before the latter are elected to the highest government posi-
tions. A negative council opinion should be hard to challenge.
That same council would serve the head of state, the legislative
authorities, and the executives regarding counsel in matters
entering its scope of scientific competence. It would also ad-
dress the public in important matters of biological and psycho-
logical life, indicating essential moral aspects. Such a council’s
duties would also include maintaining contact and discussions
with the religious authorities in such matters.
The security system for persons with various psychological
deviations would be in charge of making their life easier while
skillfully limiting their participation in the processes of the
genesis of evil. After all, such persons are not impervious to
POLITICAL PONEROLOGY
309
persuasion provided it is based upon proper knowledge of the
matter. Such an approach would also help progressively dimin-
ish societies’ gene pool burdens of hereditary aberrations. The
Council of Wise Men would furnish the scientific supervision
for such activities.
The legal system would be subjected to wide ranging trans-
formations in virtually every area, progressing from formulae
whose establishment was based on a society’s natural world
view and ancient tradition to legal solutions based upon an
objective apperception of reality, particularly the psychological
one. As a result, law studies would have to undergo true mod-
ernization, since the law would become a scientific discipline
sharing the same epistemological principles as all the other
sciences.
What is now called “penal” law would be superseded by
another kind of law with a completely modernized foundation
based on an understanding of the genesis of evil and of the
personalities of people who commit evil. Such law would be
significantly more humanitarian while furnishing individuals
and societies more effective protection from undeserved abuse.
Of course, the operational measures would be much more
complex and more dependent upon a better understanding of
causation than could ever possibly be the case in a punitive
system. A trend toward transformations in this direction is evi-
dent in the legislation of civilized nations. The social system
proposed herein would have to break through traditions in this
area in a more effective way.
No government whose system is based on an understanding
of the laws of nature, whether concerning physical and biologi-
cal phenomena or the nature of man, can lay a claim to sover-
eignty in the meaning we have inherited from the nineteenth
century and subsequent nationalistic or totalitarian systems. We
share the same air and water throughout our planet. Common
cultural values and basic moral criteria are becoming wide
spread. The world is interlinked in transportation, communica-
tion, and trade and has become Our Planet. Under such condi-
tions, interdependence and cooperation with other nations and
supranational institutions, as well as moral responsibility for
overall fate, become a law of nature. The national organism
310
A VISION OF THE FUTURE
becomes autonomous but not independent. This must be regu-
lated by means of the appropriate treaties and incorporated into
national constitutions.
A system thus envisaged would be superior to all its prede-
cessors, being based upon an understanding of the laws of na-
ture operating within individuals and societies, with objective
knowledge progressively superceding opinions based upon
natural responses to phenomena. We should call it a
“LOGOCRACY”.
Due to their properties and conformity to the laws of nature
and evolution, logocratic systems could guarantee social and
international order on a long-term basis. In keeping with their
nature, they would then become transformed into more perfect
forms, a vague and faraway vision of which may beckon to us
in the present.
The author has survived many dangerous situations and be-
come disappointed with many people and institutions. How-
ever, the Great Providence has never disappointed him under
the most difficult circumstances. This condition suffices to
permit him to promise that elaborating a more detailed draft for
such a necessary better system will also be possible.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Adler, Alfred:
Allilueva, Svetlana :
London 1967
Assagiolli, Roberto:
York Research Foundation 1959
Becker, Ernest:
Bilikiewicz, Adam (ed.):