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The Great Transformation: The Beginning of Our Religious Traditions Hardcover – March 28, 2006
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Armstrong traces the development of the Axial Age chronologically, examining the contributions of such figures as the Buddha, Socrates, Confucius, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, the mystics of the Upanishads, Mencius, and Euripides. All of the Axial Age faiths began in principled and visceral recoil from the unprecedented violence of their time. Despite some differences of emphasis, there was a remarkable consensus in their call for an abandonment of selfishness and a spirituality of compassion. With regard to dealing with fear, despair, hatred, rage, and violence, the Axial sages gave their people and give us, Armstrong says, two important pieces of advice: first there must be personal responsibility and self-criticism, and it must be followed by practical, effective action.
In her introduction and concluding chapter, Armstrong urges us to consider how these spiritualities challenge the way we are religious today. In our various institutions, we sometimes seem to be attempting to create exactly the kind of religion that Axial sages and prophets had hoped to eliminate. We often equate faith with doctrinal conformity, but the traditions of the Axial Age were not about dogma. All insisted on the primacy of compassion even in the midst of suffering. In each Axial Age case, a disciplined revulsion from violence and hatred proved to be the major catalyst of spiritual change.
- Print length496 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherAlfred A. Knopf / Random House
- Publication dateMarch 28, 2006
- Dimensions6.72 x 1.55 x 9.56 inches
- ISBN-100375413170
- ISBN-13978-0375413179
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
From Bookmarks Magazine
Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc.
From Booklist
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved
Review
“Armstrong at her best–translating and distilling complex history into lucid prose that will delight scholars and armchair historians alike.”
–Lauren F. Winner, The Washington Post Book World
“Her conviction, passion and intelligence radiate throughout the book, making us feel the urgency of the ideas it seeks to convey.”
–Charles Matthews, Baltimore Sun
“A tour de force. . . . She has dedicated herself to understanding the most prominent world faiths and explaining them to a secular/postsecular society."
–Jane Lampman, The Christian Science Monitor
“Perhaps her most ambitious work. . . . Without overlooking the differences between religions, Armstrong emphasizes their common call for compassion.”
–Lisa Montanarelli, San Francisco Chronicle
“A lucid, highly readable account of complex developments occurring over many centuries. . . . A splendid book.”
—William Grimes, The New York Times
“An utterly enthralling reading experience. . . . This book ranks with A History of God as one of her finest achievements.”
—Booklist
“In her typical magisterial fashion, she chronicles these tales in dazzling prose with remarkable depth and judicious breadth.”
—Publishers Weekly
"The Great Transformation can serve the needs of new readers interested in a popular work that synthesizes scholarship. . . . [U]seful to anyone seeking an integral sense of world religions."
—The Globe and Mail
"Karen Armstrong is a genius."
—A. N. Wilson, author of Jesus: A Life
"Armstrong is a lucid writer with a knack for synthesizing vast quantities of research."
—The Globe and Mail
"Armstrong’s writing continues to offer a religious mirror and a cultural vision."
—Amazon.com
"Armstrong has a dazzling ability: she can take a long and complex subject and reduce it to the fundamentals, without oversimplifying."
—The Sunday Times
“Armstrong’s erudition is truly impressive. . . . Few people are better qualified to explain that what so often divides us ought to unite us instead.”
—Cleveland Plain Dealer
“Broad, eloquent storytelling.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“Her conviction, passion and intelligence radiate throughout the book, making us feel the urgency of the ideas it seeks to convey.”
—New York Sun
“This could very possibly be one of the greatest intellectual histories ever written.”
—Library Journal (starred review)
“A book of the magnitude of The Great Transformation can only be considered authoritative.”
—Charleston Post & Courier
“On prominent display in this book are Armstrong’s usual virtues–wide knowledge, meticulous research, a superb appreciation for the beauty and power of religious and philosophical ideasls, and general readability.”
—Shambhala Sun
“This magisterial work, continuing Karen Armstrong’s mission to explore the place and purposes of religions in the modern world, follows in the stream of her books on Christianity, Judaism, Islam, and Buddaism.”
