I have watched a remarkable TED talk and I wanted to share it with you. The speaker, Hans Rpsling, is a Swedish MD. He visits India as a guest student during his university education and he experiences a great revelation about the East. In Sweden he is one of the top students in his class, yet in India he sees that most Indian students are better then him. Then he starts to question why Asia is so backward compared to Europe despite they are very hard working and good at what they do.
He comes with very good answers, about why both China and India stayed backwards at the civlization race and why they have started to catch up after 1950's? Could India and China have both stayed back because of the same reasons?
As I see it, the problems between China and India can easily be solved and they seem very superficial. I think both nations are in a great position to understand eachother and make emptahy because they have experienced very similar experiences, tragedies, struggles throughout the last century. If one can understand another, then all the problems may be solved, unless they are existential. And I don't see any existential problems between India and China. I mean in the past both civilizations were so close to eachother that they actually share the same philosophical and theological substructure.
A little spoiler; to ones who watch the videos should notice that despite Kerala being much more poorer than Washington DC, life expectancy and general health in Kerala is much higher.
You can check the TED talks below :
He comes with very good answers, about why both China and India stayed backwards at the civlization race and why they have started to catch up after 1950's? Could India and China have both stayed back because of the same reasons?
As I see it, the problems between China and India can easily be solved and they seem very superficial. I think both nations are in a great position to understand eachother and make emptahy because they have experienced very similar experiences, tragedies, struggles throughout the last century. If one can understand another, then all the problems may be solved, unless they are existential. And I don't see any existential problems between India and China. I mean in the past both civilizations were so close to eachother that they actually share the same philosophical and theological substructure.
A little spoiler; to ones who watch the videos should notice that despite Kerala being much more poorer than Washington DC, life expectancy and general health in Kerala is much higher.
You can check the TED talks below :