A History of Knowledge (1991, ISBN
0-345-37316-2) is a book on intellectual history, with emphasis on the western
civilization, written by Charles
Van Doren, an editor of the Encyclopædia
Britannica[citation
needed]. It is a history of human thought covering over
5000 years of philosophy, learning, and belief systems that surveys the key
historical trends and breakthroughs connecting the globalizing human landscape
of the 20th century all the way back to the scattered roots of human
civilization in India, Egypt,
Mesopotamia, China, Greece,
and Rome[dubious
– discuss].
For a sense of the tone, the first section is entitled "The Wisdom of the
Ancients" and begins, "By the time written history began, some fifty centuries
ago, mankind had learned much more than our primitive ancestors knew."
The book's last chapter focuses on the potential developments of the 21st
century. It also contains biographies of many notable historical figures.
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Chapter Titles
- Wisdom of the Ancients
- The Greek Explosion
- What the Romans Knew
- Light in the Dark Ages
- The Middle Ages: The Great Explosion
- What was Reborn in the Renaissance?
- Europe Reaches Out
- The Invention of the Scientific method
- An Age of Revolutions
- The Nineteenth Century: Prelude to Modernity
- The World in 1914
- The Twentieth Century: The Triumph of Democracy
- The Twentieth Century: Science and Technology
- The Twentieth Century: Art and the Media
- The Next Hundred Years
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References