ow otherwise is to explain that communism, the greatest utopia of the 20th century was accepted by practically half of humanity? Or that the Germans, Italians, Spanish and Japanese believed in fascism? Ideological religions appeared on the historical scene as a result of the great cataclysms of the 19th and 20th centuries but above all as a result of the internationalisation of manufacturing forces and spiritual life. This internationalisation of manufacturing gave birth to the illusion that the world might be ordered on the lines of a ready-made political model on the basis of dogma imposed by a group of people. Utopias become transformed into mass credo only when the social conflicts and chaos have caused huge destruction. Historically, mass poverty and mass violence have always caused mass reactions which has prepared the ground for the appearance of coercive utopias. Ideological religions create different types of culture. In their extreme forms these ideologies have given rise to the cult of personality and the exaltation of leaders. Just as the ancient peoples prayed to Amon Ra, Zeuss or Tangra in the 20th century they prayed to Hitler, Stalin, Mao and Pol Pot. Of course, the cult of personality is not the only type of mass utopia. The ideological religions also created the cult of the system itself, the notion of the future, power and its structures. All this was the imposition of freedom of thought. In certain countries and certain peoples this type of mass awareness lead to accompanying forms of daily life, dress and behaviour humiliating man in favour to ideology. One of the most important consequences of the collapse of the Eastern European totalitarian regimes was the destruction of the totalitarian type of mass awareness. The collapse of the Berlin wall not only destroyed the communist utopia but also created the opportunities for the entire historical removal of ideological religions. Hitler, Stalin and Mao had aspirations of disseminating their utopian notions over the entire world. Fortunately this did not happen. The destruction of ideological religions did not mean the ideological and spiritual division of the world not the final removal of the danger of new coercive utopias. The removal of the iron curtain does still not mean the final end to global inequality, economic violence or the impossibility of the appearance of new ideological religions. IN order to put a stop to such a danger many things will have to change in this world. Global awareness is radically different from the ideological religions and the culture of the coercive utopia. It is developing as a result of the new communications and the natural technological progress of humanity. It is not a consequence of violence and coercion but of the modern technological and cultural revolution. Its origin has to be looked for in the intermixing of values and the criteria for the most advanced cultures of the world and in their constant enrichment. The intermixing of different cultural values leads to the formation of common thought processes with common foundations which have began to develop rapidly since the falling of the iron curtain. Global awareness is the common understanding of people for the common problems of the world which cannot be resolved by one or a single group of countries or by one or a group of peoples. This is the realisation of the interdependence of the world and that the tragedy of one individual people might lead to a tragedy for all. Global awareness is also a change in the hierarchy of human values and in the extent to which common human conflicts come to the fore. The enormous problems of pollution, the appearance of holes in the ozone layer, global warming, the destruction of the rain forests, AIDS, cancer and other mass illnesses of the 20th century, the dangers posed by nuclear energy and numerous other problems are occupying the thoughts of people around the world more and more and motivating their actions. Global awareness is reflected in the growing realisation of a larger part of humanity that only human rights, individual freedom, freedom of speech and the press and the gradual improvement in labour and living conditions around the world can guarantee the preservation of the human species. The most important thing is that in this way, gradually but undeviatingly the common criteria for good and evil, justice and injustice, progress and stagnation are being formed. This is the basic meaning of the new theoretical and ideological synthesis which has been mentioned in an earlier chapter. Global awareness is developing on the basis of the cultural images and standards of world significance and which do not belong to any one national cultural school. Education and science, information and the media, trade and finances, sport and tourism, food and daily life are a part of this growing awareness. Today over 90% of the adult population of the world receive information from more and more accessible and homogenous sources of culture. The universal heroes, the universal film stars, the universal sports idols are all symbols of one and the same phenomenon. Claudia Schiffer, Naomi Cambell and Cindy Crawford are the greatest models at the end of the 20th century because they are a reflection of the diversity of the ideal of beauty and universal aesthetic standards. The travelling peoples have taken their cuisine all over the world to Latin