He insists he sees signs of the perfectibility of humanity everywhere, claiming that globally violence rates are falling, signs of grassroots solidarity are everywhere. There is, he argues, something in the air.
He is, by training and instinct a scientist, having begun studying Buddhism in the late 1960s at the same time as he was completing a PhD at the Pasteur Institute, in Paris. “It wasn’t like slamming any doors,” he says, “it is that you cross a mountain pass and the next valley is so beautiful you want to settle there.”
He insists he sees signs of the perfectibility of humanity everywhere, claiming that globally violence rates are falling, signs of grassroots solidarity are everywhere. There is, he argues, something in the air.He is, by training and instinct a scientist, having begun studying Buddhism in the late 1960s at the same time as he was completing a PhD at the Pasteur Institute, in Paris. “It wasn’t like slamming any doors,” he says, “it is that you cross a mountain pass and the next valley is so beautiful you want to settle there.”
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