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The Edicts of Asoka 8McKeon 9

 

The problems of civilization and society are largely problems of power, and in particular of political and economic power. Yet peace and welfare cannot be secured by political negotiations and economic arrangements alone. When truth and the values of the spirit are treated only as instruments of power, they are transformed by oppositions of power into fanaticism which seeks to impose one view of truth by use of arbitrary power. The fanaticisms of our times have many causes. One, which is frequently alleged, is the fear, real or trumped up, of an opposed irrational fanaticism. Opposition to fanaticism tends to breed fanaticisms dedicated to the destruction of error. Tolerance seems a weakness in a conflict of powers; yet tolerance is the only rational alternative to organized irrational clashes. The cause of fanaticism, underlying fears and tensions, is ignorance of other historical traditions of thought and culture.
-- Richard McKeon "Foreward" p. vi. The Edicts of Asoka Ed. and Tr. by N.A. Nikam and Richard Mckeon. 1959.
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