Here is a different perspective on Prosperity.  The article below was
copied from the Baha'i News Service: http://news.bahai.org/story/770

 A new statement challenging the common assumption that human beings
are slaves to self-interest and consumerism has been issued by the
Baha'i International Community.

A more profound look at human nature would reveal the ability to
respond to a higher calling, suggests the document – issued this week
for the United Nations Commission on Sustainable Development as it
began its annual two-week session.

"The culture of consumerism ... has tended to reduce human beings to
competitive, insatiable consumers of goods and to objects of
manipulation by the market," it says.

In fact, "the human experience is essentially spiritual in nature: it
is rooted in the inner reality – or what some call the 'soul' – that
we all share in common," it states.

The document, titled "Rethinking Prosperity: Forging Alternatives to a
Culture of Consumerism," challenges the view that there is an
intractable conflict between what people want – which supposedly is to
consume more – and what humanity needs.

"Much of economic and psychological theory depicts human beings as
slaves to self-interest," it says. "The faculties needed to construct
a more just and sustainable social order – moderation, justice, love,
reason, sacrifice and service to the common good – have too often been
dismissed as naive ideals. Yet, it is these and related qualities that
must be harnessed. ..."

Peter Adriance, a member of the Baha'i International Community's
delegation to the Commission, said the statement is a contribution to
a dialogue on the development of a 10-year framework to encourage new
programs that advance sustainable consumption and production.

"The document deals with the issue of consumerism by reflecting on the
question of what is human nature," he said. "We must look at who we
are and what our purpose in life is.

"The transition to sustainable consumption and production is one of
the great challenges of our times, and to achieve it will require a
transformation in both thought and action. The cultural forces at play
are powerful and demand re-examination if we are to move forward," he
said.

The statement can be read at 
http://bic.org/statements-and-reports/bic-statements/10-0503.htm.

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