Skip to main content
Home
International Environment Forum

Main navigation

  • Home
  • About IEF
    • Conferences
    • Activities
    • Youth Action
    • Newsletter
    • Webinars
    • Organization
    • Membership
    • About the Bahá'í Faith
  • Issues
    • Climate Change
    • Nature and Biodiversity
    • Pollution and Waste
    • Sustainability
    • Accounting
    • Governance
    • Education
    • Other Topics
  • Values
    • News and Posts on Values
    • Resources
    • Statements by the Bahá'í International Community
    • Quotations from Sacred Texts
  • Discourse
    • General Resources
    • Statements by the Bahá'í International Community
    • Compilations
    • Webinars
    • Events with IEF Participation
    • Environmental and Sustainability Science
    • Papers
    • Book Reviews
    • Blog Posts
  • Social Action
    • IEF and Social Action
    • Action Through Learning
    • Social Action in Local Communities
    • Case Studies
    • Youth Action
    • Blog Posts
  • Learning
User account menu
  • Log in

Breadcrumb

  1. Home

A Systems View of Justice

By admin, 3 April, 2024
Systems
  • Log in or register to post comments

A Systems View of Justice

Arthur Lyon Dahl
Presentation at the Justice Conference
29 March 2024


Complex systems science can help us to understand justice in a way that harmonises science and religion. An efficient complex system depends on and dynamically meets the needs of all its components, which might in human terms be a definition of justice. Systems failure can lead to collapse. The information that determines system function can be physical, chemical, genetic, ecological, or at the human level in laws and values.

Globalisation has led to the emergence of environmental justice. There are dimensions of the complex system that is humanity on this planet that can be defined with the tools of science. A just civilization must include a natural environment that promotes human well-being and that supplies the environmental conditions and natural resources for that civilization on a fully sustainable basis. Science can also define the goal for environmental well-being at the local level in our community and with respect to our own lifestyle. The Bahá’í Faith provides a new set of systems values, rules and institutions necessary for our evolution to a global ever-advancing civilisation.

This is the abstract of a paper Arthur Dahl presented at the 2024 Justice Conference at de Poort, The Netherlands, on 29 March 2024. The full paper is available here.


IEF logo

Last updated 3 April 2024

comments

  • HOME
  • ABOUT IEF
  • ISSUES
  • VALUES
  • DISCOURSE
  • SOCIAL ACTION
  • LEARNING

New to IEF?

User login

  • Create new account
  • Reset your password
RSS feed
ABOUT IEF
Conferences
Activities
Newsletter
Webinars
Organization
Blog
ISSUES
Climate change
Biodiversity
Pollution
Sustainability
Accounting
Governance
Education
DISCOURSE
Discourse
Resources
BIC Statements
Compilations
United Nations
Science
Papers
SOCIAL ACTION
Values
Youth Action
Environment
Learning
Community
Local Reality
Case Studies

© International Environment Forum 2025
Creative Commons LicenseThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Contact  |  Disclaimer
Powered by Drupal