Romans while the Arabs and the Europeans built on those of the Chinese and the Japanese. During the Second Civilisation forms of ownership and social relations began to show greater universality. Feudalism began to establish itself over the entire world in very specific forms, especially in China and Japan. To a lesser extent, the Second Civilisation retained definite disparities in the level of the development of its nations. A significant part of the world continued to develop within the parameters of the First Civilisation and even persisted to exist in pre-civilised forms for a number of centuries. The Second Civilisation was a time of numerous conflicts and inevitable crises for reasons of large-scale structural change - the destruction of the traditional city-states and cultures of the First Civilisation and the innumerable religious conflicts. This was also a time of large-scale state and cultural development and the establishment of the pre-conditions for the expansion of nations and nation-states. King Clovis (401-511) at the beginning of the 6[th] century united the Franks, Justinian (572-565) raised the level of state administration, taxation and the application of law. Enormous progress was made in the fields of science, medicine and mathematics in Baghdad, Cordoba and Cairo. In the Arab world, Africa (Ethiopia and Ghana), Japan, China and America, great empires arose. The new level of integration, typical of the Second Civilisation gradually lead to the creation of national states. To be more precise these were not single-nation states but the domination of a single nation or its symbols. During the latter Middle Ages there was a gradual slowing down in the processes of migration of nations and tribes which lead to the stabilisation of populations and states. The intermingling of cultures typical of the entire period of the Second Civilisation was gradually replaced by a period of developing national cultures, national symbols and traditions and struggles for the legacy of the cultural riches of the past. The formation of national states and the gradual advent of the "modern age was the beginning of the end of the Second Civilisation. It was no accident that the Renaissance which was the symbol of this period of transition also incorporated within itself a return to Greek and Roman art and the cult of beauty and earthly passions. Civilisations follow the spiral of development - each new civilisation destroys the previous while at the same time bearing significant resemblances to it. The Third Civilisation can also be referred to as a "Modern Age" - the age of nations states, factories and industrial complexes. It began at sometime during the 13[th] and 14[th] centuries and will come to an end at sometime during the 20[th] century. The entire period of the Third Civilisation was a period of the integration of manufacturing and spiritual life. In a similar way to the First Civilisation, the forces of integration came mainly from the most-developed states resulting from the accumulation of manufacturing and cultural achievements, rather than as a result of the resettlement and intermingling of nations at different stages of development as it was during the Second Civilisation. The transport revolution which began in Europe was of enormous significance during this period. An example of this were the sailing ships with which Magellan circumnavigated the world and which took Christopher Columbus to America and James Cook to Australia. The explorers were followed by the conquerors hungry for plunder and easy riches. Europeans and Arabs followed the Silk Road through Constantinople, Persia and Tibet to China. The world was once more regaining its strength, exploring the limits of the earth. European states begin to develop and consolidate their power and expand their domination over the rest of the world. During the 16[th] and 17[th] centuries Europe, the most powerful of world cultures, began to exert its power over the other relatively less-developed nations. Over a period of three centuries as a result of great geographical discoveries and their subsequent colonisation European culture managed to exert its influence over half of the world. t is far from the truth, however, that the only "heroic" discoverers were Europeans, such as Columbus, Magellan, Vasco da Gama. By allowing ourselves such a subjective attitude, we, Europeans often find ourselves guilty of provincial ignorance. During the same historical period while the European sailors, traders and soldiers were beginning to make their geographical discoveries, a similar process was taking place in the East. Between 1405 and 1433, admiral Cheng Ho with hundreds of Chinese ships reached Zanzibar and Ceylon. In the 15[th] century the population of China was twice the size of that of Europe: 100-120 million in comparison with 50-55 million. Chinese civilisation was also comparable with European civilisation in terms of its lustre, organisation and depth of philosophy. During this period the great discoveries of Siberia and Africa were made. At the end of the 15[th] century the conquest of America began. Arab caravans reached the interior of Africa. Like the First Civilisation, the Third Civilisation also arose from diverse and different roots. The difference is that after the 15[th] century and in particular during the 18[th] and 19[th] centuries, the process of integration had become universal in nature. Nations and