continue for a certain length of time to develop positively. The reasons for this are the newly opened markets of Eastern Europe, Russia and South East Asia in particular. Countries which had until now been culturally and politically isolated are now attractive to foreign investors. Care will have to be taken that this growth does not give rise to further "economic turbulence". For reasons of cheap labour in the East many manufacturers in Western Europe and America are turning towards Asia. In 1995 this caused much unrest amongst the German trade unions and was one of the main factors for concern voiced at the congress of German Social Democrats in Manheim in autumn of the same year. There is no doubt that with the democratic development of China and the smaller dragons within South Eastern Asia and with the opening of the Eastern European and Russian markets world economic structures will undergo significant changes. I am almost convinced that many governmental and private structures will not be able to resist the temptation and will answer the primitive instincts of competition and profit. This will have two consequences with serious repercussions in the near future. The first is that the world economic structures which have existed up to now will have to undergo significant changes. Secondly, there will be an increased danger of uncontrollable economic shocks. Jacques Atalie in his marvellous book "The Millennium" recalls that the Dutch cities which contributed so much to modern civilisation in the 15th and 16th centuries declined because of the temptation to spend more than they earned and to accumulate more debts than they could bear. Is this not, however, the illness of all modern governments, from the USA to Europe, Russia and Japan and the horrific debt problems of Brasil, Argentina and Mexico? Is this not a warning of the potential collapse of the entire financial system or at least of its entire lack of correspondence to modern day needs? Of course, these debts and the mountains of bad debts are not distributed evenly between all states. The USA and France face huge problems, Germany and Japan much less and least of all, and practically non-existent - such countries as China, Indonesia and Southern Korea whose economies are at the beginning of an undoubted period of ascendency. This divergence in the positions of countries and nations in the context of global economic transformations will alter their place and their role in the world economy. The whole of the 21st century will be a time of economic levelling if, of course, the world turns its back on the old order and successfully enters the new civilisation. This process of levelling-out will at the same time be in conflict with cultural and industrial traditions, differences in social welfare, macro-economic criteria and standards etc.. The fundamental elements of the plan put forward by the French Prime Minister, Alain Jupe, in the autumn of 1995 were targetted at France joining the European Monetary Union and reaching a position level with the other European states. We can all remember the huge reaction and the large-scale protests in responce to the threat of losing social benefits and privileges. Such shocks will be caused with every integration and this is one of the most fundamental elements of global economic reform. Large scale structural reforms will take place with the implementation of the common European currency. The difficulties related to the integration into the EU of Eastern European countries will be even more difficult. The integration of Russia will be slow and painful and even more so in the case of the poorly developed Asian and African states. However, there is no reasonable alternative. The processes of integration will continue to developed and will lead eventually to a large-scale global renewal. For this reason, in my opinion, the change in the economic roles of the various countries and nations, the globalisation of financial and commodities markets, the opening of millions of niche markets in Eastern Europe and Asia, the inadequacy of the world financial system, the mountain of debts and the re-solution of economic imbalance must be considered as the collapse of the old and the beginning of the new economic order. It has taken many nations five hundred years to establish their national economies. Today they are becoming integrated and this in its wake will bring about the enormous integration of labour, knowledge and abilities. 4. THE NEW MASTERS OF THE WORLD The globalisation of the world has lead to the appearance of new groups of leaders whose influence and power is many times greater than that of the majority of politicians. They are not always well-known but they control a huge portion of the world economy and finances, the global media and communications and their power is not subject to any serious regulation. E very day billions of television viewers watch the leading world news stories. Almost every day somewhere in the world there are elections or other important political events. The politicians are presented or present themselves as the most important decision makers. This was the case in the 20th century. With the demise of many monarchies politicians have become the heroes and the undisputed leaders of the world. Is this still really the case today? Yes, but only superficially. Since with the consolidation of the global world, the opening-up of societies and the embracing of the international market there are new territories for world