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Western culture
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Western culture, also known as Western civilization, European civilization, Occidental culture, Western society, or simply the West, is the internally diverse culture of the Western world. The term "Western" encompasses the social norms, ethical values, traditional customs, belief systems, political systems, artifacts and technologies primarily rooted in European and Mediterranean histories. A broad concept, "Western culture" does not relate to a region with fixed members or geographical confines. It generally refers to the classical era cultures of Ancient Greece, Ancient Rome, and their Christian successors that expanded across the Mediterranean basin and Europe, and later circulated around the world predominantly through colonization and globalization.[1][2]
Historically, scholars have closely associated the idea of Western culture with the classical era of Greco-Roman antiquity.[3][4] However, scholars also acknowledge that other cultures, like Ancient Egypt, the Phoenician city-states, and several Near-Eastern cultures stimulated and influenced it.[5][6][7] The Hellenistic period also promoted syncretism, blending Greek, Roman, and Jewish cultures. Major advances in literature, engineering, and science shaped the Hellenistic Jewish culture from which the earliest Christians and the Greek New Testament emerged.[8][9][10] The eventual Christianization of Europe in late-antiquity would ensure that Christianity, particularly the Catholic Church, remained a dominant force in Western culture for many centuries to follow.[11][12][13][14]
Western culture continued to develop during the Middle Ages as reforms triggered by the medieval renaissances, the influence of the Islamic world via Al-Andalus and Sicily (including the transfer of technology from the East, and Latin translations of Arabic texts on science and philosophy by Greek and Hellenic-influenced Islamic philosophers),[15][16][17] and the Italian Renaissance as Greek scholars fleeing the fall of Constantinople brought ancient Greek and Roman texts back to central and western Europe.[18] Medieval Christianity is credited with creating the modern university,[19][20] the modern hospital system,[21] scientific economics,[22][23] and natural law (which would later influence the creation of international law).[24] European culture developed a complex range of philosophy, medieval scholasticism, mysticism and Christian and secular humanism, setting the stage for the Protestant Reformation in the 16th century, which fundamentally altered religious and political life. Led by figures like Martin Luther, Protestantism challenged the authority of the Catholic Church and promoted ideas of individual freedom and religious reform, paving the way for modern notions of personal responsibility and governance.[25][26][27][28]
The Enlightenment in the 17th and 18th centuries shifted focus to reason, science, and individual rights, influencing revolutions across Europe and the Americas and the development of modern democratic institutions. Enlightenment thinkers advanced ideals of political pluralism and empirical inquiry, which, together with the Industrial Revolution, transformed Western society. In the 19th and 20th centuries, the influence of Enlightenment rationalism continued with the rise of secularism and liberal democracy, while the Industrial Revolution fueled economic and technological growth. The expansion of civil rights and the decline of religious authority marked significant cultural shifts. Tendencies that have come to define modern Western societies include the concept of political pluralism, individualism, prominent subcultures or countercultures, and increasing cultural syncretism resulting from globalization and immigration.
Terminology
[edit]The West as a geographical area is unclear and undefined. There is some disagreement about which nations should or should not be included in the category, when, and why. Certainly related conceptual terminology has changed over time in scope, meaning, and use. The term "western" draws on an affiliation with, or a perception of, a shared philosophy, worldview, political, and religious heritage grounded in the Greco-Roman world, the legacy of the Roman Empire, and medieval concepts of Christendom. For example, whether the Eastern Roman Empire (anachronistically/controversially referred to as the Byzantine Empire), or those countries heavily influenced by its legacy, should be counted as "Western" is an example of the possible ambiguity of the term. These questions[which?] can be traced back to the affiliation between the culture of ancient Rome and that of Classical Greece, a persistent Greek East and Latin West language-split within the Roman Empire, and an eventual permanent splitting of the Roman Empire in 395 into Western and Eastern halves. And perhaps, at its worst,[citation needed] culminating in Pope Leo III's transfer of the Roman Empire from the Eastern Roman Empire to the Frankish King Charlemagne in the form of the Holy Roman Empire in 800, the Great Schism of 1054, and the devastating Fourth Crusade of 1204.
Conversely, traditions of scholarship around Plato, Aristotle, and Euclid had been forgotten in the Catholic west and were rediscovered by Italians from scholars fleeing the 1453 fall of the Eastern Roman Empire.[18] The subsequent Renaissance, a conscious effort by Europeans to revive and surpass the ideas and achievements of the Greco-Roman world, eventually encouraged the Age of Discovery, the Scientific Revolution, Age of Enlightenment, and the subsequent Industrial Revolution. Similarly, complicated relationships between virtually all the countries and regions within a broadly defined "West" can be discussed in the light of a persistently fragmented political landscape resulting in a lack of uniformity and significant diversity between the various cultures affiliating with this shared socio-cultural heritage. Thus, those cultures identifying with the West and with what it means to be "western" change over time as the geopolitical circumstances of a place changes and what is meant by the terminology changes.
It is difficult to determine which individuals or places or trends fit into which category, and the East–West contrast is sometimes criticized as relativistic and arbitrary.[29][30][31][page needed] Globalization has spread Western ideas so widely that almost all modern cultures are, to some extent, influenced by aspects of Western culture. Stereotypical views of "the West" have been labeled "Occidentalism", paralleling "Orientalism"—the term for the 19th-century stereotyped views of "the East".
Some philosophers have questioned whether Western culture can be considered a historically sound, unified body of thought.[32] For example, Kwame Anthony Appiah pointed out in 2016 that many of the fundamental influences on Western culture – such as those of Greek philosophy – are also shared by the Islamic world to a certain extent.[32][need quotation to verify] Appiah argues that the origin of the Western and European identity can be traced back to the 8th-century Muslim invasion of Europe via Iberia, when Christians would start to form a common Christian or European identity.[32][need quotation to verify] Contemporary Latin chronicles from Spain referred to the victors in the Frankish victory over the Umayyads at the 732 Battle of Tours as "Europeans" according to Appiah, denoting a shared sense of identity.[33]
A former, now less-acceptable synonym for "Western civilisation" was "the white race".[34]
As Europeans discovered the extra-European world, old concepts adapted. The area that had formerly been considered the Orient ("the East") became the Near East as the interests of the European powers interfered with Meiji Japan and Qing China for the first time in the 19th century.[35] Thus the Sino-Japanese War in 1894–1895 occurred in the "Far East" while troubles surrounding the decline of the Ottoman Empire occurred simultaneously in the Near East.[a] The term "Middle East" in the mid-19th century included the territory east of the Ottoman Empire but west of China—Greater Persia and Greater India—but is now used synonymously with "Near East" in most languages.
History
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The earliest civilizations which influenced the development of Western culture were those of Mesopotamia; the area of the Tigris–Euphrates river system, largely corresponding to modern-day Iraq, northeastern Syria, southeastern Turkey and southwestern Iran: the cradle of civilization.[36][37] Ancient Egypt similarly had a strong influence on Western culture.
Phoenician mercantilism and the introduction of the alphabetical script boosted state formation in the Aegean and current-day Italy and current-day Spain, spawning civilizations in the Mediterranean such as Ancient Carthage, Ancient Greece, Etruria, and Ancient Rome.[38]
The Greeks contrasted themselves with both their Eastern neighbors (such as the Trojans in Iliad) as well as their Northern neighbors (who they considered barbarians).[citation needed] Concepts of what is the West arose out of legacies of the Western and the Eastern Roman Empire. Later, ideas of the West were formed by the concepts of Latin Christendom and the Holy Roman Empire. What is thought of as Western thought today originates primarily from Greco-Roman and Christian traditions, with varying degrees of influence from the Germanic, Celtic and Slavic peoples, and includes the ideals of the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, Reformation and the Enlightenment.[39]
The West of the Mediterranean Region during the Antiquity
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During the Greco-Roman world, North Africa and the Western regions of the Middle East were integral parts of the Western civilization, due to Hellenization and the direct cultural impact of the conquests of the Roman Empire. After the Roman conquests, the whole Mediterranean became essentially a Roman inland sea.[40]
While the concept of a "West" did not exist until the emergence of the Roman Republic, the roots of the concept can be traced back to Ancient Greece. Since Homeric literature (the Trojan Wars), through the accounts of the Persian Wars of Greeks against Persians by Herodotus, and right up until the time of Alexander the Great, there was a paradigm of a contrast between Greeks and other civilizations.[41] Greeks felt they were the most civilized and saw themselves (in the formulation of Aristotle) as something between the advanced civilizations of the Near East (who they viewed as soft and slavish) and the wild barbarians of most of Europe to the north. During this period writers like Herodotus and Xenophon would highlight the importance of freedom in the Ancient Greek world, as opposed to the perceived slavery of the so-called barbaric world.[41]

Alexander's conquests led to the emergence of a Hellenistic civilization, representing a synthesis of Greek and Near-Eastern cultures in the Eastern Mediterranean region.[42] The Near-Eastern civilizations of Ancient Egypt and the Levant, which came under Greek rule, became part of the Hellenistic world. The most important Hellenistic centre of learning was Ptolemaic Egypt, which attracted Greek, Egyptian, Jewish, Persian, Phoenician and even Indian scholars.[43] Hellenistic science, philosophy, architecture, literature and art later provided a foundation embraced and built upon by the Roman Empire as it swept up Europe and the Mediterranean world, including the Hellenistic world in its conquests in the 1st century BCE.
Following the Roman conquest of the Hellenistic world, the concept of a "West" arose, as there was a cultural divide between the Greek East and Latin West. The Latin-speaking Western Roman Empire consisted of Western Europe and Northwest Africa, while the Greek-speaking Eastern Roman Empire consisted of the Balkans, Asia Minor, Egypt and Levant. The "Greek" East was generally wealthier and more advanced than the "Latin" West.[citation needed] With the exception of Italia, the wealthiest provinces of the Roman Empire were in the East, particularly Roman Egypt which was the wealthiest Roman province outside of Italia.[44][45] Nevertheless, the Celts in the West created some significant literature in the ancient world whenever they were given the opportunity (an example being the poet Caecilius Statius), and they developed a large amount of scientific knowledge themselves (as seen in their Coligny Calendar).


For about five hundred years, the Roman Empire maintained the Greek East and consolidated a Latin West, but an east–west division remained, reflected in many cultural norms of the two areas, including language. Eventually, the empire became increasingly split into a Western and Eastern part, reviving old ideas of a contrast between an advanced East, and a rugged West.
From the time of Alexander the Great (the Hellenistic period), Greek civilization came in contact with Jewish civilization. Christianity would eventually emerge from the syncretism of Hellenic culture, Roman culture, and Second Temple Judaism, gradually spreading across the Roman Empire and eclipsing its antecedents and influences.[46]

The Greek and Roman paganism was gradually replaced by Christianity, first with its legalisation with the Edict of Milan and then the Edict of Thessalonica which made it the State church of the Roman Empire. Catholic Christianity, served as a unifying force in Christian parts of Europe, and in some respects replaced or competed with the secular authorities. The Jewish Christian tradition out of which it had emerged was all but extinguished, and antisemitism became increasingly entrenched or even integral to Christendom.[47][48] Much of art and literature, law, education, and politics were preserved in the teachings of the Church.
In a broader sense, the Middle Ages, with its fertile encounter between Greek philosophical reasoning and Levantine monotheism was not confined to the West but also stretched into the old East. The philosophy and science of Classical Greece were largely forgotten in Europe after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire, other than in isolated monastic enclaves (notably in Ireland, which had become Christian but was never conquered by Rome).[49] The learning of Classical Antiquity was better preserved in the Eastern Roman Empire. Justinian's Corpus Juris Civilis Roman civil law code was created in the East in his capital of Constantinople,[50] and that city maintained trade and intermittent political control over outposts such as Venice in the West for centuries. Classical Greek learning was also subsumed, preserved, and elaborated in the rising Eastern world, which gradually supplanted Roman-Byzantine control as a dominant cultural-political force. Thus, much of the learning of classical antiquity was slowly reintroduced to European civilization in the centuries following the collapse of the Western Roman Empire.
The birth of European West during the Middle Ages
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After the fall of Rome, much of Greco-Roman art, literature, science and even technology were all but lost in the western part of the old empire. However, this would become the center of a new West. Europe fell into political anarchy, with many warring kingdoms and principalities. Under the Frankish kings, it eventually, and partially, reunified, and the anarchy evolved into feudalism.
