Globalization

CONTENT
Introduction
PART I. CIVILIZATIONS
1. Conception of civilization
1.1. Definition of civilization
1.2. Role of civilizations in the global world
2. European civilization
2.1. Emergence of Christian civilization. Division in to the Western-European and Orthodox-Christian civilization
2.2. Concepts of time
2.3. Masculine and feminine dominants of consciousness. Oedipus complex
2.4. Cult of the dead
2.5. Spiritual-energetic principles
3. Formation of new-European subcivilization
3.1. Phenomenon of new-European subcivilization
3.2. Development and specificity of cities
3.3. Universities. Emergence of intellectual elite
3.4. Ravage of peasantry and repression of popular culture
3.5. Role of the religious factor. Credo and Reformation
3.6. Semiotic diversity of Western Europe
3.7. Spirit of revalry. Myth of the Hero. Flexibility and striving for modern
3.8. Financial and industrial revolution in England
3.9. Development of military forces
4. Eastern-Orthodox subcivilization
4.1. Emegrence of Orthdox-Russian subcivilization
4.2. Fall of Kievska Rus
4.3. Economic statement of Russia
4.4. Distinctions between Russia and Western Europe
4.5. Social system of Russian state
5. Western-Orthodox subcivilization
5.1. Fundamental parameters of European civilization
5.2. Great Lithuanian Principolity
5.3. Rzecz pospolita
5.4. Emergence of Ukraine
Hetmanate. Development of Ukraine
5.5. Ukrainian National Republic
6. Comparison of European subcivilization
6.1. Models of development and subcivilizations of Western-European civilization
6.2. Anglo-Saxonian (oceanic) subcivilization
6.3. Western-European Continental subcivilization
6.4. Eastern-European subcivilization
6.5. Comparative analysis of Christian sybcivilizations
6.6. Geopolitical duality: Land vs. Sea
6.7. Model X and Y
6.8. Model Z
6.9. Specific features of different civilizations
PART II. GLOBALIZATION
Introduction
7. Globalization — a myth
7.1. Transnational company
7.2. High-tech production 216
7.3. Financial globalization
Financial markets of third world countries. The August crisis of 1998 in Russia. Financial markets of developed countries. Globalization of the USA Dollar. Currency speculations.
7.4. Global flight from taxes
7.5. Standartization and unification
7.6. Globalization of English language
7.7. Electronic control and espionage
7.8. Manipulation with consciousness, high-hume production
7.9. Globalization of military presence. NATO. Informational war
8. Globalization of the modernism crisis
8.1. Social modernization
8.2. Global crisis of modernism. Revolt of the masses
8.3. Amplification of social inequality
8.4. Global labor market
8.5. Globalization of ecological problems
8.6. Globalization of crime
8.7. Systemic crisis in developed countries
8.8. Antiglobalism
9. War of Civilizations
9.1. Strengthening of opposition between West and other civilizations
9.2. Fundamentalism. Radical movements
9.3. Globalization of terrorism
9.4. September 11 of 2001. America under attack
9.5. War of Civilizations
10. Globalization — a reality. Law of synarchy
10.1. Postmodernism and poststructuralism
10.2. Conception of globalization
10.3. Crisis of postmodernism
10.4. Psychoanalytical structure of different civilizations. Archetype
10.5. Heart of the globalization
10.6. Law of synarchy
10.7. Synergy
10.8. Planetarization of consciousness
11. Geopolitics
11.1. Change of the functions of state
11.2. Dynamics of civilization development
11.3. Christian civilization
11.4. Ways of the Russia's assertion as significant regional leader
12. Building a new global community
12.1. Crisis of international organizations
12.2. Principle for creation of new architecture of global community
12.3. Parameters of order in global community
12.4. Architecture of global community. International organizations in the future
General Bibliography
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