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This is an interpretative history of the Russian Empire and Soviet
Union between 1850 and 1991. During this tumultuous period, the
countries of this vast area were transformed from traditional,
agrarian societies into modern industrial states. Like China, the
Soviet Union underwent this transition under the banner of
communism. After introductory chapters on traditional Russian
history and lifeways, David Christian discusses how these
transformations affected both governments and ordinary citizens,
what they gained, what they endured, and why the Communist
experiment ultimately failed.
'David Christian's approach to understanding history can help all
of us learn to prepare for the future' - Bill Gates A user's guide
to the future: from the algorithms in DNA to why time is like a
cocktail glass, interstellar migrations, transhumanism, the fate of
the galaxy, and the last black hole... Every second of our lives -
whether we're looking both ways before crossing the street,
celebrating the birth of a baby, or moving to a new city - we must
cope with an unknowable future by telling stories about what will
happen next. Where is the future, the place where we set those
stories? Can we trust our future stories? And what sort of futures
do they show us? David Christian, historian and bestselling author
of Origin Story, is renowned for pioneering the emerging discipline
of Big History, which surveys the whole of the past. But with
Future Stories, he casts his sharp analytical eye forward, offering
an introduction to the strange world of the future, and a guide to
what we think we know about it at all scales, from the predictive
mechanisms of single-celled organisms and tomato plants to the
merging of colossal galaxies billions of years from now. Drawing
together science, history and philosophy from a huge range of
places and times, Christian explores how we prepare for uncertain
futures, including the future of human evolution, artificial
intelligence, interstellar travel, and more. By linking the study
of the past much more closely to the study of the future, we can
begin to imagine what the world will look like in the next hundred
years and consider solutions to the biggest challenges facing us
all.
A scholar among the laity, anonymous author "David Christian," in
checking the text amongst the ordained, received positive feedback
including the following: Ernie (38 years of church pastoral
leadership) wrote, "Book is remarkable with more knowledge of
biblical literature and history than most ministers including yours
truly." Laurie (pastor of a small local church) offered "For your
fun and engaging approach - abundant praise. And know that it's a
fine book to use with small groups." Wayne (ordained seminary
professor) calls it "a thesaurus of great reading, good thinking,
and delightfully provocative writing." The goal of the book is to
motivate saving the many Christian churches from themselves so that
in unity the Church will motivate saving the world from itself. We
don't have a lot of time.
This book presents the history of globalization as a network-based
story in the context of Big History. Departing from the traditional
historic discourse, in which communities, cities, and states serve
as the main units of analysis, the authors instead trace the
historical emergence, growth, interconnection, and merging of
various types of networks that have gradually encompassed the
globe. They also focus on the development of certain ideas,
processes, institutions, and phenomena that spread through those
networks to become truly global. The book specifies five
macro-periods in the history of globalization and comprehensively
covers the first four, from roughly the 9th - 7th millennia BC to
World War I. For each period, it identifies the most important
network-related developments that facilitated (or even spurred on)
such transitions and had the greatest impacts on the history of
globalization. By analyzing the world system's transition to new
levels of complexity and connectivity, the book provides valuable
insights into the course of Big History and the evolution of human
societies.
It's been a church, a mosque and a synagogue. Jesus is said to have
dined there. James, his brother, is believed to have been interred
there. King David may be buried beneath the floor. The subject of
intense speculation by both scholars and the faithful, the Cenacle
on Mount Zion-also known as the Upper Room of the New Testament
gospels and as the Tomb of David-has remained a mystery for
centuries. Claimed by Jews, Christians and Muslims, the sacred
structure continues to evoke passionate controversy. Does it date
back to the time of Christ? Was the Last Supper celebrated there?
Is this the place where the Holy Spirit descended on the apostles
on the first Pentecost following Easter Sunday? Did King David's
remains ever lie there? These and many other questions are explored
in this first-ever study, offering a readable, fully researched
narrative account of the Cenacle's history, archaeology and
imagery. Artistic, architectural and photographic illustrations
document the Cenacle and its surroundings over the past 1,500
years.