domination. Someone had to come in to take control of international, economic, cultural and media business. Someone who would not be limited by national boundaries and who had to have enough money. These were the global businessmen. At the beginning of the century, the trans-national businessmen were mainly colonisers. Today they are legally in control of 80% of world trade, about the same amount of technology and about 1/3 of world manufacturing. The number and the influence of the transnational corporations is constantly on the increase. Their leaders account for the major part of the new economic elite of the world whose power is now unequalled. Who can predict in what part of the world it is most profitable to manufacture a certain type of item? Who can invest enormous sums into science and technology in the aims of breaking into a market? Who can transfer billions of dollars from one end of the world to the other in a matter of hours? Only they can - the newly emerging leaders of the modern world. Almost no-one stands above the international business leaders. They control international technological and information exchange. They own the majority of the satellites used for relaying television programmes. They also own the global information and television networks. What is more important, the leaders of the trans-national corporations are constantly expanding their power. Now they want free, open markets, the removal of all state limitations and the implementation of neo-liberal policies. On the other hand the world economic leaders want more dialogue with each other. How can they devide their spheres of influence? Where will they direct their investment resources? Where and what markets and what to aim for? The common objective uniting these new leaders is the removal of all state barriers to their eventual domination of the world. If they persist at their present rate to expand the international and industrial corporations within 20-30 years they will have succeeded in dominating practically the entire area of international trade, and they will have achieved a monopoly of world communications and distribution of technology. Ted Turner and CNN, Rupert Murdoch and his media empire and even the smaller press magnates such as M.Ringer in Switzerland today have much greater influence over people than the presidents of the majority of countries in the world. While in the context of individual national states it is possible to speak of anti-monopoly legislation, in international business "everything is permitted". If things continue to develop as they have been doing up to now, within 15-20 years we will be faced with extremely complex problems. The media are little concerned with the new leaders of the world. Only a handful of the great financial players find their way into the television studios: owners of banks and financial companies who control the movements of tens or hundreds of billions of dollars. Quietly but unerringly they are creating a power, more powerful than any government and which creates its own rules of its own game. The leaders of the world financial capital can influence exchange rates and pour in funds from all corners of the earth. Very often they are so influential in world economics that they can compel national governments, including the great powers, to play along with them and take the relevant decisions. This is so incongruous! These new integrational economic structures appear completely to lack any form of political regulation or at the best have only some sort of political facade. This is one of the reasons why global relations have been so undeviatingly infiltrated by the mafia with enormous sums of money from drugs, prostitution, currency speculation and so on. This is also why the citizens of the world are becoming more and more dependent on the transnational economic elite, rather than the politicians they have elected. If rules are not brought into this international game, if the world does not establish institutions for their regulation and control, if policies towards the poorly developed nations are not changed, then very soon the world financial elite will begin to rule world development alone. This is the greatest contradiction used by the hidden leaders - while economic and cultural life is becoming more and more internationalised and globalised, governments are remaining nationally limited. People see them as weak and helpless in the face of events. I am far from the thought that the leaders of the world corporations are bad people or that they ought to be proclaimed enemies and proponents of imperialism. The world cannot develop without them but if things remain as they are, the positive role of the transnational companies as the driving force in the world might be undermined. When I speak of chaos and disorder and the unsatisfactory regulation of the world, I mean categorically the inadequacy of the international economic infrastructure and the lack of of sufficient international political and legal regulatory bodies. Such a situation hides many dangers for humanity: unregulated financial operations, unregulated monopolisation, international mafia, the danger of periodical crises. What is more important: the greater the share of transnational companies in world production the more countries will open up to one another, the longer there is an absence of global rules to the game, the greater will be the danger of an increase in serious crises. 