Alexander Tomov. The Fourth Civilisation --------------------------------------------------------------- © Alexander Tomov, Sofia, 1996 © David Mossop (English Translation), Sofia, 1996 --------------------------------------------------------------- Sofia 1996 Dedicated to the memory of my dear mother, Radka Tomova, whose dream was to be able to read this book. Contents Foreword 7 Section One The Crisis Chapter One The Birth Of The Global World And The Crisis Of Modernity 1. Integration And The Transition Of Civilisation 11 2. The Birth Of The Global World 20 3. The 20[th] Century - The Search Of A Model For The Global World 24 4. The Common Crisis And The Collapse Of The Third Civilisation 28 Chapter Two Collapse No.I: The Explosion in Eastern Europe 1. Decline And Death Throes 33 2. Reform And Illusions 39 3. Two Options And The "Mistake" Of Gorbachev 43 4. The Collapse Of Perestroika 46 5. The Explosion In Eastern Europe 51 6. Return To A Difficult Future 54 Chapter Three Collapse No.II: Global Disorder 1. The Danger Of Chaos 56 2. Geopolitical Collapse 61 3. Economic Turbulence 63 4. The New Masters Of The World 65 5. The March Of The Poor 67 6. A Number Of Pessimistic Scenarios 71 Section Two The Fourth Civilisation Chapter Four Theory In The Time Of Crisis 1. Forewarning Of The End Of The Two Theoretical Concepts 74 2. A Return To The Roots Or The Main Thesis 82 3. Main Conclusions And A Message To Alvin Toffler 85 4. A Similar Message To S.Huntington 89 5. The Need For A New Theoretical Synthesis 92 Chapter Five The Fourth Civilisation 1. Why A New Civilisation? 96 2. Some Thoughts On The Transitions Of Civilisations 99 3. The Distinguishing Features Of The Fourth Civilisation 103 4. Inevitability And When It Will Happen 106 Chapter Six The Dimensions of a New Synthesis 1. Socialisation And The Deregulation Of Ownership 108 2. Post-Capitalism 116 3. Post-Communism 120 4. The Approach And The End Of The "Third World" 126 5. Balanced Development 129 Chapter Seven Obstructions 1. The Defenders Of The Third Civilisation 134 2. The Great Threat - Media Imperialism 136 3. Post-Modern Nationalism 139 4. The Egoism Of Politicians 141 5. Militant Religions 143 6. A Cup Of Coffee In Apenzel 144 Section Three Alternatives To The Fourth Civilisation Chapter Eight The New Economic Order 1. The Economic Heart Of The Global World 146 2. New Growth And New Structures 150 3. Who Shall Dominate The World Economy? 154 4. Is There A Need For Global Economic Regulation? 159 5. Vivat Europa And The Death Of The Introverts 163 6. The Levelling Out Of Economies 166 Chapter Nine The Culture Of The Fourth Civilisation 1. The Beatles, Michael Jackson And The Bulgarian Caval. 170 2. The Travelling Peoples 174 3. Man Without Ethnic Origin Or The Rebellion Of Ethnicity 179 4. Global Awareness 183 5. Multiculture And The Global Culture 186 Chapter Ten The New Political Order 1. The Twilight Of The Superpowers 190 2. From Imperialism To Polycentralism 193 3, The Fate Of The Nation State 195 4. After The Crisis Of Political Identity 198 5. The Global Coordinators 200 CONCLUSION THE NATIONS WHICH WILL SUCCEED 202 APPENDICES Bibliography INTRODUCTION At the end of 1989 over a period of just a few months one of the two world systems collapsed. Together with the two world wars this was clearly the third turning point in the history of the twentieth century. For quite some time now researchers and politicians in a number of countries have been attempting to find an explanation for the collapse of the Eastern European totalitarian regimes and the consequences for the world. Thousands of publications and political statements have come to the concluded that "capitalism swallowed up communism" and that "liberalism has conquered the world". Fukoyama even went as far as to declare the end of history and the establishment of a liberal world model. Others see it only as the end of the Bolshevik experiment and the social engineering of a series of political philosophers from Rousseau to Marx. After the victories of the former communist parties in Poland, Hungary and Bulgaria in parliamentary elections in 1993 and 1994, liberal passions grew cold and talk of the new ascension of left wing thought has appeared on the political agenda. What really did happen after 1989? Where is the world heading? To the left or to the right? Towards unified action or to division into new blocs? Towards long-lasting peace or newrisks? Almost everyone - theoreticians, researchers and politicians in both the East and the West were caught unprepared by circumstances. The map of Eastern Europe has changed tragically beyond all recognition. Dozens of bloody conflicts have erupted. Europe is being thwarted at every moment in its attempt to unite peacefully. The United States now without an enemy in the world has felt an increasing need to change its global policies. Germany and Japan have also increased their economic power and their political confidence. In short, the collapse of the Eastern European communist regimes has profoundly affected the present and the future of all nations and has changed the entire world, not just small elements of it. These profound changes have touched contemporary human history in so far as they were a consequence of inexorable global trends. For this reason we have to go back in history to look for more general processes in order to reinterpret the dynamics of modern life. It is time to look beyond than the ideological euphoria of the changes caused and to attempt to define exactly what happened and what we can expect in the future. This is not my first book, but it is the first which I have written in complete freedom, without censorship or self-censorship, without the patronage and supervision of academic councils and "political friends". In this book I have searched for the truth from the point of view not only of the cultural environment which surrounds me but also of the world which revealed itself to me in its inimitable diversity after 1989. The changes which have taken place in Bulgaria can not be seen purely in terms of black and white. We attempted hastily to overcome the absurdities and limitations of our past and now, five years on we are still at the very beginning. The task has proven much more difficult than anyone could have imagined. At the same time much of the dignity which the Bulgarian people managed to preserve until 1989 has been sadly lost. Today in Bulgaria and the other countries of Eastern Europe not only is the value system in a state of chaos but there is also chaos surrounding the interpretations of what has happened and what must happen in the future. Many people are disappointed by the changes and they have rejected by looking back to the system of social guarantees, voting for the past. I can not say that all the votes cast for the former Eastern European communist parties are votes for the past, but most of them are. Hundreds of thousands of people in Bulgaria, Poland and Hungary have said to themselves "Under the former regime, I managed to build a house and bought a car (albeit poor quality). Now, I haven't the slightest chance of doing so." The comparison of the benefits to the majority of the population in the 1970's and 1980's and those of the first five years of emergent democracy, does not favour modern times. In terms of concrete facts and figures, this is indeed the case. However, this is far from the truth if one looks at the situation in the future and tomorrow in terms of the potential possibilities which freedom offers. I remember life in 1989 well, because up until then I had lived for 35 years in a totalitarian society. At first glance everything seemed all right. There was full social security during childhood and guaranteed education. Everyone had a job and a salary. The population was able to live in a society without crime. However despite this, in that world called socialism, we still asked ourselves many questions: Why do we produce less and poorer quality goods than the West? Why are our shops empty more often than not? Why are there chronic shortages of goods? Why do we have money and nothing to buy for it? Why are we forbidden to do things which seemed so natural? I have often observed my daughters' parrots at home. Just as in a totalitarian society, they have everything they could ask for: guaranteed food, security and hygiene. They are "happy", because they have everything which they could ever imagine. But they do not have freedom and for this reason when they are let out of their cage they cannot fly. Without freedom progress is impossible. In his cage, man cannot reveal his enormous creative potential to take the best from the past generations and to give the best of himself to the future. In the old totalitarian system we achieved much, but we lost much more. Sooner or later that world had to change, not only because it was suffering from crisis of its own identity but because the world itself had changed... My first encounter with politics was at the age of 11. I was on holiday with my father in the Rila mountains. In a remote mountain lodge, 2000 metres above sea level, a portrait of Khrushchev was being taken down. They were a few months late doing this and were obviously in a hurry to get rid of it. I asked my father who that man was and why until yesterday his portrait had hung proudly in that spot and today - it was gone. I later learnt that he had been a "revisionist". For a long time this was how I learnt all truths - ready-made and without any commentary. I was taught to believe that I was living in a perfect society and, what was more important was that any problems existing today would certainly be rectified for the future. The formula, "any imperfections are due to the fact that we are as yet in the first stages of communism" must be the most exquisite piece of demagogy and propaganda which I have ever encountered. We believed in the glorious future of communism, just like others believed in life after death. We were unable to compare our daily lives with anyone and with anything because we all watched the same television, listened to the same radio and read the same newspapers in which the truth was written by other people. In the 1960's and 1970's there were many people who did not believe and who heretically opposed the aggression of the regime. However, the majority of the population knew nothing of this. In Bulgaria there had been none of the civil unrest of the Polish workers, the Hungarian uprising and the Prague spring. It was only late in the 1970's that we began to realise that perhaps things were not as they should be and it was possible to live in a different way, that Eastern Europe was not the proponent of supreme human progress. One reason for this was the opening up of Bulgaria to the Western World, the appearance of new audio-visual media and the expansion of scientific and technological exchanges. We were then able to see another model and were able to make comparisons. Another reason was the admission by the existing regime of the need to improve economic mechanisms and their recognition of the importance of primary stimuli. However, even then in the 1970's and 1980's, even during the years of perestroika under Gorbachev, when the entire truth about Stalin became public knowledge, our notions of the future were limited to the idea of convergence. What happened in 1989 and especially what happened subsequently was totally unexpected by everyone, both in the East and the West. I am not afraid to admit this because I know very well that even the best political scientists in the world and the academic centres specialising in Eastern European studies had no idea of the impact and the diversity of the changes which were taking place at the end of the 1980's. Even Gorbachev himself did not expect it. The chain reactions of turbulent demonstrations which took place in the whole of Eastern Europe after perestroika and the mass dellusions that everythong would be just like Switzerland, as well as the obvious geo-political changes - these are all factors which lead me to write this book. The basic question, which I have endeavoured to answer is this: What did really happen at the end of the 1980's and why did the changes which took place in Eastern Europe have global ramifications? Some of my conclusions I date back to as early as 1982. In particular this is my view of the relationship between communalisation (socialisation) and autonomy and of the insubstantiality of statism at the end of the 20[th] century. Other conclusions were formed in the late 1980's after participating in a series of discussions at the congresses of the World Federation for Future Studies which helped me to understand the situations in other countries and to make comparisons with the situation in Eastern Europe and other parts of the world. The third group of conclusions are based on my own political experience as Deputy Prime Minister in the most decisive period of reform processin Bulgaria and as a member of the Bulgarian parliament from 1990-1994. My meetings with dozens of the world's leading politicians during this period were of enormous influence in the formation of the conclusions in this book. I cannot express adequate gratitude to my colleagues from the World Organisation for Future Studies and to my colleagues from the 21[st] Century Foundation in Sofia - a young and promising group of people who helped me greatly with ideas and critical commentary as well as the practical work in preparing the book for publication. At the risk of being paradoxical, there is little in this book which relates directly to Bulgaria, despite the fact that my main motivation in writing it were the problems facing my own country. While working on the book I realised that it is impossible to understand what is going on in Bulgaria if we do not make an attempt to understand what is happening in the world, and what we want to do, to a great extent depends on global processes. Today, no-one can develop in isolation. Such a future would be absurd, if we do not want to go back into our cage. The entire world is bound with common cords which no-one who want to move with progress can ignore. For this reasonI have left my analysis of Bulgaria to a separate book which will be published later. The fourth civilisation is a book about the global transition which is taking place in the world, its basis in history, the consequences of the collapse of the regimes in Eastern Europe, the danger of global disorder and chaos in which we are living today and the future and ways in which we might overcome them There are three possible directions for the world to develop. For the greatest part of the twentieth century the world has followed the path of division on the basis of culture, religion and political blocs, aggression and dramatic conflict. This was the world of the cold war, of confrontations between socialism and capitalism. This was the path of social Utopia, imaginary models and politicalf ormulae. The second path is the path of liberal development, victorious capitalism and the vested interests of the richest social strata. This is the path of domination of people by other people, of countries over other countries and nations over nations. I would call this path, the "path of the jungle", where the strong eat the weak. What these two models of development have in common is that they both belong to the past, they both complement each other and cannot exist without the other. There is a third path which will be discussed in this book. It is not on the immediate horizon, it may be a difficult path, even Utopian. However, it is, in my opinion, inevitable. My conviction is based on the fact that the modern technological revolution is leading to the creation of a different world civilisation. It could be said quite confidently that the end of the twentieth century will mark the end of an era in the development of civilisation. The twentieth century was an era of nation states, aggression and conflict between nations for more living space. It was an era in which the historically dominant countries imposed their cultures with force. The apogee of this anti-humanitarian absurdity came in the form of theories about the superiority of one race over another and of the need for the "lower" races to be destroyed. Today, this is all over, but we are far from a state of affairs where there is no longer any danger from new aggression. Although we could in fact be moving forwards a new, free civilisation there is still the possibility that may just be reproducing recidivists for the next century. We are living in a dangerous world, requiring absolute coordination, where there is no clear order or established principles. The question is the choice which we shall make. The aim of the "Fourth Civilisation" is to be part of the discussion surrounding this choice. We could possibly change the fate of world development in an improbable way. For the first time since man has come into existence, we are able to view our own existence not through the prism of individual tribes, classes or nations, but from the point of view of global perspectives. This is a unique chance, but it is also the responsibility of the era in which we live. Section one The Crisis Chapter One THE BIRTH OF THE GLOBAL WORLD AND THE CRISIS OF MODERNITY 1. INTEGRATION AND THE TRANSITIONS OF CIVILISATION During its centuries-old existence, mankind has passed through many stages. The uncivilised period lasted more than 100,000 years. The civilised period has lasted for between 5-7 thousand years. his is a period which has seen the realisation of the essence of humankind and consists of three major stages. They are three epochs which are synonyms for the progressof humanity. Three civilisations with distinct levels of progress. At the end of the 20[th] century we are living through the final days of the Third civilisation. F rom the first appearance of human society to the present day there has been a constant growth in the mutual dependence of people, nations, their customs and culture. The first manifestations of the human race, of tribes and inter-tribal links, the first city-states show that throughout history, from epoch to epoch mankind has become more and more integrated and the people of the earth have become more and more dependent on each other. I am not in a position to argue with anthropologists about the exact date when human life began and since there are so many different criteria relating to the transition between animals, humanoids and Homo Sapiens I consider this discussion to be of little benefit. Evidently during the palaeolithic period (about 100,000 years ago) man established his domination over the over forms of life and began methodically to conquer nature. At some time between 70 and 40 thousand years B.C. man began to tend animals, to create stone cutting implements and to form social relations which were untypical of other types of animals. In the late palaeolithic period human populations began to resettle from Africa through Asia to the northern parts of America. I am not convinced, however, that civilisation began from only one root disseminated by ambulant migrants or primitive forms of transport. I am more inclined to believe that in the earliest societies the spreading of the seeds of civilisation was of secondary significance to the growth of local civilisations in various regions of the world. The first manifestations of civilisation or limited social relations are not only to be found in Egypt or in Greece, nor are they the fruit of only one root. Between 3000-2000 B.C. not only did the cultures of Egypt and Mesopotamia begin to develop but also the culture of ancient India. During the same period the cultures of the nations of the Andes, South America were also in their ascent. Ancient Greece with its highly developed manufacturing, culture and philosophy also flourished at the same time as India. These phenomena can only be explained with the overall changes in the natural environment and very possibly with the increased radioactivity of the sun. Such a conclusion is very significant since it shows that human civilisation appeared in different parts of the world establishing pluralism and diversity as a natural law. In other words, the human race developed from different natural and cultural roots at the same time and is moving towards integration without destroying its diversity. There is something else which has lead to the constant expansion of communities and for people to seek answers to the problems caused by integration. This something is the connection between the processes of domination of man over nature and the process of integration itself. With the expansion and development of transport, culture, manufacturing and trade, our forebears began to realise that the fate of mankind is indivisible from the processes of its expansion and integration. Over the centuries, mankind dominated more and more new territories, populated more and more regions of the world and subsequently linked these expanded territories into unified systems. There is a certain logic in the development of human life from its earliest manifestations to the present day - that progress is indivisible from the increase in human communities, from the growth in the compactness of populations and the mutual dependence of people. Every historical epoch confirms this conclusion - from the first signs of early civilisation in modern Africa and the development of tribal communities, to the appearance of cooperative grain farming in Eastern Asia and the appearance of the first developed dynasties in Egypt and the Near East and the expansion of art in the ancient world. The development of human integration has passed through many different forms: tribal/warrior alliances and slave owning states, imperial states combining religions and cultures. The overall trend has been constant, each subsequent form of human civilisation is either greater than the previous or more integrated and dependent on the environment in which it exists. There are two phenomena which clearly show this process: The first is the population of the world. From its first appearance to the present day mankind has been growing constantly: about 6,000,000 in 8000 B.C.; about 255 million in 1 A.D.; 460 million in 1500; 1.6 billion in 1900; 2.0 billion in 1930; 3.0 billion in 1960; 4.0 billion in 1975; 5.0 billion in 1987 and over 6 billion in 1994.