The Medieval West referred specifically to the Catholic "Latin" West, also called "Frankish" during Charlemagne's reign, in contrast to the Orthodox East, where Greek remained the language of the Byzantine Empire. The earliest recorded concept of Europe as a cultural sphere (instead of simply a geographic term) was formed by Alcuin of York in the late 8th century during the Carolingian Renaissance, limited to the territories that practised Western Christianity at the time. "European" as a cultural term did not include much of the territories where the Orthodox Church represented the dominant religion until the 19th century.[53]
Much of the basis of the post-Roman cultural world had been set before the fall of the Western Roman Empire, mainly through the integration and reshaping of Roman ideas through Christian thought. The Eastern Orthodox Church founded many cathedrals, monasteries and seminaries, some of which continue to exist today.
After the fall of the Roman Empire, many of the classical Greek texts were translated into Arabic and preserved in the medieval Islamic world. The Greek classics along with Arabic science, philosophy and technology were transmitted to Western Europe and translated into Latin, sparking the Renaissance of the 12th century and 13th century.[15][16][17]

Medieval Christianity is credited with creating the first modern universities.[19][20] The Catholic Church established a hospital system in medieval Europe that vastly improved upon the Roman valetudinaria[54] and Greek healing temples.[55] These hospitals were established to cater to "particular social groups marginalized by poverty, sickness, and age," according to the historian of hospitals, Guenter Risse.[21] Christianity played a role in ending practices common among pagan societies, such as human sacrifice, slavery,[56] infanticide and polygamy.[57] Francisco de Vitoria, a disciple of Thomas Aquinas and a Catholic thinker who studied the issue regarding the human rights of colonized natives, is recognized by the United Nations as a father of international law, and now also by historians of economics and democracy as a leading light for the West's democracy and rapid economic development.[58] Joseph Schumpeter, an economist of the twentieth century, referring to the Scholastics, wrote, "it is they who come nearer than does any other group to having been the 'founders' of scientific economics."[22]
The rediscovery of the Justinian Code in Western Europe early in the 10th century rekindled a passion for the discipline of law, which crossed many of the re-forming boundaries between East and West. In the Catholic or Frankish west, Roman law became the foundation on which all legal concepts and systems were based. Its influence is found in all Western legal systems, although in different manners and to different extents. The study of canon law, the legal system of the Catholic Church, fused with that of Roman law to form the basis of the refounding of Western legal scholarship.
From Late Antiquity, through the Middle Ages, and onwards, while Eastern Europe was shaped by the Eastern Orthodox Church, Southern and Central Europe were increasingly stabilized by the Catholic Church which, as Roman imperial governance faded from view, was the only consistent force in Western Europe.[59] In 1054 came the Great Schism that, following the Greek East and Latin West divide, separated Europe into religious and cultural regions present to this day.
Later Middle Ages (Rome and Reformation)
[edit]In the 14th century, the Renaissance starting from Italy and then spreading throughout Europe,[60] there was a massive artistic, architectural, scientific and philosophical revival, as a result of the Christian revival of Greek philosophy, and the long Christian medieval tradition that established the use of reason as one of the most important of human activities.[61] This period is commonly referred to as the Renaissance. In the following century, this process was further enhanced by an exodus of Greek Christian priests and scholars to Italian cities such as Florence and Venice after the end of the Byzantine Empire with the fall of Constantinople.

Until the Age of Enlightenment,[62] Christian culture took over as the predominant force in Western civilization, guiding the course of philosophy, art, and science for many years.[59][63] Movements in art and philosophy, such as the Humanist movement of the Renaissance and the Scholastic movement of the High Middle Ages, were motivated by a drive to connect Catholicism with Greek and Arab thought imported by Christian pilgrims.[64][65][66] However, due to the division in Western Christianity caused by the Protestant Reformation and the Enlightenment, religious influence—especially the temporal power of the Pope—began to wane.[67][68]
During the Reformation and Enlightenment, the ideas of civil rights, equality before the law, procedural justice, and democracy as the ideal form of society began to be institutionalized as principles forming the basis of modern Western culture, particularly in Protestant regions.
Expansion of the West: the Era of Colonialism (15th–20th centuries)
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Early modern era
[edit]From the late 15th century to the 17th century, Western culture began to spread to other parts of the world through explorers and missionaries during the Age of Discovery, and by imperialists from the 17th century to the early 20th century. During the Great Divergence, a term coined by Samuel Huntington[69] the Western world overcame pre-modern growth constraints and emerged during the 19th century as the most powerful and wealthy world civilization of the time, eclipsing Qing China, Mughal India, Tokugawa Japan, and the Ottoman Empire. The process was accompanied and reinforced by the Age of Discovery and continued into the modern period. Scholars have proposed a wide variety of theories to explain why the Great Divergence happened, including lack of government intervention, high bridging social capital, geography, colonialism, and customary traditions.
The Age of Discovery faded into the Age of Enlightenment of the 18th century, during which cultural and intellectual forces in European society emphasized reason, analysis, and individualism rather than traditional lines of authority. It challenged the authority of institutions that were deeply rooted in society, such as the Catholic Church; there was much talk of ways to reform society with toleration, science and skepticism.
Philosophers of the Enlightenment included Francis Bacon, René Descartes, John Locke, Baruch Spinoza, Voltaire (1694–1778), Jean-Jacques Rousseau, David Hume, and Immanuel Kant,[70] who influenced society by publishing widely read works. Upon learning about enlightened views, some rulers met with intellectuals and tried to apply their reforms, such as allowing for toleration, or accepting multiple religions, in what became known as enlightened absolutism. New ideas and beliefs spread around Europe and were fostered by an increase in literacy due to a departure from solely religious texts. Publications include Encyclopédie (1751–72) that was edited by Denis Diderot and Jean le Rond d'Alembert. The Dictionnaire philosophique (Philosophical Dictionary, 1764) and Letters on the English (1733) written by Voltaire spread the ideals of the Enlightenment.
Coinciding with the Age of Enlightenment was the Scientific Revolution, spearheaded by Newton. This included the emergence of modern science, during which developments in mathematics, physics, astronomy, biology (including human anatomy) and chemistry transformed views of society and nature.[71][72][73][74][75][76][excessive citations] While its dates are disputed, the publication in 1543 of Nicolaus Copernicus's De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres) is often cited as marking the beginning of the scientific revolution, and its completion is attributed to the "grand synthesis" of Newton's 1687 Principia.
Industrial Revolution
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The Industrial Revolution was the transition to new manufacturing processes in the period from about 1760 to sometime between 1820 and 1840. This included going from hand production methods to machines, new chemical manufacturing and iron production processes, improved efficiency of water power, the increasing use of steam power, and the development of machine tools.[78] These transitions began in Great Britain and spread to Western Europe and North America within a few decades.[79]
The Industrial Revolution marks a major turning point in history; almost every aspect of daily life was influenced in some way. In particular, average income and population began to exhibit unprecedented sustained growth. Some economists say that the major impact of the Industrial Revolution was that the standard of living for the general population began to increase consistently for the first time in history, although others have said that it did not begin to meaningfully improve until the late 19th and 20th centuries.[80][81][82] The precise start and end of the Industrial Revolution is still debated among historians, as is the pace of economic and social changes.[83][84][85][86] GDP per capita was broadly stable before the Industrial Revolution and the emergence of the modern capitalist economy,[87] while the Industrial Revolution began an era of per-capita economic growth in capitalist economies.[88] Economic historians are in agreement that the onset of the Industrial Revolution is the most important event in the history of humanity since the domestication of animals, plants[89] and fire.
The First Industrial Revolution evolved into the Second Industrial Revolution in the transition years between 1840 and 1870, when technological and economic progress continued with the increasing adoption of steam transport (steam-powered railways, boats, and ships), the large-scale manufacture of machine tools and the increasing use of machinery in steam-powered factories.[90][91][92]
Post-Industrial era
[edit]Tendencies that have come to define modern Western societies include the concept of political pluralism, individualism, prominent subcultures or countercultures (such as New Age movements) and increasing cultural syncretism resulting from globalization and immigration. Western culture has been heavily influenced by the Renaissance, the Ages of Discovery and Enlightenment and the Industrial and Scientific Revolutions.[93][94]
In the 20th century, Christianity declined in influence in many Western countries, mostly in the European Union where some member states have experienced falling church attendance and membership in recent years,[95] and also elsewhere. Secularism (separating religion from politics and science) increased. Christianity remains the dominant religion in the Western world, where 70% are Christians.[96]
The West went through a series of great cultural and social changes between 1945 and 1980. The emergent mass media (film, radio, television and recorded music) created a global culture that could ignore national frontiers. Literacy became almost universal, encouraging the growth of books, magazines and newspapers. The influence of cinema and radio remained, while televisions became near essentials in every home.
By the mid-20th century, Western culture was exported worldwide, and the development and growth of international transport and telecommunication (such as transatlantic cable and the radiotelephone) played a decisive role in modern globalization. The West has contributed a great many technological, political, philosophical, artistic and religious aspects to modern international culture: having been a crucible of Catholicism, Protestantism, democracy, industrialisation; the first major civilisation to seek to abolish slavery during the 19th century, and the first to put to use such technologies as steam, electric and nuclear power. The West invented cinema, television, the personal computer, the Internet and video games; developed sports such as soccer, cricket, golf, tennis, rugby, basketball, and volleyball; and transported humans to an astronomical object for the first time with the 1969 Apollo 11 Moon Landing.
Arts and humanities
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Music
[edit]In music, Catholic monks developed the first forms of modern Western musical notation to standardize liturgy throughout the worldwide Church,[97] and an enormous body of religious music has been composed for it through the ages. This led directly to the emergence and development of European classical music and its many derivatives. The Baroque style, which encompassed music, art, and architecture, was particularly encouraged by the post-Reformation Catholic Church as such forms offered a means of religious expression that was stirring and emotional, intended to stimulate religious fervor.[98]
The symphony, concerto, sonata, opera, and oratorio have their origins in Italy. Many musical instruments developed in the West have come to see widespread use all over the world; among them are the guitar, violin, piano, pipe organ, saxophone, trombone, clarinet, accordion, and the theremin. In turn, it has been claimed that some European instruments have roots in earlier Eastern instruments that were adopted from the medieval Islamic world.[99] The solo piano, symphony orchestra, and the string quartet are also significant musical innovations of the West.
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Claudio Monteverdi, 1567–1643
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Antonio Lucio Vivaldi, 1678–1741
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George Frideric Handel, 1685–1759
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Johann Sebastian Bach, 1685–1750
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Franz Joseph Haydn, 1732–1809
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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, 1756–1791
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Ludwig van Beethoven, 1770–1827
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Frédéric François Chopin, 1810–1849
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Franz Liszt, 1811–1886
Painting and photography
[edit]Jan van Eyck, among other renaissance painters, made great advances in oil painting, and perspective drawings and paintings had their earliest practitioners in Florence.[100] In art, the Celtic knot is a very distinctive Western repeated motif. Depictions of the nude human male and female in photography, painting, and sculpture are frequently considered to have special artistic merit. Realistic portraiture is especially valued.
Photography and the motion picture as both a technology and basis for entirely new art forms were also developed in the West.
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Restoration of a fresco from an Ancient Roman villa bedroom, circa 50–40 BC, dimensions of the room: 265.4 × 334 × 583.9 cm, in the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York City)
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Mona Lisa, by Leonardo da Vinci, c. 1503 – 1506, perhaps continuing until circa 1517, oil on poplar panel, 77 cm × 53 cm, Louvre (Paris)
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Dance at Le moulin de la Galette, by Pierre-Auguste Renoir, 1876, oil on canvas, height: 131 cm, Musée d'Orsay (Paris)
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Photo of the interior of the apartment of Eugène Atget, taken in 1910 in Paris
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Rêverie, by Alphonse Mucha, poster for the publishing house Champenois (1897)
Dance and performing arts
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The ballet is a distinctively Western form of performance dance.[101] The ballroom dance is an important Western variety of dance for the elite. The polka, the square dance, the flamenco, and the Irish step dance are very well known Western forms of folk dance.
Greek and Roman theatre are considered the antecedents of modern theatre, and forms such as medieval theatre, Passion Plays, morality plays, and commedia dell'arte are considered highly influential. Elizabethan theatre, with playwrights including William Shakespeare, Christopher Marlowe, and Ben Jonson, is considered one of the most formative and important eras for modern drama.
