Lecture 5 - "Gross National Happiness" | CBC Radio - Action News
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Ideas

Lecture 5 - "Gross National Happiness"

The Bhutanese have a principle of "Gross National Happiness" that places serious value on the harmonious well-being of people: it's a social good that's maybe even more important than economic growth. Three principles -- generosity, ethical behaviour, and tolerance -- drive the idea, which drives their concept of the good society.

The 2014 CBC Massey Lectures by Adrienne Clarkson

This lecture originally airedon CBC Radio One on November 14, 2014.

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"What is the paradox of citizenship? It is that we are most fully human, most truly ourselves, most authenticallyindividual, when we commit to the community. It is in the mirror of our communitythe street, the neighbourhood, the town, the country that we find our best selves. We've been on a long journey through some of the history of the idea of the citizen, and what a story it is. It evokes an idea of what it is to live together, and the sometimes meandering path that idea has taken as it finds its way to us, today, in Canada."

AdrienneClarkson

The Bhutanese have a principle of "Gross National Happiness" that places serious value on the harmonious well-being of people: it's a social good that's maybe even more important than economic growth. Three principles generosity, ethical behaviour, and tolerance drive the idea, which drives their concept of the good society. Happiness is related to your sense of yourself, and to knowing your place in society: to be fully an individual is to be fully living in society each shapes the other. It's the paradox of citizenship.


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