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The Tokyo Foundation for Policy Research

The Globalization of Ethics

January 21, 2008

Many Europeans doubt that Asia can catch up with Europe in terms of regional integration. But Asia not only has the type of stable common ethical foundations that were so important to European integration; it also has a well developed set of moral principles, some of which were an established part of Asian culture long before similar principles were adopted in Europe. Indeed, these Asian principles can serve as a part of an emerging common global ethic.

Of course, Asia does not yet have a cohesive core culture comparable to that of Europe, which is founded on the Judeo-Christian tradition and the Enlightenment. But Europeans ought not to be too arrogant, because, in recent years, that common European culture has itself proven to be fragile, particularly in light of the Bush administration’s divide-and-rule strategy pitting "Old Europe" against "New Europe." And, just as the inhuman terror attacks of September 11, 2001 severely damaged Islam's credibility in many people's eyes, the invasion of Iraq, which was based on lies, has damaged both Christianity and the Western community of values. . . . Read more (External Link)


Copyright: Project Syndicate/Internationale Politik, 2007. www.project-syndicate.org

    • President of the Foundation for a Global Ethic (Stiftung Weltethos) and Professor Emeritus of Ecumenical Theology at the University of Tübingen
    • Hans Küng
    • Hans Küng

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