• DocumentCode
    2155173
  • Title

    Is the UN-organisation a lost case? The vulnerability of devotional and the invulnerability of aggressive relationships

  • Author

    Starkermann, Rudolf

  • Author_Institution
    New Brunswick Univ., Fredericton, NB, Canada
  • fYear
    1995
  • fDate
    8-10 Jun 1995
  • Firstpage
    52
  • Lastpage
    61
  • Abstract
    The United Nations charter was signed by 51 nations in San Francisco on June 26, 1945. Its intention is to maintain world peace and to promote cooperation among nations. It consists of 159 countries all around the globe. The preceding organisation, the League of Nations (1919), which pursued the same goal, failed drastically due to unability to prevent the 2nd World War. If the main purpose of the UN is to maintain peace on Earth, then it has also already failed-and also as drastically as the League of Nations. This paper demonstrates in social-mathematical quantified terms that it is an irrefutable natural law that aggressive relationships will dominate over peaceful behaviour and that aggression has the following advantages over devotion. Aggression (a) provides more will-power in action, (b) acts faster, (c) has a much wider range of stable existence than devotion, and (d) is practically invulnerable to external influences compared to the utmost vulnerable devotion
  • Keywords
    politics; social sciences; League of Nations; United Nations; aggressive relationships; devotional relationships; external influences; international cooperation; natural law; peaceful behaviour; social-mathematical quantified terms; stable existence; vulnerability; will-power; world peace; Animation; Computer aided software engineering; Earth; Extraterrestrial measurements; Humans; Planets; Solar system; Visualization;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Foundations and Applications of General Science Theory, 1995. Knowledge Tools for a Sustainable Civilization. Interdisciplinary Conference., Canadian Conference on
  • Conference_Location
    Toronto, Ont.
  • Print_ISBN
    0-7803-3365-9
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/KTSC.1995.569153
  • Filename
    569153