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Index
Title Page
Copyright Page
Plan of the Book
Preface By The Author
Note By The Editor of the Abridgement
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
I. The Unit of Historical Study
II. The Comparative Study of Civilizations
III. The Comparability of Societies
(1) Civilizations and Primitive Societies
(2) The Misconception of ‘The Unity of Civilization*
(3) The Case for the Comparability of Civilizations
(4) History, Science and Fiction
II. The Geneses of Civilizations
IV. The Problem and How not to Solve it
(1) The Problem stated
(2) Race
(3) Environment
V. Challenge and Response
(1) The Mythological Clue
(2) The Myth applied to the Problem
VI. The Virtues of Adversity
VII. The Challenge of the Environment
(1) The Stimulus of Hard Countries
(2) The Stimulus of New Ground
(3) The Stimulus of Blows
(4) The Stimulus of Pressures
(5) The Stimulus of Penalizations
VIII. The Golden Mean
(1) Enough and Too Much
(2) Comparisons in Three Terms
(3) Two Abortive Civilizations
(4) The Impact of Islam on the Christendoms
III. The Growths of Civilizations
IX. The Arrested Civilizations
(1) Polynesians, Eskimos and Nomads
(2) The ‘Osmanlis
(3) The Spartans
(4) General Characteristics
NOTE. Sea and Steppe as Language-conductors
X. The Nature of the Growths of Civilizations
(1) Two False Trails
(2) Progress towards Self-determination
XI. An Analysis of Growth
(1) Society and the Individual
(2) Withdrawal and Return: Individuals
(3) Withdrawal and Return: Creative Minorities
XII. Differentiation Through Growth
IV. The Breakdowns of Civilizations
XIII. The Nature of the Problem
XIV. Deterministic Solutions
XV. Loss of Command Over the Environment
(1) The Physical Environment
(2) The Human Environment
(3) A Negative Verdict
XVI. Failure of Self-Determination
(1) The Mechanicalness of Mimesis
(2) New Wine in Old Bottles
(3) The Nemesis of Creativity: Idolization of an Ephemeral Self
(4) The Nemesis of Creativity: Idolization of an Ephemeral Institution
(5) The Nemesis of Creativity: Idolization of an Ephemeral Technique
(6) The Suicidalness of Militarism
(7) The Intoxication of Victory
V. The Disintegrations of Civilizations
XVII. The Nature of Disintegration
(1) A General Survey
(2) Schism and Palingenesia
XVIII. Schism in the Body Social
(1) Dominant Minorities
(2) Internal Proletariats
(3) The Internal Proletariat of the Western World
(4) External Proletariats
(5) External Proletariats of the Western World
(6) Alien and Indigenous Inspirations
XIX. Schism in the Soul
(1) Alternative Ways of Behaviour, Feeling and Life
(2) ‘Abandon’ and Self-Control
(3) Truancy and Martyrdom
(4) The Sense of Drift and the Sense of Sin
(5) The Sense of Promiscuity
(a) Vulgarity and Barbarism in Manners
(b) Vulgarity and Barbarism in Art
(c) Lingue Franche
(d) Syncretism in Religion
(e) Cuius Regio eius Religion
(6) The Sense of Unity
(7) Archaism
(8) Futurism
(9) The Self-transcendence of Futurism
(10) Detachment and Transfiguration
(11) Palingenesia
xx. The Relation Between Disintegrating Societies and Individuals
(1) The Creative Genius as a Saviour
(2) The Saviour with the Sword
(3) The Saviour with the Time Machine
(4) The Philosopher masked by a King
(5) The God incarnate in a Man.
xxi. The Rhythm of Disintegration
xxii. Standardization Through Disintegration
Editor’s Note and Tablesi
Argument
Index
Footnotes
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