[(] The second important phenomenon is communications. With the appearance of human civilisation sounds and gestures then language and fire were the main forms of communication. As society developed man began to develop more intensive forms of communication. All the activities of man are directly or indirectly linked with the development of new communications - roads, sea and airways, all manner of forms of transport, postal links, telephones and telegraphs, computers and optical fibres, satellite television. Communications (transport, information exchange and processing) are the most accurate bench mark for the development and progress of civilisation. There is an obvious logic involved in this. Over the centuries people have been building bridges between each other and have been using them to exchange the fruits of their labour and to influence the world in which they live. I consider that from the outset I shall have to draw a very obvious and necessary conclusion: the further human society progresses, the more compact and integrated human society becomes and the more nations and individuals become dependent on each other. This is an incontrovertible law which we can do little to stop. It is also clear that this is an element of the overall development of the Earth and an accompaniment to the entire history of the human race and the overall development of our planet. This, perhaps, gives rise to the question whether economic development and the general development of human civilisation has definable limits or whether there are limits to the growth in world population. Will human progress lead to the disappearance of the primary differences between races and nations? Will mutually dependent human existence lead to new phenomena? Will states disappear to be replaced by international communities? These are questions which will have to be answered. I believe that notwithstanding the cyclical nature of its development, the human race will irreversibly and logically move towards a mutually dependent and integrated existence and from there to constant structural reformation. The main reason for this is that human progress is becoming more and more profoundly dependent on nature and the unity of nature is in its turn influencing the unity of life on earth. The unity of nature has become transformed into a unity of independent social communities. Producing and consuming, harvesting the oceans, the seas and the care of the earth and space, people are beginning to find themselves living in a more integrated community and are becoming dependent on each other. Individual processes of production lead to general pollution. The exploitation of natural resources has caused overall changes to the environment. The development of communications has created a common environment for the transfer of information. It can be stated with confidence that the process of overall world integration is universal. It includes manufacturing, culture and religion and the processes of human thought. This process is directly connected with the universal philosophical problem of the integrity and dialectical nature of nature. There is no doubt that by revealing its diversity nature is becoming more unified. However, any claimsof its absolute unity are as absurd as claims of its extreme fragmentation. When historical processes are in their initial stages and civilisations are still poorly developed, they tend to reflect closely the conditions and the specific nature of the local natural conditions with their climatic, geographical and other particular features. People are born different, live different lives and believe in different gods. In Africa people are born black, in Europe - white, in America "red" and in the East "yellow". Today these differences for the most part are disappearing. Races, cultures, religions and values systems are merging. This is not because nature is being outdone, but that its localisation is being outlived. The closer people become to nature the more their lives, consciousness and behaviour become dependent on the common essence of nature. Individual and specific elements disappear to become merged in the common elements of life. In my opinion this is the meaning and the dialectic of progress. In order to defeat the lions and the wolves, man had to unite and to join forces and ways of thinking, to build on what he has so far achieved in order to make further progress. In this way, year after year, century after century man conquered increasing areas of nature, reached its profound depths, exploited its common natural resources - the earth, the forests, the air and the water. These resources have been exploited for the same reasons - that in order to make greater use of nature, it is necessary to use the combined efforts of individual human resources. The opposite is also true, the more we use nature, the more we become dependent (or place other people in a position of dependence) on it. This is the link between integration and progress, between integration and civilisation. The entire existence of the human race shows that integration is a constant process. Moreover, civilisations as forms of organised social life are an expression and product of integration. When we speak of civilisations, it should be noted that they do not coincide with the five social and economic formations defined by Karl Marx or with the three technological waves of A.Toffler. Marx divided world development into five large "social structures" according to the forms of ownership. This was an undoubted intellectual contribution but an artificial and unilateral approach. The exclusive use of the criteria "forms of ownership" (Marx) or "technology" (Toffler) or the criteria of "spiritual development" (Toynbee) is misleading. The specific nature of the civilisation approach is in its complexity, in the indivisible connection between economics, culture and politics. This approach cannot absolutise either technology or property or any other sphere of human activity. This excludes the possible creation of artificial formations and social constructions in the aims of "progress" being isolated within only one part of human existence. Civilisations cannot be seen merely as branches which reflect one side or another of human life but as a common cultural process. They are distinct in terms of the way of life of the ancient peoples who lived in that part of the world and secondly in terms of the differences in the historical epochs in the development of humanity. Further on I shall return to the second of these aspects of the definition of civilisation. This shall release me from the strictures of the formational approach and the ideologisation of history. Such a method can be used to show the graduality of transitions and to explain the general and individual elements in the development of different parts of the world. To this end I shall define civilisation as: 1. the common and connected levels of human development; 2. the character of this development during the various epochs of human existence. Civilisations are not divided one from another on the basis of revolutionary acts, a change of monarch or president or armed conflicts. "Civilisation", according the great historian A.Toynbee, "is movement rather than condition; sailing and not the harbour."[2]. For this reason, I consider civilisation to be the common essence of human development and its different forms are the stages of its development. How many civilisations are there at the moment? Is it, indeed, correct to speak of a multitude of different civilisations? Civilisation[3] and civilised behaviour are a synonyms for the human essence, something which makes man different from the animal world and the fundamental role of man as a transformer, harmoniser and creator of nature. This role is fundamental to the essence of humanity and also a measure of its development. Civilisation springs from more than one source - in the ancient world there were about 26 initial civilisations[4], or seen in another way, 26 sources of the same civilisation. It is possible that there were direct links between them as well as exchanges of cultural achievements and information. Even if this was the case this was not the most typical feature of their development. The ancient peoples developed in different ways since they were reflections of their different natural environments. They formed the basis for the appearance of a particular natural species and created the preconditions for a unified civilisation while programming its diversity. The more ancient the civilisation, the greater the differences between them. Despite this, the way in which they appeared, their primitive economic relations and their state and political structures speak of common elements. This is why I use the term ancient civilisations or ancient civilisation. The Egyptians, the Assyrians Shumerians, Greeks, Indians, Chinese, Romans, American Indians etc. differ greatly in terms of their daily life, culture, the colour of their skin but have much in common in terms of the level of their development, their means of manufacturing and their state-political structures. The zenith of the ancient civilisations was attained no doubt by the ancient Greek city states and Rome. However, India at the time of the Mura dynasty (322-80 BC) was also very advanced. Together with the achievements of the ancient Chinese, Koreans, Mongolians, Vietnamese and American Indians, they made up the culture of the first civilisation of the first great epoch of human development. To use Marxist criteria, the First civilisation can be divided into two strata: primitive communities and slave owning. I am not convinced that this is useful. First of all for reasons of the semi-human (uncivilised) existence of the primitive community and secondly for reasons of the non-social links within one "social" structure. The first civilisation was replete with a diversity of forms of ownership, cultures and mechanisms of government. These were its specific elements and what made it distinct from subsequent civilisations. In Europe the first civilisation was primarily slave owning, but this was not the case in Asia. Frequently, slave ownership was accompanied by other forms of administrative and economic compulsion. Europe during the first civilisation was mainly patriarchal, while ancient China was until the second millennium B.C. matriarchal. Only the civilisation approach can serve to explain these differences and at the same time determine find the common elements in the lives of our forebears. What the First Civilisation has in common and makes it distinct is the undoubted dependence of the people on primitive production tools, the use of force and the enslavement of some nations by others and the formation of imperial state structures and the maintenance of permanent aggressive armies. The peoples of the First Civilisation left us the first examples of large-scale art which exist today amongsts the ruins of the Cheops pyramid and Mayan towns, in ancient Chinese and ancient Indian architecture. These decorations of human civilisation are at first glance different from one another but they also have a lot in common. The materials, their dependence on the gods and the supernatural, the philosophy of human life with new-found self confidence can be seen everywhere and show once again the common elements of the First civilisation. The First Civilisation can be considered to have begun at some time between 4500 - 3500 B.C. and to have come to an end during the 3[rd] century A.D. It would not be wise to place strict and absolute dividing lines between the civilisations or the era of human development since they tend gradually to merge one into another. Certain peoples at certain times have tended to lag behind during the time of transition but then somehow seem to manage to catch up. During the 5[th] or 6[th] century A.D. the Second Civilisation began as a result of the structural, social and industrial changes taking place first in Asia and then in Europe. The Second Civilisation is frequently linked with the Middle Ages. If the First Civilisation lasted for between 4000 or 5000 years the Second lasted only 1000 years from the 5[th] to the 14[th]/15[th] centuries. Each subsequent civilisation as an era in the development of humanity is shorter than the one which precedes it. This is a consequence of the accelerated rate of progress arising from the accumulated material benefits of previous generations. A very typical feature of the Second Civilisation was the feudal nature of its manufacturing industries. However, as a defining feature this is neither adequate nor sufficiently universal. Another key feature of the Second Civilisation was the huge mass resettlement of peoples and the inter-mingling of diverse cultures. During the First Civilisation the processes of integration were manifested in terms of the concentration of people and power in the city states and empires. These were destroyed by the Second Civilisation which persued a process of integration of cultures through the violent intermixing of ethnic groups, traditions and religions. Between 400 and 900 A.D. new peoples begin to enter the annals of world history. Integration at this time was a byword for aggression. At one and the same time, as if on command, the Ostgoths and Westgoths, Huns and Avars, Tartars