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Prix Pictet: Human
Michael Benson, Isabelle Von Ribbentrop; Text written by Michael Benson, David Christian, Meehan Crist
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R1,071
Discovery Miles 10 710
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The breadth of the human experience We quite rightly celebrate
human creativity, innovation, and entrepreneurship, but too often
our triumphs in science, engineering and technology come at
monumental cost. The human story is more often a tale of conflict
and despair than of nurture, love, and coexistence. It would be
easy to read the human story as one of tragic hubris. Yet it does
not end here. We stand on the threshold of the future wondering
which way the dice will fall. Our wager with posterity is that
human ingenuity, intelligence, and resilience of spirit are
powerful enough to insist upon a very different future for the
human story. Prix Pictet: Human features over 100 outstanding works
of contemporary photography by many of the world’s most acclaimed
photographers.
Volume 1 of the Cambridge World History is an introduction to both
the discipline of world history and the earliest phases of world
history up to 10,000 BCE. In Part I leading scholars outline the
approaches, methods, and themes that have shaped and defined world
history scholarship across the world and right up to the present
day. Chapters examine the historiographical development of the
field globally, periodisation, divergence and convergence, belief
and knowledge, technology and innovation, family, gender,
anthropology, migration, and fire. Part II surveys the vast
Palaeolithic era, which laid the foundations for human history,
concentrating on the most recent phases of hominin evolution, the
rise of Homo sapiens and the very earliest human societies through
to the end of the last ice age. Anthropologists, archaeologists,
historical linguists and historians examine climate and tools,
language, and culture, as well as offering regional perspectives
from across the world.
Bread and Salt - a literal translation of the Russian word for
hospitality - explores the social and economic implications of
eating and drinking in Russia in the thousand years before 1900.
Eating and drinking are viewed here as social activities which
involves the economics of production, storage and distribution of
food stuffs. These activities attract both social controls and
state taxation; in this way the everyday process of eating and
drinking is linked with the history of Russia. The dominance of
grain in the diet throughout the period and the importance of salt,
as implied in the title, are dealt with, as are the early Russian
beer-drinking fraternities. The relatively late introduction of
spirits, in the from of vodka, and it disastrous consequences in
social terms are described. Tea and the samovar, also much more a
latecomer than is generally realized, did little to diminish
excessive drinking. Drinking, in any event, was by no means
discourage by the state, since it was a major source of state
income. The final section of the book looks at rural diets in the
nineteenth century, when some variation and new items, such as the
potato, became important. At the same time, peasants depended
basically on the grain crop, as they had for thousands of years.
Forced by txation to enter the market, afflicted by severe famines
towards the end of the century, many peasants ate and drank no
better as a result of the modernization of the county.
An introduction to a new way of looking at history, from a
perspective that stretches from the beginning of time to the
present day, "Maps of Time "is world history on an unprecedented
scale. Beginning with the Big Bang, David Christian views the
interaction of the natural world with the more recent arrivals in
flora and fauna, including human beings.
Cosmology, geology, archeology, and population and environmental
studies--all figure in David Christian's account, which is an
ambitious overview of the emerging field of "Big History." "Maps of
Time "opens with the origins of the universe, the stars and the
galaxies, the sun and the solar system, including the earth, and
conducts readers through the evolution of the planet before human
habitation. It surveys the development of human society from the
Paleolithic era through the transition to agriculture, the
emergence of cities and states, and the birth of the modern,
industrial period right up to intimations of possible futures.
Sweeping in scope, finely focused in its minute detail, this
riveting account of the known world, from the inception of
space-time to the prospects of global warming, lays the groundwork
for world history--and Big History--true as never before to its
name.
