Le problème principal avec la modernité est qu'elle a permis à la conscience tribale de détourner la technologie moderne, et le résultat a été Auschwitz [ voir " The Terror of Tomorrow ,"
One of the greatest problems and constant dangers faced by humanity is simply this: the Right-Hand quadrants are all material, and once a material entity has been produced, it can be used by individuals who are at virtually any level of interior development. For example, the atomic bomb is the product of formal-operational thinking (orange), but once it exists, it can be used by individuals at lower levels of development, even though those levels could not themselves produce the bomb. Nobody at a worldcentric level of moral consciousness would happily unleash the atomic bomb, but somebody at a preconventional, red-meme, egocentric level would quite cheerily bomb the hell of pretty much anybody who got in its way.
Stated in more general terms, one of humanity's constant nightmares has been that technological growth in the Right-Hand quadrants has always run ahead of the Left-Hand growth in wisdom, care, and compassionate use of that technology. In other words, exterior development has run ahead of interior development (only because, again, once a material artifact has been produced, it can be used by any interior level; and thus one genius operating at a high cognitive level--James Watt, for example--can conceive and produce a technology--in this case, the steam engine--that can then be used by individuals at any level of development, the vast majority of which could never themselves invent such technology).
Bill Joy recommends a combination of exterior and interior control. He is in favor of attempting to ban or relinquish some types of research; but he also realizes that even if that were fully possible (which is unlikely, given that knowledge slips around boundaries), it would not really address the fundamental problem, which is the need for a growth in collective wisdom. "Where can we look for a new ethical basis to set our course?," he therefore asks. "I have found the ideas in the book Ethics for the New Millennium, by the Dalai Lama, to be very helpful. As is perhaps well known but little heeded, the Dalai Lama argues that the most important thing is for us to conduct our lives with love and compassion for others, and that our societies need to develop a stronger notion of universal responsibility and of our interdependency." Any number of other spiritual leaders, from Christianity to Judaism to Hinduism, might echo those worthy sentiments.
The coercive aspects required by world governance will rise in direct proportion to the lack of interior development.
http://wilber.shambhala.com/html/books/terror _tomorrow.cfm/