A New Vision of History |
Contents
Preface | 7 |
What is History? | 19 |
Probing the Depth of History | 29 |
Three Gunas | 39 |
Changing Patterns of Government | 49 |
Classification in Society | 58 |
Individuals Role in History | 71 |
A Constructive View of History | 77 |
Henry D Thoreau | 149 |
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel | 151 |
Karl Marx | 154 |
Thomas Hill Green | 158 |
Bertrand Russell | 160 |
K Gandhi | 163 |
Jawaharlal Nehru | 167 |
Vinoba Bhave | 172 |
The World is Really | 85 |
Its Real Objective | 95 |
Peace is Certainly Possible | 110 |
The Way | 116 |
Voltaire | 143 |
S Radhakrishnan | 175 |
PART IV | 181 |
A Plan for Rulers Education | 183 |
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Common terms and phrases
accepted adversaries and natural Allauddin Khilajis attack animal attack on Chittor basic battle battle of Troy become Bertrand Russell Bhagavadgita Brahmin Chittor classless society Classless society free colour conflict declared destroyed destruction determining factor distinctions have cropped enlightened Gandhi gunas H-bombs happiness Hegel Hence Hindus ibid ideal important individual instinct institution intention to hoard Jahangir Kshatriya Mahabharata mankind Marx means merely physical ego mind modern money or deterred Nadir Shahs nation needs Nehru non-spiritual nonviolence objective one's Padmini's beauty peace persons became interested present progress prosperity pursuit like philosophy Purusha Rajas Ravana real sense religion i.e. Rigvedic rulers Samkhya Sarvodaya satisfies merely physical Sattva selfish sense of value shcha Shiri-Farhad which prove Shudra social distance created substantially Brahman supreme Tamas tendencies thought three gunas Troy was waged truth ultimate Vaishya Varna Voltaire wars wisely written history word philosophy signifies written history helps