Politics and culture in international historyTransaction Publishers |
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Page 4
... thought that antedate, in many cases by millenniums, both the conception of the one world and that of the two. Many of these indigenous patterns of life and thought got blurred while being integrated in the modern Occidental scheme of ...
... thought that antedate, in many cases by millenniums, both the conception of the one world and that of the two. Many of these indigenous patterns of life and thought got blurred while being integrated in the modern Occidental scheme of ...
Page 6
... thought can be assumed to precede action in all human societies, I concluded that inquiry and analysis should focus on mental and moral persuasions, be they religious, philosophical, or ideological; on basic values and norms within each ...
... thought can be assumed to precede action in all human societies, I concluded that inquiry and analysis should focus on mental and moral persuasions, be they religious, philosophical, or ideological; on basic values and norms within each ...
Page 9
... thought and behavior, it has fostered the development of what may be called split cultures, where societies, wavering between two frames of reference, have become so uncertain of their true attachments that they risked approaching a ...
... thought and behavior, it has fostered the development of what may be called split cultures, where societies, wavering between two frames of reference, have become so uncertain of their true attachments that they risked approaching a ...
Page 14
... thought and behavior, it draws attention to the role that informed elites have played when they have been called upon to regulate encounters between their civilizations by dispelling conflict and establishing trusted terms of reference ...
... thought and behavior, it draws attention to the role that informed elites have played when they have been called upon to regulate encounters between their civilizations by dispelling conflict and establishing trusted terms of reference ...
Page 21
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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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accepted accordance actual affairs ancient Arabs Asia authority became become Byzantine Byzantium cause century chief China Chinese Christian church cities civilizations close concept constitutional continued contract course cultural developed diplomacy early East Eastern effect emperor Empire established Europe European existence fact force foreign forms Greek hand human ideas imperial India individual influence institutions intellectual interests Islamic Italy king land later means medieval Mediterranean merchants methods Middle moral Muslim nations nature official organization orientation original particular peace period Persian policies political possible practical present principles reality realized realm reason records reference regarded region relations religious representatives Roman Rome rule Russian secular seems separate social society successful suggested theory thought tions trade traditions unity universal values various Venetian West Western whole York