The
Thinking Post. The Thinking Post is committed to enlarging
our worldview and exposing readers to a variety of points of view.
Leaders and followers in
all disciplines and at all levels need large picture thinking. So do folk like
you and me no matter where we are in the pecking order.
Here are a few large picture perspectives: there are billions
of solar systems akin to ours; there may be millions if not billions of planets
akin to ours; there are 6,910 different documented languages on our planet; you
and I share a spaceship with 6 billion+ other humans, traveling through space at
the high speed of 67,000 miles or 107,826 kilometers per hour, day in day out; there
are billions of microscopic creatures co-existing within and without each of us
in a parallel universe – on our skin, in our bowels, in our carpets, and on our
sheets; and there are over 50,000 different religious belief systems on our
planet. Few of us are used to dealing with such perspectives.
A short 400
years ago everybody understood the earth to be the center of our universe. Then
the Polish astronomer and priest, Nicholaus Copernicus, in the 16th century had
the epiphany that the earth was revolving around the sun, which is regarded as
the starting point of modern astronomy.
Most of us are too busy with daily multiple challenges of
work, family, and local community to ponder what is outside and beyond our
immediate surroundings. Is our thinking too small? Many of us may be like the
frog at the bottom of a well. The frog thinks the sky is only as big as seen
from the bottom of the well. If he surfaced, he would have a much larger and a
much more realistic view.
The Thinking Post
invites us to ponder a larger worldview. Think large. Expand your horizon. Be critical. Evaluate all
the ideas that come your way. Sharpen your perspective and understanding.
Relax in your favorite chair with a cup of coffee, a cup of tea,
a beer, a glass of wine, or your favorite drink, and let your mind soar and grapple
with different perspectives. Let the thoughts roll around in your mind awhile. Your
thinking matters as long as you share it. Your thinking shapes the lives of those around you and shapes
their worldview. Your thinking may even shape the worldview of generations to
come.
We begin with observations on our planet in an article
entitled “Planeticians”. Get to your favorite chair with your favorite beverage.
Relax, sip, and read.
(Inputs,
expansions, adjustments, counterpoints, rebuttals, etc. are very welcome. So too
are articles on topics that enlighten and challenge the reader to expand
her/his horizon. All inputs are expected to self-police, to present
comments in a civil and responsible manner, and to avoid profanity, vulgarity, slander,
and personal attacks. The Thinking Post
encourages civil dialogue, will not tolerate discrimination of any kind, and
will not accept comments encouraging any kind of illegal activities.
Submit articles
to ajmeagher@aol.com. Submit comments at the end of the blog
using your email screen name as identification. If comments are deemed
inappropriate, they will not be published. Invite friends who may want to participate.
The URL
is: http://thethinkingpost-ajm.blogspot.com/
[The Thinking Post
will offer an article for your evaluation on a weekly basis. Possible
Future Topics include (please add topics you wish to see discussed at some
length):
1. Large
picture of politics
2. Planet-wide
problem of clean fresh water
3. Planet-wide
problem of clean air
4. Large
picture of religion
5. Divine
revelation
6. Consequences
of no divine revelation.
7. Torture
8. Is
there a life after this one?
9. Is
hell a reality? Is heaven a reality?
10.
11.
12. ]
Thanks for your participation. If you do not wish to
participate now or in the future, simply do not log on to the blog.
Arnold J. Meagher (ajm)
The Planeticians
A Perspective that All Humans on Planet Earth Need
to Consider
I am
reminded of the words
of a US/Chinese astronaut on seeing planet earth from space: A Chinese tale tells of some men sent to
harm a young girl who, upon seeing her beauty, become her protectors rather
than her violators. That’s how I felt seeing the Earth for the first time. I
could not help but love and cherish her–Astronaut Taylor Wang, China/USA.
Astronaut Taylor Wang captures the commitment of
planeticians-to protect and cherish the earth and not violate her in any
manner. Planeticians see themselves first and foremost as citizens of planet
earth. Their focus is the planet as a whole, not this or that political,
economic, ethnic, cultural, or religious group. Planeticians are committed to
improving the quality of life for all inhabitants of the planet. This quality
of life depends directly on the interconnected and interdependent systems of
land, air, and water and how all humans use and manage these systems. Damage or
violence to the systems anywhere impacts all systems and all life as we are
seeing in the growth of carbon dioxide emissions and the effects on climate
change and global warming.
