Civilization Quotes
Civilization: The West and the Rest
by
Niall Ferguson10,264 ratings, 3.86 average rating, 1,011 reviews
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Civilization Quotes
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“No civilization, no matter how mighty it may appear to itself, is indestructible.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“It was an idea that made the crucial difference between British and Iberian America – an idea about the way people should govern themselves. Some people make the mistake of calling that idea ‘democracy’ and imagining that any country can adopt it merely by holding elections. In reality, democracy was the capstone of an edifice that had as its foundation the rule of law – to be precise, the sanctity of individual freedom and the security of private property rights, ensured by representative, constitutional government.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“What makes a civilization real to its inhabitants, in the end, is not just the splendid edifices at it centre, nor even the smooth functioning of the institutions they house. At its core, a civilization is the texts that are taught in its schools, learned by its students and recollected in times of tribulation.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“The dead outnumber the living fourteen to one, and we ignore the accumulated experience of such a huge majority of mankind at our peril”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“The real social contract, (Edmund Burke) argued, was not Rousseau's social contract between the noble savage and the General Will, but a "partnership" between the present generation and future generations.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“The success of a civilization is measured not just in its aesthetic achievements but also, and surely more importantly, in the duration and quality of life of its citizens.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“Between 1980 and 2000 the number of patents registered in Israel was 7652 compared with 367 for all the Arab countries combined. In 2008 alone is really inventors applied to register 9591 new patents. The equivalent figure for Iran was 50 and for all majority Muslim countries in the world with 5657.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“Was there something distinctive about American civil society that gave democracy a better chance than in France, as Tocqueville argued? Was the already centralized French state more likely to produce a Napoleon than the decentralized United States? We cannot be sure. But it is not unreasonable to ask how long the US constitution would have lasted if the United States had suffered the same military and economic strains that swept away the French constitution of 1791”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“To my mind, a civilization is much more than just the contents of a few first-rate art galleries. It is a highly complex human organization. Its paintings, statues and buildings may well be its most eye-catching achievements, but they are unintelligible without some understanding of the economic, social and political institutions which devised them, paid for them, executed them – and preserved them for our gaze.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“The result is one of the greatest paradoxes of modern history: that an economic system designed to offer infinite choice to the individual has ended up homogenizing humanity.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“Conceptio culpa Nasci pena Labor vita Necesse mori ‘Conception is sin, birth is pain, life is toil, death is inevitable.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“The Japanese had no idea what elements of Western culture and institutions where the crucial ones, so they ended up copying everything, from western clothes and hair styles to the European practice of colonizing foreign people. Unfortunately, they took up empire-building at precisely the moment when the cost of imperialism began to exceed the benefits.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“The rise of the West is, quite simply, the pre-eminent historical phenomenon of the second half of the second millennium after Christ. It is the story at the very heart of modern history. It is perhaps the most challenging riddle historians have to solve. And we should solve it not merely to satisfy our curiosity. For it is only by identifying the true causes of Western ascendancy that we can hope to estimate with any degree of accuracy the imminence of our decline and fall.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“There is in fact no such thing as the future, singular; only futures, plural. There are multiple interpretations of history, to be sure, none definitive – but there is only one past. And although the past is over, for two reasons it is indispensable to our understanding of what we experience today and what lies ahead of us tomorrow and thereafter.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“After 1968 the restored communist regime required all Czech rock musicians to sit a written exam in Marxism Leninism”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“One difficulty is that we cannot always reconstruct the past thoughts of these non-Western peoples, for not all of them existed in civilizations with the means of recording and preserving thought. In the end, history is primarily the study of civilizations, because without written records the historian is thrown back on spearheads and pot fragments, from which much less can be inferred. The”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“We should not delude ourselves into thinking that our historical narratives, as commonly constructed, are anything more than retrofits.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“Historians are not scientists. They cannot (and should not even trying to) establish universal laws of social or political "physics" with reliable predictive powers. Why? Because there is no possibility of repeating the single, multi-millennium experiment that constant to the past. The sample size of human history is one.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“No serious writer would claim that the reign of Western civilization was unblemished. Yet there are those who would insist that there was nothing whatever good about it. This position is absurd.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“Christianity, the King remarked sardonically, was ‘stuffed with miracles, contradictions and absurdities, was spawned in the fevered imaginations of the Orientals and then spread to our Europe, where some fanatics espoused it, some intriguers pretended to be convinced by it and some imbeciles actually believed it’.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“The English were luckier in their drugs, too: long habituated to alcohol, they were roused from inebriation in the seventeenth century by American tobacco, Arabic coffee and Chinese tea. They got the stimulation of the coffee house, part café, part stock exchange, part chat-room;47 the Chinese ended up with the lethargy of the opium den, their pipes filled by none other than the British East India Company.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“Robins applied Newtonian physics to the problem of artillery, using differential equations to provide the first true description of the impact of air resistance on the trajectories of high-speed projectiles (a problem that Galileo had not been able to solve).”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“By 1990 the average American was seventy-three times richer than the average Chinese.17”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“interaction of these few civilizations with one another, as much as with their own environments, has been among the most important drivers of historical change.10 The striking thing about these interactions is that authentic civilizations seem to remain true unto themselves for very long periods, despite outside influences. As Fernand Braudel put it: ‘Civilization is in fact the longest story of all . . . A civilization . . . can persist through a series of economies or societies.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“A civilization is the single largest unit of human organization, higher though more amorphous than even an empire. Civilizations are partly a practical response by human populations to their environments – the challenges of feeding, watering, sheltering and defending themselves – but they are also cultural in character; often, though not always, religious; often, though not always, communities of language. 5 They are few, but not far between. Carroll Quigley counted two dozen in the last ten millennia.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“without efficient public plumbing cities are death-traps,”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“Primeiro, a atual população mundial corresponde a aproximadamente 7% de todos os seres humanos que já viveram. Há muito mais mortos que vivos, em outras palavras, 14 para 1, e ignoramos a experiência acumulada de uma enorme maioria da humanidade por nossa conta e risco. Segundo, o passado é, com efeito, nossa única fonte de conhecimento confiável sobre o presente efêmero e os vários futuros à nossa frente, só um dos quais irá de fato acontecer. A história não é apenas como estudamos o passado; é também como estudamos nosso próprio tempo.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“The biggest threat to Western civilization is posed not by other civilizations, but by our own pusillanimity — and by the historical ignorance that feeds it.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“From 1500, anyone in China found building a ship with more than two masts was liable to the death penalty; in 1551 it became a crime even to go to sea in such a ship.21 The records of Zheng He’s journeys were destroyed. Zheng He himself died and was almost certainly buried at sea. What”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
“For roughly thirty years, young people at Western schools and universities have been given the idea of a liberal education, without the substance of historical knowledge. They have been taught isolated ‘modules’, not narratives, much less chronologies. They have been trained in the formulaic analysis of document excerpts, not in the key skill of reading widely and fast. They have been encouraged to feel empathy with imagined Roman centurions or Holocaust victims, not to write essays about why and how their predicaments arose.”
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
― Civilization: The West and the Rest