—Spirituality & Health
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
THE AXIAL PEOPLES
(c. 1600 to 900 BCE)
The first people to attempt an Axial Age spirituality were pastoralists living on the steppes of southern Russia, who called themselves the Aryans. The Aryans were not a distinct ethnic group, so this was not a racial term but an assertion of pride and meant something like “noble” or “honorable.” The Aryans were a loose-knit network of tribes who shared a common culture. Because they spoke a language that would form the basis of several Asiatic and European tongues, they are also called Indo-Europeans. They had lived on the Caucasian steppes since about 4500, but by the middle of the third millennium some tribes began to roam farther and farther afield, until they reached what is now Greece, Italy, Scandinavia, and Germany. At the same time, those Aryans who had remained behind on the steppes gradually drifted apart and became two separate peoples, speaking different forms of the original Indo-European. One used the Avestan dialect, the other an early form of Sanskrit. They were able to maintain contact, however, because at this stage their languages were still very similar, and until about 1500 they continued to live peacefully together, sharing the same cultural and religious traditions.
It was a quiet, sedentary existence. The Aryans could not travel far, because the horse had not yet been domesticated, so their horizons were bounded by the steppes. They farmed their land, herded their sheep, goats, and pigs, and valued stability and continuity. They were not a warlike people, since, apart from a few skirmishes with one another or with rival groups, they had no enemies and no ambition to conquer new territory. Their religion was simple and peaceful. Like other ancient peoples, the Aryans experienced an invisible force within themselves and in everything that they saw, heard, and touched. Storms, winds, trees, and rivers were not impersonal, mindless phenomena. The Aryans felt an affinity with them, and revered them as divine. Humans, deities, animals, plants, and the forces of nature were all manifestations of the same divine “spirit,” which the Avestans called mainyu and the Sanskrit-speakers manya. It animated, sustained, and bound them all together.
Over time the Aryans developed a more formal pantheon. At a very early stage, they had worshiped a Sky God called Dyaus Pitr, creator of the world. But like other High Gods, Dyaus was so remote that he was eventually replaced by more accessible gods, who were wholly identified with natural and cosmic forces. Varuna preserved the order of the universe; Mithra was the god of storm, thunder, and life-giving rain; Mazda, lord of justice and wisdom, was linked with the sun and stars; and Indra, a divine warrior, had fought a three-headed dragon called Vritra and brought order out of chaos. Fire, which was crucial to civilized society, was also a god and the Aryans called him Agni. Agni was not simply the divine patron of fire; he was the fire that burned in every single hearth. Even the hallucinogenic plant that inspired the Aryan poets was a god, called Haoma in Avestan and Soma in Sanskrit: he was a divine priest who protected the people from famine and looked after their cattle.
The Avestan Aryans called their gods daevas (“the shining ones”) and amesha (“the immortals”). In Sanskrit these terms became devas and amrita. None of these divine beings, however, were what we usually call “gods” today. They were not omnipotent and had no ultimate control over the cosmos. Like human beings and all the natural forces, they had to submit to the sacred order that held the universe together. Thanks to this order, the seasons succeeded one another in due course, the rain fell at the right times, and the crops grew each year in the appointed month. The Avestan Aryans called this order asha, while the Sanskrit-speakers called it rita. It made life possible, keeping everything in its proper place and defining what was true and correct.
Human society also depended upon this sacred order. People had to make firm, binding agreements about grazing rights, the herding of cattle, marriage, and the exchange of goods. Translated into social terms, asha/rita meant loyalty, truth, and respect, the ideals embodied by Varuna, the guardian of order, and Mithra, his assistant. These gods supervised all covenant agreements that were sealed by a solemn oath. The Aryans took the spoken word very seriously. Like all other phenomena, speech was a god, a deva. Aryan religion was not very visual. As far as we know, the Aryans did not make effigies of their gods. Instead, they found that the act of listening brought them close to the sacred. Quite apart from its meaning, the very sound of a chant was holy; even a single syllable could encapsulate the divine. Similarly, a vow, once uttered, was eternally binding, and a lie was absolutely evil because it perverted the holy power inherent in the spoken word. The Aryans would never lose this passion for absolute truthfulness.
Every day, the Aryans offered sacrifices to their gods to replenish the energies they expended in maintaining world order. Some of these rites were very simple. The sacrificer would throw a handful of grain, curds, or fuel into the fire to nourish Agni, or pound the stalks of soma, offer the pulp to the water goddesses, and make a sacred drink. The Aryans also sacrificed cattle. They did not grow enough crops for their needs, so killing was a tragic necessity, but the Aryans ate only meat that had been ritually and humanely slaughtered. When a beast was ceremonially given to the gods, its spirit was not extinguished but returned to Geush Urvan (“Soul of the Bull”), the archetypical domestic animal. The Aryans felt very close to their cattle. It was sinful to eat the flesh of a beast that had not been consecrated in this way, because profane slaughter destroyed it forever, and thus violated the sacred life that made all creatures kin. Again, the Aryans would never entirely lose this profound respect for the “spirit” that they shared with others, and this would become a crucial principle of their Axial Age.