and Mongols, Proto-Bulgarians and Slavs, Turks and Arabs began to search for new lands and dominions. Although the intermingling of cultures via war and aggression leading to the resettlement of peoples it was a significant quality of the Second Civilisation, I cannot agree that the Middle Ages were exclusively a period of destruction, plague and Inquisition. It was also a time of the powerful integration of cultures and production, new achievements in learning and art. There are many examples of this, beginning, perhaps, with the magnificent architectural achievements of the Byzantines, e.g. the wondrous cathedral of St.Sofia (532-537) in Istanbul. Other examples can be taken from West European art, which has left us magnificent works from its three most creative periods - pre-Roman, Roman and Gothic: the court cathedral of Charlemagne in Aachen (795-805), the castle of the Gailleurs on the River Seine (12[th] century) and innumerable Gothic cathedrals, including Notre Dame in Paris built between the 12[th] and 13[th] centuries. The Second Civilisation created abundant cultural riches in the Near East and the Middle East, North Africa and Mauritanian Spain, India, China and Japan. The Second Civilisation was a time of the further rapprochement of the nations which had been divided during the First Civilisation. In the 5[th] century, Samarkand was the heartland of a powerful culture and a bridge between the Chinese, Turks and Arabs. The masterpieces of Chinese culture and paper manufacturing technology reached Europe through Iran, Byzantium and Arab dominions. If during the period of the First Civilisation, the Romans, Macedonians and Indian copied technology, arms manufacturing and methods of animal husbandry from each other, then in the Second Civilisation a standard method of measuring time was established. An important event took place in 807 when Charles the Great received a water clock from the Harun al Rashid from Baghdad leading to the subsequent arrival of Chinese and Arab clocks in Europe. People from all over the world learnt to tell the time simultaneously. This lead to the further standardisation of the criteria of life and history. During this period the Chinese Empire further developed the achievements of the Greeks and the Romans while the Arabs and the Europeans built on those of the Chinese and the Japanese. During the Second Civilisation forms of ownership and social relations began to show greater universality. Feudalism began to establish itself over the entire world in very specific forms, especially in China and Japan. To a lesser extent, the Second Civilisation retained definite disparities in the level of the development of its nations. A significant part of the world continued to develop within the parameters of the First Civilisation and even persisted to exist in pre-civilised forms for a number of centuries. The Second Civilisation was a time of numerous conflicts and inevitable crises for reasons of large-scale structural change - the destruction of the traditional city-states and cultures of the First Civilisation and the innumerable religious conflicts. This was also a time of large-scale state and cultural development and the establishment of the pre-conditions for the expansion of nations and nation-states. King Clovis (401-511) at the beginning of the 6[th] century united the Franks, Justinian (572-565) raised the level of state administration, taxation and the application of law. Enormous progress was made in the fields of science, medicine and mathematics in Baghdad, Cordoba and Cairo. In the Arab world, Africa (Ethiopia and Ghana), Japan, China and America, great empires arose. The new level of integration, typical of the Second Civilisation gradually lead to the creation of national states. To be more precise these were not single-nation states but the domination of a single nation or its symbols. During the latter Middle Ages there was a gradual slowing down in the processes of migration of nations and tribes which lead to the stabilisation of populations and states. The intermingling of cultures typical of the entire period of the Second Civilisation was gradually replaced by a period of developing national cultures, national symbols and traditions and struggles for the legacy of the cultural riches of the past. The formation of national states and the gradual advent of the "modern age was the beginning of the end of the Second Civilisation. It was no accident that the Renaissance which was the symbol of this period of transition also incorporated within itself a return to Greek and Roman art and the cult of beauty and earthly passions. Civilisations follow the spiral of development - each new civilisation destroys the previous while at the same time bearing significant resemblances to it. The Third Civilisation can also be referred to as a "Modern Age" - the age of nations states, factories and industrial complexes. It began at sometime during the 13[th] and 14[th] centuries and will come to an end at sometime during the 20[th] century. The entire period of the Third Civilisation was a period of the integration of manufacturing and spiritual life. In a similar way to the First Civilisation, the forces of integration came mainly from the most-developed states resulting from the accumulation of manufacturing and cultural achievements, rather than as a result of the resettlement and intermingling of nations at different stages of development as it was during the Second Civilisation. The transport revolution which began in Europe was of enormous significance during this period. An example of this were the sailing ships with which Magellan circumnavigated the world and which took Christopher Columbus to America and James Cook to Australia. The explorers were followed by the conquerors hungry for plunder and easy riches. Europeans and Arabs followed the Silk Road through Constantinople, Persia and Tibet to China. The world was once more regaining its strength, exploring the limits of the earth. European states begin to develop and consolidate their power and expand their domination over the rest of the world. During the 16[th] and 17[th] centuries Europe, the most powerful of world cultures, began to exert its power over the other relatively less-developed nations. Over a period of three centuries as a result of great geographical discoveries and their subsequent colonisation European culture managed to exert its influence over half of the world. t is far from the truth, however, that the only "heroic" discoverers were Europeans, such as Columbus, Magellan, Vasco da Gama. By allowing ourselves such a subjective attitude, we, Europeans often find ourselves guilty of provincial ignorance. During the same historical period while the European sailors, traders and soldiers were beginning to make their geographical discoveries, a similar process was taking place in the East. Between 1405 and 1433, admiral Cheng Ho with hundreds of Chinese ships reached Zanzibar and Ceylon. In the 15[th] century the population of China was twice the size of that of Europe: 100-120 million in comparison with 50-55 million. Chinese civilisation was also comparable with European civilisation in terms of its lustre, organisation and depth of philosophy. During this period the great discoveries of Siberia and Africa were made. At the end of the 15[th] century the conquest of America began. Arab caravans reached the interior of Africa. Like the First Civilisation, the Third Civilisation also arose from diverse and different roots. The difference is that after the 15[th] century and in particular during the 18[th] and 19[th] centuries, the process of integration had become universal in nature. Nations and cultures discovered each other. The more developed began to impose their domination and culture with violence. At the same time, a gradual process of mutual influence and enrichment began to develop between the various cultures. A typical feature of the Third Civilisation has been the significance of the world integrity. Moreover, in ancient Greece, Theucidides, Aristotle and Plato[5] searched for the common dimensions of life and common rules for state administration amongst familiar nations. The Stoics advocated the idea of moral and political unity of the human race. Some of the thinkers of ancient Rome (Cicero and others) saw the world as a city with the dimensions of the entire human race embracing all other nations and cultures. The Renaissance enrichened this tradition. If the thinkers of the First Civilisation were occupied mainly with the chronicles of warlords and their victories, and the Second Civilisation with the defence of their religious identity, the thinkers of the Third Civilisation undoubtedly rediscovered man and his essence. Religion was of great importance to the process of integration. K.Kautski referring to statistics states that in 98 A.D. there were 42 centres of population containing Christian communities, by 180 this number had grown to 87 and by 352 - there were more than 500[6]. Ten centuries later the majority of the civilised world was united by Christianity. Buddhism and Islam had a similar influence. Over a period of about 1000 years, the major religions united the greater part of humanity within large spiritual communities. The zenith of this process was undoubtedly during the Third Civilisation. The unification of different nations on the basis of value systems and spirituality was of was of great historical significance. This lead to the building of bridges between the different parts of the world at a time when manufacturing and commercial links and communications were unsustainable. By this time the majority of the great geographical discoveries had been made. Transport and communications had made great progress and medieval means of production had been succeeded by the first factories. Commerce was no longer a haphazard accompaniment to life, but an indivisible part of civilisation. Amsterdam had become a large scale cultural and commercial centre. Venice and Genoa had become the major cities of the Mediterranean. Peter the First and his followers had built Saint Petersburg and a number of European cities had populations of more than 100,000 people. The First Civilisation was a time of the great empires. The Second of the fall of empire and unstable states and city states. The Third Civilisation was a period a nation states. The gravitational centres of progress during the First Civilisation were empires, during the Middle Ages city states and during the Third - nation states. Nation states are one of the features of the modern age distinguishing it from the Middle Ages and from what we can now observe at the end of the 20[th] century. They did not develop suddenly but as a consequence of a series of conflicts over many centuries. Certain historians believe that this is one of the reasons for the success of Europe, that it was these conflicts and the liberated spirit of the Renaissance which guaranteed its domination. It is indeed possible. In any event between the 15[th] and 17[th] centuries France, Spain, England and Sweden and a little later Russia, began to increase their power and might to guarantee their strategic advantage for a number of centuries in the future. According to P.Kennedy, between 1470 and 1650, the armies of the major European powers expanded: Spain from 20,000 to 100,000; France from 40,000 to 100,00; England from 25,000 to 70,000 and Sweden from a couple of hundred to 70,000[7]. These figures show not only the rise of the economic power of the emergent major European powers, but also their desire for the re-distribution of the newly discovered territories and the domination of some states by others. The entire history of the period between the 15[th] and the 18[th] centuries is a history of war, battles for inheritance, colonies and riches. Armies and Navies were expanded, military alliances were formed. As a result