A World Split Apart
A loss of courage may be the most striking feature which an outside observer notices in the West in our days.
Read MoreAleksandr Solzhenitsyn | August 1978
A loss of courage may be the most striking feature which an outside observer notices in the West in our days.
Read MoreArianna Stassinopoulos Huffington | March 1978
We go on trying to understand politics in terms of politics alone—which increasingly has come to mean in terms of economics—as though political beliefs and problems existed in a vacuum, totally detached from the rest of our culture.
Read MoreGerhart Niemeyer | October 1977
The construction of history en philosophe, as Voltaire named it, relies on a more or less arbitrary selection of facts.
Read MoreRhodes Boyson | June 1977
Arnold Toynbee’s theory of history holds that civilizations grow by responding successfully to challenges under the leadership of creative minorities
Read MoreAleksandr Solzhenitsyn | September 1975
Why must we hand over to Communist totalitarianism more complex and developed technology which it needs for armaments and for crushing its own citizens?
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