Freedom in the Western World: From the Dark Ages to the Rise of DemocracyHarper & Row, 1963 - 428 páginas Herbert J. Muller examines the meaning of freedom in the great civilizations of the past including the Sumerian, Egyptian, Minoan, Assyrian, Persian, Phoenician, Greek, Roman and early Christian. Ranging from the attempts of the cave man to free himself from the tyranny of nature through magic and ritual, to the religious despotism of Byzantium, the author surveys freedom's gains and triumps, its losses and failures. In doing so, he provides the reader with new insight into the meaning and destiny of freedom in Western Civilization. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 66
Página 32
... civilization in the end of Rome . There was a decline of classical civilization , he granted , but with it came a shift to Christian values ; what seemed all - important to men brought up on Greco - Roman culture no longer seemed vital ...
... civilization in the end of Rome . There was a decline of classical civilization , he granted , but with it came a shift to Christian values ; what seemed all - important to men brought up on Greco - Roman culture no longer seemed vital ...
Página 33
... civilization , the period from A.D. 400 to 1000 was unmistakably a dark age in Europe , predominantly barbarous . The Germanic peoples proved wholly incapable of matching the feats of the Arabs , who in overrunning a world with a much ...
... civilization , the period from A.D. 400 to 1000 was unmistakably a dark age in Europe , predominantly barbarous . The Germanic peoples proved wholly incapable of matching the feats of the Arabs , who in overrunning a world with a much ...
Página 38
... civilization . Wer- ner Sombart argued that it laid the foundations of capitalism by insti- tuting the regular , punctual life — the bourgeois ideal of being “ as regular as clockwork ” —which no previous society had considered neces ...
... civilization . Wer- ner Sombart argued that it laid the foundations of capitalism by insti- tuting the regular , punctual life — the bourgeois ideal of being “ as regular as clockwork ” —which no previous society had considered neces ...
Contenido
The Rise and Fall of Islam | 1 |
THE ORIGINS OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION | 25 |
The Medieval Sources of Freedom | 47 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 10 secciones no mostradas
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Freedom in the Western World: From the Dark Ages to the Rise of Democracy Herbert Joseph Muller Vista de fragmentos - 1963 |
Freedom in the Western World: From the Dark Ages to the Rise of Democracy Herbert Joseph Muller Vista de fragmentos - 1963 |
Términos y frases comunes
absolute absolute monarchy Age of Enlightenment Americans ancien régime ancient aristocracy Aristotle authority basic became began belief bourgeois Burke Catholic century chiefly Christendom Christian Church civilization classical common Constitution culture declared democracy democratic Descartes doctrine Dutch Republic early economic effort Empire England English Enlightenment essential European faith feudal Florence Florentine France freedom French Revolution Galileo genius Greek growth historians holy human idea ideal independence inspired intellectual interests Islam Jacob Fugger kings less liberty lords Louis XIV Luther major Masaccio means medieval ment Middle Ages modern Mohammed monarchy moral natural never nobility Parliament peasants philosophical political popes popular principle Prophet Protestant Protestant Reformation Protestantism Puritan reason reform reign religion religious remained Renaissance revolutionary Roman Rome royal rule rulers scientific sense simple social society Spain spirit theory thinkers thought tion took tradition truth tyranny universal Voltaire wealth