Authors & Books
Gunter Münzberg
Gunter Münzberg was born in 1941 to German parents in Rumburg in the Czech part of the Sudetenland. He grew up in the Upper Palatinate and Stuttgart, and graduated from high school in Stuttgart-Zuffenhausen in 1961. He studied electrical engineering, graduated in communications engineering, started his career as a laboratory engineer in a global telecommunications company, was assistant to the sales manager and promoted to management as export manager. He occupied various positions in sales and management of other companies. He has worldwide experience in the fields of measurement and control technology, drive technology, magnet technology, sensor technology and process engineering. Gunter Münzberg is married, has one daughter, one son. From 1963 to 2000 he was a member of the Freemasons' Association in a leading position. In 2007 he retired, but then studied physics in Tübingen, specializing in astrophysics, relativity, quantum mechanics, atomic and particle physics, thermodynamics and hydrodynamics.
Liberty, the …
The World View of the early 21st Century – An Essay
- Hardcover
- 200 pages
978-3-86638-230-5
Freedom in thinking, freedom in action, freedom in shaping one's own life plan is the highest good of a human being. This freedom has gone missing to us.
People have given up their freedom when they assigned secular rulers and religious leaders to take responsibility for them. Giving up responsibility to a fictitious god of their own invention also massively restricted people's freedom. Now we want back the freedom that was lost to us; but for that we have to take back the surrendered responsibility for ourselves, for society, for the entire living system of Earth. The call for freedom resounded unmistakably in Europe, respectively in the western oriented world, with the age of enlightenment. Enlightenment implies access to knowledge for all; gender and skin color are no limitations. It implies change and progress and is a permanent process without limitation, without an ending. Democratic coexistence, a society in which equal justice applies to all, is its basis. A turnaround towards freedom for all requires a fundamental correction of our old world view, which is no longer valid anyway - and the takeover of responsibility by all for themselves and for all. - The 10 chapters of this book want to lead to this.