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A critical study of buddhist concept of ideal society and in Thai society

Jundon Kriangsak | 9785807666925 | 2022 | Graphic Audio | Englisch | 298 Seiten
9785807666925
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Introduction Human beings are social animals. They prefer to live in a society. When they start living in a society, social relationship with each other comes into existence. When people with a common culture carry on a shared life based on their interdependence, specific societies tend to develop societies of different types emerge depending upon local conditions. Human beings are both individuals and they are members of a group. It is imperative thai they be both: the human race can only survive if its individual members survive, and the individual needs the group to enhance its own odds of surviving. It is a tightly interwoven connection. It defines all that they do, and all else depends upon it. They need each other to produce new members of their species, to protect those new members and themselves, to help provide food, to add diversity to the gene pool, to provide companionship, to pass on information. They depend upon each other for their survival and their growth as a people. At the most basic level, human beings are drawn together for reproduction. Built into every human being is the need to reproduce other humans. This need, and the means to do it, is not taught; it just is. Such a built-in need to reproduce others of one's own kind is basic to all living things, be it a flower or a dolphin. Humans create complex social structures composed of cooperating and competing groups, ranging in scale from small families and partnerships to species-wide political, scientific and economic unions. Social interactions between humans have also established an extremely wide variety of,