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The Seven Points of the Paradise Paradigm

"The real protection of life and property, always and everywhere, is the general recognition of the brotherhood of man."
-- Rose Wilder Lane, 1943


T H E    P A R A D I S E   P A R A D I G M
Raising enough emotionally-healthy children will create a healthy world


The thesis of this website is that the human condition itself — individually and collectively — can be improved dramatically, over time, by increasing the understanding that proper early care leads to a healthier and more compassionate adulthood, and that a society of healthy people will be a healthy society.

Going one step further, a world of healthier societies must, in fact, be a healthier world.

I call this set of ideas The Paradise Paradigm. A name is necessary, because it is difficult to talk about something we don’t have a name for.

Note that I am not only talking about the need to raise one’s own children well, or even to help other children in some manner. I am, in particular, advancing the idea that only the widest possible understanding of a paradigm on this topic, and an accurate one, will succeed at widely improving and eventually “saving” the world in the sense discussed on this site.

In more detail, the paradigm has seven points, which are discussed below.

The Seven Points of the Paradise Paradigm:

  1. The human world is as we make it.

  2. The character of each adult is largely shaped in the earliest months and years of life.

  3. Consistent love and respect given early in life create healthy, loving adults who respect others.

  4. Any person or group which improves the lives of pregnant mothers, infants, or children, contributes to the goal of a healthy world.

  5. Enough healthy, loving adults will make a healthy, loving world.

  6. Freedom is a necessary part of love. Unfreedom (coercion) is abuse; it erodes and destroys love.

  7. Change happens when enough people share the necessary understanding.

1. The human world is as we make it.

This first point is two-fold: First, much of the human world is in terrible shape. Second, we have the means to change that. Not overnight, but soon enough. Mankind no longer has to put up with widespread violence, racism, and other human evil and misery.

That the human world is "as we make it" seems obvious, but we don't always keep the obvious in mind. Knowing (and acting upon) the truth that we can bring about change is crucial. We can make the world as we want it to be, if enough of us understand what we want and how to get there.

To put it bluntly, the world can be healed. We can make this earth a paradise.

What does that mean: "a paradise?"

It means a world without wars, without crime against others, without needless misery.

Can we create such a world? Of course we can. This web site is designed to spread the idea that such a world is possible, and to remind people of what they already know: how to get there.

The word "paradise" is not used here in a supernatural or conventionally religious sense. It does not mean any place, in heaven or elsewhere, where we might find ourselves after death. Nor is it meant to suggest that the world can be made "perfect" or completely without pain, misery, or even conflict.

Instead, "paradise" is here used to mean a world without human evil. Our premise is that the worst of what we read about in our newspapers, and that we find in our history books, can, should, and must be eliminated from the world.

How long will it take to accomplish that? Real, visible progress may take only a few decades, if we begin the process now and in earnest. Full success, of course, will take longer: generations, in fact. How long depends upon how quickly and efficiently we work to move things in the right direction.

Some people may still (and may always) be rude -- but do they have to be murderers, rapists, or con artists? Some of us may be unhappy, even with the most loving and gentle of childhoods -- but must any of us be genocidal dictators? Or their henchmen? Must any of us (or at least so very many of us) be depressed or addicted or thoughtless or cruel?

Many will find this hard to accept, but please consider that it is time to eliminate human evil -- and along the way, to eliminate much of human misery besides. Indeed, we may not have much time left to make the transition to a more gentle and emotionally healthy world. Modern technology brings enough danger that this, right now, could be our only chance to get things right.

Now or never.

For the how of all this, see points 2 through 7 in this list. And no: government programs will not be the answer here. Far from it.

Is the world really in such dire need of change? Yes, it is.

[ Return to the 7 points ]


2. The character of each adult is largely shaped in the earliest months and years of life.

Western epigrams on the topic include:

"The child is father to the man"
and
"As the twig is bent, so grows the tree."

Every culture probably has its own folk wisdom on this theme, because it is a basic truth about life.

