Books that Changed the World
by Robert B. Downs
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Description
Books Are Weapons Books have wielded an immense power for good and evil throughout the history of the human race. Here is a thoughtful and probing discussion of sixteen of the most important works of all time which influenced history, economics, culture, civilization, and scientific thought from the Renaissance to the present day. Such widely different, but immensely powerful books as Hitler's Mein Kampf, which foreshadowed the death and destruction of World War II, Harvey's famous volume on show more blood circulation which revolutionized medical theory and treatment, Einstein's theories on relativity which opened the atomic age are clearly described in this provocative and readable volume. Dr. Downs, former President of the American Library Association and head of the University of Illinois Library, also shows the widespread and decisive influence of other great works, including Newton's presentation of his discovery of the laws of gravity, a cornerstone in scientific theory today, Darwin's Origin of Species which many churchmen thought contradicted the Bible, Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin which is considered one of the major causes of the American Civil War, and Freud's Interpretation of Dreams, the great volume from the man who revolutionized modern man's thoughts about himself. Altogether, here is a fascinating presentation of books from many times which shows the tremendous power of the printed word on human development. show lessTags
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Member Reviews
Original price 35 cents and falling apart, and furthermore written before I was born, this was my introduction to influential books. Good thumbnail sketches. Still holds up.
Let's start by saying this book is over 60 years old but out of the sixteen books covered I've read one (Uncle Tom's Cabin); have another which I still intend to read (The Prince) and I have not heard of two (Mahan's The Influence of Sea Power on History and Mackinder's The Geographical Pivot of History). Split into two sections - The World of Man, which covers 10 books, and The World of Science, about 6 books. Each section is in published chronological order - from Macchiavelli to Hitler and from Copernicus to Einstein. I like the way that Downs talks about his selections, a bit of background to the author and the times their writings first appeared; a bit about the actual book; and then the impact at that time and why he thinks that show more they have had a lasting impact. It hasn't encouraged me to actually get around to reading the selections but at least I am more informed about these influential works. show less
The authors and works you never heard of are in the list because their work can be said to have influenced Hitler in some way, and because Hitler looms very large in the author's mind because the book was written in the '50s.
"The Invention of Science", which is a very thorough and scholarly work, attempts to refute the assumption of just about everybody, including the author of this book, that Copernicus's "De Revolutionibus" was extraordinarily influential. He points out that Copernicus's was just a rearrangement, and that the stars are still fixed in Copernicus's outer shell, not going off in all directions as we know they do today. He shows that many natural philosophers of the subsequent years seemed to take little interest in show more Copernicus's work and he argues that it was Tycho Brahe, whose concept of the universe was a whole lot more three-dimensional that had the greater influence. He could be correct, but that's a lot of accepted wisdom to overthrow.
There is an interesting, to me, passage in the chapter on "Mein Kampf" which I've included in the Common Knowledge section. Hitler wrote about techniques of propaganda, and one of his central principles was to keep it simple, to give the people just one enemy to hate, and whenever you want to mobilize them against anything, associate that thing with the one true enemy. In his case, this was "the Jews". But if we look at today's propaganda, I think the one true enemy is the only slightly more abstract "white supremacy/racism" and so everything must be connected to that. We note, of course, that the doctrine that only "white" people can be racist helps to make this abstract evil into a concrete race, in this case "whites" instead of Jews. In the quotation I've attached in the Common Knowledge section, Hitler rants against France but manages to achieve, by words and not by logic a connection to the Jews, who are at the bottom of the French evil. One can imagine some 1930's German, unaffected by the propaganda, laughing at the shear incoherence of this man's invective. But we have the same incoherence now, as everything that is disliked by the propaganda machine is turned into "white supremacy" by words and not by logic. That is how Larry Elder becomes "The Black Face of White Superemacy" and so forth. We deride the incoherence of the propaganda, just as our hypothetical reader of "Mein Kampf" derides its incoherence, but maybe that is to utterly miss the point. It seems to be working reasonably well on the masses now and it was quite effective then. show less
"The Invention of Science", which is a very thorough and scholarly work, attempts to refute the assumption of just about everybody, including the author of this book, that Copernicus's "De Revolutionibus" was extraordinarily influential. He points out that Copernicus's was just a rearrangement, and that the stars are still fixed in Copernicus's outer shell, not going off in all directions as we know they do today. He shows that many natural philosophers of the subsequent years seemed to take little interest in show more Copernicus's work and he argues that it was Tycho Brahe, whose concept of the universe was a whole lot more three-dimensional that had the greater influence. He could be correct, but that's a lot of accepted wisdom to overthrow.