The key to the success of any undertaking to
improve the earth’s quality of life is the understanding that planet earth is a
shared spaceship adventure. All inhabitants of earth-all human, animal, and
plant life travel together through time and space aboard this spaceship at the
high-speed of 67,000 miles or 107,826 kilometers per hour. All humans are
crammed onto this huge traveling home for a ride that is often perilous because
of the calamities that are experienced on our planet from time to time. These
calamities, some brought about by people, include wars, famines, floods,
earthquakes, epidemics, genocides, hurricanes, typhoons, tornadoes, tsunamis,
and the daily death and suffering that humans inflict on each other. Then there
are the less obvious calamities that are also very corrosive of the quality of
life on the planet such as pollution, poverty, the arms race, poor health care,
discrimination, and prejudice.
To contribute something worthwhile to
improving the quality of life on the earth spaceship, we urge each individual
person to transcend the limiting and often harmful confines of her/his
cultural, political, social, and religious systems of thought and practice,
project themselves outside their environments, and try to see the earth as
Astronaut Taylor Wang saw it from space. We know that every person yearns to
live a life that is worthwhile, and one sure way of doing that is to become a
true planetician, and make the betterment of the planet a first priority.
The concept of shared traveling on planet earth
and hence shared responsibility for conditions on the planet is extremely
difficult to get across to our fellow citizens of the planet (Al Gore and Kevin
Wall with their Live Earth Concerts have pioneered a way).
Hence, our first big challenge is to get all peoples on earth to transcend
their own closed worlds with their separate political and religious
allegiances, their separate and unequal cultural and scientific advancement,
their histories of hot and cold wars with each other, their arms races, their
development and use of weapons of mass destruction, their use of suicide
missions against each other, and consequently the buildup of deep mutual
distrust handed down from generation to generation, and come together and reach
consensus on how best to work in harmony for the common good of their
spaceship-planet earth. This is planet earth’s greatest challenge, requiring
hard choices, change, and commitment from all humans to be care-givers to an
ailing planet.
As we climb that difficult mountain demanding sea
changes in attitudes and behavior, we need to hammer out a blueprint for
the betterment of all inhabitants of the planet going forward. And thanks to
the Internet, we have the tools to succeed. We have at our disposal all the
information collected over the centuries in our libraries; the findings of our
many research institutes; the writings, insights, and dreams of scientists,
scholars, and ordinary people across the planet; and the necessary
communication tools. And we have at our fingertips the many search engines of
the Internet system to access the vast reservoirs of information and knowledge
that we have accumulated.
We would also want deliberations on a blueprint
for the betterment of our planet to be interactive, so that the entire planet
is directly involved in fashioning the outcomes of any deliberations and
corrective actions that need to be taken. To that end, we would want our
deliberations to have total visibility to every human being on the
planet-broadcasted across the planet using all media including newspapers,
blogs, television, and radio with opportunities for feedback and input from
readers, viewers, and listeners. To achieve this we need resources. We need the
participation and support of philanthropists, media organizations, and national
and international organizations and their networks, as well as the
participation and support of each and every human on the planet. In the
interests of full visibility, total openness, transparency, and interaction, we
want deliberations conducted before live audiences at various venues around the
planet. We will rely heavily on the Internet as a principal tool in gathering
and disseminating information and feedback as well as in fostering total
openness and transparency.
Happily, we are informed by our best
scientific minds that our spaceship-planet earth-has the raw materials, the
natural resources, and in this year 2007 the technology for all its inhabitants
to enjoy a life of quality. But we are also very much aware that a shared
quality of life is not now actual, but a dream to be realized. All humans
across the planet, the rich and poor alike, have hitched rides on this
spaceship for very short periods of time. And the challenge during our short
ride on the planet is to contribute to the development and enrichment of the
planet's quality of life.
To get started, we invite people everywhere
at all levels to get involved through discussions and actions to contribute to
the betterment of the planet. We invite all schools from kindergartens to
universities, all churches and the many groups within each church, all
neighborhood groups, all community and social organizations, all local,
regional, and national government organizations, and all international and
global organizations to become actively involved, for it is going to take the
combined efforts of all caring humans, young and old, to effect change for an
improved quality of life for all.
Inputs,
expansions, adjustments, counterpoints, rebuttals, etc. to the above are very
welcome.
ajm
Arnie, good to see the promotion of good thinking! Keep up the good work.
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