America, the USA, Russia and Africa. Pele was the world football idol and the death of the racing driver Aerton Senna was mourned all over the world. The reason is because we are becoming citizens of one global village about which each subsequent generation will know more than we do. Today, global awareness is still just a trend but a trend which is developing in the space of hours and minutes. The world corporations, the global culture, mixed marriages, the "travelling peoples", universal communications and values and common experiences are all an undisputed fact. However, the trend towards the formation of a universal global awareness is still at its very beginning. It has to cope with national and local prejudices, ethnic enmity as well as social and economic inequality. This trend towards the formation of the global awareness of humanity cannot be stopped. It will take a long time and will most probably reach its peak in the next century. 5. MULTICULTURE AND GLOBAL CULTURE Multiculture or the combination of global, mixed and local cultures is the main feature of the Fourth Civilisation. T he modern era was a time of cultural coercion. The violation, plundering and export of huge amounts of works of art to Europe and America was a symbol of colonialism. Fascism and Communism with their ideologies of unification destroyed many cultural traditions and opened the way to the violent imposition of monolithic cultural products. Imperialism in all its manifestations bore within itself the idea of unification and multiculture or, in other words, the domination of one culture and the transformation of others into museum exhibits. One only has to compare the ancient cultures of Benin and Nigeria and their artifacts exhibited in the British museum or the culture of Bukhara and Samarkand preserved in the vaults of the Hermitage in St.Petersburg with what has remained in the local museums. The 20th century was a century of colonialism and imperialism, a century of the greatest progress of humanity. It was at the same time a century of the greatest destruction and oppression. One can but hope that the New Civilisation will resolve the problems of cultural aggression. However, this will be conditional upon the removal of media imperialism as a threat to cultural imperialism. Only the future will tell whether the trends of imperialism and cultural monopolism associated with the outgoing civilisation or the global trends of the Fourth Civilisation will prevail. I personally believe that historical progress and the global changes in the world are taking us towards something different from cultural imperialism and the dominance of one culture over others. There is, however, absolutely no guarantee that we will turn the clock back. If the trend towards imperialism persists and is not modernised, if the media and cultural unification of the world takes place as a result of the cultural domination of a number of countries via the trans-national corporations then the forecasts of Samuel Huntington may very well come true. The 21st century will be a century of conflicts between cultures and civilisations and the slow and turbulent development of economic polycentrism and associated cultural structures. The cultural equivalent of economic polycentrism is multiculture. Multiculture is the combination of many different cultures and their intermixing and also the preservation and the development of international and supra-national relations. The preservation of the cultures of small and large nations will be preserved with the relevant legislation and economic conditions. Multiculture means the rejection of media and cultural imperialism. Together with economic and political polycentrism this is the next most important feature of the Fourth Civilisation. Integration causes either oppression or intermixing which is at the foundation of multiculture. It is this intermixing stimulated by economic growth will be the main cultural feature of the 21st century. The most obvious manifestation of this process is in the area of showbusiness, art and music, dance and the fine arts. The resolution of religious conflicts, however, will be more difficult. The formation of a global culture and the localisation of cultural ethnic communities will have determinate roles in both economic and political processes. Globalisation and autonomisation are already leading to the huge re-structuring of cultural communities. Everything I have mentioned in this chapter: the intermixing of cultures and global culture, the intermixing of ethnic groups and the "travelling peoples", the formation of global awareness are features of this process. There are, of course, no absolute or automatic processes. I am speaking only of a determining trend for the future. There will be processes and events which will lead us forward but there will also be retrograde influences. There will be a struggle for the establishment of new relations between civilisations and the temporary victories of the protectors of the past. The greatest task faced by the modern world is the removal of cultural imperialism, the intermixing of religions and cultures with mutual tolerance. The international media have great responsibility to avoid becoming the advocates of new forms of oppression. However, they could also become the proponents of a new spirit of multiculture. In practice this means the protection and support of small and large cultures, a respect for the daily life and traditions of smaller nations, the implementation of policies of mutual adaptation of different cultures and, importantly, the rejection of totalitarian cultural forms. The last of these steps is of particular importance. As can be seen in table 14, there are in the world today five basic religions. Each of these religions and the cultures which are associated have their own geographical and historical roots and form part of the world's cultural and ideological treasury. However, at the same time each of these religions has its sects and branches which would like to transform their religion into one of world dominance and demonstrate intolerance and irreconcilability to non-believers. This is as true for Christians as it is of the Muslims. The gentle nature and lack of aggression inherent in Orthodox Christianity, perhaps, make it the only exception. After the collapse of the two-bloc system of the world the ideological vacuums were filled by religions and a semi-overt struggle for domination began. A number of evangelical Christian sects decided that the time was ripe for them to impose their own belief on the world with little concern for the fact that they were depriving many people of their individual freedom and turing them into obedient instruments. Table 14 Region Christianity % Islam % Hinduizum % Buddhism % Judaism % Africa East Asia South Azia [62] Europe Latin America North America Oceania Fm. USSR[63] 236300 22300 125900 420300 392200 227200 21500 102200 15,3 1,4 8,1 27,2 25,3 14,7 1,4 6,6 215800 22300 534900 9200 600 2600 100 31500 26,4 2,7 65,5 1,1 0,1 0,3 * 3,9 130 * 644000 600 600 700 300 * 0,2 * 99,5 0,1 0,1 0,1 * * * 143400 150900 200 500 200 * 400 * 48,5 51,0 0,1 0,2 0,1 * 0,1 300 * 3900 1500 1000 7900 100 3100 1,7 * 21,9 8,4 5,6 44,4 0,6 17,4 Total 1548500 100 817000 100 647500 100 295600 100 71800 100 *100000, 0,1% Source: The World Christian Encyclopedia, 1985. Islamic fundamentalism has also displayed public intolerance to non-believers and the representatives of other countries. The murders in Egypt and the execution of foreign hostages in Algeria and international Islamic terrorism are examples of intolerance towards the traditions of others. It is extremely important that such features of modern religions be overcome. This will not be resolved by force but with the efforts of the world community and states and their politicians and government to achieve reconciliation. If modern Islam turns towards modernism combining its profound cultural heritage with the achievements of the modern world it will become part of the New tolerant Civilisation. The other alterative is isolationism and the division of global cultures and traditions. During the middle ages in Asia Minor and other places in the world Islam was the embodiment of progress and was a source of innovation and new philosophical and cultural trends, in the modern world it could assume a similar role. The opening-up of cultures and religions to each other is a slow and clearly painful process. It requires people to live democratically and in mutual tolerance particularly of those nations which live in the border areas between two geographically and religiously different zones. One shining example is that of the Israelis and the Palestinians who since the historical events of 1993 have been attempting to find a new non-confrontational model for the resolution of their conflict. The Bulgarians, Greeks and the Turks also have a vital role to play living as they do on two sides of the divide between Christianity and Islam. There is much dependent on the way in which these countries will resolve the problems of their ethnic minorities and international relations. Cultures and religions have to be sensitive to other cultures and religions. This does not only mean avoiding conflict but actively assisting and complementing each other. Only in this way will the principle of multiculture be able to throw off the burden of the outgoing world of imperialism. Perhaps, the ideal model of multiculture and tolerance for others can be seen on the Hawaiian islands. Japanese and Polynesians, Americans and Koreans, Buddhists and evangelists live in harmony and peace on such a small piece of land. After so many centuries of inter-cultural conflicts the nations which make up the multicultural communities of the USA have achieved an impressive state of tolerance and unity. I am convinced that the idea of global multiculture is not at odds with the universal processes of globalisation. Clearly the structures of world culture and the structure of the New Civilisation and will contain the following mutually influential components: -- the emerging global culture is being developed and disseminated via the world media and is becoming distinct from the culture of the large nations which have done much to create it; -- the culture of the large nations which together with the establishment of the principles of political polycentrism and multiculture will gradually lose their ability to influence and erase the culture of smaller nations; -- the culture of the smaller independent nations which require more specific forms of protection and whose preservation and development is one of the most important issues in the modern world; -- intermixed or border cultures as a product of the mutual influence of individual nations. There is little doubt that during the 19th century and for the entire period of the 20th, there was a great deal of inequity between cultures and religions. This was a result of colonial oppression, of two world and hundreds of local conflicts and the violent attempts to impose cultural domination. After the collapse of the two world systems humanity has every opportunity to stop this trend and open up the way for multiculture as the direct alternative to cultural imperialism. A balancing element to this is the undoubted development of global cultural values which will take their inspiration from the larger countries and nations who control the world communications. The responsibility of the owners of global communications and the governments of the countries in which they function will be to ensure the development of the smaller countries and their integration into global culture exchange. There is no doubt that sooner or later this process will require strict forms of global regulation, less passive and powerless than perhaps that of UNESCO but, nevertheless, similar in terms of its profound and multi-lateral experience. Many small nations and languages have already disappeared and this process will, no doubt, continue for a number of years to come. Countries living in isolation can not but be affected by this process. Cultural autonomy is closely associated with weak economies. Weak economies permit a low level of economic integration and lead to conflicts rather than cooperation between ethnic groups and culture. This is an almost universal truth and can be seen in Iran and Iraq, Israel and Turkey, India, the Balkans and the Caususus. The opposite example of cultural intermixing and emergent multiculture can be seen in those regions of the world where people have realised the senselessness of cultural assimilation and the value of peaceful cultural co-existence. The USA, Australia, Europe, Cuba, Brazil and a number of other countries in the world are fine examples of the intermixing and cooperation of different races and cultures. Chapter Ten THE NEW POLITICAL ORDER 1. THE TWILIGHT OF THE SUPERPOWERS The Fourth Civilisation will change the global political order. This is a logical consequence of the end of the cold war the appearance of new world economic powers and the globalisation of finances and the stock markets. T he political history of humanity has developed through a number of large cycles. The First Civilisation was a time of great empires. Later, over a period of about 10 centuries, from the 4th to the 13th century, the world was witness to the collapse of empire and the formation of small unstable states and the large scale migration of tribes and entire nations. The Third Civilisation saw the development of nation states and new imperial aspirations which reached their height with the creation and the struggle between the two world systems. The New Civilisation will to a certain extent once more return us to the features of the Second Civilisation but to a qualitatively new cultural and economic level of development as well migration of large groups of people the collapse of great blocs and empires, the redrawing of national borders. Is this part of a logical cycle or is it merely a temporary political cataclysm? I believe that the cycle of predominant political concentration has already come to an end and we are entering a new cycle of the domination of global culture and the parallel development of local features. This, of course, does not mean that globalisation will come to a halt but that the parallel processes of globalisation and localisation will exert a strong influence on current state and political formations. The 19th century left us a legacy of the concept of the Great Powers. The 20th century brought in the concept of the two superpowers: the USA and the USSR. With the collapse of the USSR the world found itself faced with two possible alternatives: either to develop monocentrically with the domination of the single remaining superpower, the USA, or to search for a new geo-political form. A number of researchers, politicians and journalists seemed to be in favour of the idea of the exclusive role of the USA as the superpower to lead the world into the 21st century. Indeed, during the first years after the collapse of the Warsaw Pact and the Soviet Union this seemed possible. Without its basic enemy, the USA was transformed into the most powerful economic and political force in the world. After 1989--1990 the USA seemed to be the only power capable of resolving a number of world conflicts and stabilising the world order. The war in the Persian Gulf in 1991, the intervention in Somalia, the positive role of the USA in the peace process in Bosnia in 1995 and the resolution of the problem of Palestinian autonomy served to strengthen this conviction. The USA are still the strongest nation state in the world but, nevertheless, I believe that the time of the superpowers has passed. The Fourth Civilisation will finally reject them and even now, during the transition between eras, there are already noticeable trends and processes which support this. The gradual twilight of the superpowers is for a number of reasons a general process. It is consequence of the trend towards global balance and the expected balancing of the global market. It is also due to a number of reasons associated with the cyclic development of geopolitical structures. I mentioned earlier that the economic development of the world has become polycentric. Japan, South Korea, more recently China and a number of other Asian economic powers have achieved significant economic strength. European integration has undoubtedly raised the importance of the European Economic Community in the world division of labour. The Latin American markets have become more attractive for investments. The globalisation of the economy has allowed for many more countries to accumulate economic strength and self-confidence. During the cold war and up to 1989 the appearance of new powerful and independent economic centres was of secondary importance. Military power and nuclear weapons were an undisputed factor in the determination of political power. This trend persisted for the entire period of the 20th century. In the 1960's and the 1970's there was a growing conviction that there would in fact be no victor after a nuclear conflict. Indeed, after the collapse of the Berlin wall there are still people who continue to wag their sabres and claim that they can achieve their aims through armed conflict. Nevertheless, things do seem to have changed. The emergence of new technology and new economic opportunities have come to the fore. This has reduced, at least for the time being, the role of Russia in world politics leaving it to ponder the questions of its domestic political and economic restructuring. For the same reasons, the USA now finds itself in a completely new situation. The vacuum which was formed after the collapse of COMECON and the Warsaw Pact (1990--1991) has begun to be filled not only by the USA but Germany, France, Japan and the European community as a whole. Although this process is rather veiled and timid it will continue in the future. Germany demonstrated its new-found self-confidence with its independent position on Bosnia. The nuclear tests carried out by France in the Pacific in 1995 were more significant from a political point of view than scientific. Similar ideas can be read into the applications by Japan and Germany to join the Security Council. The other issue which has always seemed to dog the USA and which will undermine its potential as the only superpower in the world is the issue of economic expenditure. Since the Second World War the USA has run up a huge armaments bill which has lead to a colossal increase in its foreign debt. Today the world's financial systems is under an enormous strain because of the constant increase in American borrowings, especially in the 1980's (table 15). In the 1970's and 1980's, however, this seemed not to be such a serious matter. The USA at the time was the leading figure in the Brenton Woods system and the dollar was the only reserve currency in the world and the US was able with some ease to compensate for the debts it had accumulated. In the 1980's the USA was paying 250--300 billion dollars in interest alone on its foreign debt. The majority of global economists believe that if this trend persists for much longer the American economy will begin to slide and the dollar will lose its position to the yen and the German mark. Table 15 Federal debt of the USA Year 1900 1920 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 1992 1994 Billion Dollars Per head of population (USD) Interest paid on debt (bill) % of federal income 1,2 16,6 - - 21,2 228 - - 256,1 1688 5,7 13,4 284,1 1572 9,2 10,0 370,1 1814 19,3 9,9 907,7 3985 74,9 12,7 3233 13000 264,8 21,1 4064 846 292,3 21,1 4692 026 296,3 80,3 Source: Bureau of Public Debt, US Dept of Treasury. There is little doubt that the USA and Russia will progressively have to reduce their military expenses which are the main causes for budget deficits and huge debt. IN 1994 the USA spent 280.6 billion dollars on defence which more than all the other countries of the world put together with the exception of Russia. US military expenditure was 9 times greater than that of Germany (35 billion dollars); 9 times that of France (34 billion); 7 times that of the UK (41 billion); 50 times that of Japan (5.9 billion dollars); 100 times that of China (2.7 billion)[64]. I have never seen accurate or proven figures for Russia but I believe that up to 1990 they were similar to the US. There is no economy in the world which can compensate for such expenditure and bear the burden of competition in the global market. For this reason the role of the USA and Russia as the two superpowers has begun to subside. Superpower tension might reappear in the world only if the two-bloc system is revived. There is, however, little likelihood of this since global financial markets are so interlinked and interdependent and for all the other reasons associated with the emergent New Civilisation. This leads on to the other question of where the new centre of economic and political power will develop and who will take on the roles and responsibilities of the USA and Russia. Russia clearly needs time to reorganise its economy and bring it in line with the needs of the market. However, even if this were to take place within the shortest possible period of time -- 10--15 years, it would not be able to assume the role of a superpower, nor would it want to. On the other hand Jacques Atalie and other writers have forecast that "economic power is moving away from America towards Europe and the Pacific".