There is an interesting, to me, passage in the chapter on "Mein Kampf" which I've included in the Common Knowledge section. Hitler wrote about techniques of propaganda, and one of his central principles was to keep it simple, to give the people just one enemy to hate, and whenever you want to mobilize them against anything, associate that thing with the one true enemy. In his case, this was "the Jews". But if we look at today's propaganda, I think the one true enemy is the only slightly more abstract "white supremacy/racism" and so everything must be connected to that. We note, of course, that the doctrine that only "white" people can be racist helps to make this abstract evil into a concrete race, in this case "whites" instead of Jews. In the quotation I've attached in the Common Knowledge section, Hitler rants against France but manages to achieve, by words and not by logic a connection to the Jews, who are at the bottom of the French evil. One can imagine some 1930's German, unaffected by the propaganda, laughing at the shear incoherence of this man's invective. But we have the same incoherence now, as everything that is disliked by the propaganda machine is turned into "white supremacy" by words and not by logic. That is how Larry Elder becomes "The Black Face of White Superemacy" and so forth. We deride the incoherence of the propaganda, just as our hypothetical reader of "Mein Kampf" derides its incoherence, but maybe that is to utterly miss the point. It seems to be working reasonably well on the masses now and it was quite effective then. show less
Not a book to be reread often and I have let 50 years lapse between readings. Meanwhile, I managed to read five of the sixteen books listed. I confess, it was like penance in most cases, going back to school, not reading for pleasure but to see if I could read, digest and absorb important information. I read this one sort of as a Cliff's Notes for the other books that I knew I would never actually sit down and read.
I wrote something about this book over here: http://tinyurl.com/89mmc
Influencia de los escritores pioneros: Aristóteles, Eurípides, Plutarco, San Agustín, Copérnico, Maquiavelo, Newton, Smith, Wollstonecraft, Jenner, Malthus, Darwin, Freud, Einstein
Dec 10, 2019Spanish
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Common Knowledge
- Original publication date
- 1956
- People/Characters
- Adolf Hitler; Agamemnon
- Quotations
- Another major propaganda principle is that of the single devil. Do not confuse the populace by offering too many enemies for it to hate at the same time. Concentrate upon one adversary, and focus the people's hatred upon this... (show all) enemy. For Hitler, of course, the Jew served as the universal scapegoat. Regardless of whether he was ranting against democracy, Marxism, the Versailles Treaty, France, or some other favorite target, the Jew was always present, scheming and plotting, trying with devilish ingenuity to undermine Germany and Aryan culture. A sample is this hysterical outburst:
...France is and remains by far the most terrible enemy. This people, which is basically becoming more and more negrified, constitutes in its tie with the aims of Jewish world domination an enduring danger for the existence of the white race in Europe. For the contamination by Negro blood on the Rhine in the heart of Europe is just as much in keeping with the perverted sadistic thirst for vengeance of this hereditary enemy of our people as is the ice-cold calculation of the Jew thus to begin bastardizing the European continent at its core and to deprive the white race of the foundations of a sovereign existence through infection with lower humanity.
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- Nonfiction, Literature Studies and Criticism, General Nonfiction, History, Philosophy
- DDC/MDS
- 001.3 — Computer science, information & general works Computer science, knowledge & systems Knowledge and learning in general Humanities
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- CB151 .D62 — Auxiliary Sciences of History History of Civilization History of Civilization
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