The Talking Shop
Uitgelicht
|
17,23 |
Naar shop
|
|
70,99 |
Naar shop
|
|
70,99 |
Naar shop
|
Beschrijving
Bol
This book's fundamental purpose is to help understand the importance of volunteerism-not as charity, but as civic muscle. Why should we volunteer? What can a volunteer actually do? And how can public-spirited volunteers-armed only with conviction and community-reshape a state hollowed out by elite capture and apathy?The journey begins with a hard look at why democracy fails: not by accident, but by design-through wealth inequality that distorts elections before a single vote is cast, media filters that manufacture consent, and foreign actors who exploit democratic openness to destabilise nations from within. In this broken landscape, the book asks: Can ordinary people-especially the financially constrained, the unarmed, the "powerless"-still bend the arc of power toward justice?Can do-gooders without deep pockets take on oligarchs who own the rules of the game? Can volunteers without weapons confront a fully armed and loaded State that confuses dissent with sedition? To answer these questions, the book turns to history and philosophy-to Rome's collapse, to Plato's cave, to Sree Narayana Guru's quiet revolution, to the disciplined networks of the RSS, and to the moral clarity of grassroots movements across continents.What emerges is not a manifesto, but a field journal of hope grounded in realism: a roadmap for the Philosopher Volunteer-someone who combines inner strength with strategic action, who builds parallel systems of self-reliance, and who understands that real change doesn't begin in parliaments, but with something that is profoundly human - straightforward and heartfelt conversations and dialogue.
This book's fundamental purpose is to help understand the importance of volunteerism-not as charity, but as civic muscle. Why should we volunteer? What can a volunteer actually do? And how can public-spirited volunteers-armed only with conviction and community-reshape a state hollowed out by elite capture and apathy?The journey begins with a hard look at why democracy fails: not by accident, but by design-through wealth inequality that distorts elections before a single vote is cast, media filters that manufacture consent, and foreign actors who exploit democratic openness to destabilise nations from within. In this broken landscape, the book asks: Can ordinary people-especially the financially constrained, the unarmed, the "powerless"-still bend the arc of power toward justice?Can do-gooders without deep pockets take on oligarchs who own the rules of the game? Can volunteers without weapons confront a fully armed and loaded State that confuses dissent with sedition? To answer these questions, the book turns to history and philosophy-to Rome's collapse, to Plato's cave, to Sree Narayana Guru's quiet revolution, to the disciplined networks of the RSS, and to the moral clarity of grassroots movements across continents.What emerges is not a manifesto, but a field journal of hope grounded in realism: a roadmap for the Philosopher Volunteer-someone who combines inner strength with strategic action, who builds parallel systems of self-reliance, and who understands that real change doesn't begin in parliaments, but with something that is profoundly human - straightforward and heartfelt conversations and dialogue.
AmazonPages: 380, Paperback, Notion Press
Prijzen voor het laatst bijgewerkt op: