Club of Budapest
Ervin László founded international organization the Club of Budapest in 1993 to expand beyond the scientific purpose of the General Evolution Research Group to try to mobilize the resources of humanity to meet future challenges.
The Club of Budapest is an informal association of people in art, literature and culture.
It has branches in Austria, Brazil, Canada, China, France, Germany, Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, Mexico, the Netherlands, Samoa, Switzerland, Turkey, the United States and Venezuela. Fiona Douglas-Scott-Montagu, baroness Montagu of Beaulieu, was its first global ambassador.[1][2]
Creative members
- Aguida Zanol
- Akio Shoji
- Aleandro Tommasi
- Amod Kanth
- Anna Bacchia
- Avon Mattison
- Barbara Gaughen
- Barbara Marx Hubbard
- Bernd Weikl
- Bibi Russell
- Celia Russo
- Christiane Röderer
- Dana Amma Day
- David Woolfson
- Deepti Tewari
- Dominic Search
- Duane Elgin
- Elizabeth Sahtouris
- Franz Alt
- Gareth Strangemore-Jones
- Gedeon Dienes
- Georg Winter
- George Kibedi
- Gerhard Schweter
- Gunter Pauli
- Gustavo Correa
- Hans-Jürgen Müller
- Helena Norberg-Hodge
- Helga Breuninger
- Herman van Veen
- Herman Wijffels
- Jaleh Joubine-Khadem
- Jane Taylor
- Joannie Misrack
- Jurriaan Kamp
- Kambiz Poostchi
- Kim McArthur
- Lola Kristof
- Loni Kreuder
- Lucile W. Green
- Ludwig Gebhard
- Ludwig Tuman
- Marcia Odell
- Maryem Le Saget
- Michel Random
- Nancy Wimmer
- Nicanor Perlas
- Nitamo Montecucco
- Paul H. Ray
- Peter Eigen
- Peter Engberg
- Peter Hesse
- Polly Higgins
- Richard Tarnas
- Rosi Gollmann
- Ruediger Dahlke
- Shamil Fattakhov
- Steve Dillenburg
- Suheil Bushrui
- Surjo R. Soekadar
- Swami Kriyananda
- Tom Oliver
- Vinay Sansi
- Xokonoschtletl Gomora
- Zev Naveh
References
- Murtha, William (2010). 100 Words: Two Hundred Visionaries Share Their Hope for the Future, Conari Press, pp 256–257. ISBN 978-1573244732
- "Members". Club of Budapest. Archived from the original on 3 March 2013. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
External links
- Club of Budapest Official website
- Club of Budapest Basque French website
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.