There’s a book called The First 100 Years: From the Rise of the Modern to the Fall of the Iron Age. This is a great book that is more about the ideas of the 20th century than anything else, so there’s a lot of good information on this subject.
The book takes a look at the rise and fall of different civilizations and the ideas that shaped them. The book is divided into ten sections. For example, the book takes a look at the ideas of the Enlightenment and the Age of Reason. The book also covers the birth and rise of the Industrial Revolution and the ideas that contributed to it.
I love the book. It’s full of interesting information. One section even talks about the period before the industrial revolution and the ideas that were present in the early part of the 20th century, including the rise of the scientific method and the invention of the printing press, among others. Another section discusses the ideas of the Renaissance and the Age of Discovery.
The book also includes many quotes from writers from the era, including the likes of Thomas Paine and John Milton. One of my favorite quotes from this book is the one below, which is about the idea of the American Revolution.
“If you would be a man, make a choice between liberty or death.
I’ve always heard that quote as being a somewhat ridiculous statement, but I still think it is one that is fairly accurate and one that is worth repeating. It was the statement that is most often repeated in the Declaration of Independence, which said that “all men are created equal”. The quote below, however, comes from a more specific quote by Thomas Paine, who said that he, “believed that all men were created equal…
…because he wanted to. In his book Rights of Man, Paine said, “A man is simply an individual of the human species, without any pretension to superiority, that is to say, he has no political, metaphysical, or religious right to his existence; he is nothing but a human being, and if he be not a man he is not himself, and if he is not a man he never was”.
The quote below is based on a passage from the book of Isaiah where Isaiah describes an individual as “the man who hath no god, and he is the man who hath no father, and he hath no husband, and he hath no wife, and he hath no father.” The author’s quote is from Isaiah.
I’m not sure I’m being clear when I say “he has no father” and “he has no father.” What I want to be clear is that “he has no father” is a reference to a lack of biological fatherhood. Isaiah doesn’t say this, but the implication is that he has no biological father. It’s another reason why this quote is so powerful: it’s a kind of existential truth, about the kind of person God made.
It’s another way to say that God made him. He creates one of his own, and this is a description of what it means to be a human being. It shows how God’s character is so perfect, so perfect that he is able to create a human being who would be perfect for God, but his perfections are not that of the human race.