Politics and culture in international historyTransaction Publishers |
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Page xv
... forms, techniques, and words. These changes are noted or forecast in the 1960 introduction, and most are discussed in the following chapters, at least in their initial phases. The present summary assessment will therefore focus on their ...
... forms, techniques, and words. These changes are noted or forecast in the 1960 introduction, and most are discussed in the following chapters, at least in their initial phases. The present summary assessment will therefore focus on their ...
Page xix
... forms of internecine strife and succession struggles at the court, explain why sizable segments of the Kongolese population were seized by xenophobia toward the end of the seventeenth century. True to traditional thoughtways, a prime ...
... forms of internecine strife and succession struggles at the court, explain why sizable segments of the Kongolese population were seized by xenophobia toward the end of the seventeenth century. True to traditional thoughtways, a prime ...
Page xx
... forms and words as carriers or covers for concepts that are in no way congruous with the original Western ideas for which the symbols had been invented. In general it can be said therefore that cultural and political relations between ...
... forms and words as carriers or covers for concepts that are in no way congruous with the original Western ideas for which the symbols had been invented. In general it can be said therefore that cultural and political relations between ...
Page xxviii
... form, or denature the irreducible essence of that which calls itself Japan. Throughout the twentieth century, surely one of the most trying periods in their history, the Japanese could thus assure stability in law, government, and ...
... form, or denature the irreducible essence of that which calls itself Japan. Throughout the twentieth century, surely one of the most trying periods in their history, the Japanese could thus assure stability in law, government, and ...
Page xxxvi
... forms of despotism in this or previous centuries, (p.300) Furthermore, the thought is relevant that the West's leading policymakers and Sovietologists might not have lost their bearings, or could have corrected their trajectory in the ...
... forms of despotism in this or previous centuries, (p.300) Furthermore, the thought is relevant that the West's leading policymakers and Sovietologists might not have lost their bearings, or could have corrected their trajectory in the ...
Contents
3 | |
17 | |
The Pattern of Empire in the Ancient Near East in the First | 36 |
B The Greek CityStates | 66 |
The Empire of Alexander the Great and the Hel | 90 |
Greece and India | 118 |
b The Fusion of Stoicism and Buddhism in the Greco | 126 |
The Place of the Chinese State in Asia | 133 |
The Byzantine Realm | 298 |
Byzantine Diplomacy | 324 |
The Muslim Realm | 357 |
PART IV | 387 |
The Mediterranean Elites and the Furtherance | 399 |
The Scholars and the Propagation of Literate Knowledge | 412 |
The Intellectual Ascendancy of Western Europe | 425 |
E The Medieval Universities of Western Europe and their | 432 |
The Place of Rome in International Relations | 162 |
H The Internationalization of the Law of Contract and | 206 |
New Perspectives | 215 |
The Chief Elements in Mediterranean Power Politics | 226 |
The Medieval Western European Realm | 238 |
The Reality of the Western European Community in | 254 |
b The Christian Community of Western Europe and | 268 |
E New Departures in Intercultural Relations | 289 |
The Political Ascendancy of Western Europe | 438 |
E European Patterns of Transtentorial and Transnational | 499 |
a Transterritorial Union | 505 |
International Constitutionalism and the World | 513 |
Bibliography | 523 |
Index | 539 |
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