The concept of world history: What is world history? By O. Spengler.The stages of progress, by H. R. Trevor Roper. - The pattern of the past:n Cultures as organisms, by O. Spengler. Sorokin and Toynbee"Prophets of woe." by P. Geyl. Lasting and dying factors in the world`s cultures, by P. A. Sorokin. Does history repeat itself?By A. J. Toynbee. - The physiognomy of culture; The soul of the city, by O. Spengler. The mind of Mexico, by F. S. C. Northrop. History, science, and fiction, by A. J. Toynbee. The law of civilization and decay, by B. Adams. Historical attempts at apprechending civilizations, by A. L. Kroeber. - The diagnosis of our crisis: Speech on dictatorship, by J. Donso Crotes. The rise of nihilism and return to nature, by F. Nietzsche. The decline of the old elite, by V. Pareto. The period of the contending States, by O. Spengler. - The chance of regeberation: The nature and restoration of civilization, by A. Schweitzer. The roots and cure of the crisis, by P. A. Sorokin, The collapse and redemption of the West, by W. Schubart. Flow and reconstitution within civilizations, by A. L. Kroeber. The mystery of the Occident, by E. Hoffer. - An unscientific postscript: Spengler and his successors, by H. S. Hughes
TOPICAL NAME USED AS SUBJECT
Civilization, Modern -- 20th century -- Addresses, essays, lectures