The soap opera, a popular culture dramatic form, originated in the United States first on radio in the 1930s, then a couple of decades later on television. The music video was also developed in the West in the middle of the 20th century. Musical theatre was developed in the West in the 19th and 20th Centuries, from music hall, comic opera, and Vaudeville; with significant contributions from the Jewish diaspora, African-Americans, and other marginalized peoples.[102][103][104]
Literature
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Western literature encompasses the literary traditions of Europe, as well as North America, Oceania and Latin America.[105]
While epic literary works in verse such as the Mahabharata and Homer's Iliad are ancient and occurred worldwide, the prose novel as a distinct form of storytelling, with developed, consistent human characters and, typically, some connected overall plot (although both of these characteristics have sometimes been modified and played with in later times), was popularized by the West[106] in the 17th and 18th centuries. Of course, extended prose fiction had existed much earlier; both novels of adventure and romance in the Hellenistic world and in Heian Japan. Both Petronius' Satyricon (c. 60 CE) and the Tale of Genji by Murasaki Shikibu (c. 1000 CE) have been cited as the world's first major novel but they had a very limited long-term impact on literary writing beyond their own day until much more recent times.
Tragedy, from its ritually and mythologically inspired Greek origins to modern forms where struggle and downfall are often rooted in psychological or social, rather than mythical, motives, is also widely considered a specifically European creation and can be seen as a forerunner of some aspects of both the novel and of classical opera.
Architecture
[edit]This section needs additional citations for verification. (June 2022) |
Important Western architectural motifs include the Doric, Corinthian, and Ionic orders of Greek architecture,[107] and the Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque, and Victorian styles, which are still widely recognized and used in contemporary Western architecture. Much of Western architecture emphasizes repetition of simple motifs, straight lines and expansive, undecorated planes. A modern ubiquitous architectural form that emphasizes this characteristic is the skyscraper, their modern equivalent first developed in New York and Chicago. The predecessor of the skyscraper can be found in the medieval towers erected in Bologna.
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The facade of Angoulême Cathedral was built between 1110 and 1128 in the Romanesque style.
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Stained glass windows of the Sainte-Chapelle in Paris, completed in 1248, mostly constructed between 1194 and 1220 in the Gothic style
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The Palazzo Farnese, in Rome, built from 1534 to 1545, was designed by Sangallo and Michelangelo and is an important example of renaissance architecture.
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The Palais Garnier in Paris, built between 1861 and 1875, a Beaux-Arts masterpiece
Cuisine
[edit]Western foodways were, until recently, considered to have their roots in the cuisines of Classical Rome and Greece, but the influence of Arab and Near Eastern cuisine on the West has become a topic of research in recent decades. The Crusaders, known mostly for fighting over holy land, settled in the Levant and acclimated to the local culture and cuisine. Fulcher of Chartres said "For we who were occidentals have now become orientals." These cultural experiences, carried back to France by notables like Eleanor of Aquitaine influenced Western European foodways. Many Oriental ingredients were relatively new to the Western lands. Sugar, almonds, pistachios, rosewater, and dried citrus fruits were all novelties to the Crusaders who encountered them in Saracen lands. Pepper, ginger and cinnamon were the most widely used spices of the European courts and noble households. By the end of the Middle Ages, cloves, nutmeg, mastic, galingale, and other imported spices had become part of the Western cuisine.[108]
Saracen influence can be seen in medieval cookbooks. Some recipes retain their Arabic names in Italian translations of the Liber de Coquina. Known as bruet Sarassinois in the cuisine of North France, the concept of sweet and sour sauce is attested to in Greek tradition when Anthimus finishes his stew with vinegar and honey. Saracens combined sweet ingredients like date-juice and honey with pomegranate, lemons and citrus juices, or other sour ingredients. The technique of browning pieces of meat and simmering in liquid with vegetables is used in many recipes from the Baghdad cookery book. The same technique appears in the late-13th century Viandier. Fried pieces of beef simmered in wine with sugar and cloves was called bruet of Sarcynesse in English.[108]
Scientific and technological inventions and discoveries
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A notable feature of Western culture is its strong emphasis and focus on innovation and invention through science and technology, and its ability to generate new processes, materials and material artifacts with its roots dating back to the Ancient Greeks. The scientific method as "a method or procedure that has characterized natural science since the 17th century, consisting in systematic observation, measurement, and experiment, and the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses" was fashioned by the 17th-century Italian Galileo Galilei,[110][111] with roots in the work of medieval scholars such as the 11th-century Iraqi physicist Ibn al-Haytham[112][113] and the 13th-century English friar Roger Bacon.[114]
By the will of the Swedish inventor Alfred Nobel the Nobel Prizes were established in 1895. The prizes in Chemistry, Literature, Peace, Physics, and Physiology or Medicine were first awarded in 1901.[115] The percentage of ethnically European Nobel prize winners during the first and second halves of the 20th century were respectively 98 and 94 percent.[116]
The West is credited with the development of the steam engine and adapting its use into factories, and for the generation of electric power.[117] The electrical motor, dynamo, transformer, electric light, and most of the familiar electrical appliances, were inventions of the West.[118][119][120][121] The Otto and the Diesel internal combustion engines are products whose genesis and early development were in the West.[122][123] Nuclear power stations are derived from the first atomic pile constructed in Chicago in 1942.[124]
Communication devices and systems including the telegraph, the telephone, radio, television, communications and navigation satellites, mobile phone, and the Internet were all invented by Westerners.[125][126][127][128][129][130][131][132] The pencil, ballpoint pen, Cathode ray tube, liquid-crystal display, light-emitting diode, camera, photocopier, laser printer, ink jet printer, plasma display screen and World Wide Web were also invented in the West.[133][134][135][136][137]
Ubiquitous materials including aluminum, clear glass, synthetic rubber, synthetic diamond and the plastics polyethylene, polypropylene, polyvinyl chloride and polystyrene were discovered and developed or invented in the West. Iron and steel ships, bridges and skyscrapers first appeared in the West. Nitrogen fixation and petrochemicals were invented by Westerners. Most of the elements were discovered and named in the West, as well as the contemporary atomic theories to explain them.[138][139][140][141][142][143][144][145]
The transistor, integrated circuit, memory chip, first programming language and computer were all first seen in the West. The ship's chronometer, the screw propeller, the locomotive, bicycle, automobile, and airplane were all invented in the West. Eyeglasses, the telescope, the microscope and electron microscope, all the varieties of chromatography, protein and DNA sequencing, computerised tomography, nuclear magnetic resonance, x-rays, and light, ultraviolet and infrared spectroscopy, were all first developed and applied in Western laboratories, hospitals and factories.[citation needed]
In medicine, the pure antibiotics were created in the West. The method of preventing Rh disease, the treatment of diabetes, and the germ theory of disease were discovered by Westerners. The eradication of smallpox, was led by a Westerner, Donald Henderson. Radiography, computed tomography, positron emission tomography and medical ultrasonography are important diagnostic tools developed in the West. Other important diagnostic tools of clinical chemistry, including the methods of spectrophotometry, electrophoresis and immunoassay, were first devised by Westerners. So were the stethoscope, the electrocardiograph, and the endoscope. Vitamins, hormonal contraception, hormones, insulin, beta blockers and ACE inhibitors, along with a host of other medically proven drugs, were first used to treat disease in the West. The double-blind study and evidence-based medicine are critical scientific techniques widely used in the West for medical purposes.[citation needed]

In mathematics, calculus, statistics, logic, vectors, tensors and complex analysis, group theory, abstract algebra and topology were developed by Westerners.[146][147][148][149][150][151][152] In biology, evolution, chromosomes, DNA, genetics and the methods of molecular biology are creations of the West. In physics, the science of mechanics and quantum mechanics, relativity, thermodynamics, and statistical mechanics were all developed by Westerners. The discoveries and inventions by Westerners in electromagnetism include Coulomb's law (1785), the first battery (1800), the unity of electricity and magnetism (1820), Biot–Savart law (1820), Ohm's law (1827), and Maxwell's equations (1871). The atom, nucleus, electron, neutron and proton were all unveiled by Westerners.[citation needed]
The world's most widely adopted system of measurement, the International System of Units, derived from the metric system, was first developed in France and evolved through contributions from various Westerners.[153][154]
In business, economics, and finance, double entry bookkeeping, credit cards, and the charge card were all first used in the West.[155][156]
Westerners are also known for their explorations of the globe and outer space. The first expedition to circumnavigate the Earth (1522) was by Westerners, as well as the first journey to the South Pole (1911), and the first Moon landing (1969).[157][158] The landing of robots on Mars (2004 and 2012) and on an asteroid (2001), the Voyager 2 explorations of the outer planets (Uranus in 1986 and Neptune in 1989), Voyager 1's passage into interstellar space (2013), and New Horizons' flyby of Pluto (2015) were significant recent Western achievements.[159][160][161][162][163]
Media
[edit]The roots of modern-day Western mass media can be traced back to the late 15th century, when printing presses began to operate throughout wealthy European cities. The emergence of news media in the 17th century has to be seen in close connection with the spread of the printing press, from which the publishing press derives its name.[164]
In the 16th century, a decrease in the preeminence of Latin in its literary use, along with the impact of economic change, the discoveries arising from trade and travel, navigation to the New World, science and arts and the development of increasingly rapid communications through print led to a rising corpus of vernacular media content in European society.[165]
After the launch of the satellite Sputnik 1 by the Soviet Union in 1957, satellite transmission technology was dramatically realised, with the United States launching Telstar in 1962 linking live media broadcasts from the UK to the US. The first digital broadcast satellite (DBS) system began transmitting in US in 1975.[166]
Beginning in the 1990s, the Internet has contributed to a tremendous increase in the accessibility of Western media content. Departing from media offered in bundled content packages (magazines, CDs, television and radio slots), the Internet has primarily offered unbundled content items (articles, audio and video files).[167]
Religion
[edit]The native religions of Europe were polytheistic but not homogenous – however, they were similar insofar as they were predominantly Indo-European in origin. Roman religion was similar to but not the same as Hellenic religion – likewise for indigenous Germanic polytheism, Celtic polytheism and Slavic polytheism. Before this time many Europeans from the north, especially Scandinavians, remained polytheistic, though southern Europe was predominantly Christian from the 5th century onwards.
Western culture at a fundamental level is influenced by the Judeo-Christian and Greco-Roman traditions.[168] These cultures had a number of similarities, such as a common emphasis on the individual, but they also embody fundamentally conflicting worldviews. For example, in Judaism and Christianity, God is the ultimate authority, while Greco-Roman tradition considers the ultimate authority to be reason. Christian attempts to reconcile these frameworks were responsible for the preservation of Greek philosophy.[168] Historically, Europe has been the center and cradle of Christian civilization.[169][170][171][172]

According to a survey by Pew Research Center from 2011, Christianity remains the dominant religion in the Western world where 70–84% are Christians,[96] According to this survey, 76% of Europeans described themselves as Christians,[96][173][174] and about 86% of the Americas' population identified themselves as Christians,[175] (90% in Latin America and 77% in North America).[174] 73% in Oceania self-identify as Christian, and 76% in South Africa are Christian.[96]
Eurobarometer polls about religiosity in the European Union in 2012 found that Christianity was the largest religion in the European Union, accounting for 72% of the population.[176] Catholics are the largest Christian group, accounting for 48%, while Protestants make up 12%, Eastern Orthodox make up 8% and other Christians make up 4% of the population respectively.[177] In addition, Non-believers/Agnostics account for 16%,[176] atheists account for 7%,[176] and Muslims account for 2% of the population respectively.[176] According to Scholars, in 2017, Europe's population was 77.8% Christian (up from 74.9% 1970),[178][179] these changes were largely largely ascribed to the collapse of Communism and switching to Christianity in the former Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc countries.[178]
At the same time, there has been an increase in the share of agnostic or atheist residents in Europe that accounted for 18% of the European population in 2012.[180] In particular, over half of the population of the Czech Republic (79%) was agnostic, atheist or irreligious, compared to the United Kingdom (52%), Germany (25–33%),[181] France (30–35%)[182][183][184] and the Netherlands (39–44%).
As in other areas, the Jewish diaspora and Judaism exist in the Western world.
There are also small but increasing numbers of people across the Western world who seek to revive the indigenous religions of their European ancestors; such groups include Germanic, Roman, Hellenic, Celtic, Slavic, and polytheistic reconstructionist movements. Likewise, Wicca, New Age spirituality and other neo-pagan belief systems enjoy notable minority support in Western states.
