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Peace - What is peace?

Peace - What is peace?: Encyclopedia II - Peace - What is peace?

Peace is many things: the meaning of the word peace changes with context. Peace may refer specifically to an agreement concluded to end a war, or to a lack of external warfare, or to a period when a country's armies are not fighting enemies. It can also refer more generally to quietude, such as that common at night or in remote areas, allowing for sleep or meditation. Peace can be an emotion or internal state. And finally, peace can ...

See also:

Peace, Peace - What is peace?, Peace - Selfless Act of Love, Peace - Absence of war, Peace - Absence of violence or of evil; presence of justice, Peace - Plural peaces, Peace - Peace and quiet, Peace - Inner peace, Peace - Environmental Peace, Peace - Is violence necessary?, Peace - Historical examples and counter examples, Peace - Peacemakers, Peace - Nobel Peace Prize, Peace - Quotes

Peace, Peace - Absence of violence or of evil; presence of justice, Peace - Absence of war, Peace - Environmental Peace, Peace - Historical examples and counter examples, Peace - Inner peace, Peace - Is violence necessary?, Peace - Nobel Peace Prize, Peace - Peace and quiet, Peace - Peacemakers, Peace - Plural peaces, Peace - Quotes, Peace - Selfless Act of Love, Peace - What is peace?, Anarchism, Peace camp : form of nonviolent protest., Peace churches : Christian groups in the pacifist tradition., Peace movement : social movement that seeks achieve ideals such as the ending of a particular war (or all wars), minimize inter-human violence in a particular place or type of situation, often linked to the goal of achieving world peace., Peace process : describes efforts by interested parties to effect a lasting solution to long-running conflicts., Peace symbol : representation or object that has come to symbolize peace., Peace treaty : agreement (a peace treaty) between two hostile parties, usually countries or governments, that formally ends a war or armed conflict., World peace : future ideal of freedom, peace and happiness among and within all nations.

Peace: Encyclopedia II - Peace - What is peace?



Peace - What is peace?

Peace is many things: the meaning of the word peace changes with context. Peace may refer specifically to an agreement concluded to end a war, or to a lack of external warfare, or to a period when a country's armies are not fighting enemies. It can also refer more generally to quietude, such as that common at night or in remote areas, allowing for sleep or meditation. Peace can be an emotion or internal state. And finally, peace can be any combination of these definitions.

A person's conception of "peace" is often the product of culture and upbringing. People of different cultures sometimes disagree about the meaning of the word, and so do people within any given culture. Peace is not a symbol, peace is a mindset.

Peace - Selfless Act of Love

One less conventional definition of peace is peace as a state of perpetual love (see the second paragraph of Love). It comes from the understanding that any and all violence stems from an attachment, whether it be an attachment to a certain kind of truth (religious, political, economic, or otherwise) or an attachment to survival (out of the fear of death). What is borne out of the attachment is then, an imposition of an idea upon the world. To believe that something is true for oneself, and therefore, it must be true for everyone else. In the quest for the realization of this self-spawning universal truth, the exceptions, also known as the Other (See the ethics of Emmanuel Levinas) must be done away with at the cost of their lives. This definition can be used to define almost any conflict.

Peace, then, can also be defined as a condition of universal self-abnegation. To let go of the desire for absolute certainty borne out of the consolation of suffering.

See Simone Weil and her book, Gravity and Grace.

Peace - Absence of war

A simple and narrow definition of peace entails the absence of war. (The ancient Romans defined peace, Pax, as Absentia Belli, the absence of war.)

The maintenance of longstanding peace between nations ranks among the few great successes of the United Nations. Peace can be voluntary, where potential agitators choose to abstain from disturbance, or it can be enforced, by suppressing those who might otherwise cause such disturbance.

A hard stance on neutrality has given Switzerland fame as a country for its long-lasting peace. Sweden, however, presently has the longest history of continuous peace. Since its 1814 invasion of Norway, the Swedish kingdom has not engaged in military-style external violence.

