Questioning the Millennium: A Rationalist's Guide to a Precisely Arbitrary Countdown (Revised Edition) Buy on Amazon

https://www.ebooknetworking.net/books_detail-0609605410.html

Questioning the Millennium: A Rationalist's Guide to a Precisely Arbitrary Countdown (Revised Edition)

PublisherHarmony Books
CategoryHistory
16.16 17.95 USD
Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 Buy Used — $0.01

Usually ships in 24 hours

Book Details

PublisherHarmony Books
ISBN / ASIN0609605410
ISBN-139780609605417
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank668,787
CategoryHistory
MarketplaceUnited States  🇺🇸

Description

In this slender volume, Stephen Jay Gould addresses three questions about the millennium with his typical combination of erudition, warmth, and whimsy: As a calendrical event, what is the concept of a millennium and how has its meaning shifted over time? How did the projection of Christ's 1,000-year reign become a secular measure? And when exactly will the millennium begin--January 1, 2000, or January 2, 2001?

"Our urge to know is so great, but our common errors cut so deep. You just gotta love us," he states disarmingly in the preface. "And you gotta view misguided millennial passion as a primary example of our uniqueness and our absurdity--in other words, of our humanity." Gould's own curiosity about time and calendars was triggered by a 1950 issue of Life magazine, which cut the century in half with its evaluation of what had happened and its prediction of things to come, propelling his third-grade mind to the year 2000. In Questioning the Millennium, Gould promises to make no predictions (other than "an orgy of millennial books"); court no millennial epiphanies; and put forth no theories on the collective angst that typically accompanies a century's end. Instead, he answers the millennial questions which, for him, represent the intersection of undeniable reality (i.e., natural fact) and human interpretation. Gould's questions and learned answers, weaving many historical and scientific facts, are a loving inquiry into the human need for order in a vast and teeming universe.

More Books in History

More Books by Stephen Jay Gould

Donate to EbookNetworking
Theory of Optical P...Prev
Next