A Study of History, Volumen3Oxford University Press, 1951 |
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Página 128
... progress cannot properly be described in the spatial metaphor of ' direction ' . For the progress which we call growth is a cumulative progress , and its cumulative character is apparent in both its outward and its inward aspect . In ...
... progress cannot properly be described in the spatial metaphor of ' direction ' . For the progress which we call growth is a cumulative progress , and its cumulative character is apparent in both its outward and its inward aspect . In ...
Página 155
... progress is an improvement in technique . Between an improvement in technique and a progress in the conquest of the physical environment , a definite correlation may fairly be assumed to exist . Is there evidence of an equally definite ...
... progress is an improvement in technique . Between an improvement in technique and a progress in the conquest of the physical environment , a definite correlation may fairly be assumed to exist . Is there evidence of an equally definite ...
Página 174
Arnold Toynbee. no correlation between progress in technique and progress in civili- zation ; yet , although the history of technique proves not to be , in itself , the criterion for which we are seeking , it may still provide us with a ...
Arnold Toynbee. no correlation between progress in technique and progress in civili- zation ; yet , although the history of technique proves not to be , in itself , the criterion for which we are seeking , it may still provide us with a ...
Contenido
THE GROWTHS OF CIVILIZATIONS | 1 |
B THE NATURE OF THE GROWTHS OF CIVILIZATIONS | 112 |
THE PROCESS OF THE GROWTHS OF CIVILIZATIONS | 128 |
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Términos y frases comunes
Achaean achieved action Afrasian Alföld animals Arabs Athenian Athens Banu Hilal barbarians Bergson body social career century B.C. challenge chapter circa city-state climatic conquered conquest creative minority culture Date Horde Date domain economic Egypt Egyptiac English environment eruptions êthos Eurasian Nomads Eurasian Steppe feudal field genius geographical expansion Greece Greek growth Hellas Hellenic Civilization Hellenic history Hellenic Society Hellenic World human Ibn Khaldun individual institutions invention Italian Italy Janissaries Khazars Lacedaemonian living London Lycurgean Macedon Macedonian ment Messenia military Minoan Minoan Civilization modern Western Mongols movement Muhammad nature Nomads Olynthus original Osmanlis Ottoman passage Pechenegs physical political Polybius present primitive problem régime Roman Empire Rome Russian sedentary Sinic slave-household soul Spartan Spartiate Spartiate Peers spiritual Sumeric Syriac technique Threshold Thucydides tion Transalpine turn universal Western Christendom Western Society Western World whole withdrawal Withdrawal-and-Return Zeus