Sport
[edit]

Since classical antiquity, sport has been an important facet of Western cultural expression.[185][186]
A wide range of sports was already established by the time of Ancient Greece and the military culture and the development of sports in Greece influenced one another considerably. Sports became such a prominent part of their culture that the Greeks created the Olympic Games, which in ancient times were held every four years in a small village in the Peloponnesus called Olympia. Baron Pierre de Coubertin, a Frenchman, instigated the modern revival of the Olympic movement. The first modern Olympic games were held at Athens in 1896.
The Romans built immense structures such as the amphitheatres to house their festivals of sport. The Romans exhibited a passion for blood sports, such as the infamous Gladiatorial battles that pitted contestants against one another in a fight to the death. The Olympic Games revived many of the sports of classical antiquity—such as Greco-Roman wrestling, discus and javelin. The sport of bullfighting is a traditional spectacle of Spain, Portugal, southern France, and some Latin American countries. It traces its roots to prehistoric bull worship and sacrifice and is often linked to Rome, where many human-versus-animal events were held. Bullfighting spread from Spain to its American colonies, and in the 19th century to France, where it developed into a distinctive form in its own right.[187]
Jousting and hunting were popular sports in the European Middle Ages, and the aristocratic classes developed passions for leisure activities. A great number of popular global sports were first developed or codified in Europe. The modern game of golf originated in Scotland, where the first written record of golf is James II's banning of the game in 1457, as an unwelcome distraction to learning archery.[188]
The Industrial Revolution that began in Great Britain in the 18th century brought increased leisure time, leading to more opportunities for citizens to participate in athletic activities and also follow spectator sports. These trends continued with the advent of mass media and global communication. The bat and ball sport of cricket was first played in England during the 16th century and was exported around the globe via the British Empire. A number of popular modern sports were devised or codified in the United Kingdom during the 19th century and obtained global prominence; these include ping pong, modern tennis, association football, netball and rugby.[189]
Football (or soccer) remains hugely popular in Europe, but has grown from its origins to be known as the world game. Similarly, sports such as cricket, rugby, and netball were exported around the world, particularly among countries in the Commonwealth of Nations, thus India and Australia are among the strongest cricketing states, while victory in the Rugby World Cup has been shared among New Zealand, Australia, England, and South Africa.
Australian Rules Football, an Australian variation of football with similarities to Gaelic football and rugby, evolved in the British colony of Victoria in the mid-19th century. The United States also developed unique variations of English sports. English migrants took antecedents of baseball to America during the colonial period. The history of American football can be traced to early versions of rugby football and association football. Many games are known as "football" were being played at colleges and universities in the United States in the first half of the 19th century. American football resulted from several major divergences from rugby, most notably the rule changes instituted by Walter Camp, the "Father of American football". Basketball was invented in 1891 by James Naismith, a Canadian physical education instructor working in Springfield, Massachusetts, in the United States. Volleyball was created in Holyoke, Massachusetts, a city directly north of Springfield, in 1895.
Themes and traditions
[edit]
Western culture has developed many themes and traditions, the most significant of which are:[citation needed]
- Greco-Roman classic letters, arts, architecture, philosophical and cultural tradition, which include the influence of preeminent authors and philosophers such as Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, Homer, Virgil, and Cicero, as well as a long mythologic tradition.
- Christian ethical, philosophical, and mythological tradition, stemming largely from the Christian Bible, particularly the New Testament Gospels.[190][191][192]
- Monasteries, schools, libraries, books, book making, universities, teaching, education, and lecture halls.
- A tradition of the importance of the rule of law.
- Secular humanism, rationalism and Enlightenment thought. This set the basis for a new critical attitude and open questioning of religion, favouring freethinking and questioning of the church as an authority, which resulted in open-minded and reformist ideals inside, such as liberation theology, which partly adopted these currents, and secular and political tendencies such as separation of church and state (sometimes termed laicism), agnosticism and atheism.
- Generalized usage of some form of the Latin alphabet, used by the majority of Europe, Greek alphabet, used in Greece or Cyrillic script, used by southern and eastern Slavic states of Eastern Orthodox tradition, historically influenced by the Byzantine Empire or the Bulgarian Empire, and later within the Russian czarist or the Soviet area of influence. Other variants of the Latin or Greek alphabets are found in the Gothic and Coptic alphabets, which historically superseded older scripts, such as runes, and the Egyptian Demotic and Hieroglyphic systems.
- Natural law, human rights, constitutionalism, parliamentarism (or presidentialism) and formal liberal democracy in recent times—prior to the 19th century, most Western governments were still monarchies.
- A large influence, in modern times, of many of the ideals and values developed and inherited from Romanticism.
- An emphasis on, and use of, science as a means of understanding the natural world and humanity's place in it.
- More pronounced use and application of innovation and scientific developments, as well as a more rational approach to scientific progress (what has been known as the scientific method).
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ British archaeologist D. G. Hogarth published The Nearer East in 1902, which helped to define the term and its extent, including Albania, Montenegro, southern Serbia and Bulgaria, Greece, Egypt, all Ottoman lands, the entire Arabian Peninsula, and Western parts of Iran.
References
[edit]Citations
[edit]- ^ Lewis, Martin W.; Wigen, Kären (1997). The Myth of Continents: A Critique of Metageography. University of California Press. p. 226. ISBN 978-0-520-20743-1.
- ^ Hanson, Victor Davis (2007). Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power. Knopf Doubleday. ISBN 978-0-307-42518-8.
the term "Western" — refer to the culture of classical antiquity that arose in Greece and Rome; survived the collapse of the Roman Empire; spread to western and northern Europe; then during the great periods of exploration and colonization of the fifteenth through nineteenth centuries expanded to the Americas, Australia and areas of Asia and Africa; and now exercises global political, economic, cultural, and military power far greater than the size of its territory or population might otherwise suggest.
- ^
- Freeman, Charles (September 2000). The Greek Achievement: The Foundation of the Western World. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-029323-4.
The Greeks provided the chromosomes of Western civilization. One does not have to idealize the Greeks to sustain that point. Greek ways of exploring the cosmos, defining the problems of knowledge (and what is meant by knowledge itself), creating the language in which such problems are explored, representing the physical world and human society in the arts, defining the nature of value, describing the past, still underlie the Western cultural tradition
- Cartledge, Paul (2002). The Greeks: A Portrait of Self and Others. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-157783-3.
Greekness was identified with freedom-spiritual and social as well as political-and slavery was equated with being barbarian, [...] 'democracy' was a Greek invention (celebrating its 2,500th anniversary in 1993/4) [...] an ancient culture, that of the Greeks — is both a foundation stone of our own (Western) civilization and at the same time in key respects a deeply alien phenomenon.
- Pagden, Anthony (2008). Worlds at War: The 2,500 - Year Struggle Between East and West. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-923743-2.
Had the Persians overrun all of mainland Greece, had they then transformed the Greek city-states into satrapies of the Persian Empire, had Greek democracy been snuffed out, there would have been no Greek theater, no Greek science, no Plato, no Aristotle, no Sophocles, no Aeschylus. The incredible burst of creative energy that took place during the fifth and fourth centuries B.C.E. and that laid the foundation for all of later Western civilization would never have happened. [...] in the years between 490 and 479 B.C.E., the entire future of the Western world hung precariously in the balance
- Freeman, Charles (September 2000). The Greek Achievement: The Foundation of the Western World. Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-029323-4.
- ^
- Richard, Carl J. (16 April 2010). Why We're All Romans: The Roman Contribution to the Western World. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-6780-1.
In 1,200 years the tiny village of Rome established a republic, conquered all of the Mediterranean basin and western Europe, lost its republic, and finally, surrendered its empire. In the process the Romans laid the foundation of Western civilization. [...] The pragmatic Romans brought Greek and Hebrew ideas down to earth, modified them, and transmitted them throughout western Europe. [...] Roman law remains the basis for the legal codes of most western European and Latin American countries — Even in English-speaking countries, where common law prevails, Roman law has exerted substantial influence
- Sharon, Moshe (2004). Studies in Modern Religions, Religious Movements and the Båabåi-Bahåa'åi Faiths. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-13904-6.
Side by side with Christianity, the classical Greco-Roman world forms the sound foundation of Western civilization. Greek philosophy is also the origin for the methods and contents of the philosophical thought and theological investigation in Islam and Judaism
- Grant, Michael (1991). The Founders of the Western World: A History of Greece and Rome. Scribner. ISBN 978-0-684-19303-8 – via Internet Archive.
- Perry, Marvin; Chase, Myrna; Jacob, James; Jacob, Margaret; Laue, Theodore H. Von (2012). Western Civilization: Since 1400. Cengage. ISBN 978-1-111-83169-1.
- Richard, Carl J. (16 April 2010). Why We're All Romans: The Roman Contribution to the Western World. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-0-7425-6780-1.
- ^ Nightingale, Andrea (2007). "The Philosophers in Archaic Greek Culture". In Shapiro, H. A.; Antonaccio, Carla M. (eds.). The Cambridge Companion to Archaic Greece. Cambridge companions to the ancient world. Cambridge University Press. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-521-52929-7.
We have ample evidence that the Greek thinkers encountered and responded to many different cultures and ideologies. Consider, for example, the city of Miletus, which was the center of intellectual activity in sixth-century Ionia. Miletus bordered on the Lydian and, later, the Persian empires and had extensive dealings with these cultures.In addition, it had trading relations all over the Mediterranean and sent out numerous colonies to Egypt and Thrace. The Milesian thinkers thus encountered ideas and practices from all over the "known" world. In the Archaic period, the interaction of different peoples from Greece, Italy, Egypt, and the Near East created a cultural ferment that had a profound impact on Greek life and thought.
- ^ Boardman, John (1982), "The material culture of Archaic Greece", in Boardman, John; Hammond, N. G. L. (eds.), The Cambridge Ancient History, vol. 3 (2nd ed.), Cambridge University Press, p. 450, doi:10.1017/chol9780521234474.018, ISBN 978-0-521-23447-4, retrieved 20 October 2024,
Knowledge of Egyptian art after the mid century led to Greek exploitation of the harder stone, their white island marble, for the first time, and the creation of figures at life size or more. We know these best—the kouroi and korai—as dedications and grave markers, but a prime use for monumental statuary must have been as cult images and it is at about this time that the temple-houses, oikoi, for these images begin to receive a monumental form and, again probably through inspiration from Egypt are decorated with architectural orders: first the Doric in homeland Greece, then the orientalizing Ionic in the East Greek world.
- ^ Scott, John C (2018). "The Phoenicians and the Formation of the Western World". Comparative Civilizations Review. 78 (78). Brigham Young University. ISSN 0733-4540.
- ^ Green, P. (2008). Alexander The Great and the Hellenistic Age. Phoenix. p. xiii. ISBN 978-0-7538-2413-9.
- ^ Porter, Stanley E. (2013). Early Christianity in its Hellenistic context. Volume 2, Christian origins and Hellenistic Judaism: social and literary contexts for the New Testament. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-9004234765.
- ^ Hengel, Martin (2003). Judaism and Hellenism: studies in their encounter in Palestine during the early Hellenistic period. Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock. ISBN 978-1-59244-186-0.
- ^ Spielvogel, Jackson J. (2016). Western Civilization: A Brief History, Volume I: To 1715 (Cengage Learning ed.). Cengage Learning. p. 156. ISBN 978-1-305-63347-6.
- ^ Neill, Thomas Patrick (1957). Readings in the History of Western Civilization, Volume 2 (Newman Press ed.). p. 224.
- ^ O'Collins, Gerald; Farrugia, Maria (2003). Catholicism: The Story of Catholic Christianity. Oxford University Press. p. v. ISBN 978-0-19-925995-3.
- ^ Rousseau, Philip (2017). "Inheriting the fifth century: Who bequeathed what?". In Allen, Pauline; Jeffreys, Elizabeth (eds.). The Sixth Century: End or Beginning?. Brill. pp. 2–3, 5. ISBN 978-1-86420-074-4.
- ^ a b Haskins, Charles Homer (1927), The Renaissance of the Twelfth Century, Cambridge: Harvard University Press, ISBN 978-0-6747-6075-2
{{citation}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ a b George Sarton: A Guide to the History of Science Waltham Mass. U.S.A. 1952
- ^ a b Burnett, Charles. "The Coherence of the Arabic-Latin Translation Program in Toledo in the Twelfth Century", Science in Context, 14 (2001): 249–288.
- ^ a b Geanakoplos, Deno John (1989). Constantinople and the West : essays on the late Byzantine (Palaeologan) and Italian Renaissances and the Byzantine and Roman churches. Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-11880-0. OCLC 19353503.
