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Version #1 - With source annotations
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A Perfect Society

On the contrary, Utopia is a company focused on improvement and sustainability.


Likewise, we must understand social improvement as a process, because if we start
to view the ideal society as something that we can create, then we accept that we
reach the point where we cannot move on, we can no longer improve. The point is to
try to define it as perfect and redefine it by improving yourself. His flaws allow
him to improve, and therefore I see success in people. [Sources: 13, 16]

However, the idea is to constantly try to improve, because we, as humans, have
never experienced perfection. All attempts to build a different lifestyle outside
the mainstream will be criticized, and it is true that they will not be perfect.
There is no better way to live because people want to live in different ways.
Therefore, there is no better society, there are only many variations on several
topics dictated by our nature. [Sources: 1, 10, 16]

Instead of the static perfection of utopia, libertarian transhumanists envision


“extropia,” an open and evolving society that allows individuals and voluntary
groups to shape the institutions and social forms they prefer. In the 16th century,
the eponymous ideal society was proposed in the book Utopia by Thomas Morse. An
ecological utopian society describes new ways of relating society to nature.
[Sources: 5]

The description of utopia not only enables the author to criticize the vices of
modern social scenes, but it can also outline large-scale revolutionary reforms
without describing how they will be implemented. In fact, most science fiction
novels today explore utopia as a critical paradigm. They realize that we cannot
live in an ideal world. They explore the possibilities, how they work, and how they
fail. When people think of utopia, they usually think of science fiction,
imaginative and ideal worlds, which make life better than our wildest dreams.
Utopia has two wrong meanings: one is the old concept of this ideal society, which,
as we know, will never be realized, and the other is the capitalist utopia, a new
abnormal desire that you not only allow, but strongly encourage its fulfillment. .,
[Sources: 2, 5, 8]

The idea of an ideal society or “utopia” can “free you from limitations,” says
Zietzma. So the challenge is to find ways to make it a reality from now on.
[Sources: 3]

The story of six post-war attempts to rethink what society could be is told in a
highly readable form, and above all to try to translate this rethinking into
reality. In fact, it is a book that explores the quest for the ideal society in the
Western world. [Sources: 1, 8]

Associated with the literary tale of utopia was the belief in a real ideal state in
some remote and unknown corner of the world. In many cultures, societies and
religions, there is a myth or memory of a distant past in which humanity lived in a
primitive and simple state, but at the same time it was perfect happiness and
satisfaction. With the Renaissance, the ideal of utopia became more mundane, but
the religious element in utopian thought is often present later, as in the
political-religious ideals of English social philosophers and political
experimenters of the seventeenth century. [Sources: 2, 5]

His Fellowship of the Oceans (1656) portrayed a utopian society in which political
power was wholly held by the landlord nobility. In his famous (or perhaps infamous)
Anarchy, State and Utopia, Robert Nozick sets out his vision of an ideal society.
[Sources: 2, 9]

An imaginary ideal company / place where everything is perfect, pleasant,


organized, without worrying about money; and in fact there is no problem or harm
among utopians with all natural things. In a utopian materialistic society, the
economy is perfect; there is no inflation, there is only complete social and
financial equality. [Sources: 5, 7]

Therefore, dystopia is a dark mirror of utopia: failed social experiments,


repressive political systems, and powerful economic systems are all the results of
making utopian dreams come true. The word means "nowhere to go" because when
imperfect people try to achieve perfection-personal, political, economic, and
social-they fail. However, this is exactly the great experiment of Utopian
socialist ideology in Marxist/Leninist/Stalinist Russia (1917-1989), Fascist Italy
(1922-1943) and Nazi Germany (1933-1945) in the 20th century. What happened. ) All
large-scale attempts to achieve political, economic, and social (even ethnic)
perfection have resulted in tens of millions of people being killed by their own
countries or killed in conflicts with other countries. These are regarded as
obstacles. The road to heaven. [Sources: 10]

The work depicts an ideal state in which everything becomes better for the whole of
mankind, and social evils such as poverty and suffering are eliminated. In response
to Henry VIII's break with Rome, Utopia reflected an ideal society and indirectly
criticized the political and social dilemmas of Tudor England. Since my definition
of utopia is a society surrounded by improvement, I might ask: "Are we living in a
utopia?" Imagine an ideal society without government, money, and social injustice.
[Sources: 2, 11, 14, 16]

