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  1. Path dependence in historical sociology.James Mahoney - 2000 - Theory and Society 29 (4):507-548.
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  • Civilization and State Formation in the Islamic Context: Re-Reading Ibn Khaldūn.Johann P. Arnason & Georg Stauth - 2004 - Thesis Eleven 76 (1):29-48.
    Ibn KhaldØun’s theory of history has been extensively discussed and interpreted in widely divergent ways by Western scholars. In the context of present debates, it seems most appropriate to read his work as an original and comprehensive version of civilizational analysis (the key concept of ‘umran is crucial to this line of interpretation), and to reconstruct his model in terms of relations between religious, political and economic dimensions of the human condition. A specific relationship between state formation and the broader (...)
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  • Civilizations in Dispute: Historical Questions and Theoretical Traditions.Jóhann Páll Árnason - 2003 - BRILL.
    This book begins with a critical survey of current debates on the "clash of civilizations," goes on to discuss classical and contemporary approaches to civilizational theory, and concludes with an outline of a conceptual framework for comparative analysis.
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  • Japanese Civilization: A Comparative View.Anne Walthall & S. N. Eisenstadt - 1999 - Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 (2):362.
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  • Understanding Intercivilizational Encounters.Johann P. Arnason - 2006 - Thesis Eleven 86 (1):39-53.
    The notion of a ‘clash of civilizations’, which now seems to have become a fashionable cliché, should be discussed in the context of a broader set of questions: the problematic of intercivilizational encounters. This is an important but very underdeveloped part of the research programme now known as civilizational analysis. The article begins with a brief survey of the Indian experience. Indian history includes a long succession of intercivilizational encounters, both those initiated from the West (by Greeks, Muslims and Europeans) (...)
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  • Entangled Communisms: Imperial Revolutions in Russia and China.Johann P. Arnason - 2003 - European Journal of Social Theory 6 (3):307-325.
    The idea of entangled modernities is best understood as a complement and corrective to that of `multiple modernities': it serves to theorize the global unity and interconnections of modern socio-cultural formations in a non-reductionist and non-functionalist way. But it can also help to highlight complexity and divergence behind the outwardly uniform or parallel patterns of development. This line of thought seems particularly relevant to the history of Communism. The interdependent but divergent trajectories of the two imperial revolutions, Russian and Chinese, (...)
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  • Praxis und Interpretation: sozialphilosophische Studien.Jóhann Páll Árnason - 1988
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  • Von Marcuse Zu Marx Prolegomena Zu Einer Dialektischen Anthropologie.Jóhann Páll Árnason - 1971 - Luchterhand.
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  • Civilizational Patterns and Civilizing Processes.Johann P. Arnason - 2004 - In Said Amir Arjomand & Edward A. Tiryakian (eds.), Rethinking Civilizational Analysis. Sage Publications. pp. 103--118.
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