5 THE MARCH OF THE POOR During the blazing summer of the 1985 in Hungary, a tanker lorry was stopped on a motorway. The tanker was filled with the corpses of Asians travelling secretly to Western Europe. They had died of suffocation and heat exhaustion in their flight from poverty to salvation. Every year millions of citizens from the poorly developed countries set their sights on the rich countries of the West, using all possible legal and illegal means. Their march continues... T he politicians and their supporters in the most developed nations of the world can recline in complete, blissful peace. They have complete information on the condition of the poor, but they have neither experienced their problems, not demonstrate any particular desire to help them. It is difficult, very difficult, when you live in Zurich, Cannes, Barcelona or Salzburg to believe that at the moment when you are giving a piece of meat to your dog, somewhere in the world tens of thousands of children are suffering from hunger and illnesses connected with hunger. One of my friends, a member of the French parliament, told me recently, "There has always been inequality between nations and humanity is used to it." I do not agree. Despite the eternal inequalities between the developed and underdeveloped, during the past 20 or 30 years something has taken place which has radically changed and will continually the position of the under-developed nations. Thanks to world media and, in particular, to television for the first time they have become aware of how really poor they are. 20 or 30 or even 50 years ago the citizens of India, Bangladesh, Congo or Ruanda were really unaware of the huge difference in the living standards between their countries and the most developed nations of the world. If they did know, this was not common knowledge. The situation was more or less similar in Eastern Europe and Russia where poverty and the reaction of the poor led to the acceptance of social utopias and their elevation into official state religions. Globalisation brings peoples closer but also gives rise to new concerns about inequalities. Via the medium of television and other means of communication, people around the whole world have become aware of the enormous differences in ways of life and the enormous injustices existing in the world. This is a new phenomenon and if it persist then it will give rise to a wave of reactions from the poorer nations. New means of communications unite us, make us look at the world as a global village, but this openness runs the risk of creating new conflicts arising from imbalance. The largest and most compact populations of poor people (according to the criteria of the UN on poverty) exist in Southern Asia - about 550 million people. 130-140 million poor people live in Eastern Asia and no fewer than 220-230 million in the Middle East and North Africa. About 260 million live in sub-Saharan Africa and about 100 million in Latin America. In addition, there are about 200 million poor people in the industrialised countries. The gap between the rich and the poor is dismaying. The twenty richest nations in the world produce a GNP per head of population of between 16,600 (Australia) and 33,500 (Switzerland) USD. The twenty poorest nations, according to the same criteria, vary between 72 USD (Mozambique) and 261 (Ruanda)[26]. This enormous difference cannot be resolved using conventional methods. Nevertheless, if we are to take the market and international corporation as the only means of salvation, this would mean that the technological, financial and social gap between the poor and the rich countries would become even wider. This has been seen in the last 30-40 years. Even now the gap between the poor and the rich countries and people is self-perpetuating. This is one of the most convincing signs of the crisis of modern world structures. Humanity undoubtedly is to blame for such a state in Mozambique, Tanzania, Bangladesh, Laos, Vietnam, Ethiopia and other less developed countries. They were all until recently former colonies of the most developed nations and many of their priceless historical and cultural artifacts can be seen in museums and private collections in Paris, London, New York and Geneva. They have all experienced bitter armed struggles and periods of instability. Measures taken by the UN and other world organisations to assist the poor have been mainly cosmetic. If these trends persist and if liberal market illusions are not substituted with something else, then the hidden dangers may become apparent for all to see. In the most general terms I refer to this danger as the march of the poor. One of the most significant manifestations of this condition is the migration of the poor to the larger towns. Tens of millions of people in Asia, Africa and South America have left their places of birth to migrate to the cities, transforming what until were recently small towns into megapolises consisting of shanty towns and primitive suburbs with multi-million populations. Despite the efforts of the national governments this process continues. It has transformed Mexico city, Rio de Janeiro, Calcutta, Bombay and tens of other cities into places with an enormous, unmanageable poor population. The poor come to the large cities in search of food, work and a chance for their children. Perhaps, the most important reason for this is the desire to reap the benefits of the familiar values of civilisation. The images on the television screen and mass advertising campaigns are the most powerful of all magnets, compelling the poor to flee