Ideas of the 20th Century — Season 1, Episode 3: Wisdom of the Age
Documentary, Talk, War & Politics • 62 min • 2 seasons, 16 episodes
Episode synopsis
In lecture three, we analyze how early 20th-century intellectual movements like Shaw's cynicism about moral values and Italian Futurism's violent rejection of the past helped create conditions for World War I. We explore Shaw's dismissal of traditional ethics and embrace of Stalin's violence, alongside the Futurists' glorification of war and destruction as progress. The discussion concludes with WWI's catastrophic toll and its shattering of civilization's faith in progress, creating a generation that lost innocence and trust in institutions.
About Ideas of the 20th Century
In Ideas of the 20th Century, Dr. Daniel Bonevac examines the major intellectual movements that shaped modern Western thought. Beginning with the Scientific, Agricultural, and Industrial Revolutions, the course explores how traditional beliefs came under pressure, creating tensions between human freedom and scientific determinism and contributing to cultural and political upheavals. Through the ideas of thinkers such as Nietzsche, Marx, Freud, and the existentialists, as well as debates over totalitarianism, liberty, language, truth, and justice, the course traces the search for meaning in the modern world. By connecting philosophy, politics, and culture, it reveals how the central ideas of the 20th century continue to shape contemporary society and the challenges facing Western civilization today.