[65] I believe that it would more accurate to make another conclusion. It is true that during the Third Civilisation the Euroatlantic powers made great progress in their domination of the world at the beginning of the processes of globalisation. It is also true that after the 1960's the Asian economic powers began gradually to free themselves from the protectionism of the USA and Europe and they will play a very active global role in the coming 21st century. This fact, however, is insufficient to support the claim that "economic power is moving away from America towards Europe and the Pacific". It is more likely that there will be a period of levelling and mutual balance between the Japanese, American and European economies. This is possibly the most effective solution. Of course, this is also associated with the reduction in the responsibilities and burdens of the USA and the involvement of other countries such as Japan. The superpowers will disappear but it will not necessarily follow that the USA will preserve their role as one of the world's main political and economic centres. The world can no longer benefit from American domination or its downfall. In the same way the world could have done without the political and military conflicts within the former USSR. 2. FROM IMPERIALISM TO POLYCENTRISM "The old geopolitical order has left the stage and a new world order has been born". Jacques Atalie T he central issue is what will replace the two-bloc world order based on the dominance of the superpowers. Other similar periods of transition in history have lead to geopolitical chaos, conflicts, wars and huge loss of human life. The first years after the overthrow of the totalitarian regime in Eastern Europe seemed to bear out this sad truth. Today the dangers have not yet passed and seem to confound those who are optimistic of a new world order. There is no single or single group of powers capable of establishing this order. It will have to be created through a amalgamation of local and regional resolutions and the renunciation of ideas associated with the domination of one country or nation. This is the main feature of the New Civilisation. During the entire period of the outgoing civilisation monarchs were engaged in struggles for power, conquering and losing territory and making plans on how to expand their dominions. In the 19th and 20th centuries the idea of world domination arose and the revival of the huge empires of Caesar of Fredrich Barbarossa. The greatest empires of the Third Civilisation were the two political and military blocs which dominated the world for 50 years. I believe that the era of imperialism will be replaced by a new world order based on the principle of polycentrism, the alternative to imperialism and monocentrism. This principle is a rejection of the monopolism and imperial aspirations of any single nation or ideology. Polycentrism is that level of international relations which is the most concomitant for the opening up of the world and its globalisation. Polycentrism will not appear overnight. However, I am more than convinced that it is inevitable and part of the logic of historical development. The alternative is new confrontation, new violence with the accompanying threats of thermo-nuclear conflict. There are two basic conditions without which polycentrism and the natural competition between nations and countries cannot develop: Firstly, the inevitable, albeit gradual, disappearance of the super power phenomenon. Secondly, the evolutionary nature of the development of polycentrism as a system of international relations. The natural replacement of the bi-polar model with polycentric structures will pass through a number of phases, each of which will take differing lengths of time. We are already experiencing the first of these phases. The world is undergoing transition from the bi-polar model of confrontation to a multi-polar world. It is quite realistic to assume that in the next ten or so years we will pass into a transitory phase of a tri-polar world. This tri-polar world began to emerge based on the existing framework of the bi-polar world as early as the 1970's and 1980's. This model is based on the USA and a number of states which gravitate around it, Europe and the Far East lead by Japan. These three economically integrated poles have been developing gradually over the past 25--30 years. They are economically very compact and consist mainly of the economic interdependence of the individual countries. At the same time these three economic centres are strongly dependent on and open to each other creating one of the greatest opportunities for the peaceful development of the world. The tri-polar world is the closest alternative to the bi-polar world but is not an easy way out of the current crisis. The tri-polar model is to a large extent conditional on the development of common global trends. At the very beginning of the 21st century both Russia and China will aspire to become involved in the three large centres of economic power. All the most sensible politicians in the world believe that without Russia and China the world cannot develop successfully. This has been a clear feature of US policy during the Clinton administration. During the next 20--25 years we shall no doubt witness the development of a five-six-polar world in which the three main centres will be joined by a number of other new ones. China's rapid economic development and Russia's