from their traditional way of life. In all corners of the world where poverty is a typical phenomenon, this process is continuing. This is particularly the case in those places where there is no private land ownership or where land ownership does not bring satisfaction of sufficient economic results. The second logical consequence of the march of the poor is emigration to the most developed countries of the world. In recent decades the 25 most developed nations have been the object of mass immigration for foreigners. They enter their "Eldorado" with the help of relatives, false documents, locked in goods containers and lorries. The liberal dream of the open society will result in the increase of the flow of the poor looking for work and peace of mind in the rich countries. In this way the liberalism of openness will backfire. Given the present world economic order the richest countries will have to create stronger barriers to emigration and to build new Iron, Stone and Wooden curtains between their countries and the rest of the world. I do not want to be a prophet of doom but such divisions would drag humanity into a dangerous dimension for human development. Forecasts show that the situation in the European community will become particulary complex. At the moment in Germany there are about 4.4 million immigrants, in France - 2.4, in Great Britain - 1.2 and in Holland about 0.6. In the EU in total there are over 10 million immigrants. According to some calculations if the flow of immigrants is not limited within the next 5-7 years this number could double. This march of the poor could have explosive consequences in the developed countries and at the same time result in a "brain drain" from the poorer, limiting their chances of improving the standard of living. There is also the danger of the rich western countries reacting by closing their borders and isolating themselves. According to the agreement reached in Schengen which limited the possibilities of many nations to travel within Western Europe there has been a stream of reactions and disappointment which is difficult to describe. Many Eastern Europeans are convinced that they have been deceived by the West and that the Berlin Wall has been reconstructed by western politicians. The pressure for free access to the rich West will continue and no administrative barriers appear to be able to stop it. When speaking of the march of the poor, I also have in mind their growing tendency towards self-protection and resistance. I am quite sure that if they do not receive the opportunity to make changes the poor of the world will unite in search of a new universal ideology. The same reasons which led to the October revolution in Russia and transformed communism into the greatest utopia of the 20th century might also create new or re-create old social views. Poverty has always given birth and will continue to give birth to utopian views and dreams of a rapid leap into wealth. The great leap promised by Mao Tse Tung, the promises made by Khrushchev about the communist paradise and even Hitler's Third Reich were part of the illusory belief in the supernatural force of power, human will and violence. The 20th century was a time of competing utopias. In the new era it will be much more difficult to achieve similar unity simply because of the influence of the mass media and economic dependence. However, these means of indirect control might themselves be powerless. It is unlikely that the poor will look back to communism. It is more likely that they will look for salvation in nationalism and in particular in religious fundamentalism and new totalitarian doctrines. The great danger for the world in the post-cold-war period may come from the combination of economic problems and the struggle for cultural survival. If the present world economic order is preserved, in the next 10-15 years we shall undergo a series of strong economic and social shocks which will come from the poorer regions. They may take the form of local wars, the political influence of fundamentalist unions, protest movements of immigrants in the industrial countries etc.. The other side of the coin is a possible xenophobic reaction. Xenophobia in the richest nations and fundamentalism in the poorer are the two extremes, two major products of the emerging crisis. They are the catalysts for other conflicts between cultures and religions and between the ethnic groups in search of a unifying force. Many researchers believe xenophobia a transitional stage. I, however, believe that it will periodically re-occur in direct connection with the level of cultural conflicts within the open world. Those who are aware of their poverty will aspire to overcome their problems and to identify their own fate with common ideas, common religions or new idols and leaders. Today the situation is still transitional. The poor are desperate rather than unified in a common awareness, but this will change. The reaction of the poor contributed to the success of the Islamic fundamentalists in Algeria, the high level of support for the fundamentalist party in Turkey at the local elections in 1994 and the parliamentary elections in 1996 and to the consolidation of the regime of the Ayatollahs in Iran. The march of the poor is a fact and a product simultaneously of globalisation and the world order which is still inadequate to meet its demands. If we accept liberal ideas as sufficient in modern times, this will lead to a new division of the world, to the appearance of new leaders