THE HUMAN QUALITY AND THE DEEP HUMAN QUALITY IN SOCIETIES AFFECTED BY THE ACCELERATED DYNAMICS OF THECNOSCIENCES
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Abstract
Over the past few decades, the rapidly growing mutual feedback dynamic of the technosciences, capable of generating constant and rapid emergence of new products and services, has invaded all human societies and affected our ways of life because it has altered collective axiological projects in such a way as to weaken and corrode all institutions, including religious ones. This unstoppable technoscientific dynamism forces us to acknowledge that we have a dual access to the real: one related to our needs and another not relative, but absolute. It also forces us to change our conceptions of epistemology, anthropology and spirituality. That which our ancestors named "spirituality" we must call it, in accordance with the new anthropology, "a deep human quality." Induced by knowledge societies, this spirituality is transforming from being a practice channelled through submission to one channelled through open inquiry, always supported and guided by the wisdom of our forefathers. Thus, a spirituality communicating two levels, the human and the divine, becomes a spirituality in which the reality we live, being unique, presents itself through two dimensions: the relative and the absolute.
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