What to do with the injustices of the world?

Zsolt Hermann
2 min readDec 3, 2021

Question from the Internet:

“How do you make peace with all the injustice in the world?”

We can’t make peace with the injustices of the world, but we can understand where they come from and how we can solve them.

We have a double problem when it comes to “injustices” and everything else we see in the world.

We do not actually see the world, reality bad it is, we see a personal version of it according to our own egocentric, subjective consciousness, the perception that reduces, filters, distorts everything according to our own “pleasure/pain calculations”. Thus what we see as injustice, crime, a mistake is according to our own evaluation, and it might not be assessed the same way by others.

So, first of all, in order to start seeing, sensing, evaluating the world properly, we would need to acquire a completely new, selfless, and thus objective perception of reality.

And this is possible through the right, practical, educational method when we learn how to sense, see, perceive reality through the desires, thoughts, viewpoints of others while we completely abandon our own thoughts, desires, and viewpoint.

But then let’s say that we still have “objective injustices in the world”.

Then we would need to understand that all the injustices, crimes, problems have a single root cause, the same inherently egocentric, subjective, individualistic inner program, consciousness, the perception that determines our lives. So we won’t be able to build a perfect, just, harmonious world until each and every person starts the same inner correction, upgrade, learning how to think, perceive, exist through the desires, thoughts, and viewpoints of others.

Then we will build harmonious, perfect humanity with a single, collective consciousness that can solve and prevent any problems while existing in harmony with the rest of the Natural system.

--

--

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.