The Unity of Western CivilizationRead Books Ltd, 15. 7. 2016. - 416 страница This early work by Francis Sydney Marvin was originally published in 1922 and we are now republishing it with a brand new introductory biography. 'The Unity of Western Civilization' is a wonderful work charting the historical development of the western world. Francis Sidney Marvin was born in 1863, in London, son of Francis Bentham Marvin and his wife Julia Chase. He was educated at Merchant Taylors School in London and went on to study lassics and modern history at St. John's College, Oxford. Marvin retained a keen interest in history throughout his life and organised many courses and lectures on the subject to promote interest in the field. He wrote several notable works, including Progress and History (1924), The Evolution of World-Peace (1933), and The leadership of the world (1914). Francis Sidney Marvin died in 1943, in Barnet, at the age of eighty. |
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... conflicts. That we on the Allied side stand fundamentally for this ideal is one of our most valuable assets. The fact that the lectures were delivered at a settlement for training persons for social work in a religious spirit, suggested ...
... conflicts. That we on the Allied side stand fundamentally for this ideal is one of our most valuable assets. The fact that the lectures were delivered at a settlement for training persons for social work in a religious spirit, suggested ...
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... conflict. (2) The stages in the process developed in history. In prehistory conflict and diversity are predominant, though the necessities of life prescribe certain uniformities. Consolidation comes in favoured physical conditions ...
... conflict. (2) The stages in the process developed in history. In prehistory conflict and diversity are predominant, though the necessities of life prescribe certain uniformities. Consolidation comes in favoured physical conditions ...
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... conflict? How far and in what form may we anticipate that the unity of mankind, centring as it must round Europe, will emerge from the trial? Only two occasions occur to the mind on which, since the break up of the Roman Empire, a ...
... conflict? How far and in what form may we anticipate that the unity of mankind, centring as it must round Europe, will emerge from the trial? Only two occasions occur to the mind on which, since the break up of the Roman Empire, a ...
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... conflict and commingling of races, which the theatre of its appearance has imposed? Looked at in itself, so far as we can isolate it from its surroundings, man's nature is distinguished from that of lower animals by two features, both ...
... conflict and commingling of races, which the theatre of its appearance has imposed? Looked at in itself, so far as we can isolate it from its surroundings, man's nature is distinguished from that of lower animals by two features, both ...
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... conflicts of modern history. We shall in this book go back first to a still earlier stage, a stage of prehistory, to a time when no one, not gifted with superhuman insight and prescience, could have foreseen the course which human ...
... conflicts of modern history. We shall in this book go back first to a still earlier stage, a stage of prehistory, to a time when no one, not gifted with superhuman insight and prescience, could have foreseen the course which human ...
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IV | |
UNITY AND DIVERSITY IN | |
THE COMMON ELEMENTS IN EUROPEAN LITERATURE | |
VII | |
THE UNITY OF WESTERN EDUCATION | |
COMMERCE AND FINANCE AS INTERNATIONAL FORCES | |
INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIAL LEGISLATION | |
COMMON IDEALS OF SOCIAL REFORM | |
POLITICAL BASES OF A WORLDSTATE | |
RELIGION AS A UNIFYING INFLUENCE IN WESTERN | |
THE GROWTH OF HUMANITY | |
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action Aristotle artists Babylonia basis character Christian Church classical Classical Antiquity commerce common conception conflict cooperation culture economic effect elements England English essential established Europe European evil faith forces foreign France French German grasslands GrecoRoman Greece Greek growth Herodotus Holy Roman Empire hope human ideal ideas imagination important industrial influence instinct intellectual international government J.A. Hobson judgement knowledge labour land language Latin learning least legislation less literature living man’s mankind means mediaeval Mediterranean Middle Ages mind modern movement nature Nibelungenlied organization ourselves passion peace perhaps philosophy Plato political possible practice present progress race reality recognize region religion religious Roman Empire Roman law Rome secular sense sentiment social reform society sovereignty spirit theory things thought today trade tradition treaties Tristan and Iseult uniformity United unity universal West Western civilization whole