Home >> History, Ideology & Science >> World History Email Print Western Civilization Ellis Washington - 2/3/2012 The sleep of reason brings forth monsters. ~ Goya
To educate in mind and not in morals is to educate a menace to society.
~ President Theodore Roosevelt
Prologue
Harvard historian and bestselling author Niall Ferguson’s latest book, “Civilization: The West and the Rest,” presents this compelling historical thesis:
At the beginning in the fifteenth century, the West developed six powerful new concepts that the Rest lacked: competition, science, rule of law, consumerism, modern medicine, and the work ethic… that allowed the West to leap ahead of the Rest, opening global trade routes, exploiting newly discovered scientific laws, evolving a system of representative government, more than doubling life expectancy, unleashing the Industrial Revolution, and embracing a dynamic work ethic.
Ferguson asks: Has the days of Western predominance reached an end not because of clashes with rival civilizations, but simply because the Rest have now downloaded the six “killer apps” we once monopolized while the West has literally lost faith in itself? Competition Merriam-Webster defines competition in business as "the effort of two or more parties acting independently to secure the business of a third party by offering the most favorable terms." It was the 1400s that began the paradigm shift from East to West. In 1776 it was described by Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations and by subsequent economists as allocating productive resources to their most highly-valued uses and encouraging efficiency. Competition causes more choices (liberty) which usually causes lower prices for the products, compared to what the price would be if there was no competition (monopoly) or little competition (oligopoly, crony socialism). Science Notwithstanding great scientific achievements in the Orient and Arabs in the Middle Ages, the scientific revolution is generally associated with the West: an era associated mainly in Europe towards the end of the Renaissance era with the 16th and 17th centuries and continued through the Enlightenment of the late 18th and 19th centuries. Western civilization created innovative ideas and information in medicine, astronomy, biology, chemistry and physics, changed medieval and ancient understanding of nature and laid the foundations for modern science. A key year of the scientific revolution was 1543 when two works were published that fundamentally revolutionized the course of science—Nicolaus Copernicus's “De revolutionibus orbium coelestium” (On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres) and Andreas Vesalius's “De humani corporis fabrica” (On the Fabric of the Human body). The rule of law An early example of the phrase "rule of law" is found in Samuel Rutherford’s “Lex, Rex” (1644). The title is Latin for "the law is king" and reversed the traditional rex lex ("the king is the law"). John Locke also examined this issue in his “Second Treatise of Government” (1690) and by Montesquieu in “The Spirit of the Laws” (1748). The idea that no one is above the law was popular during the founding of the United States and in 1776, when America declared independence from England and the tyranny of King George III, for example Thomas Paine wrote in his pamphlet Common Sense that "in America, the law is king. For as in absolute governments the King is law, so in free countries the law ought to be king; and there ought to be no other." In 1780, John Adams enshrined this principle in the Massachusetts Constitution by seeking to establish "a government of laws and not of men." Consumerism Consumerism has tentative connections to the Western world for the idea of people purchasing goods and consuming materials above their basic needs originates in the world’s oldest civilizations (e.g. Ancient Egypt, Babylon and Ancient Rome). Yet Western civilization caused a great consumerism revolution that preceded the Industrial Revolution (circa 1760-1830). In the nineteenth century, capitalist development and the industrial revolution were primarily focused on the capital goods sector and industrial infrastructure (i.e., mining, steel, oil, transportation networks, communications networks, industrial cities, financial centers, etc.). Modern medicine Another great paradigm shift in medical thinking was the gradual rejection, especially during the Black Death in the 14th and 15th centuries, of what may be called the “traditional authority” idea to medicine and science. This was the concept that since some famous person in the past said a thing, ergo it must be so, and that evidence to the contrary was the exception not the rule. This change in European society was comparable to Copernicus's rejection of Ptolemy's theories on astronomy. The [Protestant] work ethic Protestants, beginning with Martin Luther (1517) had redefined worldly work as a duty which benefits both the individual and society as a whole. Thus, the Catholic idea of good works was reconceptualized into a duty to work assiduously as a sign of grace. It was a visible sign or result (not a cause) of personal salvation. Epilogue
Dr. Ferguson’s “Civilization” eloquently demonstrates just how fewer than a dozen Western empires came to control over half of humanity and four fifths of the world economy. My primary concern with Ferguson’s thesis is he should have included a seventh pillar of Western civilization—God (e.g., monotheism, religion, natural law). The West integrated a Christian worldview with the six pillars of Western civilization which caused it to triumph and dominate the East for the past 600 years. Demonstrative of this idea was the West translating the Bible into the vernacular languages of Europe unshackled the Bible from Catholic hegemony (Latin) and gave religious liberty to all the people to read, understand and interpret the Bible for themselves which opened the floodgates to the democratization of knowledge.
In general, liberals hate Western civilization and conservatives want to preserve its contributions. America, don’t allow President Obama, Democrat Socialists and Progressives to drag Western civilization back to our pagan past by their regressive policies based on liberal fascism and perverting the Constitution to legalize the stealing of liberties, money, property and life from one group of people and giving it to another group of people who didn’t earn it and don’t constitutionally deserve it (e.g., the welfare state, pensions, Social Security, global socialism, Obamacare).
These treacherous socialist policies have not only pis—ed away our legacy of Western civilization from our forefathers, but even worse, have destroyed American and European hegemony as once great nations now stand of the brink of moral, social and economic collapse.
Ellis Washington is a former editor of the Michigan Law Review
and law clerk at The Rutherford Institute. He is an instructor at Spring
Arbor University, the American College of Education, and the National
Paralegal College. Washington is a co-host on "Joshua's Trial, a radio show
of Christian conservative thought. He is a graduate of John Marshall Law
School and has written extensively on constitutional law, history, politics,
philosophy, critical race theory and other subjects. His latest book is "The
Nuremberg Trials: Last Tragedy of the Holocaust" (2008) and law review
article, "Natural Law Considerations of Juvenile Law" (2010). Visit his
website, Ellis Washington Report.
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