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Showing 1 to 15 of 23 results
Fox, Robin – Academic Questions, 2012
Civilization is always a work in progress. Every civilization is an experiment in how far people can shift themselves from the evolutionary norm of the small, kinship-integrated tribal society governed by ritual and custom to any kind of society either more complex in structure or less tribal in foundation. People assume that given intelligence…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Citizenship Education, Democracy, Western Civilization
Brann, Eva – Academic Questions, 2012
Is not America the West's very West, from the East Coast across the continent, "Western" even in its latest, pervasive piety--diversity? For diversity-preachment, in spite of all its excesses, is a recognition that this continent hosts--except for a tiny remnant of "Native" Americans--an immigrant population, who themselves, or through their…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Moral Development, Governance, Nationalism
Iannone, Carol – Academic Questions, 2012
This article presents an interview with Robert George, who holds Princeton's celebrated McCormick Chair in Jurisprudence and is the founding director of the James Madison Program. George has served on the President's Council on Bioethics and as a presidential appointee to the United States Commission on Civil Rights. He is also a member of the…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, United States History, Civil Rights, Interviews
Balch, Stephen H. – Academic Questions, 2012
One thing history's torrent appears to be sweeping away is, ironically, the study of its most productive wellspring, Western civilization. "The Vanishing West", a report the National Association of Scholars released in May 2011, documents the extent of this vanishing. The traditional Western civilization survey requirement, commonplace only…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Global Approach, Democracy, Citizenship
Huff, Toby E. – Academic Questions, 2012
In terms of political liberation and constitutional democracy, Americans cannot help but think back to 1776 and the Declaration of Independence. For the English, the mind reaches back to the English Declaration of Rights of 1689, and for those with somewhat longer historical memories, to Magna Carta of 1215. But the true origin of political…
Descriptors: Sciences, Scientific Concepts, Western Civilization, Foreign Countries
Duchesne, Ricardo – Academic Questions, 2012
The claim that there were "surprising similarities" between the West and the more advanced regions of Asia as late as 1800-1830, and that the Industrial Revolution was the one transformation that set Europe apart from Asia is central to the arguments of multicultural historians such as Kenneth Pomeranz, Bin Wong, Jack Goldstone, John Hobson, and…
Descriptors: Sciences, Western Civilization, Foreign Countries, Historians
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
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
Yee, Cordell D. K. – Academic Questions, 2012
One of the reasons often advanced for the study of Western civilization is its history of scientific and technical prowess. Advances in science and technology have resulted in the many conveniences of modern life: air travel, automobiles, and smart phones, to name just a few. These are fruits of the Baconian project, which emphasized observation…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Foreign Countries, Poetry, Democracy
Academic Questions, 2010
To get an inside view of campus life today, the Intercollegiate Studies Institute (whose purpose is to foster in college students an appreciation of the values that sustain a free society) was approached and asked to supply a list of their Collegiate Network editors--students who are active on their campuses, interested in the issues facing higher…
Descriptors: Student Publications, Student Experience, Educational Experience, Essays
Huff, Toby E. – Academic Questions, 2009
Globalization has brought more and more peoples and societies around the world into contact with "international" standards of law, commerce, and communication. That process has also enabled a number of formerly underdeveloped societies to experience extraordinary patterns of economic growth, especially in the last third of the twentieth century.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Global Approach, World History, World Views
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
Campbell, Douglas G. – Academic Questions, 2009
This article presents the author's interesting experiences relating to the ideological indoctrination taking place on college campuses. The author suggests that the philosophical and ethical foundations of both the United States and the modern American university are being undermined by the ideology of collectivism, with its dogmatic hatred of…
Descriptors: Western Civilization, Educational Philosophy, Foundations of Education, Ideology
Kissel, Adam – Academic Questions, 2009
The University of Chicago met widespread national opposition ten years ago after it instituted a new, less demanding core curriculum to make way for more electives. It was part of a plan to make the curriculum significantly less demanding in order to attract more students and improve the school's bottom line in a time of putative budget deficits.…
Descriptors: Core Curriculum, Elective Courses, Course Selection (Students), Required Courses
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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