PART THIRD.
LEO X.—AGE OF SCIENTIFIC INVENTION.
The work presents a broad, interpretive survey of human history that treats progress as a westward-moving drama under providential guidance. It sketches successive cultural ages and traces how literature, art, science, religion, and commerce have shifted emphasis across eras. Rather than detailed biographies, it compiles a compact nomenclature of celebrated figures and landmark events to demonstrate continuity and cumulative improvement. The author highlights recurring patterns of expansion, innovation, and renewal, arguing that major enterprises and population movements have tended to unfold toward the west. The treatment privileges grand outlines and synthesis over granular documentation.
LEO X.—AGE OF SCIENTIFIC INVENTION.