Books by "John Stuart Stuart Glennie"

12 books found

Houses for the People

Houses for the People

by Arthur Hickmott, B. L. Hutchins, Bernard Shaw, C. R. Allen, Charles Charrington, Clement Edwards, D. C. Pedder, Edward Carpenter, Edward Reynolds Pease, Fabian Society (Great Britain), Frederick Lawson Dodd, George Frederick McCleary, George Standring, Henry William Macrosty, Herbert Louis Samuel Samuel (Viscount), James Ramsay MacDonald, John Clifford, John Woolman, Joseph Francis Oakeshott, Percy Dearmer, Sidney Ball, Sidney Webb, Sir Oliver Lodge, Stephen Sanders, Stewart Duckworth Headlam, Sydney Haldane Olivier Baron Olivier

1906

England in the Reign of King Henry the Eighth

England in the Reign of King Henry the Eighth

by Thomas Starkey, Sidney John Hervon Herrtage

1878

History of Prose Fiction

History of Prose Fiction

by John Colin Dunlop

1906

Catholicon anglicum

Catholicon anglicum

by Sidney John Hervon Herrtage

1881

The English Works of Wyclif

The English Works of Wyclif

by John Wycliffe

1880

Buckle and His Critics

Buckle and His Critics

by John Mackinnon Robertson

1895

The Three Axial Ages

The Three Axial Ages

by John Torpey

2017 · Rutgers University Press

How should we think about the “shape” of human history since the birth of cities, and where are we headed? Sociologist and historian John Torpey proposes that the “Axial Age” of the first millennium BCE, when some of the world’s major religious and intellectual developments first emerged, was only one of three such decisive periods that can be used to directly affect present social problems, from economic inequality to ecological destruction. Torpey’s argument advances the idea that there are in fact three “Axial Ages,” instead of one original Axial Age and several subsequent, smaller developments. Each of the three ages contributed decisively to how humanity lives, and the difficulties it faces. The earliest, or original, Axial Age was a moral one; the second was material, and revolved around the creation and use of physical objects; and the third is chiefly mental, and focused on the technological. While there are profound risks and challenges, Torpey shows how a worldview that combines the strengths of all three ages has the potential to usher in a period of exceptional human freedom and possibility.

Darwinism

Darwinism

by John Fiske

1885