This is a magnificent book - a 20th century history of 'the people and ideas that shaped the modern mind.'It is not about wars,politics or governments, although these are, inevitably, in the background. The author describes,and discusses, developments through the century, in the arts - from music to photography, - the natural sciences - from anthropology to quarks -, the social sciences, philosophy, education and much else. The majority of the scene is the Western world, but other areas are not neglected.
The book is in 4 sections, each covering about a quarter of the century; 1' from Freud to Wittgenstein' 2)'from Spengler to Animal Farm', 3)'from Sartre to the Sea of Tranquility' and 4) 'from the counter culture to Kosovo'.The century opens with the stability and moral certainty of pre-1914 Europe, with Picasso, the unconscious,and natural selection;it ends with string theory, the genome project and post-modern, self-centered relativism.
Whatever age the reader may be, he/she will not fail to be entralled to discover the roots and origins of so much now taken for granted - for example, the wisdom of an Oxford Don, born in 1835,whose advice to the young William Beveridge, led later to the setting up of the British welfare state.Whether one's interest is the increasing power of science,the decline in tradition, the changes in the arts or simply the vast number of men and women, whose ideas and work have helped to bring about change - for good or bad(!),one will marvel at this book
Read - and be enthralled and educated.