Peace - Absence of violence or of evil; presence of justice

Constraining the concept of peace strictly to the absence of international war masks internal genocide, terrorism, and other violence. Few would describe the Congolese genocide of the 1890s as an example of peace, even though it technically occurred within the personal domain of King Léopold of the Belgians. Some, therefore, define "peace" as an absence of violence: not merely the absence of war, but also of evil.

Many believe that peace is more than the absence of certain societal maladies. From this perspective, peace requires not only the absence of violence but also the presence of justice, as articulated by Martin Luther King, Jr. In this conception, a society in which one group is oppressed by another lacks peace even in the absence of violence, because the oppression itself constitutes evil.

Peace - Plural peaces

Some "peace thinkers" choose to abandon the idea of one definition of peace; rather, they promote the idea of many peaces. They think that no singular, correct definition of peace can exist; peace, therefore, should be seen as a plurality.

For example, in the Great Lakes region of Africa, the word for peace is kindoki, which refers to a harmonious balance between human beings, the rest of the natural world, and the cosmos. This is a much more broad vision of peace than a mere "absence of war" or even a "presence of justice" standard.

Many of these same thinkers also critique the idea of peace as a hopeful or eventual end. They recognize that peace does not necessarily have to be something the humans might achieve "some day." They contend that peace exists, we can create and expand it in small ways in our everyday lives, and peace changes constantly. This view makes peace permeable and imperfect rather than static and utopian.

Peace - Peace and quiet

In some contexts, peace refers more generally to a state of quiet or tranquility--an absence of disturbance or agitation.

Those who travel to remote, rural areas often notice the striking difference in the noise level between the cities and the countryside; hence the term "peace and quiet". Conflict that occurs in nature, however, often produces sounds. When animals fight, the surrounding forest can become even more silent, as the non-engaged animals warily await the outcome. After a conflict, the normal sounds and actions of the inhabitants eventually reappear.

Peace - Inner peace

One meaning of peace refers to inner peace; a state of mind, body and soul, which is said to take place within ourselves. People that experience inner peace say that the feeling is not dependent on time, people or place, asserting that an individual may experience inner peace even in the midst of war.

Other related archives

1814, 1906 laureate, 1954, 1964 laureate, 1978 laureate, 1979 laureate, 1993 laureates, 1994 laureates, 1998 laureates, 2004 laureate, American Civil War, American Friends Service Committee, Anarchism, Army, Bolsheviks, Central Powers, Christian anarchism, Christian anarchists, Confederate, David Trimble, Democratic peace theory, Emmanuel Levinas, Frederik Willem de Klerk, Great Lakes region of Africa, Great War, Henry Kissinger, Henry Timrod, Inner peace, Jainism, Japanese Peace Bell, John Hume, June 8, King Léopold of the Belgians, Le Duc Tho, Letter from Birmingham Jail, List of places named after peace, Love, Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King, Jr., Mohamed Anwar Al-Sadat, Mother Teresa, Mutually Assured Destruction, Nelson Mandela, Nobel Peace Prize, Nobel Peace Prize laureates, Nonviolence, Norway, Other, Pacifism, Peace and Conflict Studies, Peace camp, Peace churches, Peace movement, Peace process, Peace symbol, Peace treaty, Peacekeeping, Projects working for peace among Israelis and Arabs, Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr., Satyagraha, Shimon Peres, Simone Weil, Sweden, Switzerland, Theodore Roosevelt, Treaty of Versailles, United Nations, United States Department of Peace, Utopia, Vladimir Lenin, Wangari Maathai, World War II, World peace, Yasser Arafat, Yitzhak Rabin, ancient Romans, democracies, democratic peace theory, environmentalists, evil, genocide, industrial revolution, inner peace, joint 1973 laureates, justice, leadership, nations, pacifists, poems, prayer, quiet, terrorism, terrorists, trade, tranquility, violence, visionaries, war, warmongers, world peace



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "What is peace?", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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