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(2005) The selected works of Arne Naess, Dordrecht, Springer.

Gandhi's experiments

Arne Naess

pp. 1034-1048

We find two diametrically opposed views of Mohandas K. Gandhi's moral stature. One has it that, ethically speaking, he was nearly perfect. Albert Einstein said of him, for instance, that generations to come would scarcely believe that such a man actually walked this earth, and in a collection of essays that appeared under the title Gandhi Memorial Peace Number (Roy 1949), a large number of eminent persons accord Gandhi the highest of praise as a moral being. We must also ask ourselves, however, what exactly is the nature of Gandhi's contribution and what is the basis for the tremendous esteem and adulation in which he has been held. For with regard to his own moral achievement, we find a second opinion that is, perhaps, as near the truth as the first: the opinion that Gandhi was often mistaken and that it would be wrong to take him unreservedly as a moral example for everyone.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-1-4020-4519-6_25

Full citation:

Naess, A. (2005)., Gandhi's experiments, in A. Naess, The selected works of Arne Naess, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 1034-1048.

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