Dynamics of World History
Publication Date: May 28, 2002
Format: Paperback
Pages: 450
Delivery in 2-9 business days.
In scope and in vision, Christopher Dawson's histography ranks with the work of men like Spengler, Northrop, and Toynbee. Several major themes run through Dawson's work, but perhaps the most significant contribution was his insistence on the importance of religion in shaping and sustaining civilizations.
Religion, Dawson believed, is the great creative force in any culture, and the loss of a society's historic religion therefore portends a process of social dissolution. For this reason, Dawson concludes that Western Society must find a way to revitalize its spiritual life is it is to avoid irreversible decay. Progress, the real religion of modernity, is insufficient to sustain cultural health. And an a historical, secularized Christianity is an oxymoron, a pseudo-religion only nominally related to the historic religion of the West.
Dawson maintained that the hope of the present age lay in the reconciliation of the religious tradition of Christianity with the intellectual tradition of humanism and the new knowledge about man and nature provided by modern science. Dynamics of Word History shows that though such a task may be difficult, it is not impossible