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288 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 2002
“We have only to look around us at the prevailing myths of the twentieth century—in books and films—to see how strongly Zarathustra’s ethical dualism, the eternal battle between good and evil, continues as a constant theme in the human imagination.”
“… Zarathustra had such a clear vision of humanity’s moral choices that his counsel—good words, good thoughts, good deeds—is as applicable to our times as it was to his own...”… I hit an intellectual wall. It seems as if Kriwaczek has become so enamoured of his subject that he is incapable of good judgment about it. Like the diehard Communist who thinks that the Soviet State just wasn’t given enough time to complete its mission of liberating the proletariat, Kriwaczek wants us to try harder with Zoroastrian dualism.



I felt a deep & moving kinship with the old Zoroastrian. Two & a half thousand years ago my ancestors & his had encountered each other in a meeting that would shape our world. Through my ancestors, the exiled Judeans of Cyrus the Great's empire, the teachings of Zarathustra had passed to the Jews, & through them to the Christians & the Muslims, eventually to become an integral part of the universal spiritual world-view.
Western culture is often said to have been erected on foundations of Hellenism & Judaism. From now on, I would have to add "and Zoroastrianism too."
