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Article Title: An Historical Perspective: from No to Yes in 7 Words
Author: James Burgess
Category: philosophy
Word Count: 1207
Keywords: history, philosophy
Author's Email Address: [email protected]
Article Source: http://www.7wordsassociates.org/psychology_spotlight.php
The article is preformatted to 65CPL.

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We can identify the zeitgeist as a major force that casts a veil of illusion 
over humanity's thinking. 


We consider whether 7 words might be used to examine the deeper waves that 
underlie all changes. Let's look briefly at the greater cycles of change, 
underneath the babble of so much detail and so many opinions — look at the 
major facets of human evolution, at least the Homo Sapiens bit.

We can say that civilisation began to express awareness significantly above the 
animal level when tools were used. Before that human behaviour very closely 
resembled that of certain animals—in particular by surrendering to the 
inevitable danger and hardships of life because no better condition was 
imaginable. This suggests Yes, the acceptance of what comes without resistance. 
The tooling-up of the hunter-gatherers coincided with their saying No! They no 
longer accepted fate and chose a new reality wherein nature could be tamed a 
little. The truth was affirmed that humanity was a significant partner in the 
co-creating of Earth conditions. `We are no longer sleeping children of the 
Earth Mother; we are awakening and growing up'. Our prehistoric Yes became No, 
the beginning of the story of civilization. 

No 

The Agricultural Revolution marked a major universal shift in humanity's 
thinking and was clearly No-like. Fences were constructed around land, 
establishing both clear boundaries and the identity of those who were normally 
allowed inside them. People were required to choose to belong to a particular 
social group—and not to any other, and not to continue their hunter-gatherer 
meanderings. Foragers who wouldn't invest their labour into putting down roots 
were excluded. Thus clans became nations and, protected within the walls of 
their city-states, they grew wealthy.

Hello 

The Hello era that followed accelerated as people developed their languages, 
shared knowledge, skills and ideas and learned more about getting along with 
neighbours—who had become much more permanent. Without land to tie them down, 
the early hunters had had less need for social skills, being able to refuse 
involvement if they felt uncomfortable. As exchanges opened up, communication 
took on an even greater level of importance. To exchange surpluses and find 
`new breeding stock' required that various groups reached out the hand of 
friendship in trade—or the less friendly version in skirmishes with 
neighbouring groups.

Curiosity also became a major factor that promoted travel and cultural 
exchange. Its twin sister inventiveness applied itself to overcome hardships 
and came up with ideas like yoking oxen and irrigation—mechanical devices that 
can be seen as early heralds for the next leap forward—the Industrial 
Revolution. The building of railways and telegraphs and spreading of newspapers 
even to the working folk are all clues that this period was the flowering of 
the Hello era. The world, previously an inconceivable concept, was now 
navigable by even the poorest wayfarer with enough spark and an ardent 
curiosity.

Thank You

As much as the seeds of Hello were clearly visible within the No-like 
Agricultural Revolution, the seeds of the Thank You era can be identified 
within the industrialization process. Leisure became increasingly known as a 
major social phenomenon—until it became widespread across all classes in the 
developed world. The poor were still relatively poor—yet only by contrast to 
the richer rich. In the middle of the 20th century many ordinary working people 
were rescued from domestic drudgery by washing machines and they could watch TV 
and drive cars. People became free to appreciate the good life, to express 
options about what they valued. The governments of rich countries gave 
compassionate aid to the hungry. And, at least for a while, we felt thankful.

Goodbye 

The Information Revolution could be said to have arisen in the mid 1960's when 
microchip technology enabled electronic things to come about. This made the 
processing of data incomparably faster and fanned the flames of humanity's 
obsessional lust for information. Now we are given all the information we need 
to see that the Industrial Age was not handled very elegantly—we had forgotten 
to deal with all of its ramifications—and the first major complaints were 
becoming clear sounding. Words like ecology, global warming and CND were 
introduced into our language, firstly by a group of people who were born around 
the late 1940's. 

In the Goodbye era we would expect to observe the 4 keywords: realization, 
decision, completion and moving on. Well, indeed, now we are—at least some of 
us—coming to the realization of what the Industrial era has done. Next comes 
decision, and this is not so clear. Unfortunately, those who can really make a 
difference, the powerful Western industrialists, are not yet willing to decide. 
When they do decide we will need to go through a stage of completion. Our task 
is to reach completion on the Industrial Revolution—to clean up. Only then can 
we expect to move on.

There is good reason to expect a tidal-wave type of change as the baby-boomers 
of 1946/7, who were born to express humanity's moving on from wartime, begin to 
retire at 60. This is the hidden bomb whose long shock-wave blast has rippled 
throughout the post-war period and is being projected into a future where it is 
ready to explode. Pensions will become increasingly tight and great pressure 
will arise to allocate diminishing resources to ageing and unproductive voters 
(as long as democracy holds). But these same people have had to compete all 
their lives for limited resources and have become quite used to making 
governments change their position—on matters like the Vietnam War. And we have 
to acknowledge that when they came of age in 1964, they pushed the boundaries 
of convention like never before. 

As they approach retirement, they will do whatever they can to look after their 
own interests. Unfortunately, whereas now it takes three workers to fund one 
retired person during the next 30 years the dependency ratio will worsen and by 
2036 it will need to be only two. We'll all have to work harder, longer and 
more effectively by a margin of 50%. Either we wake up to this now and do 
something or we can learn to expect that as old folks we will be cold, hungry, 
sick and uncared-for. Goodbye is ruthless; a decision must cut the past from 
the future. We need to make a difficult decision that will change the face of 
economics and politics forever, and we need to make it now. 

What's next?

Please will be next, and unified intention, cooperation and prayer will be the 
qualities of the era. Please begins with vision, so perhaps we may pray for a 
collective vision of world peace brought about through a widespread shift of 
awareness. These major revolutionary shifts are happening more quickly as `time 
speeds up'. It took tens of thousands of years for hunter-gatherers to learn 
their lessons, thousands for the agricultural wisdoms to be assimilated and a 
couple of hundred until we saw the ambiguities of industrialization. So 40 
years after the Information Revolution of the Sixties, we ought to be ready for 
another—a bedrock change in how we see things, how we think and how we act upon 
those thoughts. 

Presumably this can be called the Consciousness Revolution. 

Free Questionnaires and Mini Courses are available on the 7 Words website 
(http://www.7words.co.uk), interactive fun with the "satisfaction index 
calculator" at http://www.7wordsassociates.org/psychology_spotlight.php

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