To take the life of any being was a fearful act, not to be undertaken lightly, and the sacrificial ritual compelled the Aryans to confront this harsh law of existence. The sacrifice became and would remain the organizing symbol of their culture, by which they explained the world and their society. The Aryans believed that the universe itself had originated in a sacrificial offering. In the beginning, it was said, the gods, working in obedience to the divine order, had brought forth the world in seven stages. First they created the Sky, which was made of stone like a huge round shell; then the Earth, which rested like a flat dish upon the Water that had collected in the base of the shell. In the center of the Earth, the gods placed three living creatures: a Plant, a Bull, and a Man. Finally they produced Agni, the Fire. But at first everything was static and lifeless. It was not until the gods performed a triple sacrifice—crushing the Plant, and killing the Bull and the Man—that the world became animated. The sun began to move across the sky, seasonal change was established, and the three sacrificial victims brought forth their own kind. Flowers, crops, and trees sprouted from the pulped Plant; animals sprang from the corpse of the Bull; and the carcass of the first Man gave birth to the human race. The Aryans would always see sacrifice as creative. By reflecting on this ritual, they realized that their lives depended upon the death of other creatures. The three archetypal creatures had laid down their lives so that others might live. There could be no progress, materially or spiritually, without self-sacrifice. This too would become one of the principles of the Axial Age.
The Aryans had no elaborate shrines and temples. Sacrifice was offered in the open air on a small, level piece of land, marked off from the rest of the settlement by a furrow. The seven original creations were all symbolically represented in this arena: Earth in the soil, Water in the vessels, Fire in the hearth; the stone Sky was present in the flint knife, the Plant in the crushed soma stalks, the Bull in the victim, and the first Man in the priest. And the gods, it was thought, were also present. The hotr priest, expert in the liturgical chant, would sing a hymn to summon devas to the feast. When they had entered the sacred arena, the gods sat down on the freshly mown grass strewn around the altar to listen to these hymns of praise. Since the sound of these inspired syllables was itself a god, as the song filled the air and entered their consciousness, the congregation felt surrounded by and infused with divinity. Finally the primordial sacrifice was repeated. The cattle were slain, the soma pressed, and the priest laid the choicest portions of the victims onto the fire, so that Agni could convey them to the land of the gods. The ceremony ended with a holy communion, as priest and participants shared a festal meal with the deities, eating the consecrated meat and drinking the intoxicating soma, which seemed to lift them to another dimension of being.
The sacrifice brought practical benefits too. It was commissioned by a member of the community, who hoped that those devas who had responded to his invitation and attended the sacrifice would help him in the future. Like any act of hospitality, the ritual placed an obligation on the divinities to respond in kind, and the hotr often reminded them to protect the patron’s family, crops, and herd. The s...
Product details
- Publisher : Alfred A. Knopf / Random House
- Publication date : March 28, 2006
- Edition : First Edition
- Language : English
- Print length : 496 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0375413170
- ISBN-13 : 978-0375413179
- Item Weight : 1.86 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.72 x 1.55 x 9.56 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #877,159 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #79 in General History of Religion
- #84 in History of Religions
- #154 in Comparative Religion (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Karen Armstrong is the author of numerous other books on religious affairs-including A History of God, The Battle for God, Holy War, Islam, Buddha, and The Great Transformation-and two memoirs, Through the Narrow Gate and The Spiral Staircase. Her work has been translated into forty-five languages. She has addressed members of the U.S. Congress on three occasions; lectured to policy makers at the U.S. State Department; participated in the World Economic Forum in New York, Jordan, and Davos; addressed the Council on Foreign Relations in Washington and New York; is increasingly invited to speak in Muslim countries; and is now an ambassador for the UN Alliance of Civilizations. In February 2008 she was awarded the TED Prize and is currently working with TED on a major international project to launch and propagate a Charter for Compassion, created online by the general public and crafted by leading thinkers in Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism, to be signed in the fall of 2009 by a thousand religious and secular leaders. She lives in London.
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Customers find the book deeply learned and informative, with well-written prose that makes it accessible to both laymen. Moreover, they appreciate its detailed historical analysis and comprehensive presentation of comparative developmental history. However, the book receives mixed feedback regarding its effort, with some praising it as an outstanding work while others express disappointment. Additionally, customers disagree on the depth of the content.
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Customers find the book deeply learned and brilliant, adding significant depth to any topic, with one customer highlighting its excellent description of the development of Judaism and Christianity.
