The book certainly covers a wide range of information, sometimes persuasively, and draws attention to a number of neglected thinkers. But the overwrought tone, unusual for an academic production, frequently verges on hysteria. And when confronted with a writer who seriously prefers Oliver Cromwell and all that he stands for to Michel de Montaigne and all that he stands for, one has to question that writer's good sense.
In 2008 The Teaching Company released Professor Arthur Williamson’s lectures titled “Apocalypse Now Apocalypse Then: Prophesy, the Creation of the Modern World.” On average each audio lecture is 45 minutes long. His lectures feature the biblical Book of Revelations writings about the last days ending with the return of Christ on earth. The lectures trace the apocalypse view from its medieval reformation, enlightenment, and industrial revolutionary periods of history. Also Prof. Williamson’s lectures profile apocalypse influences on antichrist Cold War Ideologies and the apocalyptic age of Martin Luther King Jr. I especially enjoyed his lectures about the similarity of perspectives between Jewish and Christian religious thought and morality practices. (P)
Wow. What an … imaginative … premise: everything in the western world - religion, philosophy, politics, governance, … science! …, morals, … everything…
… is due to one wacky psychedelic raving canonized by a faction of men out of dozens extant in the late 4th century CE that survived the hundreds of apocalypse writings from the first couple of centuries.
Um, okay. Dr. Williamson.
The lectures are delivered in a slow, breathy, almost conspiratorial manner. I survived by playing them at 1.2 and 1.3x normal speed. Lots of history (a plus, as some is obscure) and not inconsiderate amount of doctrine/dogma (not a plus). The Greeks would be annoyed with the perversion of their word ᾰ̓ποκᾰ́λῠψῐς.
Three stars for the history lessons, Minus one for the reaching.
the Important of these lectures form is that it discuss the political and scientific development from the religious side in the west which certainly shine more knowledge in the west history but sometimes feel like it's bit exaggerated