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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    New York :New American Libr.,
    UID:
    almahu_BV007394048
    Format: 254 S.
    Edition: 6. print.
    Series Statement: A Mentor book 32
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ancient Studies
    RVK:
    Keywords: Geistesgeschichte
    Author information: Hamilton, Edith, 1867-1963.
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    London ; New York ; Oxford ; New Delhi ; Sydney :Bloomsbury Academic,
    UID:
    almafu_BV047873010
    Format: XV, 247 Seiten : , Illustrationen.
    ISBN: 978-1-350-21282-4
    Series Statement: Bloomsbury studies in classical reception
    Content: "This volume offers an instructive comparative perspective on the Judaic, Christian, Greek and Roman myths in relation to each other, as well as a broad overview of their enduring relevance in the modern Western world and its conceptions of gender and identity. Taking the idea that the way in which a society regards humanity, and especially the roots of humanity, is crucial to an understanding of that society. Different models for the creation and nature of mankind, and their changing receptions at different periods and places, can therefore be seen to reflect fundamental continuities, evolutions and developments across cultures and societies: in no context are these more apparent than with regard to gender. Chapters explore the role of gender in Greco-Roman and Judaeo-Christian creation myths and their reception traditions, demonstrating how perceptions of 'male' and 'female' dating back to antiquity have become embedded in and significantly influenced subsequent perceptions of gender roles. Focusing on the figures of Prometheus, Pandora, Adam and Eve and their instantiations in a broad range of narratives and media from antiquity to the present day, they examine how variations on these myths reflect the concerns of the societies producing them and the malleability of the stories as they are recast to fit different contexts and different audiences"--
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe ISBN 978-1-350-21284-8
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe, PDF ISBN 978-1-350-21283-1
    Language: English
    Subjects: Theology , Ancient Studies
    RVK:
    RVK:
    Keywords: Prometheus ; Pandora ; Biblische Person Adam ; Biblische Person Eva ; Mythos ; Geschlechtsidentität ; Judentum ; Christentum ; Antike ; Schöpfungsmythos ; Geschlechtsidentität ; Rezeption ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 3
    UID:
    almahu_9949702006202882
    Format: 1 online resource.
    ISBN: 9789004464728 , 9789004328495
    Series Statement: International Comparative Social Studies ; 52
    Content: Vittorio Cotesta's The Heavens and the Earth traces the origin of the images of the world typical of the Graeco-Roman, Ancient Chinese and Medieval Islamic civilisations. Each of them had its own peculiar way of understanding the universe, life, death, society, power, humanity and its destiny. The comparative analysis carried out here suggests that they all shared a common human aspiration despite their differences: human being is unique; differences are details which enrich its image. Today, the traditions derived from these civilisations are often in competition and conflict. Reference to a common vision of humanity as a shared universal entity should lead, instead, to a quest for understanding and dialogue.
