The challenge is to explain what I will include in "fair society". Most people think that it is easy to explain all the pain and injustices that are shown in myriad ways every day in the world. Philosophically, we must consider many considerations about the many variables and conditions present in society. On the contrary, it is difficult to think that I will be three pages of "fair society". This is because I am inspiring my own consciousness through Buddhist teaching and "charm", and my own positive thoughts
To answer this question, we must first explain what the fair society constitutes. The perfect condition can only be guided under perfect conditions. Civil society is a better name for the state. A fair country consists of three parts. First, the state is a structure in which parts behave like organisms. If parts do not work well, the whole part will crash. It must have virtue, integrity, it can be wise and courageous. The state must do everything best to accomplish the task. For a country, people within that country must also be fair. People are when he has an ordered soul. Because you will do right through good and just acts. The soul must be allowed to do its normal function. In one situation, justice can not be defined by one person. Instead, you need to define justice based on format. Plato says these forms are eternal and eternal
People are inherently wrong. Therefore, a fair society requires exemplary behavior, but that is also loose. Fair society respects the right of life. A fair society is neither a majority nor a minority. A fair society strives for equality of opportunity rather than the result of equality. A fair society is considerate and ensures the welfare of unhappy people. Kupamanduka Nyaya is a Sanskrit word adequately describing the essence of people enjoying accepting humble ignorance. Maxims explain frogs no one knows about the world it lives outside of a well. One day, it met an outsider who conveyed the vast ocean. Frogs can not believe there may be better than it to laugh at outsiders. Kupamanduka, the frog in the well, represents a little man who has little or no idea of or concerns about the surrounding matters. Empty stars and heart treasures do not care about him.