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Williams, Philip F. – Academic Questions, 2012
Great Books programs and Western civilization courses have understandably emphasized the Greco-Roman and Hebraic origins of Western civilization, while moving on to a European focus, with some material relating to the Western Hemisphere usually brought in for good measure. After all, people have the ancient Greeks to thank for such landmark…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Foreign Countries, Non Western Civilization, Asian History
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Butterworth, Charles E. – Academic Questions, 2012
The attention in the West, especially in the United States, now accorded Islam and those who conduct themselves according to its precepts betrays woeful ignorance of both. As Graham Fuller has persuasively argued in his recent book, "A World Without Islam", Western culture owes much to Islam as well as to Muslims and would be greatly impoverished…
Descriptors: Muslims, Islam, Non Western Civilization, Religious Conflict
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Duchesne, Ricardo – Academic Questions, 2009
In this article, the author reviews several books on world history from the 1920s to the 1940s. These include books authored by a diverse group: H.G. Wells, "Outline of History" (Macmillan, 1920); James Henry Breasted, "Ancient Times, A History of the Early World" (published in 1916 by Ginn and Company and largely rewritten in 1935); M.…
Descriptors: World History, Textbook Content, Textbook Evaluation, Textbook Research
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Nieli, Russell K. – Academic Questions, 2007
In this carefully documented essay, Russell K. Nieli outlines the major transformation in American higher education that began at the end of the nineteenth century. Today's research- and vocation-driven private universities began as Christian institutions founded by zealous evangelizers, while public colleges embraced a watered-down version of the…
Descriptors: Educational History, Higher Education, Research Universities, Private Colleges
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Smith, Barry – Academic Questions, 2002
This article explores whether it is possible to compare civilizations one with another; that is, whether one can construct some neutral and objective framework in terms of which we could establish in what respects one civilization might deserve to be ranked more highly than its competitors. The author states that, in addressing the idea of an…
Descriptors: Non Western Civilization, Western Civilization, Comparative Analysis, Validity