity's
universal movement towards reunion with God. - (Bahá'í International Community, One Common
Faith, p. 51-52).
69Extending the process of systematic learning
- As you continue to labour in your clusters, you
will be drawn further and further into the life
of the society around you and will be challenged
to extend the process of systematic learning in
which you are engaged to encompass a growing
range of human endeavours. In the approaches you
take, the methods you adopt, and the instruments
you employ, you will need to achieve the same
degree of coherence that characterizes the
pattern of growth presently under way. - Universal House of Justice, Ridvan 2008
70This is transformation from the inside
outcoherence between words and actions(Mark
Tobey, New Genesis, 1958)
71Addressing the challenges of the outer
environment(Mark Tobey, Urban Renewal, 1964)
72Environmental impactsmust be reduced
- at the global level
- in each country
- in every community
- by each individual
- through a balance of material and spiritual
approaches
73Preservation of Nature
- Bahá'í Scriptures describe nature as a reflection
of the sacred. They teach that nature should be
valued and respected, but not worshipped rather,
it should serve humanity's efforts to carry
forward an ever-advancing civilization. However,
in light of the interdependence of all parts of
nature, and the importance of evolution and
diversity "to the beauty, efficiency and
perfection of the whole," every effort should be
made to preserve as much as possible the earth's
bio-diversity and natural order. - (Bahá'í International Community, Valuing
Spirituality in Development Initial
Considerations Regarding the Creation of
Spiritually Based Indicators for Development. A
concept paper written for the World Faiths and
Development Dialogue, Lambeth Palace, London,
18-19 February 1998)
74The spiritual principle environmentalsustainabil
ity is a fundamental responsibility
- As trustees, or stewards, of the planet's vast
resources and biological diversity, humanity must
learn to make use of the earth's natural
resources, both renewable and non-renewable, in a
manner that ensures sustainability and equity
into the distant reaches of time. This attitude
of stewardship will require full consideration of
the potential environmental consequences of all
development activities. It will compel humanity
to temper its actions with moderation and
humility, realizing that the true value of nature
cannot be expressed in economic terms. It will
also require a deep understanding of the natural
world and its role in humanity's collective
development both material and spiritual.
Therefore, sustainable environmental management
must come to be seen not as a discretionary
commitment mankind can weigh against other
competing interests, but rather as a fundamental
responsibility that must be shouldered a
pre-requisite for spiritual development as well
as the individual's physical survival. (Bahá'í
International Community, Valuing Spirituality in
Development Initial Considerations Regarding the
Creation of Spiritually Based Indicators for
Development. A concept paper written for the
World Faiths and Development Dialogue, Lambeth
Palace, London, 18-19 February 1998)
75A new vision of economics
- The ultimate function of economic systems should
be to equip the peoples and institutions of the
world with the means to achieve the real purpose
of development that is, the cultivation of the
limitless potentialities latent in human
consciousness. - (Bahá'í International Community, Valuing
Spirituality in Development Initial
Considerations Regarding the Creation of
Spiritually Based Indicators for Development. A
concept paper written for the World Faiths and
Development Dialogue, Lambeth Palace, London,
18-19 February 1998).
76New economic models
- ... furthering a dynamic, just and thriving
social order. Such economic systems will be
strongly altruistic and cooperative in nature
they will provide meaningful employment and will
help to eradicate poverty in the world. - (Bahá'í International Community, Valuing
Spirituality in Development Initial
Considerations Regarding the Creation of
Spiritually Based Indicators for Development. A
concept paper written for the World Faiths and
Development Dialogue, Lambeth Palace, London,
18-19 February 1998)
77Rehabilitating the Reputationof Religion
- A global intelligensia, its prescription largely
shaped by materialistic misconceptions of
reality, clings tenaciously to the hope that
imaginative social engineering, supported by
political compromise, may indefinitely postpone
the potential disasters that few deny loom over
humanity's future.... As unity is the remedy for
the world's ills, its one certain source lies in
the restoration of religion's influence in human
affairs. - (Bahá'í International Community, One Common
Faith, p. 42-43 )
78Global Governanceframework of lawsenvironmental
and social standardsreplacement of national
sovereigntyaddressing climate changeglobal
management of resourcesequitable distribution
79Action in Civil SocietyAcademic and Research
Institutions
- UN Decade of Education for Sustainable
Development UNESCOcat International Expert
Meeting of Faith-based organizations, March 2007
http//www.bcca.org/ief/mtg/UNESCOcatESD07.pdf - US Partnership for DESD http//www.uspartnership.o
rg/ - European Consumer Citizenship Network (CCN) and
its successor, the Partnership for Education and
Research for Responsible Living (PERL)
http//www.hihm.no/concit/ - Values-based Indicators of Education for
Sustainable Development http//www.ESDinds.e
u/
80Something fundmental is missingthe pace and
scale of changepossible only with spiritual
transformationin an accelerating process of
organic change (Mark Tobey, Lovers of Light,
1960)
81The only solution...the World Order of
Bahá'u'lláh
- Until such time as the nations of the world
understand and follow the admonitions of
Bahá'u'lláh to whole-heartedly work together in
looking after the best interests of all
humankind, and unite in the search for ways and
means to meet the many environmental problems
besetting our planet, ...little progress will be
made towards their solution.... - Universal House of Justice
82Conclusions
- We must overcome
- - narrow perspectives
- - materialism
- We must encourage
- - spirituality
- - balance
- - moderation
- - consultation
83We need generalists -Whole systems specialists
- 'Abdu'l-Baha described how in the future the
Learned required "knowledge of the sacred
Scriptures and the entire field of divine and
natural science, of religious jurisprudence and
the arts of government and the varied learning of
the time and the great events of history" in
order to meet "the necessary qualification of
comprehensive knowledge." - ('Abdu'l-Baha, Secret of Divine Civilization, p.
35-36)
84The challenge to us all
- Become leaders in the transformation of society
and its relationship to the environment - Use spiritual principles to guide us
- Lay new intellectual foundations for social
change from the inside out - Pioneer in building new economic and social
systems and institutions - Bring us back into balance with a sustainable
environment - Lay a solid foundation for an ever-advancing
civilization
85The years ahead will be difficult, but there is
reason for hope
- Transforming environments
- is only possible
- from the inside out
86Thank you
- The planet will thank you too