- ^ a b Rüegg, Walter: "Foreword. The University as a European Institution", in: A History of the University in Europe. Vol. 1: Universities in the Middle Ages, Cambridge University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-521-36105-2, pp. xix–xx
- ^ a b Verger 1999
- ^ a b Risse, Guenter B. (April 1999). Mending Bodies, Saving Souls: A History of Hospitals. Oxford University Press. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-19-505523-8.
- ^ a b Schumpeter, Joseph (1954). History of Economic Analysis. London: Allen & Unwin.
- ^ "Review of How the Catholic Church Built Western Civilization by Thomas Woods, Jr". National Review Book Service. Archived from the original on 22 August 2006. Retrieved 16 September 2006.
- ^ Cf. Jeremy Waldron (2002), God, Locke, and Equality: Christian Foundations in Locke's Political Thought, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (UK), ISBN 978-0-521-89057-1, pp. 189, 208
- ^ The Protestant Heritage Archived 23 February 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Britannica
- ^ McNeill, William H. (2010). History of Western Civilization: A Handbook (University of Chicago Press ed.). University of Chicago Press. p. 204. ISBN 978-0-226-56162-2.
- ^ Faltin, Lucia; Melanie J. Wright (2007). The Religious Roots of Contemporary European Identity (A&C Black ed.). A&C Black. p. 83. ISBN 978-0-8264-9482-5.
- ^ Karl Heussi, Kompendium der Kirchengeschichte, 11. Auflage (1956), Tübingen (Germany), pp. 317–319, 325–326
- ^ Yin Cheong Cheng, New Paradigm for Re-engineering Education. p. 369
- ^ Ainslie Thomas Embree, Carol Gluck, Asia in Western and World History: A Guide for Teaching. p. xvi
- ^ Kwang-Sae Lee, East and West: Fusion of Horizons[page needed]
- ^ a b c Kwame Anthony Appiah (9 November 2016). "There Is No Such Thing As Western Civilization".
- ^ Kwame Anthony Appiah (9 November 2016). "There Is No Such Thing As Western Civilization".
[...] the first recorded use of a word for Europeans as a kind of person, so far as I know, comes out of this history of conflict. In a Latin chronicle, written in 754 in Spain, the author refers to the victors of the Battle of Tours as Europenses, Europeans. So, simply put, the very idea of a 'European' was first used to contrast Christians and Muslims.
- ^
Graeber, David; Wengrow, David (9 November 2021). "Farewell to Humanity's Childhood". The Dawn of Everything: A New History of Humanity. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 9780374721107. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
[...] that one group of humans who used to refer to themselves as 'the white race' (and now, generally, call themselves by its more accepted synonym, 'Western civilization') [...].
- ^ Davidson, Roderic H. (1960). "Where is the Middle East?". Foreign Affairs. 38 (4): 665–75. doi:10.2307/20029452. JSTOR 20029452. S2CID 157454140.
- ^ Jacobus Bronowski; The Ascent of Man; Angus & Robertson, 1973 ISBN 0-563-17064-6
- ^ Geoffrey Blainey; A Very Short History of the World; Penguin Books, 2004
- ^ Scott 2018, pp. 38–39.
- ^ Stearns, Peter N. (2003). Western civilization in world history. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781134374755.
- ^ Polybius (1980). The Rise of the Roman Empire. Oxford University Press. p. 177. ISBN 9780140443622.
- ^ a b Hanson, Victor Davis (18 December 2007). Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power. Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-307-42518-8.
- ^ Green, Peter. Alexander to Actium: The Historical Evolution of the Hellenistic Age. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990.
- ^ George G. Joseph (2000). The Crest of the Peacock, pp. 7–8. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00659-8
- ^ Maddison, Angus (2007), Contours of the World Economy, 1–2030 AD: Essays in Macro-Economic History, p. 55, table 1.14, Oxford University Press, ISBN 978-0-19-922721-1
- ^ Hero (1899). "Pneumatika, Book ΙΙ, Chapter XI". Herons von Alexandria Druckwerke und Automatentheater (in Greek and German). Translated by Wilhelm Schmidt. Leipzig: B.G. Teubner. pp. 228–232.
- ^ Gordon, Cyrus H., The Common Background of the Greek and Hebrew Civilizations, W. W. Norton and Company, New York 1965
- ^ Nicholls, William (1995). Christian Antisemitism: A History of Hate (1st Jason Aronson softcover ed.). Northvale, New Jersey: Jason Aronson. ISBN 978-1-56821-519-8. OCLC 34892303.
- ^ Gager, John G. (1983). The origins of anti-semitism : attitudes toward Judaism in Pagan and Christian antiquity. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-503607-7. OCLC 9112202.
- ^ "How The Irish Saved Civilisation", by Thomas Cahill, 1995[page needed]
- ^ Kaiser, Wolfgang (2015). The Cambridge Companion to Roman Law. pp. 119–148.
- ^ Fortenberry, Diane (2017). THE ART MUSEUM. Phaidon. p. 108. ISBN 978-0-7148-7502-6.
- ^ Elisheva Carlebach; Jacob J. Schacter (25 November 2011). New Perspectives on Jewish-Christian Relations. BRILL. p. 38. ISBN 978-90-04-22117-8.
- ^ Sanjay Kumar (2021). A Handbook of Political Geography. K.K. Publications. pp. 125–127.
- ^ "Valetudinaria". broughttolife.sciencemuseum.org.uk. Archived from the original on 5 October 2018. Retrieved 22 February 2018.
- ^ Risse, Guenter B. (15 April 1999). Mending Bodies, Saving Souls: A History of Hospitals. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-974869-3.
- ^ Chadwick, Owen p. 242.
- ^ Hastings, p. 309.
- ^ de Torre, Fr. Joseph M. (1997). "A Philosophical and Historical Analysis of Modern Democracy, Equality, and Freedom Under the Influence of Christianity". Catholic Education Resource Center. Archived from the original on 20 April 2017. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
- ^ a b Koch, Carl (1994). The Catholic Church: Journey, Wisdom, and Mission. Early Middle Ages: St. Mary's Press. ISBN 978-0-88489-298-4.
- ^ Burke, P., The European Renaissance: Centre and Peripheries (1998)
- ^ Grant God and Reason p. 9
- ^ Koch, Carl (1994). "The Age of Enlightenment". The Catholic Church: Journey, Wisdom, and Mission. St. Mary's Press. ISBN 978-0-88489-298-4.
- ^ Dawson, Christopher; Glenn Olsen (1961). Crisis in Western Education (reprint ed.). CUA Press. ISBN 978-0-8132-1683-6.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ Koch, Carl (1994). "High Middle Ages". The Catholic Church: Journey, Wisdom, and Mission. St. Mary's Press. ISBN 978-0-88489-298-4.
- ^ Koch, Carl (1994). "Renaissance". The Catholic Church: Journey, Wisdom, and Mission. St. Mary's Press. ISBN 978-0-88489-298-4.
- ^ Dawson, Christopher; Glenn Olsen (1961). Crisis in Western Education (reprint ed.). CUA Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-8132-1683-6.
{{cite book}}: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ Koch, Carl (1994). "Reformation". The Catholic Church: Journey, Wisdom, and Mission. St. Mary's Press. ISBN 978-0-88489-298-4.
- ^ Koch, Carl (1994). "Enlightenment". The Catholic Church: Journey, Wisdom, and Mission. St. Mary's Press. ISBN 978-0-88489-298-4.
- ^ Frank 2001, p. 180.
- ^ Sootin, Harry. "Isaac Newton." New York, Messner (1955)
- ^ Galileo Galilei, Two New Sciences, trans. Stillman Drake, (Madison: Univ. of Wisconsin Pr., 1974), pp. 217, 225, 296–97.
- ^ Ernest A. Moody (1951). "Galileo and Avempace: The Dynamics of the Leaning Tower Experiment (I)". Journal of the History of Ideas. 12 (2): 163–93. doi:10.2307/2707514. JSTOR 2707514.
- ^ Marshall Clagett, The Science of Mechanics in the Middle Ages, (Madison, Univ. of Wisconsin Pr., 1961), pp. 218–19, 252–55, 346, 409–16, 547, 576–78, 673–82; Anneliese Maier, "Galileo and the Scholastic Theory of Impetus", pp. 103–23 in On the Threshold of Exact Science: Selected Writings of Anneliese Maier on Late Medieval Natural Philosophy, (Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Pr., 1982).
- ^ Hannam, p. 342
- ^ E. Grant, The Foundations of Modern Science in the Middle Ages: Their Religious, Institutional, and Intellectual Contexts, (Cambridge: Cambridge Univ. Pr., 1996), pp. 29–30, 42–47.
- ^ "Scientific Revolution". Encarta. 2007. Archived from the original on 28 October 2009.
- ^ Watt steam engine File: located in the lobby of into the Superior Technical School of Industrial Engineers of the UPM (Madrid)
- ^ Landes 1969, p. 40
- ^ Landes 1969
- ^ Lucas, Robert E. Jr. (2002). Lectures on Economic Growth. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. pp. 109–10. ISBN 978-0-674-01601-9.
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it is fairly clear that up to 1800 or maybe 1750, no society had experienced sustained growth in per capita income. (Eighteenth century population growth also averaged one-third of 1 percent, the same as production growth.) That is, up to about two centuries ago, per capita incomes in all societies were stagnated at around $400 to $800 per year.
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[consider] annual growth rates of 2.4 percent for the first 60 years of the 20th century, of 1 percent for the entire 19th century, of one-third of 1 percent for the 18th century
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Alhazen (or Al-Haytham; 965–1039 CE) was perhaps one of the greatest physicists of all times and a product of the Islamic Golden Age or Islamic Renaissance (7th–13th centuries). He made significant contributions to anatomy, astronomy, engineering, mathematics, medicine, ophthalmology, philosophy, physics, psychology, and visual perception and is primarily attributed as the inventor of the scientific method, for which author Bradley Steffens (2006) describes him as the "first scientist".
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electrophorus volta.
- ^ Bohr, Niels (1 January 1913). "On the Constitution of Atoms and Molecules, Part I". Philosophical Magazine. 26: 1. Bibcode:1913PMag...26....1B. doi:10.1080/14786441308634955.
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{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: publisher location (link) - ^ "This Is Cheshire - Winnington history in the making". 21 January 2010. Archived from the original on 21 January 2010. Retrieved 20 June 2022.
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- ^ (Chapters 9, 10, 11, 13, 25 and 26) and three times (Chapters 4, 8 and 19) in its sequel, Equality
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{{cite book}}:|work=ignored (help)CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ Nelson, Jon. "Mars Exploration Rover – Spirit". NASA. Archived from the original on 28 January 2018. Retrieved 2 February 2014.
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- ^ Brown, Dwayne; Cantillo, Laurie; Buckley, Mike; Stotoff, Maria (14 July 2015). "15-149 NASA's Three-Billion-Mile Journey to Pluto Reaches Historic Encounter". NASA. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
- ^ Butrica, Andrew. From Engineering Science to Big Science. p. 267. Retrieved 4 September 2015.
- ^ Weber, Johannes (2006). "Strassburg, 1605: The Origins of the Newspaper in Europe". German History. 24 (3): 387–412 (387). doi:10.1191/0266355406gh380oa.:
At the same time, then as the printing press in the physical technological sense was invented, 'the press' in the extended sense of the word also entered the historical stage. The phenomenon of publishing was now born.
- ^ Hardy, Jonathan (25 February 2010). Western Media Systems. Routledge. p. 25. ISBN 978-1-135-25370-7.
- ^ Hardy, Jonathan (25 February 2010). Western Media Systems. Routledge. p. 59. ISBN 978-1-135-25370-7.
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- ^ a b Perry, Marvin; Chase, Myrna; Jacob, James; Jacob, Margaret; Von Laue, Theodore H. (1 January 2012). Western Civilization: Since 1400. Cengage Learning. p. XXIX. ISBN 978-1-111-83169-1.
- ^ A. J. Richards, David (2010). Fundamentalism in American Religion and Law: Obama's Challenge to Patriarchy's Threat to Democracy. University of Philadelphia Press. p. 177. ISBN 9781139484138.
..for the Jews in twentieth-century Europe, the cradle of Christian civilization.
- ^ D'Anieri, Paul (2019). Ukraine and Russia: From Civilied Divorce to Uncivil War. Cambridge University Press. p. 94. ISBN 9781108486095.
..for the Jews in twentieth-century Europe, the cradle of Christian civilization.
