The Peace of Westphalia: A Phase Shift in Universal History
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During this particular Christmas season, we need something of optimistic substance more than ever and thus I thought it apt to share a wonderful lecture delivered by my husband Matthew Ehret on a very important subject in our western history. Today’s world is shaped by a tension caused by two opposing paradigms pulling humanity into two directions. Where one is unipolar and premised around an organizing principle of “Might makes Right”, the other is multi-polar and shaped by a principle of “Win-Win Cooperation”. Where one is imperial-defining “value” around the material extraction of land and labor (or outright theft via usury, war and speculation), the other defines value around the creative powers of human thought driven by long-term projects that harmonize individual profit with the General Welfare. Where one is shaped by the words of Tony Blair and Kissinger who called for a “post-Westphalian era” of R2P humanitarian interventions into nation states, the other is premised on the defense of national sovereignty as enshrined in the Westphalian Treaty.
The Peace of Westphalia: A Phase Shift in Universal History
The Peace of Westphalia: A Phase Shift in…
The Peace of Westphalia: A Phase Shift in Universal History
During this particular Christmas season, we need something of optimistic substance more than ever and thus I thought it apt to share a wonderful lecture delivered by my husband Matthew Ehret on a very important subject in our western history. Today’s world is shaped by a tension caused by two opposing paradigms pulling humanity into two directions. Where one is unipolar and premised around an organizing principle of “Might makes Right”, the other is multi-polar and shaped by a principle of “Win-Win Cooperation”. Where one is imperial-defining “value” around the material extraction of land and labor (or outright theft via usury, war and speculation), the other defines value around the creative powers of human thought driven by long-term projects that harmonize individual profit with the General Welfare. Where one is shaped by the words of Tony Blair and Kissinger who called for a “post-Westphalian era” of R2P humanitarian interventions into nation states, the other is premised on the defense of national sovereignty as enshrined in the Westphalian Treaty.