In this essay, I'll tell you about three companies that failed in Ancient Rome,
America, and Unwind. As you read, you will see the cracks in their society that
lead them to failure. In fact, all the problems that communities face are also
experienced in traditional society - broken relationships, adultery, addiction (the
list goes on) - because these are human problems, not society problems. [Sources:
1, 14]

My vision of an ideal society is when people share with each other and love each
other, laugh, live happily, work together, and each other's interests are
equivalent to the interests of each. One day we will reach Utopia, but keep this
Utopia in our hands. The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals can serve as
the foundation for this society. [Sources: 0, 3, 16]

Almost two-thirds of the respondents described it as a society in which “everyone


can lead a decent life,” as researcher Elke Schuessler wrote. Therefore, before we
can say anything about what could make society better, we first need to determine
the number of people in it. The closest thing to perfection would be an
interdependent confederation of societies, each with between one and two hundred
citizens, depending on factors such as location and climate. Logically, this will
be a situation where everyone will receive as much as he wants, as much as possible
to receive honestly. [Sources: 3, 13]

Usually, in the best societies, all parameters are set to the average of our
personal ideals in this area. For example, if we all have different attitudes
towards ideal working hours, then in a better society, working hours will be the
average of all our ideals. However, although this sounds like an acceptable
definition, harmony is a state that is difficult or impossible to achieve in
society, and maintaining harmony always hinders the realization of personal ideals.
One such assumption made by Ruhlsian—in fact, almost all political philosophers—is
that an ideal society is a single political unit and should be managed by a single
central government. [Sources: 9, 13]

##### Sources #####

[0]: https://www.123helpme.com/essay/The-Utopian-Society-My-Own-View-Of-442240

[1]: https://www.bruderhof.com/en/voices-blog/world/is-a-perfect-society-possible

[2]: https://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Perfect+society

[3]: https://bthechange.com/envisioning-an-ideal-society-and-how-to-get-there-
f2d437ca434c

[4]: https://examples.yourdictionary.com/examples-of-utopia.html

[5]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Utopia

[6]: https://www.prospectmagazine.co.uk/arts-and-books/experiments-in-living-how-
to-build-a-perfect-society

[7]: https://askinglot.com/what-is-the-perfect-society

[8]: https://www.amazon.com/Utopia-Search-Ideal-Society-Western/dp/0195141113

[9]: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/theforum/thinking-small-ideal-society/

[10]: https://qz.com/1243042/utopia-is-a-dangerous-ideal-we-should-aim-for-
protopia/

[11]: https://www.freethesaurus.com/Perfect+society

[12]: https://literatureessaysamples.com/the-ideal-society-in-utopia-by-thomas-
more/

[13]: https://philosophynow.org/issues/73/What_Would_Make_The_Best_Society

[14]: https://www.bartleby.com/essay/There-is-No-Perfect-Society-P3AM68ECDB6A

[15]: https://www.nypl.org/node/29525

[16]: https://medium.com/@thevarunkhatri/utopia-the-idea-of-a-perfect-society-
862583a0de35
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-----------------------
Version #2 - Without source annotations
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------

A Perfect Society

On the contrary, Utopia is a company focused on improvement and sustainability.


Likewise, we must understand social improvement as a process, because if we start
to view the ideal society as something that we can create, then we accept that we
reach the point where we cannot move on, we can no longer improve. The point is to
try to define it as perfect and redefine it by improving yourself. His flaws allow
him to improve, and therefore I see success in people.

However, the idea is to constantly try to improve, because we, as humans, have
never experienced perfection. All attempts to build a different lifestyle outside
the mainstream will be criticized, and it is true that they will not be perfect.
There is no better way to live because people want to live in different ways.
Therefore, there is no better society, there are only many variations on several
topics dictated by our nature.

Instead of the static perfection of utopia, libertarian transhumanists envision


“extropia,” an open and evolving society that allows individuals and voluntary
groups to shape the institutions and social forms they prefer. In the 16th century,
the eponymous ideal society was proposed in the book Utopia by Thomas Morse. An
ecological utopian society describes new ways of relating society to nature.

