The Great Clock: Civilization, Myth, and the Turning of the Ages
What if history moves in patterns larger than empires, religions, and nations?
What if civilizations are shaped not only by politics and economics, but by the myths, symbols, and stories through which humanity understands reality itself?
In The Great Clock, Michael J. Thomas explores one of the oldest and most enduring ideas in human history: that civilization moves through symbolic ages, each carrying its own psychological atmosphere, worldview, and structure of power.
From the earthbound permanence of the Age of Taurus...
to the warrior empires of Aries...
to the faith-centered civilization of Pisces...
and now toward the technological networks and fragmented realities of Aquarius...
The Great Clock examines how mythology, religion, media, technology, and collective perception have repeatedly shaped the rise and transformation of human societies.
Blending history, psychology, philosophy, media theory, and civilizational analysis, Thomas traces the hidden symbolic architecture beneath:
Drawing from thinkers such as Carl Jung, Joseph Campbell, Marshall McLuhan, Neil Postman, Jacques Ellul, and Oswald Spengler, this book asks a deeper question increasingly relevant in the modern world:
What happens when the stories holding civilization together begin to collapse?
Neither rigidly religious nor traditionally academic, The Great Clock is a provocative exploration of myth, power, consciousness, and the future of human civilization in an age of accelerating technological transformation.
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