EBOOK

Geopolitics and Evolution
Fertility and Progress - The Burqa and the Miniskirt - Power - The Imminent Collapse of America
Angelo Bertolo(0)
About
What forces truly shape the rise and decline of civilizations?
In Geopolitical Evolution, Professor Angelo Bertolo presents a serious and
provocative work of historical and geopolitical analysis. Moving beyond
short-term political commentary, he examines the deeper patterns that
influence how societies grow, create, dominate, weaken, and pass their
legacy to others.
Drawing from classical and European history, Asian civilizations, biblical
peoples, archaeology, and the thought of Vico, Machiavelli, Ibn Khaldun,
Darwin, and Hegel, Bertolo explores civilization as an evolving human
force shaped by fertility, moral energy, religious belief, ideology, social
class, and political power.
At the center of the book is a challenging argument: the destiny of nations
cannot be understood through economics, diplomacy, or military strength
alone. Population growth, cultural confidence, moral conviction, and the
vitality of belief also shape the movement of history.
For readers interested in geopolitics, civilizational decline, demography,
political philosophy, and the future of the West, Geopolitical Evolution
offers a broad framework for understanding the modern world.
This is not a book of headlines. It is an invitation to read history as a
recurring pattern of growth, power, maturity, decline, and transformation.
In Geopolitical Evolution, Professor Angelo Bertolo presents a serious and
provocative work of historical and geopolitical analysis. Moving beyond
short-term political commentary, he examines the deeper patterns that
influence how societies grow, create, dominate, weaken, and pass their
legacy to others.
Drawing from classical and European history, Asian civilizations, biblical
peoples, archaeology, and the thought of Vico, Machiavelli, Ibn Khaldun,
Darwin, and Hegel, Bertolo explores civilization as an evolving human
force shaped by fertility, moral energy, religious belief, ideology, social
class, and political power.
At the center of the book is a challenging argument: the destiny of nations
cannot be understood through economics, diplomacy, or military strength
alone. Population growth, cultural confidence, moral conviction, and the
vitality of belief also shape the movement of history.
For readers interested in geopolitics, civilizational decline, demography,
political philosophy, and the future of the West, Geopolitical Evolution
offers a broad framework for understanding the modern world.
This is not a book of headlines. It is an invitation to read history as a
recurring pattern of growth, power, maturity, decline, and transformation.