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Beijing Culture Forum spotlights civilizational diversity, mutual learning

By You Jiaxin and Wang Yiming
China.org.cn
| September 25, 2025
2025-09-25

A parallel forum focusing on civilizational diversity and exchanges was held Sept. 23 in Beijing as part of the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum. China International Communications Group (CICG) guided the event, titled "Exchanges and Mutual Learning: Respecting the Diversity of Civilizations," while the Academy of Contemporary China and World Studies organized it.

Yu Yingfu, vice president of China International Communications Group, delivers a keynote speech at the parallel forum "Exchanges and Mutual Learning: Respecting the Diversity of Civilizations" during the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum in Beijing, Sept. 23, 2025. [Photo courtesy of the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum]

Yu Yingfu, vice president of CICG, pointed out that Chinese civilization has always engaged in dialogue with other world civilizations with an open and inclusive mind, citing historical examples from Zhang Qian's missions to the Western Regions to Zheng He's seven voyages to the "Western Ocean" (the Indian Ocean), and from the eastward spread of Buddhism to the introduction of Western learning to the East. In today's deeply globalized world, respecting civilizational diversity and promoting exchanges and mutual learning are both a shared vision and an inevitable choice for humanity to move forward.

Yu said CICG, as a major international communication organization, will use the forum to strengthen global partnerships. The group plans to create more exchange platforms and pursue concrete cooperative results, he said. This approach would make civilizational diversity a lasting driver of human progress while providing cultural strength for building a community with a shared future for humanity.

Le Yucheng, former vice minister of foreign affairs and former deputy director of the National Radio and Television Administration, delivers a keynote speech at the parallel forum "Exchanges and Mutual Learning: Respecting the Diversity of Civilizations" during the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum in Beijing, Sept. 23, 2025. [Photo courtesy of the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum]

Le Yucheng, former vice minister of foreign affairs and former deputy director of the National Radio and Television Administration, noted that digital technology and artificial intelligence are profoundly reshaping the way cultures and civilizations communicate and interact, opening new avenues for dialogue and mutual understanding. He called for leveraging digital intelligence to advance civilization building, foster the integration of culture and technology, and reinforce the value foundations of digital civilization.

Wang Chunfa, former director of the National Museum of China and president of the China Science Writers Association, delivers a keynote speech at the parallel forum "Exchanges and Mutual Learning: Respecting the Diversity of Civilizations" during the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum in Beijing, Sept. 23, 2025. [Photo courtesy of the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum]

Wang Chunfa, former director of the National Museum of China and president of the China Science Writers Association, said civilizations are inherently diverse. True common prosperity requires exchanges based on equality, openness and inclusiveness, he said. Wang argued that promoting dialogue among civilizations needs coordinated efforts from all parties to foster communication and practical cooperation. Only by working together on global challenges can the world harness the collective strength of its civilizations to build a community with a shared future for humanity, he said.

David Gosset, founder of the China-Europe-America Global Initiative and chairman of DG2CI, delivers a keynote speech at the parallel forum "Exchanges and Mutual Learning: Respecting the Diversity of Civilizations" during the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum in Beijing, Sept. 23, 2025. [Photo courtesy of the 2025 Beijing Culture Forum]

Building on Le's call for deeper integration of culture and technology, David Gosset, founder of the China-Europe-America Global Initiative and chairman of DG2CI, stressed that striking a balance between technology and the humanities is "not merely a nice ideal; it is an existential necessity."

He warned that in the pursuit of technological advancement, humanity risks neglecting the very disciplines that give life its depth and meaning. "Wisdom is not born of code," he said. "It is cultivated through reflection, through engagement with history, with ethics, with literature and art — through the humanities."

Gosset also emphasized that exchanges among cultures remain essential in today's interconnected and technologically advanced world. He called on participants to "remember what true civilization owes: to the classics, to the respect of the other, and to the mutual learning between cultures."

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