Means of transport have shortened the distance between towns and cities in this global world.
The information and communication technologies have shortened the distance in the transmission of information.
The scientific and technological progress has shortened the distance between our planet and the universe.
However, there is one thing in what human being has not made a historic leap
like that has occurred in other aspects of science and technology in the
modern ages. I mean the mental distance between the welfare of the few
and the suffering of a majority.
We shorten distances to the extent that we manage to connect in a way
more quickly, agile and simply. Today we can cross an ocean in hours,
and know what happens in our antipodes with a single click.
However,
we only experience and share the suffering of the others when we feel
it very close to us. And only through empathy will get to commitment and
action in advocacy of others with which we identify. It is precisely
this identification what makes us feel firsthand the threat that
triggers our commitment.
We have found means and tools to connect with each other, no matter
how far they are physically. But there is still an astronomical distance
in the minds and hearts of people. The distance that allows many to
live stranger to the suffering of others, except that the misfortune of
these affects the welfare of those.
Only when we bridge that mental and emotional distance, as the
result of a individual process of transformation, we will be able to
speak of a truly mankind progress. Perhaps the greatest challenge of
modern society.
Technology has changed the way we connect to the world. Empathy will change the world.
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The good samaritan (after Delacroix) 1890 - Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) Kröller-Müller Museum |