The beliefs of Aristotle, Socrates and Plato have similarities in the condemnation of national democracy. The view of Socrates expressed and written by student Plato is essentially philosophically very important and insists on the idea of casting doubts on life to gain insight. According to the allegory of Plato and his cave, philosophers with absolute truth are the most capable people who can dominate society. Instead, Aristotle takes a more political scientific method to discuss and analyze the various constitutions to determine the best form of government where rational existence in society is the ruler of nature I will.
Historically, I liked Tom Holland's Rubicon and James Shapiro's 1606: Lear and enjoyed Quentin Skinner 's contemporary political ideology following the evolution of the late Middle Ages and the Renaissance contemporary concept. I really do not believe the Silk Road, this is the history of the world There are many good comments through the lenses in Central Asia, but later I found it is pretty unilateral and controversial It was. This year's follow-up version of my 2015 book is Homo Deus by Sapiens, Yuval Noah Harari. Brian Christian's "The Human Human Human" also covers a similar foundation, complements this and is a subtle historical study that extensively studied the meaning of human beings. The role of the disciple as one of the baits in the annual "Turing test" competition as its starting point and structure
________ John · Rock's Political Thought: Historical evolution of conflict between the two governments. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1969, 99. Jeremy · Waldron, God, Rock and Equality Quotations: Christian Foundation of John · Rock 's Political Thought, 12. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002. Holyfield, persuad E Brooks era: American thought and culture 1521-1680. Edited by Twayne's American thought and culture, Lewis Perry. Boston: Twayne Press, 1989, p.46. Quote from James P. Byrd, Jr. "Roger Williams' Challenge: Religious Freedom, Violent Persecution and the Bible", 48. Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press, 2002