'David Christian's approach to understanding history can help all
of us learn to prepare for the future' - Bill Gates A user's guide
to the future: from the algorithms in DNA to why time is like a
cocktail glass, interstellar migrations, transhumanism, the fate of
the galaxy, and the last black hole... Every second of our lives -
whether we're looking both ways before crossing the street,
celebrating the birth of a baby, or moving to a new city - we must
cope with an unknowable future by telling stories about what will
happen next. Where is the future, the place where we set those
stories? Can we trust our future stories? And what sort of futures
do they show us? David Christian, historian and bestselling author
of Origin Story, is renowned for pioneering the emerging discipline
of Big History, which surveys the whole of the past. But with
Future Stories, he casts his sharp analytical eye forward, offering
an introduction to the strange world of the future, and a guide to
what we think we know about it at all scales, from the predictive
mechanisms of single-celled organisms and tomato plants to the
merging of colossal galaxies billions of years from now. Drawing
together science, history and philosophy from a huge range of
places and times, Christian explores how we prepare for uncertain
futures, including the future of human evolution, artificial
intelligence, interstellar travel, and more. By linking the study
of the past much more closely to the study of the future, we can
begin to imagine what the world will look like in the next hundred
years and consider solutions to the biggest challenges facing us
all.
This is a study of the social, economic, and political role of
Vodka in nineteenth-century Russia. Since the `Green Serpent' first
appeared in sixteenth-century Muscovy, it has played a vital part
in Russian life. Vodka became an essential part of Russian
working-class celebrations: personal, religious, and commercial.
Trade in Vodka redistributed wealth upwards through Russian society
over several centuries. Indeed, Russia's status as a great power
was underpinned by it: by the nineteenth century, it generated
one-third of government revenue - enough to cover most of the costs
of the vast army. The dependence on Vodka of both people and state
has endured into the Gorbachev era. But despite Vodka's key role in
Russian history, and the complex network of corruption associated
with it, the subject has been ignored by most historians until now.
This study concentrates on an important transitional era in the
history of Vodka: the early nineteenth century. During this period,
Vodka taxes played the role that salt taxes had played in the
ancien regime in France. The abolition of the tax farm in 1863
should be seen as one of the most important of the `Great Reforms'
of the 1860s, an era which, in many ways, parallels the glasnost of
the 1980s.
'David Christian's approach to understanding history can help all
of us learn to prepare for the future' - Bill Gates A user's guide
to the future: from the algorithms in DNA to why time is like a
cocktail glass, interstellar migrations, transhumanism, the fate of
the galaxy, and the last black hole... Every second of our lives -
whether we're looking both ways before crossing the street,
celebrating the birth of a baby, or moving to a new city - we must
cope with an unknowable future. How do we do this? And how do we,
like most living organisms, manage this impossible challenge quite
well (at least most of the time)? David Christian, historian and
bestselling author of Origin Story, is renowned for pioneering the
emerging discipline of Big History, which surveys the whole of the
past. But with Future Stories, he casts his sharp analytical eye
forward, offering an introduction to the strange world of the
future, and a guide to what we think we know about it at all
scales, from the predictive mechanisms of single-celled organisms
and tomato plants to the merging of colossal galaxies billions of
years from now. Drawing together science, history and philosophy
from a huge range of places and times, Christian explores how we
prepare for uncertain futures, including the future of human
evolution, artificial intelligence, interstellar travel, and more.
By linking the study of the past much more closely to the study of
the future, we can begin to imagine what the world will look like
in the next hundred years and consider solutions to the biggest
challenges facing us all.
A scholar among the laity, anonymous author "David Christian," in
checking the text amongst the ordained, received positive feedback
including the following: Ernie (38 years of church pastoral
leadership) wrote, "Book is remarkable with more knowledge of
biblical literature and history than most ministers including yours
truly." Laurie (pastor of a small local church) offered "For your
fun and engaging approach - abundant praise. And know that it's a
fine book to use with small groups." Wayne (ordained seminary
professor) calls it "a thesaurus of great reading, good thinking,
and delightfully provocative writing." The goal of the book is to
motivate saving the many Christian churches from themselves so that
in unity the Church will motivate saving the world from itself. We
don't have a lot of time.
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