Copy, Shake, and Paste: March 2015.
Mathiopoulos, Margarita. History and Progress: In Search of the European and American Mind (1989) online edition; Melzer, Arthur M. et al. eds. History and the Idea of Progress (1995), conservative scholars discuss Machiavelli, Kant, Nietsche, Spengler and others online edition; Nisbet, Robert.
The Theory of Metarealism is a reformulation of Kenneth N. Waltz's landmark 1979 work, Theory of International Politics. Specifically, the reformulation is of Waltz's market-firm analogy and more generally his microeconomic logic. The starting points for the Theory of Metarealism are the two major problems present in structural neorealism, the approach most closely linked to Waltz's Theory of.
His thesis, Sociology of Progress, was published by Routledge in 1970.
Progress is the movement towards a refined, improved, or otherwise desired state. In the context of progressivism, it refers to the proposition that advancements in technology, science, and social organization have resulted, and by extension will continue to result, in an improved human condition; the latter may happen as a result of direct human action, as in social enterprise or through.
Marantzidis, Nikos. 2001. Yasasin Millet, Zito to Ethnos. Prosfygia, katohi kai emfylios: Ethnotiki taftotita kai politiki symperifora stous tourkofonous elinorthodoxous tou Dytikou Pontou (Yasasin Millet, long live the nation: Uprooting, occupation, and civil war: Ethnic identity and political behavior in the Turkish-Speaking Greek-Orthodox of Western Pontos).