as well as Utopias offering protection to the poor of the world. The way in which we can avoid such a potential outcome lies in world integration, in the establishment of a new world political and economic order and an entirely new kind of global society. This is the task which faces us, which faces the new generation of politicians above all in the industrialised countries. Such a task cannot be resolved at summit meetings, like the one in Copenhagen in March 1995. It is not general discussion or promises of new charity but profound structural reforms in the world economy which will help to resolve the problems. This includes specific programmes for the stimulation of investments in the least developed nations, an increase in the role of the UN and the restructuring of the activities of the IMF and the World Bank etc.. Fundamentalism and terrorism, the danger of reestablishing opposition between political blocs, the appearance of new utopias are all dangers which express the crisis of the transition to a new world. No-one will be spared: not the Europeans bathed in the luxury of social welfare, nor the dynamic USA, nor the over-ambitious Japanese. Realisation of poverty is one of the most important phenomena which the opening of the world and new communications has caused. It may lead to more and more violent reactions, alienation and a hatred for the rich countries and their elites. Did anyone believe that we would become witness to such senseless acts of terrorism as the bomb attack in Oklahama city or the Tokyo Metro in 1995. The bomb attacks in Paris and Lyons carried out by unknown extremists caused grave concern throughout Europe. These will hardly be the last. This is how it was in past civilisations when different cultures and different levels of wealth clashed. The other possibility is a rapid and coordinated change in the world economic order. The most developed nations and their governments will have to make a choice between global concern and responsibility or growing instability for all. 6. A NUMBER OF PESSIMISTIC SCENARIOS Periods of transition in human development resemble a tunnel with a number of exits. You can take the most direct route to thelight or enter a side tunnel with a dead-end and fluster around in the dark, turn around and return to where you started from. T his book is not meant to be either optimistic or pessimistic. It does not make categorical forecasts but outlines the possibilities. For the world in which we are living, this approach is particularly important. Our world is in a state of transition between two epochs and is instable.The question is which direction will modern humanity take? Summing up the conclusions to this chapter, I believe that the dangers which I have mentioned can be grouped into three pessimistic scenarios. I refer to the first of them as the scenario of "long-term indeterminacy", or perhaps the scenario of "continuing chaos". This would be an extended 20 or 30 year period (perhaps even longer) of geo-political instability and attempts to expand the positions of the great political powers. France and Germany would want to establish for themselves a leading role in Europe, independent of the USA and Russia. The Euro-Atlantic partnership, the keystone of world politics in the last 50 years might be threatened. Russia, threatened with the possibilities of becoming isolated as a result of the expansion of NATO might look to the East to form alliances. Very soon China might begin to have global ambitions and Japan will turn its economic power into political ambitions. Given this scenario the transitional companies will be compelled to play a greater "national patriotic" role rather than the role of a globalising force. Perhaps, you do not believe that this is possible. Take a look at Bosnia, crippled children, dead and wounded civilians and raped women. Why did the USA support the Muslims, Germany the Croats and Russia the Serbs? Why at the end of the 20th century can we not put a stop to a senseless letting of blood. Was it differences between three ethnic groups in this long-suffering country which lead to the differences between the great powers or was it the other way around? There will be a constant series of conflicts on the periphery of the entire post-Soviet system, in the border regions between Islam and Christianity and in the regions of great poverty. Let us hope that they will not be as bloody. The greatest danger in this scenario is the wave of national, regional, cultural and religious egoism which it contains. The "period of long-term indeterminacy" will not end before the advent of the 21st century. This period might also be called a time of "chaotic policentralism". Where there will not be a single super power. There will be no clear international political or financial order. We will be witness to a slow, contradictory and conflicting accumulation of aspirations, roles and egoisms and of the grudging recognition of the rights of others. In the 1970's and 1980's a number of American politicians declared almost half of the planet a zone of vital American interests. Today this is being done by a number of Russian, Greek, Turkish, French and even Japanese politicians. The problem is that in the majority of cases these zones coincide or overlap. The Balkans is a typical example of an area which Europeans, Americans and Russians consider an important region for their interests. Chaotic policentralism is a state in which there are many centres of power, but the poles of power change