Dean's World

Defending the liberal tradition in history, science, and philosophy.

Vectors of Action Toward Peace Part I

The end of man is an action and not a thought, though it were the noblest. ----Thomas Carlyle. Sartor Resartus (Book ii, Chapter 6)

To wage peace we should foster freedom. But how? Encourage democratic revolutions? Intervening in dictatorships to topple tyrants? Make war for democracy? No, nothing like this.

Rather, the Positive Peace Principle argues that people should be left alone to form their own communities or states, to live their own lives. If they prefer to live in authoritarian societies (as many Islamists do) or under totalitarian governments (as do communists and fascists), that is their choice (given one can emigrate, a point I will come back to later). Promoting freedom does not mean, then, forcibly converting others into accepting an exchange society and liberal democratic government; nor does it mean waging a crusade against other societies or governments or ideologies. Instead, fostering freedom means to facilitate procedurally and institutionally people making their own choices about how they want to live, whether with freedom or not, as long as they do not try to impose their choice on others. This is the socially just approach.

(Continued here)

Posted by Rudy Rummel | Permalink | Technorati Trackbacks
Ymarsakar (www):
For that to work, it needs something that can guarantee enforcement. The only thing that exists currently that could make tyrannies let their people go, is the United States. Without such a threat, dictators aren't going to let anyone go.
6.2.2006 7:37pm