Wednesday, September 4, 2024

Review of From Plato To NATO: The Idea of the West and Its Opponents by David Gress

This book review was written by Eugene Kernes   

Book can be found in: 
Genre = History



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Excerpts

“Western liberty was not something marvelously distinct from historical reality, but the initially unintended side effect of the drive for power.  Rulers competing for power found that the niches of liberty of local communities made their societies stronger and more prosperous, hence more fit to compete.” – David Gress, Introduction, Page 2

 

“The Grand Narrative was both a version of history and a description of the ideal modern Western identity.  In its basic form, the Grand Narrative followed an axis that spanned five millennia, from ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia to mid-twentieth-century America.  It was a history of reason, democracy, and economic growth.  Its authors assumed that progress was real, objectively definable, and universally desirable.  Being free was better than being enslaved, being rich was better than being poor, being healthy better than being sick, being enlightened better than being superstitious, being at peace better than being at war.  Progress meant moving from subjection, poverty, disease, superstition, and violence to democracy, prosperity, health, science, and peace both domestic and international.” – David Gress, Chapter One: The Grand Narrative and Its Fate, Page 40

 

“In Western history, the drama of power was inseparably tied to two other fundamental and recurrent themes – empire and universalism.  Power was necessary for empire, which was a constant aspiration of the greatest Old Western rulers, because they believed that a universal empire was the only order for humankind; just as there was only one God in heaven, so there should be only one world ruler on earth.” – David Gress, Chapter Five: Germanic Freedom and the Old Western Synthesis, Page 171


Review

Is This An Overview?

As Western ideas have become dominant, they have also come under attack.  There is a lot to criticize about the West, but there is also confusion about what the identity of the West is.  Confusion that seeks to share the negative consequences without reference to the values. 

 

The West’s defining feature is the contrasting evolution of liberty and power.  Liberty came from the competition of power, as liberty enables societies to be more effective competitors.  The benefits of Western ideas were thought to be universally desirable, which has totalitarian features.  Universal values that leaders wanted to apply to everyone, wanted to rule over everyone.  In response to the totalitarian imposition, people sought for liberty.  A search for power lead to liberty, individualism.  But liberty without an appropriate administration, without governance, lead to totalitarian regimes. 

 

Caveats?

This book uses nonfiction and fiction to explain the Western identity.  Uses history and mythology.  The interpretations have mixed qualities.  Misinterpreting certain information for a simplified narrative.  Creating an essence of other authors, and the West.  Various authors presented have more complex claims than a single underlying theme provided.  The same narrative of the West, can apply to other societies as well, as the same aspects exist throughout various societies.  


Questions to Consider while Reading the Book

•What is the raison d’etre of the book?  For what purpose did the author write the book?  Why do people read this book?
•What are some limitations of the book?
•To whom would you suggest this book?
•What are Western values?
•What are the criticisms of the West?
•What is the Grand Narrative?
•What is the Western identity? 
•How did the Greeks effect the West’s identity?
•How did the Roman Empire effect the West’s identity?
•How did the Germans effect the West’s identity?
•Who are the Germans?
•How did Christianity effect the West’s identity?
•How did Russia effect the West’s identity?
•Who are the Bolsheviks? 
•How did the U.S.A. effect the West’s identity?
•How does democracy effect military capacity?
•How does capitalism effect the West?

Book Details
Publisher:               The Free Press [Simon & Schuster]
Edition ISBN:         0684827891
Pages to read:          563
Publication:             1998
1st Edition:              1998
Format:                    Hardcover 

Ratings out of 5:
Readability    3
Content          2
Overall          2