000 01631nam a2200193Ia 4500
999 _c41783
_d41783
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008 200204s9999 xx 000 0 und d
020 _a631145427
082 _a306 HAL
100 _aHall,John A.
245 0 _aPowers and liberties: the clauses and consequences of the rise of the west
260 _aOxford
260 _bBasil Blackwell
260 _c1985
300 _a272 p.
520 _a"This is a major contribution an important debate. Why did the West rise? What are the general conditions under which societies develop, stagnate and decay? These are the issues covered. It is written with great clarity and verve and contains many interesting and striking ideas. I can safely predict that it will attract both readers and reputation. Michael Mann, London School of Economics and Political Science This book is a philosophic history in the tradition of Hume, Adam Smith, Marx and Weber. The first half offers an explanation of the emergence in one of the world's civilisations of a self-sustaining economic dynamism that took on a broadly capitalist form. A solution is therefore offered to Max Weber's problem, that capitalism was somehow related to Christianity, but it is an answer far removed from that of Weber himself. The second half examines the three worlds of modernity, state socialism, the Third World and the liberal polities of the West, each of which is now interlinked by the force of international military and economic competition. The concluding chapter spells out the possible strategic options available to modern Europe.
650 _aSociology
942 _cB
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