Igor M. Diakonoff, Geoffrey Hosking9780521643986, 0-521-64398-8, 0521643481
This is a broad and ambitious study of the entire history of humanity that takes as its point of departure Marx’s theory of social evolution. Professor Diakonoff’s theory of world history differs from Marx’s in a number of ways. First, he has expanded Marx’s five stages of development to eight. Second, he denies that social evolution necessarily implies progress and shows how “each progress is simultaneously a regress,” and third, he demonstrates that the transition from one stage to another is not necessarily marked by social conflict and that sometimes this is achieved peacefully and gracefully. As the book moves through these various stages, the reader is drawn into a remarkable and thought-provoking study of the process of the history of the human race that focuses on the wide range of factors (economic, social, military-technological, and socio-pyschological) that have influenced our development from palaeolithic times to the present day. |
Table of contents : EEn……Page 1 Contents……Page 6 Foreword……Page 8 Preface……Page 12 Introduction……Page 14 1 – First Phase (Primitive)……Page 23 2 – Second Phase (Primitive Communal)……Page 26 3 – Third Phase (Early Antiquity)……Page 34 4 – Fourth Phase (Imperial Antiquity)……Page 50 5 – Fifth Phase (the Middle Ages)……Page 69 6 – Sixth Phase (the Stable Absolutist Post-Medieval Phase)……Page 157 7 – Seventh Phase (Capitalist)……Page 206 8 – Eighth Phase (Post-Capitalist)……Page 337 Index……Page 352 |
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