The description of utopia not only enables the author to criticize the vices of
modern social scenes, but it can also outline large-scale revolutionary reforms
without describing how they will be implemented. In fact, most science fiction
novels today explore utopia as a critical paradigm. They realize that we cannot
live in an ideal world. They explore the possibilities, how they work, and how they
fail. When people think of utopia, they usually think of science fiction,
imaginative and ideal worlds, which make life better than our wildest dreams.
Utopia has two wrong meanings: one is the old concept of this ideal society, which,
as we know, will never be realized, and the other is the capitalist utopia, a new
abnormal desire that you not only allow, but strongly encourage its fulfillment. .,

The idea of an ideal society or “utopia” can “free you from limitations,” says
Zietzma. So the challenge is to find ways to make it a reality from now on.

The story of six post-war attempts to rethink what society could be is told in a
highly readable form, and above all to try to translate this rethinking into
reality. In fact, it is a book that explores the quest for the ideal society in the
Western world.

Associated with the literary tale of utopia was the belief in a real ideal state in
some remote and unknown corner of the world. In many cultures, societies and
religions, there is a myth or memory of a distant past in which humanity lived in a
primitive and simple state, but at the same time it was perfect happiness and
satisfaction. With the Renaissance, the ideal of utopia became more mundane, but
the religious element in utopian thought is often present later, as in the
political-religious ideals of English social philosophers and political
experimenters of the seventeenth century.
His Fellowship of the Oceans (1656) portrayed a utopian society in which political
power was wholly held by the landlord nobility. In his famous (or perhaps infamous)
Anarchy, State and Utopia, Robert Nozick sets out his vision of an ideal society.

An imaginary ideal company / place where everything is perfect, pleasant,


organized, without worrying about money; and in fact there is no problem or harm
among utopians with all natural things. In a utopian materialistic society, the
economy is perfect; there is no inflation, there is only complete social and
financial equality.

Therefore, dystopia is a dark mirror of utopia: failed social experiments,


repressive political systems, and powerful economic systems are all the results of
making utopian dreams come true. The word means "nowhere to go" because when
imperfect people try to achieve perfection-personal, political, economic, and
social-they fail. However, this is exactly the great experiment of Utopian
socialist ideology in Marxist/Leninist/Stalinist Russia (1917-1989), Fascist Italy
(1922-1943) and Nazi Germany (1933-1945) in the 20th century. What happened. ) All
large-scale attempts to achieve political, economic, and social (even ethnic)
perfection have resulted in tens of millions of people being killed by their own
countries or killed in conflicts with other countries. These are regarded as
obstacles. The road to heaven.

The work depicts an ideal state in which everything becomes better for the whole of
mankind, and social evils such as poverty and suffering are eliminated. In response
to Henry VIII's break with Rome, Utopia reflected an ideal society and indirectly
criticized the political and social dilemmas of Tudor England. Since my definition
of utopia is a society surrounded by improvement, I might ask: "Are we living in a
utopia?" Imagine an ideal society without government, money, and social injustice.

In this essay, I'll tell you about three companies that failed in Ancient Rome,
America, and Unwind. As you read, you will see the cracks in their society that
lead them to failure. In fact, all the problems that communities face are also
experienced in traditional society - broken relationships, adultery, addiction (the
list goes on) - because these are human problems, not society problems.

My vision of an ideal society is when people share with each other and love each
other, laugh, live happily, work together, and each other's interests are
equivalent to the interests of each. One day we will reach Utopia, but keep this
Utopia in our hands. The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals can serve as
the foundation for this society.

Almost two-thirds of the respondents described it as a society in which “everyone


can lead a decent life,” as researcher Elke Schuessler wrote. Therefore, before we
can say anything about what could make society better, we first need to determine
the number of people in it. The closest thing to perfection would be an
interdependent confederation of societies, each with between one and two hundred
citizens, depending on factors such as location and climate. Logically, this will
be a situation where everyone will receive as much as he wants, as much as possible
to receive honestly.

Usually, in the best societies, all parameters are set to the average of our
personal ideals in this area. For example, if we all have different attitudes
towards ideal working hours, then in a better society, working hours will be the
average of all our ideals. However, although this sounds like an acceptable
definition, harmony is a state that is difficult or impossible to achieve in
society, and maintaining harmony always hinders the realization of personal ideals.
One such assumption made by Ruhlsian—in fact, almost all political philosophers—is
that an ideal society is a single political unit and should be managed by a single
central government.

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