A Rosetta Key for History: Generations Revealing the Phases of TimeThis work reveals how generations form the hidden rhythm of history. By charting time in 15-year generational intervals-an approach first used by the medieval historian Bede and later championed by the twentieth-century philosopher José Ortega y Gasset-the author uncovers distinct phases that recur across civilizations. Rather than relying solely on yearly dating, which can fragment historical awareness, this generational lens exposes history's deeper coherence.
The phases found are: (1) Beginnings and testing (0-15 generations); (2) Establishment and unifying image (beginning at 15/20 generations); (3) Consolidation and opening up (30 generations); (4) Crisis and creativity (40 generations); (5) Universalization and inclusion (50 generations); and (6) Renewal or rigidification (60 generations). Through detailed case studies-Egypt, Israel-Judah, Rome, and the Medieval-Modern era-the author shows how each culture moves through these generational arcs, revealing a pattern that mirrors the human life cycle.
The 30th generation, often neglected by historians, emerges as a pivotal phase of openness, justice, and illumination. In sum, A Rosetta Key for History does not merely present a new way to measure time-it reveals the living architecture of history itself. The sequel volume extends this discovery into the Americas and contemporary civilization. Readers are invited on an intriguing journey in which generations become the Rosetta key for understanding time's unfolding design.
A Rosetta Key for History: Generations Revealing the Phases of TimeThis work reveals how generations form the hidden rhythm of history. By charting time in 15-year generational intervals-an approach first used by the medieval historian Bede and later championed by the twentieth-century philosopher José Ortega y Gasset-the author uncovers distinct phases that recur across civilizations. Rather than relying solely on yearly dating, which can fragment historical awareness, this generational lens exposes history's deeper coherence.
The phases found are: (1) Beginnings and testing (0-15 generations); (2) Establishment and unifying image (beginning at 15/20 generations); (3) Consolidation and opening up (30 generations); (4) Crisis and creativity (40 generations); (5) Universalization and inclusion (50 generations); and (6) Renewal or rigidification (60 generations). Through detailed case studies-Egypt, Israel-Judah, Rome, and the Medieval-Modern era-the author shows how each culture moves through these generational arcs, revealing a pattern that mirrors the human life cycle.
The 30th generation, often neglected by historians, emerges as a pivotal phase of openness, justice, and illumination. In sum, A Rosetta Key for History does not merely present a new way to measure time-it reveals the living architecture of history itself. The sequel volume extends this discovery into the Americas and contemporary civilization. Readers are invited on an intriguing journey in which generations become the Rosetta key for understanding time's unfolding design.