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Ordnung und Geschichte Band 8: Das ökumenische Zeitalter: Die Legitimität der Antike

2004

by Voegelin and Voegelin

Eric VoegelinPolitical PhilosophyAncient PhilosophyAristotlePlatoGeorg Wilhelm Friedrich HegelKarl MarxMarxismThomas AquinasIdeologyNatural LawAuguste ComteVoltaireImmanuel Kant

Table of Contents · 56 segments

1
Front Matter, Series Information, and Publication Databibliography
2
General Table of Contents for The Ecumenic Agebibliography
3
Analytical Table of Contents: Introductiontheoretical
4
Analytical Table of Contents: Chapter 1, Historiogenesischapter
5
Analytical Table of Contents: Chapter 2, The Ecumenic Agechapter
6
Contents Tail and Introduction: Original Plan and Its Breakdowntheoretical
7
Linear Time and Axial Timetheoretical
8
The Beginning and the Beyond: Historiogenesis and Cosmogonytheoretical
9
The Tension of Consciousness: Plato, Aristotle, and Israeltheoretical
10
Tension in the Gospel of Johntheoretical
11
Lost Equilibrium: Gnosticismtheoretical
12
Regained Equilibrium: Philotheoretical
13
Allegoresis and Philo's Torah Interpretationtheoretical
14
The Deformation of Philosophy into Doctrinetheoretical
15
Religion, Cicero's Religio, and the Survival of Doctrinetheoretical
16
Holy Scripturetheoretical
17
Concluding Reflection and Opening Chapter Headingtheoretical
18
Chapter 1: Historiogenesis—Definition and Namingtheoretical
19
Mythospeculation and the Cosmological Equivalent of Philosophytheoretical
20
Historiogenetic Speculation, Irreversible Time, and Imperial Constructionstheoretical
21
Existence and Nonexistence: Introductiontheoretical
22
The Primary Experience of the Cosmostheoretical
23
The Cosmological Style of Truththeoretical
24
Types of Timetheoretical
25
Numbers and Ages in Historiogenetic Speculationtheoretical
26
Declining Ages, Patriarchal Longevity, and the Falltheoretical
27
Imperial Mediation and Egyptian Historiogenesistheoretical
28
Israelite Universal History and the Chosen Peopletheoretical
29
Hellenic Historiogenesis: Definition, Conditions, and Characteristicstheoretical
30
Hesiod and Herodotus as Hellenic Historiogenesistheoretical
31
Euhemeros, Panchaia, and the Hellenistic Imperial Oikoumenetheoretical
32
Historiomachy and the Emergence of Comparative Chronographytheoretical
33
Chapter 2 Introduction: The Ecumenic Agechapter
34
The Spectrum of Ordertheoretical
35
Genesis of the Pragmatic Ecumene and the Power Vacuumtheoretical
36
Polybius’s Method and the Roman Theorematheoretical
37
The Ecumenic Empire, Polybius, and the Roman Constitutiontheoretical
38
Roman Success, Deisidaimonia, Decline, and Tychetheoretical
39
Conceptual Clarification of Oikoumene and the Ecumenic Agetheoretical
40
The Spiritual Ecumene: Introductiontheoretical
41
Paul and the Spiritual Transformation of the Ecumenetheoretical
42
Mani, Manichaeism, and Ecumenical Religiontheoretical
43
Mohammed, Islam, and the Fusion of Apostolate with Empiretheoretical
44
The King of Asia: Framing the Ecumenic Agechapter
45
Achaemenid Prologue: From Cosmological Empire to Ecumenic Orderchapter
46
Alexander: King of Asia, Homonoia, and Imperial Ritualchapter
47
Alexander’s Administrative Deification and Aristotle’s God Among Mentheoretical
48
Alexander, Ammon, God the Father, and Pothostheoretical
49
Greek-Indian Epilogue: Maurya, Bactria, and the Indo-Greek Kingdomsessay
50
Name Indexbibliography
51
Subject Indexbibliography
52
Translator and Editor Notesfootnotes
53
Afterword I: The Ecumenic Age and the Problem of Continuing Order and Historyessay
54
Afterword II: The Long Composition of The Ecumenic Ageessay
55
Afterword III: Legitimacy of Antiquity, Historiogenesis, and the Subject of Historyessay
56
Afterword IV: Voegelin’s Ecumenic Age, Historiogenesis, and Philosophical Myth of Historyessay