ABSTRACT

The pressure of physical needs, the fear of their masters, and the desire for protection create conditions of servitude for the people. However, in the fixed relationship between the people and the leadership class, neither is more important than the other; they are indispensable to each other's existence and function. In order to give realistic consideration to ways of attaining the dignity of life for people everywhere, it is necessary to consider not only the complex pattern of leadership identity but the whole of human society. True progress should be measured in terms of the people rather than the leadership group or the middle class. Nothing is likely to affect the welfare of Mankind more profoundly or more lastingly than what is or is not done for all of the people. Notwithstanding many noble attempts through the ages, man has never solved the dilemma of the people because he has never approached the problem in terms of Mankind.