of wars, trade and new conquests the whole world entered into a new phase of integration. The Third Civilisation developed greater mass phenomenons in all areas of life - transport, manufacturing, international trade and ideas, the spiritual world and the world of ideas and religions. There is one other important criterion which distinguishes the three civilisations - the forms of production. The First was the age of agriculture and animal husbandry, the Second saw the advent of manufacturing and crafts while the Third is the age of industry and industrial giants. I accept A.Toffler's belief that technological revolutions stimulated the progressionfrom onea ge into another, but I do not believe that this is an exhaustive or adequate criterion. There also another difference between us in terms of the periodisation of history: A.Toffler divides history into two eras: agricultural and industrial, while I have looked for the differences in a wider and more civilisational spectrum. Technological changes are a synthetic expression of the changes in forms of ownership. Typical features of the three forms of civilisation were slave ownership, feudalism and capitalism and it would be wrong to ignore them. At the same time I believe that the transition between the various civilisations was not abrupt and cannot be defined on the basis of one event or another. New civilisations develop within a country and grow organically as a number of trends. This usually takes place as a result of a change in the instruments of labour and technology but at the same time as a result of changes in social relations and means of government. This is the case with the Third Civilisation and the period of its greatest prosperity during the industrial revolution of the 19[th] century. Moreover, at the end of the 19[th] century and especially during the 20[th] century, there were a number of processes in world development which bore innovations of the modern age and which were entirely different from the first three civilisations. The most important characteristics of the Third Civilisation - industry, nations, nation states began to change intensively. In practice this meant the beginning of a process of the collapse of the modern age and the Third Civilisation. 2. THE BIRTH OF THE GLOBAL WORLD The industrial revolution in Europe at the beginning of the 19thcentury brought with it a rapid process of economic and political internationalisation. The borders of the nation states - the most distinguishing feature of the Third Civilisation become too limiting for the new manufacturing forces. T here is no doubt that the 19th century was a time of exceptional technological revolution. In the 1850's and 1860's Great Britain, France, Italy, Germany and Austria demonstrated significant increases in the growth of their industrial output. The invention of the steam engine in 1769 by James Watt and the locomotive by George Stephenson were of revolutionary significance for world economic development and accelerated integration. At the end of the 19th century the first experimental flights with an aeroplane were carried out by Langley (1896). Enormous progress was made between 1885 and 1897 in the development of autmobile construction. In 1837 Morse invented his communications code and in 1864 Edison improved methods of electronic transmission. In 1876 Bell gave the world its first telephones. The second half of the 19th century was a time of important discoveries in the areas of transport and weapons systems. Revolutionary developments were made in coal mining, mettalurgy and energy production resulting in the increase of iron and steel production between 1890 and 1913: in the USA from 9.3 million tons to 31.8 million, in Germany from 4.1 to 17.6, in France from 1.9 to 4.6 and in Russia from 0.95 to 4.6 million tons. Energy consumption for the same period rose: in the USA from 147 million tons of coal equivalent to 541 million tons, in Great Britain from 145 million tons to 195 million, in Germany from 71 to 187 million tons, in Germany from 71 to 187 million tons, in France from 36 to 62.5 million tons and in Russia from 10.9 to 54 million tons.[8] Energy and metal became the major factors in the rapid development of railways and armies, predetermining the development of entirely new branches of industry and science. A common feature of this process is that the industrial revolution of the 19th century interlinked the interests of the developing nations in a completely new manner. If until the 19th century, conflicts between nations were of a purely localised nature and on mainly religious or territorial grounds or for reasons of inheritance, after the developments of the industrial revolution the main factors in the emergence of conflicts were disputes for continental or world domination, cheap raw materials and colonies. These facts are perhaps sufficient to support the contention that the Global World was born at the end of the 19th century. I interpret the term "Global World" as meaning the level of development at which the majority of countries and peoples become dependent on each other and, notwithstanding their own national governments, form a common essence. If this is the case, then the end of the 19th century was just the beginning of world globalisation within the framework of the nation states of the Third Civilisation. During the same period the world began an intensive period of establishing common economic (export of capital), technological (transport, communications, science) and cultural links. At some time towards the end of the 19th century the great world powers were already unable to resolve their own conlicts in isolation. Conflicts could no longer be limited to their own borders but to the economic and political divisions already existing in the world. A new world trend began to emerge, that of imperialism. The trend towards imperialism was the first manifestation of the globalisation of the world, a qualitative new level of world integration. I consider imperialism to be a result of the intermingling of two intersecting phenomena: the strong feelings of nationalism which existed everywhere at the end of the 19th century and the objective trend towards integration as a result of the export of capital and aspirations towards the economic division of the world. In the 19th century, globalisation existed only as a direct initiative of the nation state. However, during the second half of the 19th century economic development began to transcend national borders in the form of ambitions and aspirations towards national dominance. Such belligerent nationalism within the conditions of internationalisation gave rise to what J.Hobson, R.Hilferging and V.Lenin defined as imperialism.[9] Looking at the way in which humanity greeted the advent of the twentieth century, one is suprised by their equanimity of spirit. Upon a cursory examination of the major newspapers of France, Germany and Bulgaria published on the 1st of January 1900, I observe a remarkable similarity. Almost everywhere countries greeted the new century with fervent and malcontent nationalism. The new century was seen as a century during which individual states would satisfy their ambitions for new territory and conquer and punish their opponents. The dominant atmosphere was of nationalism and imperial aspirations and against this background, the emergence of socialist ideas. National borders had become too limiting for the expansion of industry. The Germans and the Bulgarians wanted to unite to castigate their neighbours. The British rejoiced in their colonial dominions and dreamed of an even greater Britain. The French reminded the Germans that they would not stand for any more humiliation like that suffered in 1870. Not one of the European nations or the USA are an exception. They were all overcome by some level of imperialist amnbition. This was like a contagious disease brought on by a need for raw materials and control over the railways and the sea routes but it also penetrated political, journalistic and social thought. During this period, Fichte developed his idea of the exclusive role of the Prussian state in the progress of humanity. Fichte was the greatest proponent of the way in which nationalism and the need for internationalisation becomes transformed into imperialism. But France was no different. During the decades after the destruction of the French army in 1870, French nationalism reached unseen heights. Charles Morras defined nationalism as the absolute criterion for every political action. In general at the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th European nationalism flourished. In the USA at the end of the 19th century, economic and demographic growth, albeit slower than in Europe also gave rise to a similar explosion of self-confidence and aspirations for a new role for America in the world. The idea of an international society, a common feature of American political thought during this period, was also frequently proclaimed as a right to domination and even war. It could also be said that at the beginning of the 20th century humanity was obsessed by the political paradigm typical of all world empires: nationalism combined with imperial ambitions. In other words, internationalisation and globalisation stem from the ambitions of isolated nationalism and nation states. This was also reflected in the structure of manufacturing, politics and life in general. Over a thirty-year period, between 1880 and 1910 the standing armies of the world powers increased significantly. The Russian army increased from 791,000 to 1,285,000 persons. The French army increased from 543,000 to 769,000. The Germany army increased from 426,000 to 694,000 and the British army from 246,000 to 531,000. The army of the Austro-Hungarian empire increased from 246,000 to 425,000. The Japanese army increased from 71,000 to 271,000 and the army of the United States grew from 34,000 to 127,000[10]. Stockpiles of weapons and huge amounts of human resources were ammassed in the event of war, which was soon to break out. The First World War was the first manifestation of an integrated world, the first major demonstration of world globalisation. It was proof of the growing interdependence of countries which did not allow them, apart from rare exceptions, to stay out of the conflict. Practically the entire world was sucked into the conflicts of the First World War. From this moment on the world began to manifest itself as a mutually dependent system developing within a common cycle. I consider this argument to be of particular significance and I would like to develop it further. The First World War linked the majority of the countries within a common conflict but also formed the beginning of a common economic cycle in the development of the industrial nations. What other explanation can be given for the fact that in the 1920's all the major powers witnessed, to a greater or lesser extent, advances in industrial progress? Taking 1913 as a basis (100%) the indices of industrial output growth between 1921 and 1928 were as follows: in the USA from 98 to 154.5%; Germany - from 74.7% to 118.3; Great Britain from 55.1 to 95.1%; France - from 61.4 to 134.4; Japan from 167 - 300%; Italy from 98.4 to 175.2 and the Soviet Union from 23.3 to 143.5[11]. All the developed nations, as though bound by some common umbilical cord, suffered economic collapse at the beginning of the 1930's. Only those nations such as the USSR who had isolated themselves from the world economy escaped the crisis. In 1937 Germany succumbed. This common feature of world economic development also manifested itself after the Second World War in countries with an open market economy. Despite certain divergence in terms of the stages of development, it is clear that after the 1920's the most industrialised nations of the world began to develop in a more mutually dependent manner. Today at the end of