Abstract

Empire Builders, Culture Makers, and Culture Imprinters Surveying the world today, we see several huge areas in which hundreds of millions of people share a religion, laws, institutions, arts, architecture, cooking, and a way of life. Apart from physical differences, the outward characteristic which distinguishes these regions from each other is a language. They are the Chinese, Indian (notwithstanding the presence of many large linguistic groups), Anglo-Saxon, Russian (not including the Caucasus and Central Asia), Latin American, Latin European, and Arab culture areas; the last consists of an Arab mass and a small linguistic fringe in east and west Africa.1 Together, they account

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