- ^ L. Allen, John (2005). The Rise of Benedict XVI: The Inside story of How the Pope Was Elected and What it Means for the World. Penguin UK. ISBN 9780141954714.
Europe is historically the cradle of Christian culture, it is still the primary center of institutional and pastoral energy in the Catholic Church...
- ^ Rietbergen, Peter (2014). Europe: A Cultural History. Routledge. p. 170. ISBN 9781317606307.
Europe is historically the cradle of Christian culture, it is still the primary center of institutional and pastoral energy in the Catholic Church...
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The Bible is the most globally influential and widely read book ever written. ... it has been a major influence on the behavior, laws, customs, education, art, literature, and morality of Western civilization.
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Sources
[edit]- Ankerl, Guy (2000). Global communication without universal civilization. INU societal research. Vol. 1: Coexisting contemporary civilizations: Arabo-Muslim, Bharati, Chinese, and Western. Geneva: INU Press. ISBN 978-2-88155-004-1.
- Ankerl, Guy (2000). Coexisting Civilizations: Arabo-Muslim, Bharati, Chinese, and Western. INUPRESS, Geneva, 119–244. ISBN 2-88155-004-5.
- Atle Hesmyr (2013). Civilization, Oikos, and Progress ISBN 978-1468924190
- Barzun, Jacques From Dawn to Decadence: 500 Years of Western Cultural Life 1500 to the Present HarperCollins (2000) ISBN 0-06-017586-9.
- Daly, Jonathan. "The Rise of Western Power: A Comparative History of Western Civilization Archived 30 June 2017 at the Wayback Machine" (London and New York: Bloomsbury, 2014). ISBN 978-1441161314.
- Daly, Jonathan. "Historians Debate the Rise of the West" (London and New York: Routledge, 2015). ISBN 978-1138774810.
- Derry, T. K. and Williams, Trevor I. A Short History of Technology: From the Earliest Times to A.D. 1900 Dover (1960) ISBN 0-486-27472-1.
- Duran, Eduardo, Bonnie Dyran Native American Postcolonial Psychology 1995 Albany: State University of New York Press ISBN 0-7914-2353-0
- Frank, Andre (2001), "Review of The Great Divergence", Journal of Asian Studies, 60 (1): 180–182, doi:10.2307/2659525, JSTOR 2659525
- Hanson, Victor Davis; Heath, John (2001). Who Killed Homer: The Demise of Classical Education and the Recovery of Greek Wisdom, Encounter Books.
- Hunter, Louis C. (1985). A History of Industrial Power in the United States, 1730–1930. Vol. 2: Steam Power. Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia.
- Jones, Prudence and Pennick, Nigel A History of Pagan Europe Barnes & Noble (1995) ISBN 0-7607-1210-7.
- Landes, David. S. (1969). The Unbound Prometheus: Technological Change and Industrial Development in Western Europe from 1750 to the Present. Cambridge, New York: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. p. 92. ISBN 0-521-09418-6.
- Meaney, Thomas "The Return of 'The West'" New York Times March 11, 2022.
- Merriman, John Modern Europe: From the Renaissance to the Present W. W. Norton (1996) ISBN 0-393-96885-5.
- McClellan, James E. III and Dorn, Harold Science and Technology in World History Johns Hopkins University Press (1999) ISBN 0-8018-5869-0.
- Stein, Ralph The Great Inventions Playboy Press (1976) ISBN 0-87223-444-4.
- Asimov, Isaac Asimov's Biographical Encyclopedia of Science and Technology: The Lives & Achievements of 1510 Great Scientists from Ancient Times to the Present Revised second edition, Doubleday (1982) ISBN 0-385-17771-2.
- Pastor, Ludwig von, History of the Popes from the Close of the Middle Ages; Drawn from the Secret Archives of the Vatican and other original sources, 40 vols. St. Louis, B. Herder (1898ff.)
- Walsh, James Joseph, The Popes and Science; the History of the Papal Relations to Science During the Middle Ages and Down to Our Own Time, Fordham University Press, 1908, reprinted 2003, Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 0-7661-3646-9 Reviews: p. 462.[1]
- Stearns, P.N. (2003). Western Civilization in World History, Routledge, New York.
- Thornton, Bruce (2002). Greek Ways: How the Greeks Created Western Civilization, Encounter Books.
- Ferguson, Niall, Civilization. The West and the rest, Penguin Press, 2011. ISBN 978-1-101-54802-8
- Pinker, Steven, Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism, and Progress, Penguin Books, 2018. ISBN 978-0-525-42757-5
- Henrich, Joseph, The WEIRDest People in the World: How the West Became Psychologically Peculiar and Particularly Prosperous, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2020. ISBN 978-0374173227
- Stark, Rodney, The Victory of Reason: How Christianity Led to Freedom, Capitalism, and Western Success, Random House, 2006. ISBN 978-0812972337
- Stark, Rodney, How the West Won: The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, Intercollegiate Studies Institute, 2014. ISBN 978-1497603257
- Headley, John M. The Europeanization of the World: On the Origins of Human Rights and Democracy, Princeton University Press, 2007. ISBN 9780691171487
- Verger, Jacques [in French] (1999). Culture, enseignement et société en Occident aux XIIe et XIIIe siècles (in French) (1st ed.). Presses universitaires de Rennes in Rennes. ISBN 286847344X.
Further reading
[edit]- Barzun, Jacques. From Dawn to Decadence: 500 Years of Western Cultural Life : 1500 to the Present. New York: HarperCollins, 2001.
- Hesmyr, Atle Kultorp: Civilization; Its Economic Basis, Historical Lessons and Future Prospects (Telemark: Nisus Publications, 2020).
External links
[edit]- An overview of the Western Civilization Archived 24 October 2021 at the Wayback Machine
Western culture
View on GrokipediaTerminology and Definition
Etymology and Historical Scope
The term "Western culture," also known as Western civilization, originated from the Latin occidens, referring to the direction of the setting sun and contrasting with oriens (the rising sun in the East), a distinction formalized during the administrative division of the Roman Empire in 395 CE into the Western Roman Empire (centered in Rome) and the Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantium). [8] This bifurcation laid the groundwork for conceptualizing Europe as the "West," distinct from Eastern Mediterranean and Asian spheres, though the modern phrasing "Western civilization" gained currency in European intellectual discourse only in the late 19th century, appearing in German texts around the 1890s (e.g., in Friedrich Nietzsche's writings) and entering widespread English usage by the 1930s amid efforts to define shared European heritage against rising global ideologies. [9] [1] Historically, the scope of Western culture delineates the intellectual, artistic, political, and ethical traditions emerging primarily from ancient Greece (circa 800 BCE onward), where foundational elements like rational inquiry, democratic governance experiments in Athens (e.g., the Assembly established around 508 BCE), and philosophical inquiry by figures such as Socrates and Plato took root, subsequently synthesized with Roman legal and republican institutions (e.g., the Twelve Tables codified circa 450 BCE and the Republic's expansion from 509 BCE). [10] [11] This Greco-Roman core evolved through the Christianization of Europe following the Western Roman Empire's fall in 476 CE, incorporating Judeo-Christian ethics and medieval scholasticism, then accelerating via the Renaissance (circa 1400 CE), which revived classical humanism; the Reformation (1517 CE onward), challenging ecclesiastical authority; and the Enlightenment (17th–18th centuries), emphasizing empirical science and individual rights as articulated in works like John Locke's Two Treatises of Government (1689). [3] [12] The temporal and geographical expanse extends to the present, encompassing Europe's colonial expansions (e.g., from 1492 CE with Columbus's voyages), the Industrial Revolution (beginning circa 1760 in Britain with innovations like James Watt's steam engine improvements in 1769), and the cultural exports to settler societies in North America, Australia, and New Zealand, where institutions like the U.S. Constitution (ratified 1788) embedded principles of limited government and property rights derived from earlier Western precedents. [10] [11] This scope excludes non-European traditions unless causally integrated, such as limited ancient Near Eastern influences on Greece (e.g., via Phoenician alphabet adoption circa 800 BCE), prioritizing endogenous developments in rationalism and liberty over exogenous impositions. [13] Modern delineations often limit it to societies upholding these lineages, amid debates over inclusions like post-1945 Eastern European integrations post-Cold War. [14]Core Principles: Individualism, Rationalism, and Liberty
Individualism in Western culture posits the person as the primary bearer of rights, dignity, and moral agency, diverging from kinship-based or communal hierarchies prevalent in many non-Western societies. This principle originated in ancient Greek philosophy, where figures like Socrates (c. 469–399 BCE) exemplified self-examination and personal responsibility through dialectical questioning, challenging collective myths and traditions.[15] Christianity further entrenched individualism by asserting the moral equality of all souls before God, independent of social status, as evidenced in Pauline epistles emphasizing personal faith over tribal lineage (e.g., Galatians 3:28, circa 50 CE).[16] By the medieval period, this evolved into concepts of conscience and natural rights, culminating in the Renaissance and Reformation's focus on individual interpretation of scripture and autonomy.[17] Rationalism, the reliance on reason and logic as the chief means to acquire knowledge, forms another pillar, tracing to Pythagoras (c. 570–495 BCE) and intensified by Plato's (c. 428–348 BCE) epistemology, which prioritized innate rational insight over sensory experience in grasping eternal forms.[18] Aristotle (384–322 BCE) systematized this through deductive logic and empirical observation, laying groundwork for scientific method that demanded verifiable propositions over authority or revelation alone.[19] The 17th-century rationalists, including Descartes (1596–1650), reinforced this with "cogito ergo sum" (1637), arguing innate ideas and deductive certainty as foundations of truth, influencing Western advancements in mathematics and physics, such as Newton's Principia Mathematica (1687).[20] This tradition fostered skepticism toward unexamined dogma, enabling critiques of absolutism and superstition. Liberty, understood as safeguards against coercion to pursue personal ends, integrates with the prior principles by protecting rational inquiry and individual agency under rule of law. Roman republicanism (c. 509–27 BCE) introduced concepts like res publica and legal equality, echoed in Cicero's (106–43 BCE) defenses of constitutional limits on power.[21] John Locke's Second Treatise of Government (1689) articulated natural rights to life, liberty, and property, derived from rational self-ownership, influencing documents like the U.S. Declaration of Independence (1776).[22] Empirical correlations link these ideals to prosperity: nations scoring high on individualism and liberty indices, per Hofstede's cultural dimensions (1980), exhibit higher GDP per capita and innovation rates, as self-reliance incentivizes entrepreneurship absent in collectivist systems.[23] Together, these principles underpin Western exceptionalism in generating voluntary cooperation, scientific progress, and limited government, though tensions arise in balancing individual freedoms with social order.[24]
Historical Development
Ancient Greco-Roman Foundations (c. 800 BCE–476 CE)
The foundations of Western culture emerged in ancient Greece during the Archaic period around 800 BCE, marked by the composition of epic poems such as Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, which established enduring heroic ideals of honor, courage, and human agency amid divine intervention.[25] These works, transmitted orally before being written down circa 750–700 BCE, influenced subsequent literature and ethical conceptions by portraying individuals navigating fate through personal excellence (arete). City-states (poleis) developed independently, fostering competition in politics, arts, and thought; Athens, in particular, innovated direct democracy through reforms by Cleisthenes in 508 BCE, granting male citizens participation in the Assembly (ekklesia), where decisions on war, laws, and ostracism were made by majority vote among approximately 30,000–60,000 eligible participants out of a population exceeding 300,000.[26] This system, limited to free adult males excluding women, slaves (about 20–30% of the population), and metics, emphasized civic equality (isonomia) and accountability via lotteries for offices and public trials, laying precedents for participatory governance despite its instabilities, as evidenced by the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BCE).[27] Greek philosophy, originating with Pre-Socratics like Thales of Miletus (c. 624–546 BCE) who sought natural causes over mythological explanations, prioritized rational inquiry (logos) into the cosmos, ethics, and knowledge. Socrates (c. 469–399 BCE) advanced dialectical questioning to expose ignorance and pursue virtue, influencing Plato's Academy (founded c. 387 BCE), where ideal forms and political theory in The Republic posited justice as harmony in the soul and state, advocating philosopher-kings. Aristotle (384–322 BCE), tutor to Alexander the Great, systematized logic in Organon, empiricism in biology (classifying over 500 species), and ethics emphasizing eudaimonia through rational activity, profoundly shaping Western metaphysics, science, and teleological reasoning.[28] Mathematics advanced with Pythagoras (c. 570–495 BCE) proving the theorem on right triangles and Euclid compiling Elements (c. 300 BCE), axiomatizing geometry, while Archimedes (c. 287–212 BCE) calculated pi and invented war machines, establishing deductive methods central to scientific methodology.[29] The Hellenistic era, following Alexander's conquests (336–323 BCE) that extended Greek influence to Egypt, Persia, and India, disseminated paideia (cultural education) via institutions like the Library of Alexandria (founded c. 295 BCE, housing up to 700,000 scrolls). Philosophical schools proliferated: Stoicism, founded by Zeno of Citium (c. 334–262 BCE), taught cosmopolitan virtue and emotional resilience through reason, influencing Roman and later Christian ethics; Epicureanism, by Epicurus (341–270 BCE), advocated pleasure via moderation and atomism, challenging supernatural fears.