89 min listen
Ancient Worlds: A Meeting of East and West
ratings:
Length:
63 minutes
Released:
Jul 15, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
There’s a new school of history that’s revolutionising the way we look at the past. For centuries, our history has been taught in separate chunks, with the classical, European world divided from China and the East. This traditional, somewhat lazy history of civilisation, zeroing in on the Western Mediterranean, drastically restricts our understanding of the world – and the crucial ideas and problems that have affected human civilisation as a whole; from politics to religion; from war to money. The ‘ancient world’ has been confined in the West to Greece and Rome, when, of course, it encompassed the whole globe. By crashing through these boundaries, of time and geography, we can connect the strands of our human story and develop a more sophisticated sense of why the world looks like it does today – a global history for global times.
This is nothing less than a new historical movement that completely changes the prism through which we see the past and explain the present. And on July 5th Intelligence Squared... For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
This is nothing less than a new historical movement that completely changes the prism through which we see the past and explain the present. And on July 5th Intelligence Squared... For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy
Released:
Jul 15, 2016
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
Terry Eagleton in conversation with Roger Scruton: What really divides the left and the right? To answer this question, Intelligence Squared brought together two giants of British intellectual culture for an ideological reckoning: Terry Eagleton, literary critic and long-time hero of the radical left, ... by Intelligence Squared