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Third came in 1954 when a Ford Foundation grant allowed me to begin writing my projected world history. This
required me to decide what really mattered in the human past; and taking notes on what others had said seemed futile.
I decided to fall back on reading first and writing afterwards as I had done at Chatham House. I soon discovered that
I could remember where I had seen something important for about six weeks, so made it a rule to stop reading for each
new chapter after six weeks and start to write with fifty or so books piled on my desk available to consult whenever
a footnote seemed appropriate. Without relying on memory so completely, and devoting almost the whole of my waking
hours to the task, I could not have written The Rise of the West as quickly as I did. Another grant from Carnegie
Corporation of New York made that possible, freeing me from teaching for two quarters for five years, 1957-62,
during which time I completed the book.  I should also confess that another serendipitous experience contributed greatly to my actual achievement. In
1955, Gustav von Grunebaum invited me to join him in a seminar at the University of Frankfurt, Germany. The seminar
was conducted in German so I had to learn the language as never before, and during the three months I spent in
Frankfurt a learned teaching assistant, Fraulein von Dechend guided me through pre-war German scholarship about
pre-history and the history of steppe peoples. This required rewriting the first chapters of my book when I got
back home and resumed work. In this instance I did use notes taken in Frankfurt so cannot say I dispensed with note-
taking entirely. Finally, I spent a whole year revising and shortening the original manuscript to make it fit into a single volume.
I was convinced that multi-volume books are usually consulted, not read through and wanted mine to be read from
beginning to end, so the shape of the whole human past, as I understood it, might emerge. Even though, when cutting it
back by about 20%, I often felt I was hurting the smoothness and readability of the book, I believe many readers
have in fact labored through its 812 pages. So still, believe my butchery was worthwhile, fifty-five years after its
initial publication it is still in print and sells several hundred copies a year. It has also been translated into
about a dozen different languages, so by any standard it has been a real success, however outmoded it is
now becoming. QuotesBy William Hardy McNeill
What such a vision of the future anticipates, in other words, is the eventual establishment of a world-wide
cosmopolitanism, which, compared with the confusions and haste of our time, would enjoy a. vastly greater stability.
A suitable political frame for such a Society might arise through sudden victory and defeat in war, or piecemeal
through a more gradual encapsulation of a particular balance of world power within a growingly effective international
bureaucracy. But no matter how it comes, the cosmopolitanism of the future will surely bear a Western imprint. At
least in its initial stages, any world state will be an empire of the West. This would be the case even if non-
Westerners should happen to hold the supreme controls of world-wide political-military authority for they could
only do so by utilizing such origin Western traits as industrialism, Science, and the public palliation of power
through advocacy of one or other of the democratic political faiths . Hence "The Rise of the West" may serve as a
shorthand description of the upshot of the history of the human commun
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