Details, Explanation and Meaning About Great Books of the Western World

Great Books of the Western World Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description

The Great Books of the Western World is a series of books originally published in 1952 in an attempt to present the western canon in a single package of 54 volumes.

Table of contents
1 History
2 The works
3 Criticism
4 Second edition

History

The project got its start at the University of Chicago. University president Robert Hutchins collaborated with Mortimer Adler to develop a course, generally aimed at businessmen, for the purpose of filling in gaps in education, making one more well-rounded and familiar with the "Great Books" and ideas of the past three millennia. Among the original students was William Benton, future US Senator and then CEO of the Encyclopædia Britannica. It was he who proposed a series of books presenting the greatest works of the canon, complete and unabridged, to be edited by Hitchins and Adler and published by Encyclopedia Britannica. Hutchins was wary, fearing that the works would be sold and treated as Encyclopedias cheapening the great books they were. Nevertheless, he was persuaded to agree to the project and pay $60,000 for it.

After several debates about what was to be included and how the work was to be presented, and the budget exploding to $2,000,000, the project was ready for publication. It was presented at a gala at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City on April 15, 1952. In a speech made that night, Hutchins said "This is more than a set of books, and more than a liberal education. Great Books of the Western World is an act of piety. Here are the sources of our being. Here is our heritage. This is the west. This is its meaning for mankind." It was decided that the first two volumes would be presented to Queen Elizabeth and President Truman.

Sales were initially poor. After 1,863 were sold in 1952, less than one-tenth that amount were sold the following year. A financial debacle loomed, until Encyclopedia Britannica altered the marketing strategy and sold the set (as Hutchins feared) through experienced door-to-door encyclopedia salesmen. Through this method 50,000 editions were sold in 1961.

The works

Published in 54 volumes, The Great Books of the Western World covers topics including fiction, history, poetry, natural science, mathematics, philosophy, drama, politics, religion, economics, and ethics. The first volume, titled "The Great Conversation" contains an introduction and discourse on liberal education by Hutchins. The next two volumes "The Great Ideas: A Syntopicon" were written by Adler and contained an introduction to 102 different concepts and references to them in all the works within "The Great Books". The volumes contained the following works:

1- The Great Conversation

2- Syntopicon I: Angel, Animal, Aristocracy, Art, Astronomy, Beauty, Being, Cause, Chance, Change, Citizen, Constitution, Courage, Custom and Convention, Definition, Democracy, Desire, Dialectic, Duty, Education, Element, Emotion, Eternity, Evolution, Experience, Family, Fate, Form, God, Good and Evil, Government, Habit, Happiness, History, Honor, Hypothesis, Idea, Immortality, Induction, Infinity, Judgment, Justice, Knowledge, Labor, Language, Law, Liberty, Life and Death, Logic, and Love

3- Syntopicon II: Man, Mathematics, Matter, Mechanics, Medicine, Memory and Imagination, Metaphysics, Mind, Monarchy, Nature, Necessity and Contingency, Oligarchy, One and Many, Opinion, Opposition, Philosophy, Physics, Pleasure and Pain, Poetry, Principle, Progress, Prophecy, Prudence, Punishment, Quality, Quantity, Reasoning, Relation, Religion, Revolution, Rhetoric, Same and Other, Science, Sense, Sign and Symbol, Sin, Slavery, Soul, Space, State, Temperance, Theology, Time, Truth, Tyranny, Universal and Particular, Virtue and Vice, War and Peace, Wealth, Will, Wisdom, and World

4- Homer -

5- Aeschylus - 6- Herodotus 7- Plato
    • Dialogues
8- Aristotle
    • Works, Part 1
9- Aristotle
    • Works, Part 2
10 - Hippocrates
    • Works
  • Galen
    • On the Natural Faculties
11- Euclid 12- Lucretius - 13- Virgil - 14- Plutarch-
    • The Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans'''
15- P. Cornelius Tacitus - 16- Ptolemy - 17- Plotinus - 18- St. Augustine - 19- Saint Thomas Aquinas - 20- Saint Thomas Aquinas - 21- Dante Alighieri - 22- Geoffrey Chaucer - 23- Nicoló Machiavelli - 24- Francois Rabelais - 25- Michel Eyquem de Montaigne -
    • Essays
26- William Shakespeare -
    • Complete Plays (Part 1)
27- William Shakespeare -
    • Complete Plays (Part 2)
    • Sonnets
28- William Gilbert -
    • On the Loadstone and Magnetic Bodies
  • Galileo Galilei -
    • Dialogues Concerning the Two New Sciences
  • William Harvey -
    • On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals
    • On the Circulation of Blood
    • On the Generation of Animals
29- Miguel de Cervantes - 30- Sir Francis Bacon -
    • Advancement of Learning
    • Novum Organum
    • New Atlantis
31- René Descartes - 32- John Milton - 33- Blaise Pascal -
    • Essays
34- Sir Isaac Newton - 35- John Locke - 36- Jonathan Swift - 37- Henry Fielding 38- Charles de Secondat, Baron de Montesquieu 39- Adam Smith - 40- Edward Gibbon - 41- Edward Gibbon - 42- Immanuel Kant -
    • The Critique of Pure Reason
    • Fundamental Principles of the Metaphysic of Morals
    • The Critique of Practical Reason
    • Preface and Introduction to the Metaphysical Elements of Ethics with a note on Conscience
    • General Introduction to the Metaphysic of Morals
    • The Science of Right
    • The Critique of Judgement
43- American State Papers 44- James Boswell -
    • The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D
45- Antoine Laurent Lavoisier - 46- Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel 47- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe - 48- Herman Melville - 49- Charles Darwin - 50- Karl Marx - 51- Count Leo Tolstoy - 52- Fyodor Mikhailovich Dostoevsky - 53- William James - 54- Sigmund Freud -
    • The Origin and Development of Psycho-Analysis
    • Selected Papers on Hysteria
    • The Sexual Enlightenment of Children
    • The Future Prospects of Psycho-Analytic Therapy

Criticism

The Great Books of the Western World have received their share of criticism from the time of their publication. The stress Hutchins placed on the monumental importance of these works was an easy target for those who dismissed the project as elites in their ivory tower pretending to save the world. Likewise the project has been attacked for further promoting the deification of "dead white males", while ignoring contributions of females and minorities to the canon. This mostly emerged later with the feminist and civil rights movements. But another harmful criticism was that the series was in reality more for show than for substance. While the sales were good through the aggressive promotion Encyclopedia Britannica put forth, the percentages of those purchase that were actually read to any significant extent, let alone completed, must still be rather small. Some argued that their main use was to create the illusion of being cultured, without any real substance behind it, only a modest financial investment. Furthermore the translations used were generally seen to be poor, given the scope and aim of the project, which certainly did not encourage readership. In an effort to keep ballooning costs down, the publishers decided to use only translations that were in the public domain, and often quite dated. This combined with the dense formatting did not help its readibilty.

Second edition

In 1990 a second edition of the Great Books of the Western World was published, this time with updated translations and six more volumes of material, covering the 20th century, an era of which the first edition was nearly devoid. These new volumes consisted of the following:

55- William James -

56- Henri Poincare - 57- Thorstein Veblen - 58- Sir James George Frazer - 59- Henry James - 60- Virginia Woolf -

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