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I am amazed
by this book. I find here for the first time a thesis, acceptable
because supported by practical wisdom, on how to create a better
life on earth. For those who dream of seeing true peace on earth
someday, Hope for a Better World! offers a convincing blueprint.
In a progressive series of deeply insightful analyses, J. Donald
Walters examines why certain societies of the past failed, and
how others in future might succeed. His reflections are the most
persuasive I've ever encountered.
In classes
that I teach at the University of Hawaii and elsewhere, I have
been surprised at how many students nowadays express frustration
at the absence of flexibility in their lives. They feel locked
into their cultural heritage. In this respect, Honolulu is, itself,
a laboratory, for in this city people from many traditions, both
Eastern and Western, live together, trying to adapt to, and even
evolve, a new society. Those who once came here from many countries
felt a need to weave about themselves a sort of mental cocoon.
That very cultural isolation now often seems artificial to their
descendants, who want to spread their wings like the butterfly
emerging from its cocoon, and to soar in a new reality. Naturally,
they are also somewhat fearful concerning their new directions.
This book may offer them the clarity they've been seeking. I now
feel that I, too, have practical answers to give them. I recommend
Hope for a Better World! unreservedly. It shows how to
draw the best from every culture, and to unite those "bests"
in a new future.
This book
is not revolutionary. It doesn't reject past wisdom. It is even-handed,
intelligent, and respectful of the genius every culture possesses.
At the same time, it repeatedly asks a very simple, indeed obvious,
question: "Does it work?" It asks also, How? and, Why?
The author
has taken upon himself the awesome task of creating places where
his ideas could be tested and refined. Increasing numbershundreds,
nowreside in those communities. They are developing a pattern
of living that is above all, in a human sense, realistic. His
book is grounded in more than one discipline: scientific, philosophical,
and the humanities. He has resolved a major problem that faces
anyone who would build communities: how to enable people to live
together happily while at the same time challenging and inspiring
them to develop their fullest potentials.
To my mind,
this last feature, inspiration, is one thing that makes this book
so special. Apart from the clear way it addresses real needs,
Walters inspires. He actually infuses this quality into his style
of writing. His ability to affect the reader's consciousness,
and not only to persuade us with clear reasoning, is to my mind
an amazing feature of this book.
Among my students,
what I've noticed is their increasing sense that business skills
need to be balanced with spiritual values. Spirituality, Walters
insists, means more than adhering to the religious duties prescribed
by various traditions. It means striving toward joyful personal
transformation. And it means also sharing one's deeper aspirations
with others. Spirituality is not a question of converting anyone
to anything. True personal fulfillment requires us to feel concerned
for others, and to reject the modern-day emphasis on competition.
These are
simple conceptsindeed, they seem self-evident. I've often
wondered, since reading this work, why they haven't been proposed
with such clarity before. Surely they resonate with the way all
of us think during moments of calmness.
The communities
Walters has established successfully have been an acid test for
his ideas. Hope for a Better World! suggests that a shining
future indeed awaits mankind. I consider this book to be a must
read for everyone. It will be especially helpful for those
who have been struggling to cope with the aftermath of 9/11. And
it will help all who sincerely want to improve the quality of
life on this planet.
Milton Staackmann
M.A. Cultural Anthropology (University of Hawaii)
teacher, medical researcher
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