[30] Skepticism, via Pyrrho (c. 360–270 BCE), questioned dogmatic knowledge, promoting suspension of judgment (epochē). These shifts toward personal ethics amid empire reflected adaptation to larger polities, seeding individualism and universalism. Rome, traditionally founded in 753 BCE, absorbed Greek culture (Graecia capta ferum victorem cepit) after conquering southern Italy and Greece by 146 BCE, adapting Hellenistic philosophy— Cicero (106–43 BCE) synthesized Plato and Stoicism in De Officiis—and mythology, equating Zeus with Jupiter. The Republic (509–27 BCE) featured a mixed constitution with Senate, consuls, and assemblies, balancing patrician and plebeian interests via the Twelve Tables (451 BCE), codifying laws on property, debt, and contracts, emphasizing written statutes over arbitrary rule.[31] Engineering feats, including 400,000 km of roads by 100 CE and aqueducts supplying 1 million cubic meters daily to Rome, facilitated administrative unity and trade, while the Empire under Augustus (27 BCE–14 CE) peaked territorially under Trajan (98–117 CE), spanning 5 million km² and 50–90 million people. Roman law's principles—such as contracts (pacta sunt servanda), delicts, and public authority—evolved into the Corpus Juris Civilis under Justinian (529–534 CE), though foundational republican elements persisted, informing civil law traditions.[32] The Western Roman Empire's collapse culminated in 476 CE when the Germanic chieftain Odoacer deposed the boy-emperor Romulus Augustulus, ending centralized rule amid barbarian migrations, economic contraction (tax revenues falling 50% from 150–400 CE), military reliance on foederati, and internal divisions, yet Greco-Roman legacies in language (Latin basis for Romance tongues), literature (Virgil's Aeneid c. 19 BCE linking Rome to Troy), and institutions endured through Byzantine preservation and medieval transmission.[33]Judeo-Christian Synthesis in the Medieval Period (c. 476–1500 CE)
The fall of the Western Roman Empire in 476 CE marked a transition where the Christian Church became the custodian of literacy and intellectual continuity in Europe, integrating biblical revelation—drawn from Jewish scriptures—with remnants of Greco-Roman philosophy and law. Monasteries, established under rules like that of St. Benedict (c. 530 CE), functioned as scriptoria where monks meticulously copied classical texts, including works by Plato, Aristotle (in limited fragments), Virgil, and Ovid, alongside patristic writings from figures like Augustine of Hippo (354–430 CE), who had already begun reconciling Platonic ideas with Christian doctrine in works such as Confessions and City of God. This preservation effort countered widespread illiteracy and invasions, maintaining a corpus estimated at thousands of manuscripts by the 9th century, though transmission was selective, prioritizing texts compatible with theology.[34][35] The Carolingian Renaissance, initiated under Charlemagne (r. 768–814 CE), accelerated this synthesis through royal patronage of schools and libraries, such as the Palace School at Aachen, where scholars like Alcuin of York (c. 735–804 CE) reformed education, standardized Latin script (Carolingian minuscule), and revived trivium and quadrivium curricula rooted in classical models but oriented toward scriptural exegesis. Charlemagne's Admonitio Generalis (789 CE) mandated cathedral and monastic schools, fostering a revival that produced over 7,000 surviving manuscripts, blending liturgical reforms with secular learning to unify the Frankish realm under Christian imperial ideology. This era's emphasis on ad fontes (to the sources) echoed Jewish scribal traditions of textual fidelity while adapting Roman administrative structures for ecclesiastical governance.[36][37] Scholasticism, emerging in the 11th–13th centuries, represented the pinnacle of this intellectual fusion, employing dialectical reasoning to harmonize faith and reason, with Jewish monotheism's emphasis on a transcendent creator God providing the metaphysical foundation critiqued against Aristotelian causality. Anselm of Canterbury (1033–1109 CE) advanced the method in Proslogion (1078 CE), arguing for God's existence via ontological proof, asserting "faith seeking understanding" (fides quaerens intellectum) as compatible with biblical revelation. The rediscovery of Aristotle's full corpus—translated from Arabic via Toledo around 1120–1150 CE—influenced centers like the School of Chartres, but it was Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274 CE) who systematically integrated it in Summa Theologica (1265–1274 CE), positing natural reason's alignment with revealed truth, where Aristotelian essence-existence distinction supported Christian doctrines like creation ex nihilo from Genesis. Aquinas cited over 3,000 biblical passages alongside pagan philosophers, resolving tensions such as divine foreknowledge and free will through analogical predication, though his work faced initial condemnation for perceived over-reliance on "pagan" sources.[38][39] The establishment of universities institutionalized this synthesis, evolving from cathedral schools into autonomous corporations granting degrees in theology, law, and arts. The University of Bologna, formalized in 1088 CE, focused on civil and canon law, drawing Roman Corpus Juris Civilis (529–534 CE) into Christian moral frameworks; the University of Paris, chartered c. 1200 CE, emphasized theology, producing scholastic debates that numbered in the thousands annually by 1300 CE. These institutions, numbering over 20 by 1400 CE across Europe, trained clergy and laity in disputation, ensuring the Judeo-Christian ethical core—emphasizing natural law from Mosaic commandments and Pauline epistles—intersected with rational inquiry, laying groundwork for empirical methods despite theological primacy.[40][41] This medieval synthesis preserved Western culture's dual heritage amid feudal fragmentation, enabling later advancements, though it privileged orthodoxy, as seen in the 1277 Paris condemnations of 219 Aristotelian propositions deemed incompatible with scripture.[38]Renaissance, Reformation, and Enlightenment (c. 1400–1800 CE)
The Renaissance, emerging in Italy around 1400 and extending into the 17th century, represented a cultural revival centered on humanism, which prioritized human agency, classical antiquity, and empirical observation over medieval scholasticism. This period saw innovations in art, such as linear perspective pioneered by Filippo Brunelleschi in the early 1400s and anatomical precision in Leonardo da Vinci's works like the Vitruvian Man (c. 1490), reflecting a renewed focus on the human form and natural world.[42] The invention of the printing press by Johannes Gutenberg around 1440 facilitated the dissemination of texts, including rediscovered Greek and Roman manuscripts, boosting literacy and scholarly debate across Europe.[42] These developments fostered individualism by celebrating personal genius and inquiry, shifting cultural emphasis from divine predestination to human potential and achievement.[43] The Protestant Reformation, sparked by Martin Luther's Ninety-Five Theses nailed to the Wittenberg church door on October 31, 1517, directly challenged the Catholic Church's authority, particularly its sale of indulgences and hierarchical control over salvation.[44] Luther's doctrine of sola scriptura—scripture alone as the ultimate authority—and the priesthood of all believers empowered individuals to interpret the Bible personally, undermining clerical monopoly and promoting religious autonomy.[45] This movement, amplified by the printing press, spread rapidly, leading to the establishment of Lutheranism in Germany by 1530 and Calvinism in Switzerland and beyond, while igniting conflicts like the Thirty Years' War (1618–1648) that reshaped Europe's religious landscape.[46] The Reformation's stress on personal faith and conscience reinforced Renaissance humanism's individualism, contributing to a cultural ethos where private judgment challenged institutional dogma, laying groundwork for modern notions of liberty in belief and expression.[47][48] Building on Renaissance recovery of ancient texts and Reformation's critique of authority, the Enlightenment (c. 1685–1815) elevated reason, empiricism, and natural law as foundations for knowledge and governance, influencing Western culture's commitment to rationalism and individual rights. John Locke's Two Treatises of Government (1689) posited that governments derive legitimacy from protecting innate rights to life, liberty, and property, justifying resistance to tyranny and inspiring constitutional frameworks. Voltaire's advocacy for religious tolerance and separation of church and state, articulated in works like Candide (1759), countered fanaticism and promoted civil liberties amid events like the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685.[49] Empirical advances, such as Isaac Newton's Principia Mathematica (1687), demonstrated mechanistic laws governing the universe, encouraging skepticism toward superstition and divine intervention. These ideas culminated in political transformations, including the American Declaration of Independence (1776), embedding Enlightenment principles of consent and equality under law into Western political culture.[49] Interlinked, the Renaissance provided intellectual tools via humanism, the Reformation instilled habits of dissent and personal responsibility, and the Enlightenment synthesized them into systematic advocacy for reason over revelation, propelling Western culture toward secular progress, scientific method, and limited government. This progression prioritized causal explanation through observation—evident in Galileo's telescopic discoveries (c. 1610)—over teleological medieval views, fostering innovations like the steam engine prototypes by the late 18th century and embedding a worldview resilient to authoritarianism.[42][50] Despite biases in some academic narratives favoring progressive reinterpretations, primary sources like Luther's writings and Locke's treatises reveal a pragmatic realism grounded in human imperfection and empirical limits, rather than utopian ideals.[46][48]
Industrial Revolution and Imperial Expansion (c. 1760–1914 CE)
The Industrial Revolution originated in Great Britain around 1760, driven by innovations in textile machinery and energy production that shifted economies from agrarian and artisanal bases to mechanized manufacturing.[51] Factors enabling this included abundant coal resources, capital accumulation from trade, and legal protections for property and invention, fostering entrepreneurship and technological experimentation.[52] Britain's naval dominance secured raw material imports and export markets, amplifying industrial growth.[53] Pivotal inventions accelerated production: James Hargreaves' spinning jenny in 1764 multiplied thread output, Richard Arkwright's water frame in 1769 enabled factory-scale cotton spinning, and Samuel Crompton's spinning mule in 1779 combined efficiency with quality.[54] James Watt's steam engine, patented in 1769 and refined by 1782, decoupled machinery from water power, enabling factories in urban areas and powering locomotives like George Stephenson's Rocket in 1829, which reached 30 mph.[55] Iron production surged with Henry Cort's puddling process in 1784, yielding 18,000 tons annually by 1790, underpinning infrastructure like railways totaling 6,000 miles by 1850.[56] These changes propelled capitalism, with GDP per capita in Britain rising from £1,711 in 1760 to £3,190 by 1860 (in 1700 prices), reflecting productivity gains from division of labor and market expansion.[53] Urbanization intensified as rural workers migrated to cities; Manchester's population grew from 10,000 in 1717 to 300,000 by 1851, straining sanitation and housing but birthing a middle class of industrialists and professionals. Factory work imposed regimented 12-16 hour days, often for women and children at low wages—children as young as 5 earning half adult rates—leading to health crises like cholera outbreaks from contaminated water, yet literacy rates climbed to 97% for men by 1900 due to compulsory schooling reforms.[57] Industrial demands for raw materials and overseas markets intertwined with imperial expansion, as Britain's empire supplied cotton from India and America, fueling textile exports that comprised 50% of Britain's trade by 1830.[56] European powers, emulating Britain, pursued colonies for resources like rubber and minerals, with motivations rooted in economic surplus extraction, strategic naval bases, and national prestige amid rivalries.[58] The British Empire peaked at 13.7 million square miles by 1914, governing 458 million subjects, while France, Germany, Belgium, and Portugal partitioned Africa during the Scramble, formalized at the 1884-1885 Berlin Conference, claiming 90% of the continent by 1900.[59] Steamships and quinine prophylaxis enabled deeper penetration, reducing mortality from tropical diseases by 75% for Europeans.[60] Imperial ventures disseminated Western technologies, such as railways—India's network expanded to 25,000 miles by 1900—and institutions like common law and parliamentary governance in settler colonies, alongside missionary efforts converting 10 million Africans by 1914.[61] However, extraction-focused policies, including forced labor in Belgian Congo yielding 80% of global rubber by 1900, inflicted demographic catastrophes, with estimates of 10 million deaths from exploitation and famine.[62] This era entrenched Western cultural exports—scientific rationalism, individualism via trade liberalism—but provoked resistances, as in the 1857 Indian Rebellion against East India Company rule, underscoring tensions between imposed modernity and local traditions.[63] Overall, these dynamics amplified Western global influence through material prowess, embedding innovation and market-oriented values central to its cultural identity.[52]20th Century Wars, Welfare States, and Cold War (1914–1991 CE)
