Meic Pearse

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Meic Pearse



Originally from Britain, Pearse did his master’s and doctoral degrees at the University of Oxford, having previously taken his B.A. in the University of Wales, and his D.M.S. (business and management) at the Polytechnic of Wales.

Currently living in the U.S. and Croatia, Meic Pearse is Professor of History at Houghton College, New York, where he leads the ‘East Meets West’ Honors Program, which introduces students to the study of three major world civilizations: the Catholic/Protestant West, Eastern Orthodoxy and (in southeastern Europe and the Middle East) Islam.

For more than a decade, Pearse taught Church History at the London School of Theology, for most of that time as head of its B.A. in Theology programme. He is also Visiting Professo
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Average rating: 3.83 · 204 ratings · 32 reviews · 8 distinct works
Why the Rest Hates the West...

3.79 avg rating — 156 ratings — published 2004 — 6 editions
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The Gods of War: Is Religio...

3.69 avg rating — 26 ratings — published 2007 — 4 editions
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The Age of Reason: From the...

4.20 avg rating — 15 ratings — published 2006 — 6 editions
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Great Restoration: The Reli...

4.50 avg rating — 6 ratings — published 1998 — 2 editions
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We Must Stop Meeting Like This

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Whos Feeding Whom:

0.00 avg rating — 0 ratings — published 1997
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The Age of Reason: From the...

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The Age of Reason

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Quotes by Meic Pearse  (?)
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“The truth is that we, in our hyperprosperity, may be able to live without meaning, faith or purpose, filling our threescore years and ten with a variety of entertainments—but most of the world cannot. If economics is implicated in the conflict, it is mostly in an ironic sense: only an abundance of riches such as no previous generation has known could possibly console us for the emptiness of our lives, the absence of stable families and relationships, and the lack of any overarching purpose.”
Meic Pearse, Why the Rest Hates the West: Understanding the Roots of Global Rage

“It does, however, seem to me that fashionable Western self-loathing is fundamentally misplaced. Almost always it is directed at the fact of our wealth and power, relative to the other peoples of the earth, with the constant, quasi-Marxist (and false) assumption that the wealth must somehow inevitably be stolen from the poor, as if the economic pie were of a fixed size and economics a zero-sum game. Really, a decade and a half after the fall of communism, do we still need to go on disproving this? Our vast wealth does, indeed, impose upon us equally vast responsibilities toward those who remain in poverty. It is the real strengths of the West that created that wealth and that, tentatively and in humility, need to be proffered to those who could profit from them. The self-loathing, however, should be redirected from the mere fact of our prosperity to the disconnection, boredom, feeble-mindedness and infantilism that we have allowed our wealth to let us slip into. The unprecedented comfort of our lives allows us, if we are not careful—and we have not been careful—to lose hold of the fundamental realities that underpin all human existence.”
Meic Pearse, Why the Rest Hates the West: Understanding the Roots of Global Rage



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