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Where the Christian Science Monitor appears to have failed, a much broader movement that operates on the universal scale, has begun to score some advances in perception. At present the advanced work in this arena is carried out by the American statesman and economist, Lyndon H. LaRouche Jr. and his organization of pioneers in this field. To the best of the authors' knowledge, there exists no other scientific movement on the planet that has carried the torch for the development of humanity for a longer period of time, with greater dedication, and with more astonishing success, than this small organization of pioneers. It is no coincident, therefore, that their achievements were wrought in the same arena that Mary Baker Eddy had, according to all evidence, judged to be of the most crucial importance. Both strife towards the goal to raise in public thought an awareness of the infinite nature of man as created in the image of God, the Creator. Both acknowledge the necessary reflection of this image in the creative application of the genius of man in public policy for the development of civilization. It may be deduced from this, by observing the course of this pioneering movement in the small, that its growth, on the grass roots level, will encircle the globe once society makes up for its missed development and finds itself in the universality of the truth.
The work that Mary Baker Eddy had outlined up a hundred years ago is finally in the beginning stages of being carried out. It is carried out by a broad range of publications*( The Executive Intelligence Review magazine, The New Federalist newspaper, the Fidelio magazine of the Schiller Institute, and 21th Century Science and Technology magazine) each of which is uniquely focused on specific aspects of human development. Together, perhaps not knowingly so, they carry the torch that Mary Baker Eddy had lit a hundred years ago. Nor is it surprising that the modern pioneers embrace the broad range of aspects that were addressed by Mary Baker Eddy within the outline of her scientific development structure. It is for this reason that much of the politically oriented research material for this book series was drawn from publications of the Lyndon LaRouche organization whose goal it is to rouse the dormant understanding of humanity to the apprehension of scientific and spiritual ideas, and to elevate civilization.
The book is designed to bring together the background of two great pioneers that follow the same course, in the same arena, although from vastly different standpoints. Indeed, it is a fact of Science that wherever in the world there is an honest endeavor in progress in the search for the truth, an underlying universal coincidence must unfold, because there is but one Truth. Truth is universal. At this point, all mankind must ultimately unite out of necessity, as people discover the nature of reality. It appears, this process has begun in no small way, and is fast moving ahead.
This is natural progress, for humanity is one. On this higher platform of expanding perception humanity is save, nor can anything truly significant be achieved on any lesser platform. It is impossible, for instance, from a scientific standpoint, for a society or government to support its nation without also supporting the rights of all people, of all nations, manifest in justice, in development, in freedom from disease, and in advances that manifest the infinite dignity of man, "clothed with the sun!" This truth-bound awareness is beginning to take hold.
Evidently, it was the overriding need for bringing mankind and its Science into a cohesive unity that had caused Mary Baker Eddy to devote such great personal attention and effort to establish the Christian Science Monitor. In the specific sense the Monitor may have failed, but in its real mission, apparently it has not failed. It appears that even unsupported by its founder's tallest achievement, the integrity of the Monitor has leavened the world scene. The goal of this book is to advance the process that has now begun to unfold on a very broad front.
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