"...A delight found in each chapter is Armstrong's judicious use of primary sacred texts--yes, including Homer's epics and the Greek dramatists broad..." Read more
"...This book makes for absorbing and inspirational reading, and shows the importance of returning to the roots of our different faiths...." Read more
"...other reviews, is that she goes in with a vision and engages directly with these traditions instead of treating them as historical artifacts and..." Read more
"...The supporting evidence was laid out well, and usually at the end of each chapter, she would relate the evidence to how significant it was to the..." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, noting its well-written prose and superior vocabulary, with one customer highlighting how it is accessible to both laymen.
"...clear, informative and, though somewhat academic, easy for the layman to understand. Her voice is straightforward yet wrought with palpable concern...." Read more
"...It is a very interesting read, and Armstrong does a fantastic job with laying down her arguments and specifying certain areas of uncertainty." Read more
"...She writes well and tries to combine a wide range of historical ethical trends under one umbrella theme...." Read more
"...Having said all that, she is incredibly thorough, carefully building her story brick by brick and her work greatly increased my understanding...." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's historical content, particularly its detailed analyses of life and ancient origins, and consider it one of the best documented presentations of comparative developmental history.
"...It is a well-organized mix of history and philosophical analysis...." Read more
"...She writes well and tries to combine a wide range of historical ethical trends under one umbrella theme...." Read more
"This is a lucid and rousing review of the history of the major old world religions by Karen Armstrong...." Read more
"Karen Armstrong is a remarkable historian whose breath and depth of historical knowledge supplies all serious students of the subject to carefully..." Read more
Customers appreciate the thorough scholarship of the book.
"...Armstrong has made a good effort and has exhibited a wide range of overall scholarship, "The Great Transformation" was a disappointment when it came..." Read more
"...Her scholarship is thorough and provides a background to make sense of many current world movements." Read more
"...Thank your, Karen for such an amazing scholarship. Have all your books. Wish you the best." Read more
"Karen Armstrong maintains her reputation for careful scholarship and readability. Her books are always a pleasant educational experience." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's effort, with some praising it as an outstanding original work while others find it a great disappointment.
"...airs and those that are seminal works. This is a seminal, original work that is accessible, enjoyable, and life-helpful on all levels...." Read more
"...one, however, falls short of her best efforts, perhaps because it attempts so much...." Read more
"Although Karen Armstrong has made a good effort and has exhibited a wide range of overall scholarship, "The Great Transformation" was a..." Read more
"This book is a great disappointment...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the book's depth, with some finding it shallow.
"...that I would love to have explained more fully, but it covers a lot of ground already. Maybe I can take a class from her someday." Read more
"...This is an interesting and instructive book, but it lacks for me the depth of some of her other works." Read more
"...written with deep insight of the subject matter covered which is really vast. Recommend highly as a good read" Read more
"This book is a great disappointment. If offers a shallow and superficial reconstruction of history, and often a distorted presentation of the great..." Read more
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- Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2017My first comment is that the Amazon post from Publishers Weekly (pasted here) needs an editor..
Karl Jung is not the one who coined the term Axial Age. It was Karl Jaspers.
Furthermore, the review is sensationalistic and misses the key points of Armstrong's work.
"It's not what one may expect from a book about the development of the world's religions: 'Crouched in his mother's womb, he lay in wait for his father, armed with a sickle, and the next time Uranus penetrated Gaia, he cut off his genitals and threw them to the earth.' However, the Greek myth of Cronus clearly illustrates Armstrong's main thesis, that the 'simultaneous' development of the world's religions during what Karl Jung called the axial age, is a direct result of the violence and chaos, both physical and spiritual, of past civilizations. Armstrong, a former nun turned self-described 'freelance monotheist,' has enough background and personal investment in the material to make it come alive. Her delivery is crystal clear, informative and, though somewhat academic, easy for the layman to understand. Her voice is straightforward yet wrought with palpable concern. This reinforces the book's goals of creating a clear understanding of where religious developments have come from and explaining how today's 'violence of an unprecedented scale' parallels the activities that created the 'axial age' in the first place."
In The Great Transformation (TGT) Armstrong meticulously, but without losing energy, explores the emergence of the pivotal religions of the world that emerged from c. 900 to c. 200 BCE. Her treatment is, first of all, historical and cultural, with emphases upon India (Hinduism and Buddhism), China (Taoism and Confucianism), the Middle East (Judaism), and ancient Greece.
