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William Hardy McNeill on Reshaping the Human Past - The John Adams Institute 

The John Adams Institute
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On December 12, 1996, The John Adams Institute hosted renowned historian William Hardy McNeill who was in Holland to receive the prestigious Erasmus Prize, the first non-European scholar ever to be awarded this honor. Born in Vancouver, B.C., William McNeill graduating from the University of Chicago with a Master’s degree in history in 1939. After war service in th U.S. army, he studied at Cornell University where he graduated in 1947 and published several books on Greece and Western Civilization. McNeill’s reputation as a world historian was established with his book The Rise of the West in which he works out his core thesis: that human history must be seen against the background of a continuing interaction between the natural environment and different civilizations and cultures. He has written many influential studies on this theme, including Plagues and Peoples, The Pursuit of Power and Keeping Together in Time. In his lecture, McNeill discussed his earlier work and his collaboration with the British historian Arnold Toynbee. With his trail-blazing vision of world history, McNeill not only enlarged our understanding of the past, but also elaborated on the links between historical and present-day events. He taught history at the University of Chicago starting in 1947 until his retirment.
Moderator: Joop Goudsblom and Michael Zeeman

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15 июл 2024

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Комментарии : 8   
@wcdune1
@wcdune1 Год назад
Astonishing lecture
@tarnopol
@tarnopol 4 года назад
12:29 if you want to jump past the excellent intro and get to McNeill.
@karenchristenze
@karenchristenze 2 года назад
I worked with Bill McNeill for over a decade, and spent a good deal of time with him until his death at nearly 98. This recording is a delight, and I am over the moon that this speech was recorded, and very well preserved, until being uploaded to RU-vid over 20 years after he gave it. Thank you.
@lauritammi4598
@lauritammi4598 2 года назад
I am a huge fan of W.H. McNeill. He was THE historian for me. Human Web and Keeping together in Time are classics that have deeply influenced my thinking and world-view until today. Now I'm in China working on several projects - but Bill McNeill's legacy is with me still today. Warm greetings from Hangzhou.
@traininglime5559
@traininglime5559 Год назад
The first person asking a question really seems like someone trying to play a gotcha moment. I mean I thought it was going to be more of a question that’s related to the book, then challenging the validity of world history; essentially saying that writing a world history is no longer necessary or useful because History is now written in very specific fields of study. However, I agree that a history that only shows a specific field just like a map that only shows one town does not give a sense of a world connection just like the town map wouldn’t equate to a world map.
@su-mu
@su-mu Год назад
Bookmark 1:59
@user-lj7es5jw2f
@user-lj7es5jw2f 3 года назад
서초굴비보고온분?
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