the century, this mutual dependence has attained unseen levels as expressed in the indices of the world stock exchanges and in the unconditional mutual interdependence of exchange rates. During the period between the two world wars a new global essence began to develop entirely independently of national governments. This began with the increasing in the level of mutual interdependence between countries and gradually gained strength from the growth in new technology, commerce and finance, transport and communications, culture and science and armaments etc. Nevertheless, the 20th century witnessed only the birth of the global world. The global revolution still only exists as a possibility. It will take many decades to achieve the gradual and problematic development of global structures within the model of the individual nation states. Globalisation is a level of international integration at which interdependence between nations and cultures exists at a planetary level. Such mutual interdependence is not a matter for one or two or a group of nations but between each individual state and the world as a whole, between individual regions of the world, between all nations and cultures simultaneously. If upon the emergence of human civilisation, the processes of integration affected only a number of individual tribes and was localised and during the Middle Ages it took on regional proportions, then since the beginning of the 20th century, it has existed within the framework of mankind as a whole. All countries and peoples are involved in a common system which is governed in a particular way and on the basis of certain principles. This system arose spontaneously, via struggles for domination, wars and violence. One should take into account the difficulties people encounter in attempting to overcome the boundaries of their own environment, religion and nation. At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century people were little occupied by thoughts of the world as a whole or the priorities of universal human interests. Of course, there were a number of writers and businessmen, Henry Ford was a prime example, who were exceptions to this rule. However, this was not the case for the large mass of the active inhabitants of our planet, politicians and the influential owners of large amounts of wealth. The culture of the Third Civilisation is above all a culture of national thought and behaviour and the 20th century will remain entirely within its dominion notwithstanding the accelerated processes of world integration. Its militant nationalism and militiary blocs created the first models of the global world based on violence and conflicts and on the familiar struggle for national domination which existed in previous civilisations. 3. THE SEARCH FOR A MODEL FOR THE GLOBAL WORLD The first model of the global world was the colonial system. It was a product of the combination of 19th century nationalism and the acceleration of globalisation. In the middle of the 20thcentury and as a consequence of the two world wars this modelcollapsed to give way to a two-bloc political and economic model. T he first model of the global world was colonialism. During the second half of the 19th century the larger nation states, motivated by desires for empire began gradually to conquer andto divide the world. Geo-politically the world became integrated through the colonial system for the first time into a single unity. By achieving pre-eminence in the seas and oceans and possessing the largest fleet in the world, Great Britain after 1815 turned its attention to the rapid conquest of territories from Africa to India and Hong Kong. Over a period of between 50 and 70 years the British managed to create the greatest colonial empire in the world. From 1815-1865, a further 100,000 square miles was added to the territory of the British Empire. During this period France was the only other country to attempt to compete with Great Britain. It was later to be followed by Germany, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Denmark, the USA, Russia and Japan. Starting from the basis of the nation state and moving towards globalisation, the great powers of the time began a process of the domination and re-division of the entire world into a unified world system linked through imperial centres. As can be seen from table 1, during the last quarter of the 19th century, the largest colonial powers expanded their territories by almost 200 million head of population and 2.32 million square kilometres of territory. Between 1900 and the beginning of the First World War this rate decreased as a result of the satiation of the "colonial market" Table 1 Size and population of the colonies (1875-1914) State 1875 1900 1914 sq.km. pop. sq.km. pop. sq.km. pop. Great Britain France Holland Belgium Germany USA 22.5 1.0 2.0 2.3 - 1.5 250 6 25 15 - [*] 32.7 11.0 2.0 2.3 2.6 1.9 370 50 38 15 12 9 32.7 11.0 2.0 2.4 2.9 1.0 350 54 45 12 13 10 All the most prestigious, accessible and wealthy colonies have been conquered by the beginning of the twentieth century, resulting in the establishment of the first model of the emergent global world - the colonial world. The colonial system itself gave rise to the second momentous event in the globalisation of the world. Hardly had the system become firmly established when it began to give rise to a series of almost irresolvable world conflicts: the irreconcilable struggle for the re-division of the world and the First World War in which millions lost their lives. The resulting radicalisation of public opinion in Russia, Germany and to a large extent in other parts of the world stimulated the growth in anti-imperialist attitudes and provided an opportunity for the growth of the radical ideas of socialist revolution. These events in themselves gave rise to the second model of the emergent global world - the model of the two systems which began with the October revolution in 1917 and continued until 1989-91. Almost the entire period of the twentieth century passed within conditions of the two opposing systems and the existence of the bi-polar global model. During this period the existence of the two systems was explained basically as the opposition of two ideologies, the ideologies of the rich and the poor, socialism and capitalism. This was also the view of Marxism-Leninism. After the collapse of the Eastern European political regimes the existence of the communist world was presented as an historical mistake, as the consequence of the profound delusions of huge masses of people and the tyranny of dictatorship etc.. This was of the view put forward by Z.Bzezinski[12], but I find these ideas be simplistic and far too easy. In actual fact the processes were much more complex and contradictory. During the period of its mutually dependent development, the world began to subordinate itself to a greater extent to the principle of equilibrium, a principle which is based on the laws of nature. The lack of social equilibrium leads sooner or later to serious conflicts and delayed development. In the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th within the process of accelerating industrialisation and rising imperialism two global imbalances formed: the first - between the rich metropolitan countries and the second - between the rich, ruling classes of the imperialist bourgeoisie and the enormous masses of the poor proletariate. These large imbalances were particularly developed in the poorer countries and the countries who found themselves on the losing side in the First World War. In general terms, in the 19th century and the first 50-60 years of the twentieth century, class differences became much more marked and the ensuing class struggle was a direct consequence. It was these class conflicts and international disproportions which gave rise to the radical revolutions in Russia, Germany and Hungary and a series of other countries between 1917 and 1923. This also goes some way to explaining the development of dominant political doctrines such as in the USSR, Italy, Germany and a number of other countries. To take the example of the USSR, the guiding aim of the Soviet economy in the 1920's and in particular the 1930's was to overcome its backwardness and to undertake a programme of rapid, accelerated industrialisation and to create a stable armaments industry. Its initial ambition to achieve a balance with the rest of the capitalist world and subsequently to overtake it was the dominant strategy of Stalin in the 1930's and 1940's. This economic policy, while defensible, can in no way justify the violence and historical absurdity of totalitarianism. I am merely attempting to explain its roots. All my academic research and my direct observations of the Soviet totalitarian system show that millions of people were aware of the violence of the system but that they accepted it as something inevitable, as a lesser evil than poverty and misery. The illusions and the crimes perpetrated during the regimes of Stalin, Hitler and Mao and the other violent regimes of the 20th century are indisputable. These crimes were stimulated by the vicissitudes of history, by the ambition to create an alternative model of social progress. Are Robespierre or Danton or the British colonisers, or the Russian conquerors of Central Asia any less culpable? The deeply rooted reasons for these crimes need to be explained before they can be resolved. There is no doubt that at the root of Stalin's violence initially against the rural population and subsequently against the whole of Soviet society after 1929 lay his ambition to achieve rapid industrialisation. The strategy of rapid industrialisation and anti-colonial conflicts in a number of less-developed countries should be viewed as a reaction against emergent global imbalances. That which was considered by many to be the struggle of the repressed nations for the freedom of the proletariate was actually a struggle against economic backwardness, against imperialism and the monopolies of most developed nations and the struggle for national supremacy. In the 20th century, the poorer nations had no other option to defend themselves against colonialism other than to concentrate their force and might through powerful state structures. Slogans such as the "welfare of the proletariate", "care for people" were always associated with the power of the state. Poverty always generates Utopias. Communism was one of them. During the first half of the twentieth century the world had continued to develop on the basis of liberal market doctrines and it persisted in being a world of rich and poor peoples, metropolises and colonies and profound class differences. When markets are free but imbalanced, the strong easily swallow up the weak. Such imbalanced historical development allows those countries with more rapid development to become dominant. Sooner or later this was bound to lead to social revolutions. This, I feel, is the explanation for the division of the world into two opposing blocs as an alternative to the existing colonial model. After the two world wars and the economic crisis of 1929-33, the liberal idea underwent a crisis and opened the way for the radicalisation of the world and its division. By 1925, two countries had yielded to "state socialism" - the USSR and Mongolia - with a total population of over 150 million. 