IBREA

Brain Declaration

  • I declare that I am the master of my brain.
  • I declare that my brain has infinite possibilities and creative potential.
  • I declare that my brain has the right to accept or refuse any information or knowledge that it is offered.
  • I declare that my brain loves humanity and the earth.
  • I declare that my brain desires peace.

Take Back Your Brain!

 

History of the Brain Declaration

World-renowned scholars, thinkers, and social activists gathered in Seoul, Korea on June 15, 2001, to attend the New Millennium World Peace Humanity Conference. It was the first Humanity Conference held to highlight the values of "Humanity, Earth, and the Brain." The event attracted 12,000 people and international luminaries, including Al Gore, former US Vice President, Seymour Topping, former Pulitzer Prize administrator, Jean Houston, world-renowned anthropologist and advisor to UNICEF, and Maurice Strong, Deputy Secretary General of the UN. The panelists discussed the Earth Human philosophy and sought ways to put it into practice.

Ratified at the 1st Humanity Conference in June 2001, The Declaration of Humanity is a brief document that recognizes the Earth as the common ground of humanity. The document emphasizes the basic responsibilities of humanity toward humanity. When the Earth Human Declaration was adopted, it reflected a fundamental shift in consciousness, capable of resolving the problems facing the human race. The Declaration became the philosophical foundation of Brain Education and was later adapted and renamed the Brain Declaration.