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You are here: Home / history / Gandhi’s Seven Blunders Of The World

Gandhi’s Seven Blunders Of The World

April 19, 2012 by hubs Leave a Comment

I recently posted about the Nine Satanic Sins so I suppose it is only proper to post about Gandhi’s Seven Blunders Of The World.

Gandhi’s Seven dangers to human virtue is a list that Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi gave to his grandson Arun Gandhi, written on a piece of paper, on their final day together, shortly before his assassination. Gandhi suggested it was from these blunders springs the “passive violence” that plagues the world. The list consists of:

  • Wealth without work.
  • Pleasure without conscience.
  • Knowledge without character.
  • Commerce without morality.
  • Science without humanity.
  • Worship without sacrifice.
  • Politics without principle.
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Filed Under: history, lists, philosophy/religion, politics Tagged With: Gandhi, history, list, philosophy/religion, politics, religion, violence

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