A moral commitment that binds the world
What is our greatest identity as human beings? The question may seem simple, yet its answer is profound and layered.
What is our greatest identity as human beings? The question may seem simple, yet its answer is profound and layered.
As another year turns, humanity finds itself trapped in structures of its own making. The problems that confront us today are not accidents of fate.
This legacy has inspired humanity for centuries and continues to guide the world even today, he claimed.
Birla made these remarks while delivering inaugural address at an international conference titled "Faith and Future: Integrating AI with Spirituality" at Dev Sanskriti Vishwavidyalaya, Haridwar.
On the occasion of the death anniversary of Swami Vivekananda on Friday, chief minister Mamata Banerjee sent a subtle political message to people of the state to adopt Swamiji’s principle of “religion of humanity”, which are not narrowed by the walls of religious beliefs, caste, and class.
Calling Sanatan Dharma the national religion of India, Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath said on Friday that it is the collective responsibility of the citizens to protect it.
AI can’t only be regulated by national or local laws. But rather by comprehensive ones forged and monitored by an intergovernmental organisation, which in turn can pave the way for local and national regulatory frameworks.
Human beings as we know them today can be traced back to about 100,000 years, perhaps a few thousand years less or more. For about 90 per cent of this time, there was a remarkable continuity in the life of humanity.
He further noted that if Sanatan Dharma remains on a path of safety and prosperity, it would pave the way for the betterment of global humanity.
Throughout history, periods of turbulence have presented opportunities to redefine collective values and the assumptions that underlie them.