    Note: Contents -- Preface -- List of Illustrations and Tables -- Introduction: The Axial Age and Global Society -- Part 1: The Greek and Roman Vision of the World -- Section 1: The Greek Vision of the World -- 1 The Universe, Nature and Humanity in Ancient Greece -- 2 The Political Constitution and Forms of Government -- 1 Plato's Utopic Model -- 2 Aristotle's politeia as a Form of Mixed Government -- 3 Herodotus and the Greek Image of a Global Society -- 4 The Image of Mankind and the Social Bond -- 5 Chance and Necessity -- 1 The Movement of Atoms and the Origins of the Universe -- 2 Life, Death, Happiness -- 6 God, Nature, Providence -- 1 The Epistemological Model of Stoicism -- 2 The Origin and Structure of the Universe -- 3 Humanity, Society and the State -- 4 The Happy Life -- 5 Natural Law and Human Rights -- Section 2: The Roman Vision of the World, Society and Mankind -- 7 Polybius and the Roman View of the World -- 1 The Paradoxes of Polybius' Existence, from Hostage to Cantor of the Destiny of Rome -- 2 Polybius and History as a Science of Prevision -- 3 Rome: Sole World Power -- 8 Conflict over Rome's Cultural Identity -- 1 Tradition and Innovation: Cato the Censor and Scipio Africanus -- 2 Scipio's Dream and the Destiny of Rome -- 9 The Image of Rome and of Her Mission in the World According to Cicero -- 1 Society, the State and the Law. Rome's Universal Destiny -- 2 Global Graeco-Roman Society and Cosmopolitan Law -- 10 The Empire and Rome's New Vision of the World -- 11 Rome and Christianity -- 1 Incomprehension, Conflict, Convergence -- 12 The Hellenistic Scientific Revolution and the New World View -- 1 The Inhabited World Is a Chlamys. On Eratosthenes and His Critics -- 2 The Star Canopus and New Measurements of the Earth -- 13 The Geography of the Century of Augustus and First Diplomatic Contact with China -- 1 Strabo: "Pragmatic" Geography -- 2 Juba of Mauretania and Exploration of the Sources of the Nile -- 3 Pliny the Elder: Chinese Silk and the Transparent Robes of the Roman Matrons -- 4 The Periplous of the Erythrean Sea and the Silent Barter between the Kiratas and the Chinese -- 5 First Diplomatic Contact with China -- 14 Claudius Ptolemy and Astrological Previsions of Peoples' Destinies -- Part 2: Harmony as the Core of Chinese Image of the World -- 1 Confucius: The Origin of the Axial Revolution in China -- 1 The Virtues of the Good Ruler -- 2 The Dao: The Way to Humanity -- 2 Mozi and Universal Love -- 3 Xunzi: The Dark Side of Human Nature -- 4 Zhuangzi and Lao Tzu: Harmony in Taoist Philosophy -- 1 The Dao Has No Name -- 2 Non-action as a Principle of World Governance -- 5 Legalism: How to Create a Well-Ordered Society -- 1 Society, History, Power -- 6 Sima Qian: History and the Identity of Ancient China -- 1 Herodotus and Sima Qian -- 2 History and Power in Sima Qian's Life -- 3 Dynastic Cycles and History -- 4 The Social Organisation of the Mongols and Chinese Identity -- Part 3: Intermezzo -- 1 Convergences and Divergences between China and Greece -- 1 The Universe, Heaven and Earth -- 2 Society and Humanity -- 3 The State, Power and Politics -- 2 The Formation of a Eurasian World-System -- 3 A Shift in the Meaning of "Axial Revolution" -- Section 1: The Global World from the Islamic Point of View -- Section 2: Origin and Structure of the Islamic Vision of the World -- 1 The Preaching of Muhammad and the Birth of Islam -- 2 God, The Universe and the World According to Islam -- 3 Al-Kindi: Muhammad and Aristotle. , 1 The Quest for Truth -- 2 God and the Creation of the World -- 4 Al-Farabi I. God, The Universe, The World and the Way to Happiness -- 1 Introduction -- 2 God and the Universe -- 3 Man and Society -- 4 Happiness, The "Virtuous City" -- 5 Al-Farabi II. Political Theory and the Doctrine of Perfect Imam -- 1 Political Regimes -- 2 The Theory of the Perfect Imam -- 3 Peace and (Just) War -- 6 Avicenna I. God, The Cosmos and the World -- 1 An Adventurous and Dangerous Life -- 2 God, The Universe, The World -- 7 Avicenna II. Man, Society and Governance -- 1 The Happy Life and Man's Return to God -- 2 Reason and Mysticism -- 8 Al-Biruni. I. A Eurasian Vision of the World Biographical, Cultural and Epistemological Premises -- 1 The Adventurous Life of al-Biruni -- 2 Time, History and Society -- 3 The Study of India and of the Identity of Peoples -- 9 Al-Biruni. II. A Eurasian Vision of the World A Sociological and Anthropological Analysis -- 1 The Sciences and Social Classes -- 2 The Indian Castes and the Hierarchical Societies of Eurasia -- 10 The Islamic Vision of the World and