as a result of conflict. This disorder existed at the beginning of the Second Civilisation albeit in different historical conditions. Unfortunately, global thinking is at such a low level that the danger of conflict cannot be avoided. This scenario will be dominated by local conflicts. International crime will flourish and there will be an increase in the wealth of a small group of international rulers. My second pessimistic scenario could be called "Back to the bi-polar world". In actual fact we are still partially in it. Psychologically a large number of politicians, senior figures in the armies and security forces, retired officers and a number of others still live in the bi-polar world. Older people whose whole lives have been connected with the struggle against the class enemy (communism or American imperialism) dream of a return to the period of strong-arm politics. There are those in the East who consider Gorbachev a traitor or an agent of the CIA and dream of the restoration of the Warsaw Pact and the super power status of Russia. In the West there are others who advocate the idea of a single world super power in the USA and the transformation of NATO into a dominant world military force and the casting out of Russia and China into the back-yard of international relations. It would be very easy for these people and their ideas to become dominant in world politics: for example, the conflict in Bosnia and the bombing of Serbian targets in September 1995; or the results of the parliamentary elections in Russia in the same year and the presidential elections in 1996. Despite perestroika and other great changes and despite changes of attitude towards Russia, the trust which exists between politicians in the East and West is still extremely fragile. It is quite possible that the "bi-polar" model of the world could be restored as a consequence of the conflicts for the fate of Eastern Europe. On the one hand, Russia wants to preserve its influence in this region, not to be isolated from Europe and to have guarantees for its future. On the other hand, in the West there is an increase in the influence of those who desire the expansion of NATO to the borders of Russia. The Eastern European countries themselves, with the only possible exception of the socialist government in Bulgaria, want to enter NATO and to guarantee its security and existence within Europe. In this event, every incautious step, each hasty move without considering the global consequences could turn the clock back centuries and extend the life of the Third Civilisation artificially. It is a complete illusion to consider Russia a weak country, engrossed in its own problems. An influential American state department official told me in 1994 that "now Russia is weak, this is best time to teach it where it belongs". I replied that such an idea was imprudent and belonged to the vocabulary of cold-war talk. Russia possesses a huge military might and huge resources. And such a suggestion would be sufficient for confrontation to reassert itself. Whether it is caused by nationalist forces within Russia or naive politicians in Western Europe, isolation of Russia, in my opinion, does not have any long-term prospects and hides great dangers. The question of "whither Eastern Europe?": whether it should enter the structures of NATO or not, hides a potential danger for the restoration of the bi-polar world. However, this will not resolve the matter of the proportionality of world forces. I believe that if Russia is alienated from the European processes and in particular from mainstream world politics, it will seek its revenge in Eastern Europe, the Balkans in particular, and in Asia. The new Eastern bloc may include Russia, its former Asian republics and China which very soon will be in a position to increase its world political role. The fact that a new bi-polar world will be based on a new combination of states will not alter its inadequacies. Such a scenario would only slow down the processes of world integration, exacerbate the universal crisis of the Third Civilisation and cause unhappiness for hundreds of millions of people. It would also result in a new spiral of armaments, new ecological dramas and new even greater poverty for Africans and Asians. The third pessimistic scenario is the "revolution scenario". This is the least likely of the three, but should not be ignored. It is a revolution of the poor, socially deprived nations and states, who have gained access to powerful strategic weapons and nuclear weapons. Another variation on this scenario is that put forward by the American researcher Samuel Huntington, that the 21st century will be a century of wars between civilisations. I shall later reject his theory since I believe that he is mistaken about the common future of mankind. However, as a scenario for the transition from one civilisation to another, as a temporary or local delay to the processes of global reform over a period of about 20 or 30 years, this is entirely possible. In each of these three "pessimistic" scenarios I can see the possibility of an increase in terrorism and individual or group uprisings of isolated and deprived peoples. The danger is that these uprisings might find support and unifying influences within Islam, fundamentalist regimes or new utopian doctrines. There is also the real possibility that these three scenarios might appear in combination. None of them can contribute anything positive to mankind. One should not forget that it was the idiotic ambitions