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The open conspiracy

Chapter 9: Chapter VII NO STABLE UTOPIA IS CONTEMPLATED
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About This Book

The text argues for an organised, transparent movement of committed people to establish a global commonweal, proposing a restated, objective religion rooted in subordination of self and collective responsibility. It outlines aims, structure, and methods, including explanation and propaganda, constructive social work, and alliances with existing progressive movements, while insisting on heterogeneity and moral reorientation. Chapters examine practical obstacles: entrenched institutions, cultural resistances in less industrialised regions, and internal human frailties, and discuss building creative homes, schools, and mechanisms for international coordination. The tone is prescriptive, sketching hazards and strategies for gradual global cooperation and social reconstruction.

Chapter VII

NO STABLE UTOPIA IS CONTEMPLATED

This unified world towards which the efforts of the religious minority would direct human activities cannot be pictured for the reader as any static and stereotyped spectacle of happiness. Indeed one may doubt if such a thing as happiness is possible without steadily changing conditions involving continually enlarging and exhilarating opportunities. Mankind released from the pressure of population, the waste of warfare and the private monopolisation of the sources of wealth, will face the universe with a great and increasing surplus of will and energy. Change and novelty will be the order of life; each day will differ from its predecessor in its greater amplitude of interest. Life which was once routine, endurance and mischance, will become adventure and discovery. It will no longer be “the old, old story.”

We have still barely emerged from among the animals in their struggle for existence. We live only in the early dawn of human self-consciousness and in the first awakening of the spirit of mastery. We believe that the persistent exploration of our outward and inward worlds by scientific and artistic endeavour will lead to developments of power and activity upon which at present we can set no limits nor give any certain form.

Our antagonists are confusion of mind, want of courage, want of curiosity and want of imagination, indolence and spendthrift egotism. These are the enemies against which the Open Conspiracy arrays itself; these are the jailers of human freedom and achievement.