My teacher, Peter owls, of Cefymed throughout the course of Introduction to Community Mediation has been kind enough to open doors intellectuals. For several weeks I absorbed like a sponge, a series of lessons that probably had for years just paying attention, but today, with current maturity and humility to accept the shortcomings that life shows me have been weekly gems that enshrine to form a gem of great value.
Perhaps the most important lesson has been that of today because after four hours that after studying Future Workshops, I have extracted the following thoughts:
Today most people have no direct ability to make decisions that affect them. They are the politicians we voted - or not - large corporations, experts who design our lives, work, our environment. And yet, it is possible that critical mass, silent, take the word and partnerships and platforms around to assume its place of power. A power understood as the exercise of sharing his ideas, proposals, your needs and take to the arena of public response.
Has nothing to do with the disenchantment of a particular situation, the present, but in 1952 Robert Jungk published a book "The future has already begun" in which the author relates how modern societies - we are talking about half the last century - notes and dysfunction between the political and social demands. Later, other authors
address the same subject, although Jungk who poses as the company essentially has to enjoy a new democracy, actively participating in political decisions based on equality. In 1981, the twenty-first century, published jointly with NR Müllert a methodology for carrying out this "re-democratization" if the term exists. Is titled "The workshops of the future, ways to revive democracy."
is to create a laboratory of ideas, where citizens committed to propose and design alternative futures. The experiences, the wisdom of the people, the wildest ideas, utopias and realism we study to become strong and valuable contributions possible to realize a well-structured, solid and concrete.
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