of dictators and global messiahs in the 20th century which killed hundreds of millions of lives. There is a way of avoiding these pessimistic solutions but it cannot be achieved by conventional means. The traditional solutions with which we are familiar from recent decades will not help. The big question is whether we are going back to the Third civilisation of forward to a new civilisation? Back to the restoration of old contradictions or forwards to their resolution and the formation of new global structures. It will in no way be easy to change the stereotypes of thought and to break the mould of the bi-polar world, protective nationalism and all the theories and doctrines which supported and continue to support the waning Third human civilisation. If the new communication systems and world corporations are the bridge to new forms of imperialism, this will undoubtedly create a new wave of protective nationalism and regional egoism based on ethnic or economic factors. This will consequently lead to the danger of new conflicts and struggles typical of the 20th century - the century of violent, uncomprehended and savage globalisation, the century of imperialism and world wars. Section two The Fourth Civilisation Chapter Four THEORY IN THE TIME OF CRISIS 1. FOREWARNING OF THE END OF TWO THEORETICAL CONCEPTS Every change of epoch is a change of views of the world. The Third civilisation not only gave birth to but was also served by theories which are rapidly becoming a thing of the past. Today it is clear to all of us that the changes which are taking place in the world can not be explained by traditional doctrines. The crisis is evident... T he 19th and 20th centuries were a time of intellectual supremacy of certain theoretical concepts and their numerous variations and metamorphoses. One of them conquered the minds of the activists of the French revolution, became enshrined in the American constitution and filled the hearts of several generations of world intellectuals. The 19th century was the century of liberalism. Its ideas still form the dream of the free and the wealthy. The second was the theoretical system of Marxism which appeared as the defender of the deprived and the poor and was a chance of hope for those who had no property or education. Or course, the 19th and the 20th centuries did not belong solely to these two doctrines. The 19th century in varying countries and at varying times was dominated by restorationism, enlightened absolutism, conservatism or just reactionary monarchism. On the border between the two centuries a period of belligerent nationalism and imperialism broke out. The period between the two world wars saw the strong development of radical ideologies - communism and fascism and a whole range of statist and semi-statist doctrines. After the Second World War ideas of the social state (L.Erchard) and the mixed economy (P.Samuelson) and the national democratic state (Khrushchev) became popular. At the same time Marxism as the ideological basis of communism, state socialism and liberalism as the banner of individual freedoms and capitalism became the two most powerful driving forces in the world and survived right up to the present day. Even the "softening" of their ideological systems as a result of "democratic socialism" and "state capitalism" or their "hardening" in the forms of communism or fascism did not reduce their significance as the fundamental ideologies of the Third Civilisation. Perhaps, I should mention here why I have not included another important ideological movement - that of conservatism. The conservatives have always made a cult out of their loyalty to the traditional structures of life. The conservative values of "hierarchy, order, authority and loyalty" have not stood up to the test of time and new realities. Communism and fascism appear to have been conclusively rejected. Monarchism is only viable as a cultural tradition. Radical and revolutionary theories have lost their power. Of the old political doctrines, only liberalism and Marxism in its totalitarian version managed to retain any of their power, at least until the end of the 1980's. To what extent, however, can they benefit from the transition between epochs? Do they answer the needs of the new global realities? Is it sufficient to say, that liberalism has become a dominant and eternal global theory, or that Marxism has been reborn in the form of democratic socialism? Let us look at the first of these. The ideas of liberalism have a long history going back to the awakening of civil societies, private ownership and the rights of man. This is its huge historical significance. Hobbs, Spinosa and Locke in different ways contributed to the creation of liberal ideas. The geniuses of the Enlightenment gave it a more systematic form and value system. However, the driving force behind the development of liberalism was Adam Smith. He saw the state and state control as the main obstacles to the development of the society in which we live. He was in favour of the free movement of the work force, the abolition of semi-feudal remnants and the regulation of industry and foreign trade. He was in favour of the complete removal of all limitations on trade with land and goods. A.Smith, D.Riccardo and A.Ferguson as well as all their followers advocated the limitation of the role of the state to the functions of a "night watchman" whose job it is to safeguard the freedom of the owners of property and the means of production. "Anarchy plus a constable, freedom