The First World War (1914–1918), triggered by the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand on June 28, 1914, and involving major Western powers alongside allies, resulted in an estimated 8.5 million military deaths and 13 million total casualties from combat, disease, and famine, shattering illusions of inevitable progress and rational diplomacy. The conflict's mechanized slaughter, including over 1.3 million tons of artillery shells fired on the Western Front, led to the collapse of four empires—German, Austro-Hungarian, Russian, and Ottoman—paving the way for national self-determination but also sowing seeds of resentment through the Treaty of Versailles (1919), which imposed reparations of 132 billion gold marks on Germany. This upheaval accelerated secularization and skepticism toward monarchial and aristocratic traditions in Western Europe, fostering modernist cultural expressions like Dadaism and existential philosophy that questioned absolute truths. The interwar period saw economic turmoil from the Great Depression, with U.S. GDP falling 30% by 1933 and unemployment reaching 25%, catalyzing authoritarian responses including Mussolini's fascist regime in Italy (established 1922) and Hitler's Nazi Party gaining power in Germany (1933). These movements rejected liberal individualism for collectivist statism, promising national revival amid perceived failures of democratic capitalism, though they suppressed dissent and targeted minorities. World War II (1939–1945), ignited by Germany's invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939, escalated to 70–85 million deaths, including 6 million Jews in the Holocaust orchestrated by Nazi Germany's systematic extermination policies from 1941 onward. The war's total mobilization, atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki (August 6 and 9, 1945), and Allied victory underscored Western technological edge—evident in radar, penicillin mass production (over 2.3 million doses by D-Day), and code-breaking—but at the cost of moral reckonings over civilian bombings like Dresden (25,000 deaths, February 1945) and the erosion of pre-war chivalric norms in warfare. Postwar reconstruction in Western Europe emphasized social democratic welfare states, beginning with Britain's Beveridge Report (1942), which outlined universal healthcare, unemployment benefits, and pensions, implemented via the National Health Service in 1948 and covering 100% of the population by 1950. Similar systems emerged in Scandinavia (e.g., Sweden's folkhemmet model from 1930s expansions, with public spending reaching 50% of GDP by 1970) and West Germany (social market economy under Ludwig Erhard, 1948), funded by progressive taxation and Keynesian deficit spending that averaged 3–5% of GDP annually in the 1950s–1960s. These structures reduced poverty—UK relative poverty fell from 20% in 1949 to under 10% by 1968—but engendered dependency cultures and fiscal strains, with public debt-to-GDP ratios climbing above 100% in several nations by the 1970s amid stagflation. The Marshall Plan (1948–1952) injected $13 billion (equivalent to $150 billion today) into Europe, prioritizing market-oriented recovery over pure redistribution, which facilitated the European Coal and Steel Community (1951) precursor to the EU. The Cold War (1947–1991), framed by the Truman Doctrine's containment policy against Soviet expansion (announced March 12, 1947), pitted Western liberal democracies against communist totalitarianism, with proxy conflicts like Korea (1950–1953, 2.5 million deaths) and Vietnam (1955–1975, 3 million deaths) testing resolve. NATO's formation (1949) and the Warsaw Pact (1955) institutionalized division, symbolized by the Berlin Wall (1961–1989), while Western cultural soft power—via Hollywood exports (e.g., 500 films annually by 1950s) and rock music—contrasted Soviet suppression, contributing to dissident movements. Economic disparity proved decisive: Western GDP per capita averaged $20,000 by 1980 versus Eastern Europe's $6,000, driven by free enterprise innovation like the transistor (1947) and personal computers (1970s). The Soviet Union's dissolution (December 26, 1991) validated Western model's superiority in fostering individual agency and material prosperity, though it masked internal challenges like 1960s counterculture's hedonism and family breakdown (U.S. divorce rates doubling to 50% by 1980). Throughout, these events reinforced Western culture's adaptive resilience via rule-of-law institutions and empirical problem-solving, yet introduced tensions between liberty and security, with welfare expansions correlating to enlarged bureaucracies (e.g., EU public employment rising to 20% of workforce by 1990) and ideological fractures over state intervention versus markets.[64] The era's causal dynamics—war's destruction yielding institutional innovation, ideological rivalry spurring technological leaps—highlighted how Western emphasis on rational critique and decentralized power enabled recovery, contrasting rigid collectivist failures.Post-Cold War and Digital Age (1991–Present)
The dissolution of the Soviet Union on December 25, 1991, concluded the Cold War and facilitated the rapid expansion of Western economic and political models into Eastern Europe and former Soviet republics, with many adopting market-oriented reforms and democratic institutions by the mid-1990s.[65] This period initially fostered optimism about the universal appeal of liberal democracy, as articulated in Francis Fukuyama's 1992 thesis on the "end of history," positing ideological convergence toward Western-style governance amid reduced superpower rivalry.[66] However, subsequent geopolitical shifts, including NATO's enlargement from 16 members in 1991 to 32 by 2024 and the European Union's absorption of Central and Eastern states in 2004 waves, strained relations with Russia and highlighted limits to seamless integration.[67] Globalization accelerated cultural exchanges through intensified trade, migration, and media flows, with Western Europe experiencing net immigration rising from 1.2 million annually in the early 1990s to peaks exceeding 2 million by the 2010s, driven by EU free movement and asylum policies.[68] Policies promoting multiculturalism, formalized in countries like Canada via the 1988 Multiculturalism Act and echoed in European frameworks such as the UK's 1999 Macpherson Report, aimed to accommodate diversity but empirically correlated with integration challenges, including higher welfare dependency and crime rates among certain immigrant cohorts, as documented in Scandinavian studies showing parallel societies in urban enclaves.[69] Causal factors included labor market mismatches and cultural value divergences, where host societies' emphasis on individualism clashed with collectivist norms from source regions, contributing to social tensions evident in events like the 2005 French riots involving North African descendants.[70] The digital revolution transformed Western cultural production and consumption, with internet users in OECD countries surging from under 1% in 1991 to over 90% by 2020, enabling instantaneous global connectivity via platforms commercialized in the 1990s.[71] Social media's proliferation—Facebook launched in 2004, Twitter in 2006—amplified individual expression but fostered echo chambers and algorithmic polarization, correlating with a 20-30% increase in affective political divides in the U.S. and Europe per longitudinal surveys from 2010 onward.[72] This shift eroded traditional gatekeepers like print media, empowering decentralized discourse yet enabling rapid dissemination of identity-based grievances, as seen in the #MeToo movement's 2017 viral spread, which exposed systemic abuses but also prompted debates over due process erosion.[73] Post-9/11 security imperatives from the 2001 attacks, killing 2,977 in the U.S., prompted Western governments to expand surveillance and military engagements in Afghanistan (2001) and Iraq (2003), reframing cultural narratives around Islamism's incompatibility with liberal values and fueling domestic scrutiny of multiculturalism's security costs.[74] The 2008 global financial crisis, originating in U.S. subprime lending and causing a 4.3% GDP contraction in the Eurozone by 2009, exacerbated income inequality—Gini coefficients rising 2-5 points in major economies—and eroded trust in neoliberal elites, precipitating populist surges like the Tea Party in 2009 U.S. midterm gains and European parties capturing 20-25% vote shares by 2015.[75][76] These movements, exemplified by Brexit's 2016 referendum (52% leave vote) and Donald Trump's 2016 U.S. presidency, channeled grievances over deindustrialization and unchecked immigration, with empirical data linking crisis-induced unemployment spikes to 10-15% vote shifts toward anti-establishment platforms.[77] Identity politics, evolving from 1970s civil rights extensions, intensified in the 2010s through academic postmodern frameworks emphasizing group-based oppression, influencing policy via affirmative action expansions and corporate DEI initiatives adopted by 80% of Fortune 500 firms by 2020.[78] This paradigm shift correlated with declining endorsement of universalist principles, as World Values Survey data from 1990-2020 showed Western emancipative values peaking before plateauing amid rising relativism, with religiosity dropping to under 20% active practice in Western Europe by 2020 and fertility rates falling to 1.4-1.6 children per woman, below replacement levels.[79] The COVID-19 pandemic from 2020, with over 1 million U.S. deaths and lockdowns enforced in 95% of Western nations, further tested cultural resilience, revealing fault lines in trust—vaccine hesitancy reaching 30% in parts of Europe—and accelerating remote work, which decoupled identity from physical communities.[80] Emerging technologies like AI, with models like GPT-3 released in 2020 scaling to widespread adoption by 2025, pose causal risks to rationalism's primacy by automating creative and analytical tasks, potentially deepening cultural fragmentation through deepfakes and personalized realities, as evidenced by a 2023 EU report on disinformation's role in electoral interference.[81] Despite these disruptions, Western culture's adaptive individualism persists, evidenced by innovation rates—U.S. patents per capita remaining 2-3 times global averages—and ongoing philosophical pushback against relativism in works critiquing institutional biases in media and academia, where surveys indicate 60-70% of U.S. professors lean left, skewing narratives on topics like gender and race.[82] This era underscores tensions between liberty's expansive tendencies and causal pressures from demographic stagnation, technological determinism, and value divergences, with empirical trends suggesting no inevitable decline but requiring vigilant defense of core principles against entropy.[83]Philosophical Foundations
Classical and Medieval Thinkers
Socrates (c. 469–399 BCE) pioneered the dialectical method of inquiry, employing relentless questioning to expose contradictions in beliefs and pursue truth, a technique that underpins Western philosophical discourse.[84] This Socratic elenchus prioritized ethical self-examination, encapsulated in his dictum that "the unexamined life is not worth living," shifting focus from natural philosophy to human virtue and knowledge of the good.[85] Though he left no writings, his influence endures through students like Plato, establishing foundations for rational critique in ethics and epistemology.[84] Plato (c. 427–347 BCE), Socrates' disciple, advanced idealism via the theory of Forms, positing immutable, eternal archetypes (e.g., Justice, Beauty) as the true reality, with the sensory world mere imperfect imitations.[86] In works like The Republic, he envisioned a philosopher-king governed polity stratified by rational souls—gold for rulers, silver for guardians, bronze/iron for producers—emphasizing justice as psychic harmony mirroring cosmic order.[86] Plato's Academy institutionalized dialectic, fostering systematic reasoning that integrated metaphysics, politics, and mathematics, profoundly shaping subsequent Western thought despite critiques of its elitism and detachment from empirical observation.[28] Aristotle (384–322 BCE), Plato's pupil, rejected pure Forms for empirical realism, classifying knowledge through observation and logic, including the syllogism: "All men are mortal; Socrates is a man; therefore, Socrates is mortal."[87] His Nicomachean Ethics defined virtue as a mean between extremes (e.g., courage between rashness and cowardice), attainable via habituation toward eudaimonia, or flourishing through rational activity.[88] In Politics, he analyzed constitutions empirically, favoring a mixed polity blending monarchy, aristocracy, and democracy to avert corruption, while viewing humans as political animals whose telos requires communal life.[89] Aristotle's Lyceum systematized biology, physics, and metaphysics, providing causal frameworks—material, formal, efficient, final—that dominated Western science until the Renaissance.[89] Augustine of Hippo (354–430 CE) fused Neoplatonism with Christian doctrine, arguing in Confessions and City of God for divine illumination as the source of truth, countering Manichaean dualism with a creation ex nihilo where evil arises from privation of good.[90] He defended just war theory, permitting defensive violence under authority, and explored time as subjective distention of the mind, reconciling eternity with temporal existence.[91] Augustine's emphasis on original sin and grace underscored human dependence on God, influencing medieval theology amid Rome's fall, though his predestination views sparked later debates.[90] Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274) achieved a landmark synthesis of Aristotelian philosophy and Christianity in Summa Theologica, employing reason to demonstrate God's existence via five proofs (e.g., unmoved mover, necessary being).[92] He distinguished natural law—accessible via reason, directing toward common good—from divine law revealed in Scripture, positing virtues as habits perfecting human nature toward beatitude.[93] Aquinas affirmed faith and reason's harmony, with philosophy as handmaid to theology, enabling pagans' partial truths; his hylomorphic view of soul-body unity resolved dualist tensions, cementing scholasticism's rational defense of orthodoxy.[94] This integration preserved classical learning through medieval universities, countering fideism while subordinating pagan insights to revealed truth.[92]