enormous resources of raw materials and its strategical capability will exert significant influence on this process. The triangular community of the USA, EC and Japan has quite quickly replaced the bi-polar model the development of a multi-polar model will take at least 15--20 years. Russia will need time to stabilise its economy and China will need to consolidate its reform process and balance out its levels of development. There is, however, a question of principle here. Will this not take us back to the beginning of the modern age, to a situation where five or six great powers dominated the world creating a series of conflicts which may develop into regional or even world wars? May this not also lead to the grouping of these powers into two or three political and military groups and a repeat of the Third Civilisation? It is here that the difference between the outgoing civilisation and the new era lies. The new powers will not arise only on one continent, Europe or America. They will develop in all the continents and within the framework of a single global economy. I, therefore, believe that the second phase, the transition to a new world order will be characterised by the gradual transition from five or six centres to a multi-polar or polycentric world structure. Even at the beginning of the transition period countries like Brazil, India, Australia, South Africa and others will increase their geo-political roles. They will be balanced between the other "great powers" and with their geographical position and size and increased economic potential they will gradually begin to assume greater geo-political significance. When speaking of the polycentric structure of the world, I am not concerned only with the political aspect but also with the economic and cultural sides of the issue. At the same time global integration will take place simultaneously in all countries but will lead to the creation of a number of regional formations. I also believe that we can expect that the poles of the new world structure will be defined via the development of a number of economically integrated blocs which of necessity will be open to one another and will autonomous units within an expanding integral entity. L.Thorou forecast that the 21st century would be a century of "quasi-commercial blocs applying managed trade". This is true to a certain extent but only in the initial stages since I believe that with the emergence of polycentrism the autonomous economic regions and commercial blocs will gradually become very interwoven and to lose their primary borders. The principle of polycentrism is at the heart of the new world order. However, these are not the same world centres which existed in the 13th and the 19th centuries and whose monarchs and presidents went to war every 10--15 years to re-distribute their dominions. They will not be the same centres which colonised the entire world and imposed their will on other nations. Polycentrism is the principle of balance between the world's powers, the umbrella under which new centres will develop and a bridge leading to a more complete integration of the world. The essence of the Fourth Civilisation is in the gradual formation of this new world order. 3. THE FATE OF THE NATION STATE Do not be in a hurry to destroy the nation state. It will not die suddenly of cardiac arrest but will gradually fade away... T he functions and the borders of the nation state depend directly on the economic maturity of societies. Historically the nation state is a transitory category. It appeared when nations were being created and the economic conditions of life were imposing certain certain types of government and regulation. There were different versions of statism and state government during the First Civilisation and the Second Civilisation, more commonly know as the Middle Ages. Nation states, however, are a typical feature of the Third Civilisation. The reduction in their role and changes in their functions is a result of the same phenomena which created them. The globalisation of modern economies and culture, the media invasions, transnational corporations and everything else which has been mentioned in other parts of the book are leading to changes in the borders and the essence of the concept of nation state as well as in the structure of government and economies. For a number of decades the inhabitants of the most developed nations have become growingly aware that the governments for which they may have voted are not the only centres of power and that the promises of politicians seem to have little in common with realities and that the implementation of policies depends on other factors and phenomena. P.Drucker frequently speaks of a new pluralism. In this he is absolutely correct. Pluralism does not mean competition between parties and their leaders. It is a very diverse pluralism of economic, government, cultural and lobby groups. What is even more significant is that this new pluralism is becoming more and more international. Corporations and political parties, foundations and association, information groups and trans-national media have transformed pluralism in to an universal concept and the nation state into an annoying but not insurmountable barrier. It is quite evident that as society develops governmental restrictions decline along with the significance of national boundaries. For this reason open societie