Although Armstrong often is tagged as a comparative religion scholar/writer, she is less interested in comparing religions (comparisons almost always devolve into value assessments that fuel competitive approaches to religion) than she is showing how diverse histories and cultures leave us with deep resonances of religious and spiritual awareness.
Those resonances--including ritual, kenosis (emptying), knowledge, suffering, empathy, and concern for everybody--provide the clues to a careful reader to help understand how regional/cultural/historical expressions of religion finally transcended those beginnings and became viable across cultures and eras in history.
The transformation suggested in the book's title is kaleidoscopic. From time to time and from place to place the resonances emerge from particular circumstances and move toward universally recognized traits of authentic, transformative religions.
A delight found in each chapter is Armstrong's judicious use of primary sacred texts--yes, including Homer's epics and the Greek dramatists broad ouvre--that contextualize the values of religion without attempting to put all religions in one proverbial pot.
Finally, TGT begins with reflections upon recent history (e.g., the fall of the Twin Towers in 2001) and the rise of the perceived certainties of science and technology that have had the effect of muting the myths and mysteries found in the history of religions. Armstrong's closing parenthesis, "The Way Forward," holds out the hope those seeking to survive the twenty-first century might find, again, the values of myth and mysteries from ancient and contemporary flowerings of Axial Religion.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2007This is an outstandingly interesting book, even if you do not agree with every one of Karen Armstrong's conclusions.
The great German psychiatrist and philosopher Karl Jaspers first proposed the idea of an "Axial period" that ran from approximately 800 to 200 BCE. During this time all the fundamental creations that underlie our current civilization came into being. It was also during this time that four of the world's great religions and philosophical traditions emerged: Hinduism and Buddhism in India; Confucianism and Taoism in China; Monotheism in Israel, that eventually gave expression to Judaism, Christianity and Islam; and rationalism in Greece. Some experts - including Jaspers - included a fifth: Zoroastrianism in Persia. Most scholars now consider that Zoroastrianism emerged before the Axial period, so it is discussed in this book, but is not one of the four great strands.
Following Jaspers' lead, Karen Armstrong credits this six to seven hundred year period as the turning point in the development of human spiritual consciousness. She describes these developments as a reaction to political disintegration and religious intolerance that lead large numbers of people to turn away from their customary systems of ritual and worship, and instead to search for and to create new systems based on justice, compassion and love. This search provided the catalyst for major transformations in religious culture.
Though she is a scholar, Karen writes a clear and easily digestible account about the spiritual heart of each of these religious doctrines, and shows that they all have some things in common: primarily the need for compassion and love in overcoming violence, hatred and selfishness. All the great sages of the time from Socrates to some of the Old Testament prophets, the mystics of the Upanishads and the Buddha taught the central importance of personal responsibility and self-criticism, which had to be followed by practical. effective action.
Although a great step forward, the emergence of the ethics and religions of the Axial period was far from perfect. As the most glaring example, women were largely excluded from a significant place in most of these systems.
Karen's approach also begs another question: did religions emerge as a reaction to the times or had some people reached a point in their development where they were able to receive Divine guidance?
It is easy to see many of the parallels between the Axial period and the turmoil of today. Perhaps a return to the ethos of the time, in an evermore interconnected world, armed now with the cognitive and emotional insights of the last two thousand years, might help provide the guidelines for another great step forward along the spiritual path. And a way of dealing with some of the problems that threaten to engulf us.
As Karen Armstrong say, "In the last resort, "love" and "concern" will benefit everybody more than self-interested or shortsighted policies."
This book makes for absorbing and inspirational reading, and shows the importance of returning to the roots of our different faiths.
Highly recommended.
Top reviews from other countries
Shawn Thompson aka the intimate apeReviewed in Canada on August 27, 20165.0 out of 5 stars The roots of spirituality in diversity
Karen Armstrong gives amazing clarity and insight to the root of spiritual development that in its diversity defines the potential of human nature.
Norwich readerReviewed in the United Kingdom on September 20, 20225.0 out of 5 stars OK
Book arrived on time in condition described.
Arijit GhoshReviewed in India on November 29, 20195.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book
Excellent book to understand and appreciate evolution of different religions and philosophies in India, China, Middle East and Greece, during the first millennia BCE. Gives us a glimpse of life then with the historical context of what the author calls, the Axial Age.
Kindle CustomerReviewed in the United Kingdom on June 16, 20155.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
fascinating book
John DeakosReviewed in Canada on August 12, 20175.0 out of 5 stars Five Stars
A great document to help us understand the true purpose of religion.

