Freedom in the Western World: From the Dark Ages to the Rise of DemocracyHarper & Row, 1963 - 428 Seiten 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. |
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Seite 185
... belief , men could realize that their own belief might be custom , and were somewhat less disposed to accept it on unreasoned or unconscious faith . But the most significant result of the discoveries was perhaps the simplest just the ...
... belief , men could realize that their own belief might be custom , and were somewhat less disposed to accept it on unreasoned or unconscious faith . But the most significant result of the discoveries was perhaps the simplest just the ...
Seite 185
... belief , men could realize that their own belief might be custom , and were somewhat less disposed to accept it on unreasoned or unconscious faith . But the most significant result of the discoveries was perhaps the simplest just the ...
... belief , men could realize that their own belief might be custom , and were somewhat less disposed to accept it on unreasoned or unconscious faith . But the most significant result of the discoveries was perhaps the simplest just the ...
Seite 257
... belief , looked to the facts ; it was implicitly hostile to an unreasoned faith , or to belief supported only by the authority of custom or tradition . Hence both Fontenelle and Bayle insisted that the fact of universal belief in a ...
... belief , looked to the facts ; it was implicitly hostile to an unreasoned faith , or to belief supported only by the authority of custom or tradition . Hence both Fontenelle and Bayle insisted that the fact of universal belief in a ...
Inhalt
The Rise and Fall of Islam | 1 |
THE ORIGINS OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION | 25 |
The Medieval Sources of Freedom | 47 |
Urheberrecht | |
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