History Al-YaʿQubi, al-Tabari's and al-MasʿUdi's Contributions -- 1 Al-YaʿQubi -- 2 Al-Tabari -- 3 Al-MasʿUdi -- 11 The Islamic Vision of the World and Geography Al-Khwarizmi, Ferdowsi, al-Muqaddasi, al-Idrisi -- 1 Al-Khwarizmi -- 2 Ferdowsi, al-Faqih and Other Persian Geographers and Historians -- 3 Al-Muqaddasi -- 4 Al-Idrisi's Universalist Perspective -- 12 Reason and Mysticism. Al-Ghazali's Battle against Philosophy -- 1 The Life of al-Ghazali -- 2 The Battle against Reason -- 3 The Virtues of the Intellectual -- The Western Islamic Vision of the World -- 13 The Western Pathway to the Construction of the Islamic Image of the World -- 1 Introduction -- 14 Alternative Ways to Happiness. Ibn Bajja and Ibn Tufayl -- 1 The Outsider and the Way to Happiness: Ibn Bajja -- 2 Ibn Tufayl: Mysticism as a Way to Happiness -- 15 Averroes. I. The Defense of Reason -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Controversy with al-Ghazali and the Decisive Treaty -- 16 Averroes. II. A Project for a New World -- 1 The Ideal City and the Happy Life -- 2 Societies, Forms of Government, the Virtues of the Good Ruler (Imam) -- 3 Some Final Observations, in Brief -- 17 Ibn Khaldun. I. Truth and History -- 1 A Life Lived between Politics and Study -- 2 Ibn Khaldun's Epistemological Model of History -- 3 Fake News and Historical Truth -- 18 Ibn Khaldun II. Religions, Society, and Civilisations. Islam's Universal Mission -- 1 The Shape of the Earth and the Characteristics of Peoples -- 2 Cooperation and Society -- 3 Nomadism and Civilisation -- 4 Religion as a Factor of Civilisation and of the Universal Mission of Islam -- Conclusions -- 1 The Problems and the Research Method -- 2 The Universe -- 3 The Issue of Time -- 4 The Heavens and the Earth -- 5 The Form of the oikoumene -- 6 Humanity, Society and Forms of Government -- 7 Human Nature and Human Rights. Universalism by Halves -- Bibliography -- Index of Proper Names -- Index of Selected Topics, Cities, Countries and Continents.
    Additional Edition: Print version: The Heavens and the Earth: Graeco-Roman, Ancient Chinese, and Mediaeval Islamic Images of the World. Leiden ; Boston : BRILL, 2021 ISBN 9789004328495
    Language: English
    URL: DOI:
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  • 4
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949301206102882
    Format: 1 online resource (274 pages)
    ISBN: 9783319263007
    Series Statement: The Frontiers Collection
    Note: Intro -- Contents -- About the Editors -- 1 Introduction -- Abstract -- 1 Contents of This Book: Addressing the Challenge -- 2 A Transdisciplinary Perspective on Chance -- Acknowledgement -- 2 Conceptual and Historical Reflections on Chance (and Related Concepts) -- Abstract -- 1 Etymological Prelude -- 1.1 Dice and Other Falling Objects -- 1.2 Fortuna, Wheels and the Lottery -- 1.3 Randomness and Reckoning with Fortune -- 2 History -- 2.1 Greek Origins -- 2.2 Aristotle -- 2.3 The Ancient Atomists -- 2.4 On Divination and Providence -- 2.5 Boethius -- 2.6 Late Medieval Views on Chance -- 2.7 Chance, Necessity and Design in a Mechanistic Universe -- 2.8 Hume's Critique of the Argument from Design -- 2.9 From Natural History to Darwinism -- 2.10 Laplace's Determinism, Statistical Regularity and the New Physical Randomness -- 3 A Conclusion ex negativo -- References -- The Mathematical Foundations of Randomness -- 1 Introduction -- 2 What Is Randomness? -- 3 Can Randomness Be Defined? -- 4 Computability Theory -- 5 Kolmogorov Complexity -- 6 Martin-Löf Randomness -- 7 Martingales -- 8 Randomness and Provability -- 9 Other Notions of Randomness -- 10 Pseudorandom Number Generators and Complexity Theory -- 11 Applications -- References -- 4 Randomness and the Madness of Crowds -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Super-Humans Against Nature and the Rationality Assumption -- 2.1 A Single Random Event -- 2.2 Repeated Random Events -- 2.3 Risk Preferences -- 3 Super-Humans Against Super-Humans -- 4 Humans Against Humans -- 4.1 Bounded Rationality -- 4.2 Beliefs -- 4.3 Speculation -- 5 The Madness of Crowds -- 5.1 Luck Versus Skill -- 5.2 No Free Lunch \varvec{\ne} the Price Is Right -- 5.3 From Mispricing to Madness -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- 5 Randomness and the Games of Science -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Randomness in Science. , 3 The Likelihood of Irreproducible Research -- 4 The Dialogue with the Critic -- 5 Publishing -- 6 Speaking About Uncertainty -- References -- 6 The Fine-Tuning Argument: Exploring the Improbability of Our Existence -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Evidence for Fine-Tuning -- 3 General Arguments -- 4 Critiquing the Inference of Design from Fine-Tuning -- 5 Critiquing the Inference of a Multiverse from Fine-Tuning -- 6 Conclusion -- Acknowledgement -- References -- 7 Chance in the Hebrew Bible: Views in Job and Genesis 1 -- Abstract -- 1 The Prologue of the Book of Job: Chance as a Wager -- 2 Dialogue in the Book of Job: Chance as Proof of Moral Balance -- 3 God's Answer "Out of the Whirlwind" -- 4 Chance in the Book of Job -- 5 From Narrative to Philosophy -- 6 From Philosophy Back to Narrative: Genesis 1 -- 7 Worldview in the Hebrew Bible -- 8 Genesis 1:1-3 -- 9 The Framework of Non-Linearity in Genesis 1 -- 10 The Non-linear Arrangement in Genesis 1 and the Concept of Chance -- 11 Conclusion: Views on Chance in Job and Genesis 1 -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 8 Happiness and Invulnerability from Chance: Western and Eastern Perspectives -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Ancient Greek Philosophy as a Way of Life: The Pursuit of Happiness -- 3 Immunising Against Luck: Ancient Greek Approaches -- 4 A Christian Perspective: The Myth of the Fall -- 5 The Asian Buddhist Perspective: Karma Rather than (Bad) Luck -- 6 Protection Against Luck: West and East -- References -- 9 The Experience of Coincidence: An Integrated Psychological and Neurocognitive Perspective -- Abstract -- 1 Prelude -- 2 Introduction -- 3 The Psychology of Coincidence -- 3.1 Cognitive Biases and Predictive Models -- 3.2 Context and Model Adjustment -- 3.3 Individual Differences and Precision -- 4 Predictive Coding and Coincidence -- 5 Conclusions -- References. , 10 When Chance Strikes: Random Mutational Events as a Cause of Birth Defects and Cancer -- Abstract -- 1 Fascination -- 2 Divinity and Sorcery -- 3 Maternal Impressions -- 4 Infections and Teratogens -- 5 Inherited Factors -- 6 De Novo Mutations in Human Genetic Disease -- 7 The Randomness of Mutations -- 8 Why Mutations Happen -- 9 Can We Prevent Mutations? -- 10 Accepting Risks -- 11 Are Mutations a Necessary Part of Our Existence? -- 12 Conclusion -- References -- 11 Chance, Variation and the Nature of Causality in Ecological Communities -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction: The Fascinating Complexity of Ecosystems -- 2 Example 1: Explaining the Maintenance of Species Diversity -- 2.1 Coexistence Theory: Species Differ in Niches -- 2.2 Natural Enemies as Niche-Axes: The Janzen-Connell Hypothesis -- 2.3 Coexistence Through Intransitive Competition and Rock-Paper-Scissor Games -- 2.4 Tests with Bacterial Communities: Rock-Paper-Scissor Dynamics Is not Enough for Stable Coexistence -- 2.5 Global Stability in Hyper-Diverse Plant Communities Consistent with Local Rock-Paper-Scissor Dynamics -- 2.6 Global Stability Through Neutral Dynamics if Species Are Demographically Equal -- 2.7 Coexistence Mechanisms May Result in Unpredictable Dynamics -- 2.8 Conclusion: The Interplay Between Scale-Dependent Predictable and Unpredictable Patterns in Community Dynamics -- 3 Example 2: Understanding Species Population Trends -- 3.1 Species Survive in Metapopulations with a High Incidence of Chance Effects -- 3.2 Farmland Birds: Understanding Population Trends -- 3.3 Mastering Chance Effects at Local Scale to Explain Global Trends -- 3.4 Understanding Causality: A Comparison with Epidemiology -- 4 Epilogue -- Acknowledgements -- References -- 12 