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The Anti-Axial Age

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Abstract

Karl Jaspers famously characterized the period from the beginning of the eighth to the end of the third century before Christ as an “Axial Age” in which intellectual freedom and creativity blossomed as never before. This article argues that it was followed, five hundred years later, by an “Anti-Axial Age”, which devised a novel formula for intellectual and political repression. Its essence was the state’s capture of the millenial narrative, which had first been developed as religious doctrine within Zoroastrianism and Christianity. Involving the two great classical empires of Western Eurasia, Persia and Rome, and then empowering the expansion of Islam, the Anti-Axial Age left an ideological legacy that continues to haunt the contemporary world.

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Correspondence to Stephen Balch.

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Today, scholars believe that Zoroaster actually lived about a thousand years earlier.

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Balch, S. The Anti-Axial Age. Soc 54, 346–351 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12115-017-0150-9

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12115-017-0150-9

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