25 years later this political system had spread into more than 20 countries and accounted for more than half the population of the world. After the victory over Germany in 1945 the power and the authority of the USSR grew immensely. Under the auspices of its power the national patriotic forces of a number of countries threw off the colonial domination of Britain, France, Belgium, Portugal, Holland and other countries. At the beginning of the 1960's, with certain exceptions the colonial model ceased to exist and was replaced by the two-polar model. At the end of the 1950's the two world systems embraced populations of about 1-1.5 billion people and possessed military parity. Without achieving full economic parity or high levels of productivity, the USSR managed to undermine the monopoly of the USA in strategic military areas. Two basic centres of power became established in the world - Moscow and Washington accompanied by other satellites with varying degrees of power. Since the Second World War the world has witnessed a number of local conflicts. There have been armed struggles in the Near East, North and Equatorial Africa, Indo-China, India and Pakistan, Chile, Bolivia, Cuba and tens of other regions and countries. All these countries were directly or indirectly linked with the two superpowers and their opposition. On the other hand the achievement of nuclear parity between the USSR and the USA in the 1950's brought an end to the trend towards ultra-imperialism[13] and the possibility of the world becoming subordinated to a single world power centre. Beneath the nuclear umbrellas of the two super powers and carefully balanced between them, the countries of Western Europe, Japan and a number of other Asian and Latin American countries achieved great success. I believe the achievement of nuclear parity to be a phenomenon with key significance for world development. Napoleon with his ambitions for an empire from "Paris to India" , Hitler with his "World Order" and Stalin with his aspirations for the "victory of world communism" all longed for a unified world empire. This was also the view of a number of other politicians and thinkers who seeing a trend towards world integration and the expansion of manufacturing came to the conclusion that a future world would be a world of monopolistic unity, a unified manufactory for workers and peasants (Lenin), ultra-imperialism (Kautski), permanent revolution (Trotski) and so on. To this extent the bi-polar model is a higher level of development than the model of colonial empires. On the other hand, the bi-polar model is only a stage in the formation of the global world and the actual peak of the crisis of the Third Civilisation. I defend the thesis that the two bloc system has to be seen as a transitional stage from the point of view of the development of the global world and the transition between the Third and the Fourth Civilisation. Until the end of the 19th century, researchers analysed world changes through the prism of national thinking and the nation state. After 1917 and especially after the Second World War, the main object of research was the two world systems - socialism (communism) and capitalism, their competition and the struggle for domination. This was a reflection of the realities in a world which had overpowered the minds of billions of people. Henceforth, however, any analysis of the structural changes within the world cannot be based on the confrontational bi-polar model. Only the global, civilisation approach is capable of providing the correct response to questions and to reveal the common and, consequently, the local trends of human development. 4. THE COMMON CRISIS AND THE COLLAPSE OF THE THIRD CIVILISATION The 1970's saw the Suez crisis, the increase in the price of oil (1973-5) and the end of the Brent Woods system[14]. Everyone began to speak of the crisis of world capitalism. At the end of the 1980's everyone began to speak of the crisis of world communism. In actual fact, the entire world had been overcome by a profound crisis. T he ideologues and politicians of the two superpowers always maintained that the system of their opponents was in crisis. In the communist countries students attended lectures about the "common crisis of capitalism" while in the West Kremlinologists talked of the "crisis of world communism". In 1960-2 Nikita Krushchev frequently was heard to say that the "collapse of the colonial system is an historical victory over imperialism". In 1989-90 the victory of world capitalims over communism was declared. Was this really the case? I have come to a different conclusion. I believe that the problem cannot be reduced merely to the collapse of one system and the victory of another. In actual fact during the second half of the twentieth century, it was not only the communist system which was in a state of crisis but the whole of the two bloc political system in the world, the entire structure of the Third Civilisation. Industrial technologies, nation states and their alliances, the culture of violence against the individual and nature suffered serious repercussions. What was the world like before the 1980's? There were two giant groups of nations within which 99% of the weapons of mass destruction and 80% of manufacturing industry were concentrated. Each group was closely connected with military, political and economic alliances (NATO and the EU, the Warsaw Pact and COMECON) with common military and economic infrastructures, with joint institutions and education of personnel. All other countries and peoples were dependent in some way or another on these groups. It is no accident that hundreds of local conflicts during this period were waged with the weapons of one or other of the military blocs and regarded as the continuation of their undeclared war. On the other hand, the two bloc system existed in the conditions of continuing integration and the growing dependence of countries on each other. This was the main reason for the general trends of world development to enter into contradiction with its existing structures. The extent of these contradictions was so great that there are justifiable grounds to speak of the common crisis of the two bloc system and, in broader terms, the crisis of the entire modern age. The first cause which lead to this crisis was the character and structure of world economic growth. After the Second World War, the global economic product of the Earth increased four-fold. The total manufactured output of the period between 1950 and 1990 is equal to the growth of production from the beginning of civilisation to the present day. There had never been such a turbulent period in the development of the manufacturing powers of humankind. Humankind had never witnessed such a period of dynamic processes reliant on mutual cooperation, discoveries, the multiplication of discoveries and their by-products. The other side of the coin was that such economic growth gave rise to enormous deformations. The competition between the two super powers and their allies assisted in the acceleration of progress but also lead to previously unknown levels of unbalanced growth. In the 1980's the average national product per head of population in the industrialised countries was more than 11,000 dollars. In the majority of African countries this figure was between 250-300 dollars. While in the most developed countries of the world post-war development had lead to an enormous abundance of goods and the domination of consumerism, in the Third World more than 1.9 billion people were suffering from malnutrition and disease. The level of consumerism in the developed industrial countries rose to a level 40 to 100 times greater than in the developing countries. This process of world development gave rise to the most unexpected paradoxes. The money spent by today by the French on pet food would be sufficient to feed the starving children of Ethiopia and Somalia. The iniquities in world development have increased during the last couple of decades. Under colonialism, capital was re-directed towards the poorer countries. After the war, however, it began to move in the opposite direction. Large investments began to be made in the USA, Western Europe and Japan. In the 1980's alone, direct investments in the developing countries fell by about one hundred percent - from 25 billion USD in 1982 to 13 billion in 1987. As a result of this the poorer nations began to rely on large amounts of credit in order to be able to feed their people, resulting in the crippling debt burden which exists today. At present the countries of Latin America owe international creditor banks and a number of governments more than 400 billion dollars. Over 100 billion are owed by the Eastern European countries. These statistics are proof not only of enormous deformations but of the profound crisis which is affecting the foundations of the world financial system. While the processes of international integration do not permit the development of a monocentric world, the seven richest nations of the world and the 300-400 wealthiest banks control the lives of the majority of humanity via debt management. On the other hand, the disproportionate economic development resulting from the mad rush to purchase armaments and conflicts led to the economic overloading of the two superpowers. As a direct result of the exisiting two-bloc geo-political structure the USA managed (or some say was obliged) to amass huge internal debts of more than 4 trillion dollars. In the 1970's and 1980's the debts of the USSR increase enormously and delayed the rates of its development. A second characteristic problem of the two-bloc model of develoment was the increase in environmental problems. For the entire period of post-war development, as a result of uncontrolled industrialisation and the blind faith in political and ideological ambitions the world lost practically one fifth of its cultivable land, one fifth of its tropical forests and tens of thousands of species of animal and plant life. During this same period the level of carbon-monoxide in the atmosphere increased more than ten-fold. The level of ozone in the stratoshpere has diminished and humanity is faced with the threat of global warming. Talk is now of a global ecological tragedy. Even today despite the growth in ecological awareness and "green" movements, the world environmental crisis is seen as something of secondary significance as something less important than the struggle for economic growth, military strategic stability or national domination. Global warming as a result of the industrial boom has already had serious, possibly catastrophic, consequences. The reduction of irrigated agricultural land, the increase in the levels of the oceans, the dessication of entire regions which produce the majority of the world's grain - these are just a small part of the possible consequences. Despite the potential serious consequences for the world the leaders of the two systems did not want, nor were they able to take any decisive measures to allocate more funds for the conservation of the environment and to reduce military expenditure or to pass common legislation to guarantee the priorities of human needs. The third and no less important cause of the crisis of the two-bloc system was the fact that in the 1950's mankind surpassed all logical extremes of military growth. The cold war and the opposition of the two world systems lead the two super powers into a ceaseless race for domination. This contest reached such a level that in the mid 1980's the USSR and the USA possessed enough nuclear and strategic warheads to destroy life on earth several times over. The eight most economically powerful nations on the earth - the USA, USSR, China, the UK, France, West Germany, Italy and Japan continually and deliberately increased their military budgets during the entire post-war period. In 1984, world arms export reached record levels of 75 billion dollars, several times greater than the amount of money necessary to buy food and medicines for the hungry and sick in the world and for investment in the poorer countries. As a result of the opposition of the two blocs in the 1980's between 13 and 15 million people were employed in the arms industry. In 1987, the global military budget of the world was more than 1 trillion US dollars. This extreme overarmament lead to the overall deformation of entire world development and distorted the structure of industrial production. It caused enourmous deficits in the