Editing Gaianism (book)/Introduction/Gaianism

Jump to: navigation, search

Warning: You are not logged in.

Your IP address will be recorded in this page's edit history.
The edit can be undone. Please check the comparison below to verify that this is what you want to do, and then save the changes below to finish undoing the edit.
Latest revision Your text
Line 9: Line 9:
  
 
Gaianism is the belief that Gaia is alive and has a subjectivity, is independent of its constituent parts and unable to communicate with them, but dependent on them for maintaining homeostasis and remain alive, and is concerned with ensuring that Gaia remains alive and as healthy as it was prior to human civilisations. Gaianism assumes that health is manifested through the sustainability of its diversity and expansiveness of life throughout the biosphere. A Gaian is a person who shares this belief and concern, and expresses it by adopting a purposely designed culture comprised of values, behaviours and implementation strategies defined by the Gaianism religion. Gaianism is designed to be egalitarian and horizontal, with a clear and simple protocol to enable its development without the need for authoritarianism. Also, Gaianism limits its religious aspect to not much more than the belief in Gaia's subjectivity and the mystery of subjectivity itself (generally referred by other belief systems as spirit, or soul), and embraces the Methods of Science along with Gaianism's fundamental principles, or Dogma. Gaians core set of values are a deep respect for sentient life and the order of the Natural world, a high esteem for freedom of expression, and an alignment between knowledge, beliefs, behaviours and shared objectives. The goals of Gaianism are ensuring the health, safety and endurance of Gaia, and the development of environments for people living free from labour, inequality, imposed violence, oppression, and submission.
 
Gaianism is the belief that Gaia is alive and has a subjectivity, is independent of its constituent parts and unable to communicate with them, but dependent on them for maintaining homeostasis and remain alive, and is concerned with ensuring that Gaia remains alive and as healthy as it was prior to human civilisations. Gaianism assumes that health is manifested through the sustainability of its diversity and expansiveness of life throughout the biosphere. A Gaian is a person who shares this belief and concern, and expresses it by adopting a purposely designed culture comprised of values, behaviours and implementation strategies defined by the Gaianism religion. Gaianism is designed to be egalitarian and horizontal, with a clear and simple protocol to enable its development without the need for authoritarianism. Also, Gaianism limits its religious aspect to not much more than the belief in Gaia's subjectivity and the mystery of subjectivity itself (generally referred by other belief systems as spirit, or soul), and embraces the Methods of Science along with Gaianism's fundamental principles, or Dogma. Gaians core set of values are a deep respect for sentient life and the order of the Natural world, a high esteem for freedom of expression, and an alignment between knowledge, beliefs, behaviours and shared objectives. The goals of Gaianism are ensuring the health, safety and endurance of Gaia, and the development of environments for people living free from labour, inequality, imposed violence, oppression, and submission.
 
The selection for a name for this religion was not without difficulty and consideration. The Gaianism religion is intended to be universally accessible: it is meant to be open to anyone regardless of their personal beliefs, ethnicity, language, or circumstances. One of the fundamental principles of Gaianism is the care for consistency, and therefore its very name would be required to conform with this intention for being universally accessible. Any choice for language ends up creating favouritism towards that language, and by extension, any cultures that identify with such language; even when selecting a word that doesn't mean anything in any language, the choice of sounds would still be subject to the same problem. A sensible choice would be using a word from an ancient civilisation, one that would allow most people feeling identified, one that would pay homage to a distant common root. There were several great ancient civilisations to consider in terms of the development of knowledge and cultural refinement that have permeated the entire world, such as the Persian/Parsi (possibly the first civilisation, and who invented standards such as weight and money{{ref|Gaia F}}), the Egyptian (who invented astronomy, timekeeping, glass, and the phonetic alphabet{{ref|Gaia E}}), Hindu/Brahmin (who invented the decimal notation used ubiquitously today throughout the world), the Babylonian (the sexagesimal notation, still used today for minutes and seconds in time and angles), the Chinese (the print and the merit system among countless others{{ref|Gaia C}}). There were many other cultures, perhaps smaller and less powerful or long-lived, who's legacy still lives today and makes an important part of our everyday lives. The choice was settled for ancient Greek language for multiple reasons: it is an ancient language which is still widely used today in Science and although still spoken today (in a modern form) it is only spoken in the region where it was initially conceived. And even though it has an imperialist past, its culture has not been dominant for more than two thousand years. Greek words have been chosen time and time again for naming advances, discoveries and inventions in science and philosophy, and has been adopted and adapted by cultures throughout the world. It was in also in the Greek region of Miletus that a technologically and scientifically developed culture exalted freethinking, leading to the scientific revolution with personalities such as Thales{{ref|Gaia T}}. There is today also a mostly universal familiarity with the sounds of the Greek language, with words such as democracy, philosophy, and olympic games, and it is the hope of Gaianism that this choice will not feel foreign, offend nor create any form of segmentation. It is also important to note that Greek culture was heavily influenced by Persian and Egyptian civilisations (partly thanks to Phoenician trading){{ref|Gaia B1}}, Hindu philosophy{{ref|Gaia B2}}, many ancient Greeks were of sub-Saharan origin{{ref|Gaia B3}}, and they probably had profound interactions with Chinese culture{{ref|Gaia B4}}.
 
 
 
</onlyinclude>
 
</onlyinclude>
  
Line 20: Line 17:
 
# {{note|Gaia H}} {{cite web |title=Gaia hypothesis |url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_hypothesis |accessdate=19 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia H}} {{cite web |title=Gaia hypothesis |url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_hypothesis |accessdate=19 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia M}} {{cite web |title=Gaia Movement |url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_Movement |accessdate=19 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia M}} {{cite web |title=Gaia Movement |url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaia_Movement |accessdate=19 July 2014 }}
# {{note|Gaia F}} {{cite web |title=Contribution of Persia to the World Civilization|url=http://www.iran-heritage.org/interestgroups/history-article3.htm |accessdate=20 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia E}} {{cite web |title=Ancient Egyptian technology|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ancient_Egyptian_technology |accessdate=20 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia C}} {{cite web |title=List of Chinese inventions|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Chinese_inventions |accessdate=20 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia T}} {{cite web |title=Thales inventions|url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thales |accessdate=20 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia B1}} {{cite web |title=Black Athena |url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Athena |accessdate=20 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia B2}} {{cite web |title=Indian Influence on Greeks |url=http://www.josephwaligore.com/greek-philosophy/indian-influence-on-hellenistic-philosophy/ |accessdate=20 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia B3}} {{cite web |title=HLA genes in Macedonians and the sub-Saharan origin of the Greeks. |url=http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11260506 |accessdate=20 July 2014 }}
 
# {{note|Gaia B4}} {{cite web |title=Greco-Buddhism |url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greco-Buddhism |accessdate=20 July 2014 }}
 
 
</onlyinclude>
 
</onlyinclude>

Please note that all contributions to The Crowdsourced Resource-Based Economy Knowledgebase are considered to be released under the Creative Commons Zero (Public Domain) (see RBEMWiki:Copyrights for details). If you do not want your writing to be edited mercilessly and redistributed at will, then do not submit it here.
You are also promising us that you wrote this yourself, or copied it from a public domain or similar free resource. Do not submit copyrighted work without permission!

Cancel | Editing help (opens in new window)
Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
Toolbox
Share