The Size of History: Coincidence, Counterfactuality and Questions of Scale in History -- Abstract. , 1 Introduction: Coincidence and Comparisons -- 2 Contingency, Causality and Counterfactuality -- 3 Coincidence and the Construction of a Clear Course of History -- 4 Coincidence, Big History and Accidental Cause -- 5 Coincidence and Cliodynamics -- 6 Coincidence as an Interpretative Tool? -- Acknowledgment -- References -- 13 Accidental Harm Under (Roman) Civil Law -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Sources of Obligation Under Roman and Modern Law -- 3 Accidental Harm Under Roman Tort Law and Subsequent Criticism -- 4 Accidental Harm Under Roman Contract Law -- 5 Accidental Harm in the Case of Negotiorum Gestio -- 6 Other Meanings of 'Casus' in the Roman Sources -- 7 Brief Interlude: 'Casus' Under Roman Criminal Law -- 8 Accidental Harm Under Modern Private Law -- 9 Concluding Observations -- References -- 14 Taming Chaos. Chance and Variability in the Language Sciences -- Abstract -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Field -- 3 Linguistic Typology: Chance and Variability in the Constitution of Languages -- 3.1 L'arbitraire du signe -- 3.2 Iconicity -- 3.3 Dependencies -- 4 Variationist Linguistics: Chance in Production and Perception -- 5 Chance: Conundrum or Inherent Property? -- References -- Biographies -- Titles in this Series.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Landsman, Klaas The Challenge of Chance Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2016 ISBN 9783319262987
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books.
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  • 5
    Book
    Book
    New York :The New American Library,
    UID:
    almafu_BV026435885
    Format: 190 S.
    Edition: 1. print.
    Series Statement: Mentor book : M 32
    Language: English
    Subjects: Ancient Studies
    RVK:
    Keywords: Geistesgeschichte
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  • 6
    Book
    Book
    New York, NY : New American Library
    UID:
    kobvindex_ADK207889
    Format: 254 S.
    Edition: 6. print.
    Series Statement: Mentor book 32 : Ms
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Book
    Book
    New York :Mentor Book,
    UID:
    kobvindex_MMZbei00136
    Format: 190 S.
    Edition: 2. Aufl.
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Bern : Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
    UID:
    almahu_9948665154802882
    Format: 1 online resource (333 p.)
    Edition: 1st, New ed.
    ISBN: 9783035304343
    Series Statement: New Comparative Criticism 1
    Content: Why do revivals and adaptations of Greek tragedy still abound in European national theatres, fringe stages and international festivals in the twenty-first century? Taking as its starting point the concepts of myth developed by Jean-Luc Nancy and Roland Barthes and the notion of the ‘classical’ outlined by Salvatore Settis, this book analyses discourses around community, democracy, origin and Western identity in stage adaptations of Greek tragedy on contemporary European stages. The author addresses the ways in which the theatre produces and perpetuates the myth of ‘classical’ Greece as the origin of Europe and how this narrative raises issues concerning the possibility of a transnational European community. Each chapter explores a pivotal problem in modern appropriations of Greek tragedy, including the performance of the chorus, the concept of the ‘obscene’ and the audience as the demos of democracy. Modern versions of Women of Troy, Hippolytus and Persians performed in Britain, France, Spain, Germany, Italy, Poland and Greece are analysed through a series of comparative case studies. By engaging with the work of prominent theatre-makers such as Mark Ravenhill, Michel Vinaver, Katie Mitchell, Sarah Kane, Krzysztof Warlikowski, Romeo Castellucci, Calixto Bieito and Rimini Protokoll, this volume offers a critique of contemporary democratic Europe and the way it represents itself onstage.