budgets of the industrialised nations and created serious pre-conditions for the future of world finance. No less important was the fact that as a result of the constant increase in arms production and nuclear weapons in particular, the level of nuclear security fell to very low levels. The danger of a nuclear Third World War loomed greater than ever. At the end of the 1980's the two super powers - the USSR and the USA had over 12 thousand units of nuclear arms - which from the view point of common humanity was beyond the realms of common sense. Thus, the deformation of economic development, the world environmental crisis, the wealth of the North and the poverty and disease of the South, the demographic booms, overarming - all these factors are the clear symptoms of a profound crisis. It is true that all these critical phenomena have been frequently discussed before and that some of the problems which I have mentioned here have been the subjects of international summit meetings and research groups but it is also true that they have been looking for explanations to these phenomena in the wrong places. In my opinion the most profound reason for the crises in the environment, manufacturing and population growth can be found in the growing inadequacy of the entire two-bloc structure of the world. On the one hand, during this period, following the logic of confrontation and the struggle for domination, the two super powers, their allies and all the remaining smaller countries established structures oriented towards the development of the economic and military power of the bloc to which they belonged. On the other hand, the inter-bloc and inter-state power-struggle created a manufacturing capacity which lead to the internationalisation of the world and caused world problems which until then had been unknown. The contradiction is manifest. Institutions, politics, propaganda, the training of personnel, the links between manufacture and defence were directly dependent on the profound ideologisation of thinking, while the globalisation of humanity lead to the destruction of the confrontational structures of the two blocs. In the 1970's and 1980's the bi-polar world could no longer cope with global and world trends. This contradiction still exists today notwithstanding the collapse of the two world systems. The reason was the impossibility of bringing a sudden halt to the inertia of the past based in the instutitions, upbringing, education and thinking of people. There is no doubt that in the West, and in particular in the East, humanity has taken too long to come to terms with these problems. Moreover, subsequent generations will bear the consequences and will discover new disasters particularly in the environment and as a result of the abnormal military competition between the two world systems. A number of academics and politicians issued warnings in the middle of the century. The scientists' rebellion against atomic weapons in the 1950's, the courage of Sakharov in the USSR, and the actions of Albert Einstein, Bertrand Russel and Jacques Cousteau are just a few examples. However, the conditions of political opposition continue to exert an enormous power of inertia. This inertia comes from the cultures of the existing civilisation, the nationalism of the modern age and the world conflicts of the 20th century. One of the main reasons for the acceleration in the crisis of the two-bloc system and the collapse of the iron curtain was the growth in world communications. In simple terms, the growth of radio, television, computers and satellite dishes destroyed the iron curtain, pierced the armour of the tanks and lead to the formation of a common culture of integration. The revolution in communications which began at the beginning of the 1960's brought about incredible political and spiritual changes throughout the entire world. The Beatles and the Rolling Stones became a world phenomenon not only as a result of their musical talent but also due to the new methods of information transfer. In 1971 I went abroad for the first time, to the German Democratic Republic. I asked my hosts why all the television ariels faced west and he answered "It makes the German people feel united." Television had begun to erode the Berlin wall even then. After the 1960's and the 1970's people felt a new wave of integration and discovered their common humanity. This was, however, in sharp contradiction to the collapse of the world and the structures of the political regimes. The new generations began to grow up in an atmosphere which was no longer dominated by the dogma of ideology but by music and spirituality and the thirst for contact with progressive cultural images. Clearly this was in contradiction with the two-bloc division of the world and the division between capitalism and socialism. On the other hand, computers, communications and new world media began to exert a direct influence on the human conscience and to create the beginnings of a new previously unknown global culture. Together with the globalisation of commerce and financial markets, this raised questions about the basic structures of the third civilisation - nations and nation states. There is no doubt that their borders had begun to change giving rise to the problem of the formation of another world structure and of another political and economic order. In the 1960's when the cold war emerged from the ice age and the peoples from the two sides began to get know each other, the first barriers in their consciousness came down. In the Eastern bloc, intellectual movements and calls for more freedom caught the leaders quite unawares. In Czechoslovakia the Prague Spring blossomed, Hungary began a process of brave economic reforms and in Poland the workers began to fight for their rights. This period produced the indefatiguable spirits of Vladimir Visotskiy in Russia, the "Shturtsi" in Bulgaria and Ceslav Niemen in Poland. Many people in the West also realised that military, political and cultural confrontation was of little benefit. In the 1960's and 1970's in the USA and in particular in Western Europe movements for peace and understanding gained momentum. The demonstrations against the war in Vietnam, the youth movements in 1968, the hippy peace movements and a number of other phenomena were manifestations not only of the political status quo but also of a new emergent culture. The bearers of the new spirituality in the West in the 1960's were born not so much in the academic environments of Eaton and Harvard but in the fields of Woodstock and amongst the millions of fans of John Lennon, Mick Jagger and Ian Gillan. At the beginning of the 1960's the president of the USA, John F.Kennedy was the first American statesman to evaluate the Eastern European nations not merely as the incorporation of evil but recognised that they had attained certain social achievements from which much could be learned. Of particular significance was his attempt to build intellectual bridges with the East and to break the ice of the cold war. Without accepting the violence of the totalitarian regimes, many intellectuals in the West began to perceive more clearly not only the mistakes and errors but also the successes of the Eastern European countries and to propose the application of certain of the benefits of state socialism, particularly in the social field. Year after year the means of global integration - transport, commerce, radio and television lead to to growth in international contact and slowly lead to the blurring of the iron curtain between East and West. With the appearance of the computer and satellite television in daily life and with the intensity of world radio television and cultural exchange the barriers between the two systems became more illusory. New means of communication made the policies of isolation, concealment of truth and global division absurd. The monopoly of information collapsed as a direct result of the revolution in communications which in turn lead to the undermining of the two-polar model. Despite everything which I have mentioned until now, is it still not overstated to speak of the collapse of the Third Civilisation? Am I not attempting to impose original thought in an aggressive way onto the evolution of human development? I am conviced that this is not so. My arguments for speaking of a general change in civilisation will be developed in the subsequent chapters. They involve technological and geo-political structures, ownership and the transition from traditional capitalist and socialist societies and the blurring of the concept of the nation state. Everything which symbolised and represented the modern age - industrial technology, nation states, capitalism and socialism and the bi-polar world - has undergone change. As a result of the explosion of world communications the process of cultural globalisation has begun to accelerate and what emerged has taken on new sharper features. This trend has gradually created more and more adherents of a new world and a new civilisation. Sooner rather than later the two-bloc system of world civilisation was going to collapse. The question was "when?" and "in what way?" Chapter two COLLAPSE I: THE EXPLOSION IN EASTERN EUROPE 1. DECAY AND DEATH Between 1960 and 1990 a noticeable gap began to open up betweenthe socialist countries of Eastern Europe and the industrialisedcountries of Western Europe. At the beginning of the 1980's there was a growing danger that this gap was going to become insurmountable... A lthough the two-bloc structure of the world was entering a period of common crisis its disintegration began not in the West but in the East. The changes in Eastern Europe were revolutionary" while in the West they were seen as "evolutionary". Why? In my opinion the reasons for this can be seen in the greater inadequacies of the Eastern European totalitarian regimes to adapt to the new trends in world development and to adapt themselves to the new technological and economic conditions which appeared in the 1970's and 1980's. The Eastern European totalitarian bloc was the weakest link in the world of the Third Civilisation. As early as the 1950's the Americans, the Japanese and the Western Europeans had begun to look for completely new approaches to the way in which their lives were structured. On the one hand, under pressure from the new external and internal realities which had to be taken into account and on the other hand as a result of competition with the Soviet Union and other countries of the Eastern Bloc, the most developed industrial nations began to improve their systems. Today the economies of the USA, Japan and France have little in common with what they were in the 1920's and 1930's. By preserving free initiative, the industrialised Western countries managed to overcome the danger of monopolism within their economies and extreme social stratification. In this way they did not allow the predictions of Lenin that "imperialism cannot be reformed and will disintegrate under the blows from its own contradictions"[15] to come true. In fact the opposite was true, after the Great Depression of 1929 and during the post-war period the largest Western European states and the USA undertook a series of measures aimed at overcoming the danger of further monopolisation and achieving greater social equality and harmony. Economic and political power were balanced through moderate state regulation, anti-monopoly legislation and the stimulation of medium and small-scale business. The most significant changes undertaken in the USA and Western Europe were in the structure of ownership. After the passing Legislation allowing the transferring of share ownership to employees in 1974 in the USA hundreds of thousands of employees began to acquire stock in the companies in which they worked. Similar trends can be seen in Great Britain, Germany, France and a number of other Wester European countries. They also undert