A Study of History: Abridgement of Volumes I-VI, by D.C. SomervellOxford University Press, 1947 - 617 páginas Donated by Sydney Harris. |
Dentro del libro
Resultados 1-3 de 84
Página 169
... forces beyond his control . There are two such external forces to which he is subject : one force which pushes and another force which pulls . He is some- times pushed off the Steppe by an increase of desiccation which puts his former ...
... forces beyond his control . There are two such external forces to which he is subject : one force which pushes and another force which pulls . He is some- times pushed off the Steppe by an increase of desiccation which puts his former ...
Página 281
... force whose outlet is being obstructed ; and , the greater the pressure , the more violent the explosion in which the imprisoned force ultimately breaks through . As for the social enormities that are the alternative to revolutions ...
... force whose outlet is being obstructed ; and , the greater the pressure , the more violent the explosion in which the imprisoned force ultimately breaks through . As for the social enormities that are the alternative to revolutions ...
Página 355
... force with force , which is justifiable within limits which may be divined by intuition but which are perhaps impossible to define , had fatal results because , in the first instance , it succeeded all too well . Intoxicated by the ...
... force with force , which is justifiable within limits which may be divined by intuition but which are perhaps impossible to define , had fatal results because , in the first instance , it succeeded all too well . Intoxicated by the ...
Contenido
2 Progress towards Selfdetermination | 1 |
THE GENESES OF CIVILIZATIONS | 48 |
Creative Minorities | 230 |
Derechos de autor | |
Otras 16 secciones no mostradas
Términos y frases comunes
achieved alien already Anatolia Arabic Assyrian Athenian Athens Babylonic barbarians body social breakdown Buddhism century B.C. challenge chapter Christendom Church city-state civiliza communities conquest creative culture disintegration dominant minority economic Egypt Egyptiac Society England English environment Eurasian Eurasian Nomads example external fact force frontier genesis Greek growth Hellas Hellenic Civilization Hellenic history Hellenic Society Hellenic World higher religions Hindu Hittite human impact Industrialism institutions internal proletariat Islam Italian Italy Jewish Jews Kingdom living Mahāyāna military mimesis Minoan Minoan Civilization modern Western movement Muslim nature Nomads original Orthodox Christendom Orthodox Christian Orthodox Christian Society Osmanlis Ottoman Ottoman Empire parochial Phanariots philosophy physical political present primitive societies problem religious response revolution Roman Empire Rome Russian Scandinavian Sinic souls Spartan spiritual stage Steppe stimulating success Sumeric Syriac Syriac Society tariat technique tion to-day turn universal victory Völkerwanderung Western Christendom Western Society Western World Zoroastrianism