    Content: «Margherita Laera tackles a fundamental problem of our times: what do we do with our ancestors and with the myths of Greek tragedy and democracy? This is an ambitious project and an excellent piece of scholarship.» (Patrice Pavis, Professor of Theatre Studies, Korea National University of the Arts) «This book articulates original, important and wide-ranging arguments with elegance and verve. A stimulating deconstruction of myth, in the Barthesian sense of that word.» (Carl Lavery, Senior Lecturer in Drama, Theatre and Performance, Aberystwyth University) «Margherita Laera launches her complex and compelling study of recent adaptations into waters that, seemingly charted as ‘the classical tradition’, reveal themselves to be deep and churning Sargasso Seas of ideology, politics and mythology. [...] ‘Reaching Athens’ fills an important role as it explores areas that are often neglected or given short shrift [... and it] complicates the polemic in an extremely meaningful way [...] This invaluable work deserves a wide audience and should encourage further investigation of the ideological role of present-day adaptations and the ongoing mythologizing of ancient, selective affinities.» (Norma Jenckes, Theatre Research International 40.1, 2015)
    Note: Contents: The cradle of Western civilization? Athens as beginning – Myth, community and the myth of community – Can we deal with the chorus? Performing collective identity and the decline of union – The ‘obscene’ and the limits of representation: false etymologies, censorship and performability – Constructing the audience as the demos of democracy: spectatorship and/as citizenship – The myth of the simultaneous birth of theatre and democracy in Athens – How can theatre and performance deal with, and respond to, the persistence of these mythologies? – Neither actualisation nor reconstitution: a manifesto in six points.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783034308076
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Leiden :Brill,
    UID:
    edocfu_9959231251202883
    Format: 1 online resource (xi, 527 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9789004194618 , 1283120453 , 9786613120458 , 9004194614 , 9789004232761
    Series Statement: Studies in critical social sciences, v. 28
    Content: This extensively researched book argues that the development of a libertarian culture was an indispensable component of the rise of the West. The roots of the West's superior intellectual and artistic creativity should be traced back to the aristocratic warlike culture of Indo-European speakers. Among the many fascinating topics discussed are: the ascendancy of multicultural historians and the degradation of European history; China's ecological endowments and imperial windfalls; military revolutions in Europe 1300-1800; the science and chivalry of Henry the Navigator; Judaism and its contribution to Western rationalism; the cultural richness of Max Weber versus the intellectual poverty of Pomeranz, Wong, Goldstone, Goody, and A.G. Frank; change without progress in the East; Hegel's Phenomenology of the [Western] Spirit; Nietzsche and the education of the Homeric Greeks; Kojeve's master-slave dialectic and the Western state of nature; Christian virtues and German aristocratic expansionism.
    Note: 1. The Fall of Western Civilization and the Rise of Multicultural World History -- Early World Historians and the Idea of Progress -- Termination of the Western Civilization Course -- World History Texts from the 1920s to the 1940s -- World History Texts in the 1960s -- Rise of Dependency Theory -- Wallerstein's World-System and Critical Theory -- Franz Boas's Relativism and Marvin Harris's Cultural Materialism -- The Conversion of William McNeill: From "Rise of the West" to "Interactive Webs" -- Cultural Relativism, Scientific Materialism, and Humanism Combined -- The Exclusion of Sociobiology -- Kant's "unsocial sociability" -- Progress and the State of Nature -- Dynamic Man versus Reactive Man -- The Ascendancy of Multicultural World Historians -- Patrick Manning: It Takes an African Village to Write World History -- Disparaging the West: Felipe Fernandez-Armesto -- , 2. Eurocentrism over Sinocentrism -- The Basic Empirical Claims of the Revisionists -- The Two Arguments of Re-Orient -- One Asian World System? -- The Role of Colonial Profits -- Trade, Power, and Liberty: the Secret of