One world order

Zsolt Hermann
2 min readApr 3, 2023

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Question from the Internet:

“Why is a one-world order always viewed negatively, and isn’t it a potential solution for world peace?”

A “one world order” is the only solution to world peace and all of our problems. We live in a “one world” in a single, mutually integrated, and interdependent system of nature.

Regardless of what we think or believe in, we are all completely integral parts of nature’s system, and we are all integral parts of humanity within nature.

It is true that we are all born with an inherently egocentric, self-serving, self-justifying, subjective, and individualistic viewpoint and perception of reality. But this is simply an illusion, a misunderstanding that we will have to correct.

Unless we learn and practice — against and above our inherent nature, belief, and perception — how to become healthy, selfless, and unconditionally serving cells in a single human “organism” that is also an organ in nature’s body, we will not be able to comprehend, let alone solve any of our mounting global problems, and we will not be able to survive.

This “one world order” cannot come about by the different arbitrary and self-serving human ideologies, philosophies, or religions we try to use. They are all the product of our inherently misguided, selfish, and exploitative nature, and they all aim to subjugate and exploit others for the benefit of certain individuals or groups against others.

We need to learn and practice how nature creates, organizes, and governs reality’s “one world system” and adapt ourselves to the laws and operations of that system.

Then, when we all find our perfect, selfless, mutually responsible, and mutually complementing role and purpose in the whole, when we unconditionally fulfill our role and, in return, receive everything we actually need and deserve in order to maintain that role, then there will be peace, harmony and continuing, collective human survival.

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Zsolt Hermann
Zsolt Hermann

Written by Zsolt Hermann

I am a Hungarian-born Orthopedic surgeon presently living in New Zealand, with a profound interest in how mutually integrated living systems work.

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