The biosophic view of the world considerably changes the position of man in nature because it reaffirms the thesis that we are nature's symbiotic beings, that we therefore have to harmonise ourselves with the environment (nature) and not brutally change it according to our ideas. Man as a symbiotic being has all the evolutional capacities of adaptation instead of trying to objectivise nature (and through this also himself) to the level of perfection with the unreasonable and risky use of technoscience. In the biological nature of man there is a characteristic that with his technology and culture he creates his life and the society in which he lives. The emphasis is on his culture. The biosophic paradigm promotes the cultural switch to a new civilisation. Cultural evolution and spiritual emancipation concern new approaches in all the fields of his activity, from politics (the new local democracy), the economy (the abolition of market anarchy), human rights (the precedence of public interest over private interest), science (the relativisation of reductionism and positivism), medicine (biosophic prevention in health care), education (forming an integral personality), through to the social sciences in which there is primarily an emphasis on the cultural autonomy of local communities and spiritual affirmation of man as a symbiotic being in the broadest sense.
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