British Imperial Success -- Chinas "high-level equilibrium trap" -- The "Geographical Limits" of Chinas Post-1400 Extensive Growth -- Was Eighteenth Century Europe following a Malthusian path? -- Was traditional China a Low Fertility Regime? -- Conclusion -- , 3. Whence the Industrial Divergence? -- The Basic Propositions of Pomeranz's "Great Divergence" -- Malthus was Born too Late in a World too New -- End of the Old Malthusian Regime in England -- Standard-of-Living Debate -- New World Resources versus European Resources -- Was Cheap Coal Sufficient or Necessary? -- Dynamic Rather than Static Comparisons -- China's Ecological Endowments and Imperial Windfalls -- , 4. The Continuous Creativity of Europe -- Hobson and the Eastern Origins of the West -- Eurocentric Historians -- Imitation, Innovation, and Invention -- Revolution in Time -- The Printing Revolution -- The Science and Chivalry of Henry the Navigator -- Columbus and the Cartographic Revolution -- The Industrial Enlightenment -- Goldstone's "Happy Chance" versus Jacob's Scientific Ethos -- Contingency versus Long Term Patterns -- Europe's Solo Act: A Mercantile-Militaristic State? -- Military Revolutions in Europe 1300-1800 -- The Inter-State System -- Greek Hoplites and the "Western Way of War" -- Mercantilism and the Birth of Political Economy -- Liberty and the States System -- , 5. The `Rise' of Western Reason and Freedom -- The West is more than Wealth and Power -- The Cultural Poverty of the Revisionists -- The Cultural Richness of Max Weber -- Judaism and its Contribution to Western Rationalism -- Schluchter on the Genetic Developmental Dynamic of the West -- Habermas and the Rationalization of Substantive Values -- The Liberal Democratic Ideals of the West and its Historiography -- , 6. The Restlessness of the Western Spirit from a Hegelian Perspective -- Change without Progress in the East -- Measuring Human Accomplishments -- The Historiography of Europe's Revolutions -- Phenomenology of the Western Spirit -- Hegel and the Geographical Basis of the "infinite thirst" of the West -- Hegel and the Beginnings of Western Reason -- Hegel on the "desire" of World-Historical Individuals -- The Master-Slave Dialectic and its Historical Reference -- Hegel's Account of the State of Nature -- Kojeve and the fight to the death for pure prestige -- Spengler and the Faustian Soul of the West -- McNeill and the Indo-European Roots of the West's Warrior Ethos -- , 7. The Aristocratic Egalitarianism of Indo-Europeans and the Primordial Origins of Western Civilization -- The Founding Fathers of the West: Democratic Citizens or Aristocratic Warriors? -- Indo-Europeans as the "Other" of World History -- The Distinctive Indo-Europeanization of the West -- Chariots, Mycenaeans, and Aristocratic Berserkers -- Aristocratic and Martial Traits -- The Impact of Indo-Europeans on the Civilizations of the East -- "Big Man" Feasting and the Origins of Inequality -- Prestige-Seeking Chiefs -- From Simple to Paramount Chiefdoms -- "Eastern" Group-Oriented and "Western" Individualizing Chiefdoms -- City-States: Sumerian versus Greek -- The Autocratic Character of Mesopotamia and Egypt -- The Epic of Gilgamesh is not a Heroic Tragedy -- , 8. The Emergence of the Self from the Western `State of Nature' and the Conciliation of Christianity and Aristocratic Liberty -- Fukuyama and the Megalothymia of the "first men" of the West -- Why Hegel's "Master" Must be Aristocratic -- Kojeve and the "first appearance" of Self-Consciousness -- Charles Taylor and Plato's Self-Mastery -- The Beginnings of Genuine Personalities in History -- Nietzsche's "Homer on Competition" -- Arete and the Education of the Greeks -- The Roman Aristocratic Link -- The Germanic Barbarian Rejuvenation of the West -- Feudalism: an Aristocratic Type of Rule -- Charlemagne's Continuation of the Western Tradition -- Christian Virtues and Aristocratic Expansionism -- Aristocratic liberty and the Rise of Representative Institutions.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 90-04-19248-4
    Language: English
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  • 10
    Book
    Book
    New York, NY : New American Library
    UID:
    gbv_1512342521
    Format: 190 S.
    Edition: 1. print.
    Series Statement: Mentor book 32
    Language: English
    Author information: Hamilton, Edith 1867-1963
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