Not exact matches
It may serve the purpose of clarity if having made this qualification I
state bluntly my thesis that the
utopianism in the liberal faith had a lasting value which it derived partly from the Christian faith and partly from what was valid in the world view of the Enlightenment.
Therefore while keeping love as the essence of humanness and, therefore, the criterion and goal of all human endeavor, human society today has to eschew
utopianism and organize itself as power - structures based on a sense of the moral law of structural justice and utilize even the coercive legal sanctions of the
state to preserve social peace and protect the weaker sections of society in a balance of order, freedom and justice.
Therefore while keeping love as the essence of humanness and therefore the criterion and goal of all human endeavour, human society today has to eschew
utopianism and organize itself as power - structures based on a sense of the moral law of structural justice and utilize even the coercive legal sanctions of the
State to preserve social peace and protect the weaker sections of society in a balance of order.
Time magazine recognized him in 1999 as a «Hero for the Planet,»
stating that «his
utopianism is grounded in a unified philosophy that - in demonstrable and practical ways - is changing the design of the world.»
There has never been a democratic
state which has constructed a system of social welfare and then succumbed to fascism (or communism)... In an extreme version of market
utopianism (which Hayek himself opposed) the Vienna School merges with the thinking of Ayn Rand; competition represents the very meaning of life.
1999: William McDonough is named a «Hero For the Planet» in Time magazine, which
states: «[William McDonough's]...
utopianism is grounded, in a unified philosophy that, in demonstrable and practical ways, is changing the design of the world.»