Modern science adds its own support in the form of Chaos theory, which tells us that complex systems exhibit "sensitive dependence on early conditions." In other words, events early in the life of a complex system tend to have far more impact on the outcome or later states of that system, than do similar events which happen at a later time.

Other things being equal, early experience is more powerful than later experience, and the changes wrought by early experience form the building blocks that later character must be built upon. This is true for the "complex system" of a human being, just as it is for flow turbulence or weather systems.

Please see Scientific and general references for further support of this point.

[ Return to the 7 points ]


3. Consistent love and respect given early in life create loving, healthy adults who respect others.

This is a corollary to something we read about frequently: that abused children often grow up to be abusive adults.

It isn't always "someone else" who is being abused, either. Many abused children grow up to abuse themselves, with unhealthy and destructive habits. Smoking, heavy drinking, and the use of other drugs are all higher among adults who were abused as children. Not surprisingly, cancer, heart disease, and other physical problems are also more common among such adults. See "People Find Unhealthy Ways to Cope: Bad Childhood, Sick Adults" and other material in Scientific and general references for details.

The good news is that a loving childhood -- starting with good prenatal care, actually, and continuing through birth, infancy, and later childhood -- sets the stage for a life with less risk of physical and emotional problems. And every study which shows that violent or abusive adults are more likely to have been abused in childhood, is also saying that loved, non-abused children have a better chance to become normal, loving, non-abusive adults.

[ Return to the 7 points ]


4. Any person or group which improves the lives of pregnant mothers, infants, and children, contributes to the goal of a healthy world.

This is intuitive, obvious -- and important. A healthy human world will never emerge while large numbers of humans are repressed, traumatized, and without a sense of love and connection to others.

Please see Scientific and general references for further content on this point.

[ Return to the 7 points ]


5. Enough healthy, loving adults will make a healthy, loving world.

This is simple mathematics. Who are the bad guys gonna get to run the concentration camps and staff the secret police, when almost everyone is emotionally healthy? Who will be the executioner, when every person feels love in their heart for others? How often will crimes be committed against others when no one was victimized during childhood?

Perhaps it is time to find out.

[ Return to the 7 points ]


6. Freedom is a necessary part of love. Unfreedom (coercion) is abuse; it erodes and destroys love.

Our natural ability to forget painful truths makes this harder to remember than it should be. But imagine trying to raise your children in, say, Tibet under the Red Chinese, or in Hitler's Germany, or in Pol Pot's Cambodia.

Even when used for a good cause, coercion creates nightmares. One simply cannot do good with the evil of initiated coercion.

In contrast, a free society sets the stage for and encourages compassion and emotional health generally. Freedom for children is an important part of freedom in any society; consider Summerhill School in England or Sudbury Valley School in the United States for examples.

Love and freedom require each other. Indeed, love and freedom form one of the dualities in human life that must be in balance for a healthy world. Love requires us to respect the right of others to live their own lives in their own way. Each of us is a unique individual, and yet we are also all brothers and sisters.

As Rose Wilder Lane (quoted at the top of this page) put it during World War II: “All men are brothers, and each man is free and self-controlling.”

For more discussion of this topic, click here.

[ Return to the 7 points ]


7. Change happens when enough people share the necessary understanding.

Why? Because that is how paradigms work.

[ Return to the 7 points ]


COPYRIGHT NOTICE

All content copyright © 2000 - 2006 by Glen Allport, except as noted. All Rights Reserved. Permission is granted to reproduce all original material at this site, in any medium, as long as it is not-for-profit and clearly attributed to Paradise Paradigm. You are encouraged to link to this site from your own, or to alternate-host the entire site, so long as you clearly display the original link to this site. The object of this site is to improve the human condition, and wide education about this possibility, and of how to achieve it, is the key to success. Thanks for helping to spread the word. All other rights reserved. Please contact us before using the contents, details, or ideas of the site on a for-profit basis.

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This page is http://www.paradise-paradigm.net/theseven.html
First posted 12/14/2000 -- Most recent edit May 21, 2006

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