cultures discovered each other. The more developed began to impose their domination and culture with violence. At the same time, a gradual process of mutual influence and enrichment began to develop between the various cultures. A typical feature of the Third Civilisation has been the significance of the world integrity. Moreover, in ancient Greece, Theucidides, Aristotle and Plato[5] searched for the common dimensions of life and common rules for state administration amongst familiar nations. The Stoics advocated the idea of moral and political unity of the human race. Some of the thinkers of ancient Rome (Cicero and others) saw the world as a city with the dimensions of the entire human race embracing all other nations and cultures. The Renaissance enrichened this tradition. If the thinkers of the First Civilisation were occupied mainly with the chronicles of warlords and their victories, and the Second Civilisation with the defence of their religious identity, the thinkers of the Third Civilisation undoubtedly rediscovered man and his essence. Religion was of great importance to the process of integration. K.Kautski referring to statistics states that in 98 A.D. there were 42 centres of population containing Christian communities, by 180 this number had grown to 87 and by 352 - there were more than 500[6]. Ten centuries later the majority of the civilised world was united by Christianity. Buddhism and Islam had a similar influence. Over a period of about 1000 years, the major religions united the greater part of humanity within large spiritual communities. The zenith of this process was undoubtedly during the Third Civilisation. The unification of different nations on the basis of value systems and spirituality was of was of great historical significance. This lead to the building of bridges between the different parts of the world at a time when manufacturing and commercial links and communications were unsustainable. By this time the majority of the great geographical discoveries had been made. Transport and communications had made great progress and medieval means of production had been succeeded by the first factories. Commerce was no longer a haphazard accompaniment to life, but an indivisible part of civilisation. Amsterdam had become a large scale cultural and commercial centre. Venice and Genoa had become the major cities of the Mediterranean. Peter the First and his followers had built Saint Petersburg and a number of European cities had populations of more than 100,000 people. The First Civilisation was a time of the great empires. The Second of the fall of empire and unstable states and city states. The Third Civilisation was a period a nation states. The gravitational centres of progress during the First Civilisation were empires, during the Middle Ages city states and during the Third - nation states. Nation states are one of the features of the modern age distinguishing it from the Middle Ages and from what we can now observe at the end of the 20[th] century. They did not develop suddenly but as a consequence of a series of conflicts over many centuries. Certain historians believe that this is one of the reasons for the success of Europe, that it was these conflicts and the liberated spirit of the Renaissance which guaranteed its domination. It is indeed possible. In any event between the 15[th] and 17[th] centuries France, Spain, England and Sweden and a little later Russia, began to increase their power and might to guarantee their strategic advantage for a number of centuries in the future. According to P.Kennedy, between 1470 and 1650, the armies of the major European powers expanded: Spain from 20,000 to 100,000; France from 40,000 to 100,00; England from 25,000 to 70,000 and Sweden from a couple of hundred to 70,000[7]. These figures show not only the rise of the economic power of the emergent major European powers, but also their desire for the re-distribution of the newly discovered territories and the domination of some states by others. The entire history of the period between the 15[th] and the 18[th] centuries is a history of war, battles for inheritance, colonies and riches. Armies and Navies were expanded, military alliances were formed. As a result of wars, trade and new conquests the whole world entered into a new phase of integration. The Third Civilisation developed greater mass phenomenons in all areas of life - transport, manufacturing, international trade and ideas, the spiritual world and the world of ideas and religions. There is one other important criterion which distinguishes the three civilisations - the forms of production. The First was the age of agriculture and animal husbandry, the Second saw the advent of manufacturing and crafts while the Third is the age of industry and industrial giants. I accept A.Toffler's belief that technological revolutions stimulated the progressionfrom onea ge into another, but I do not believe that this is an exhaustive or adequate criterion. There also another difference between us in terms of the periodisation of history: A.Toffler divides history into two eras: agricultural and industrial, while I have looked for the differences in a wider and more civilisational spectrum. Technological changes are a synthetic expression of the changes in forms of ownership. Typical features of the three forms of civilisation were slave ownership, feudalism and capitalism and it would be wrong to ignore them. At the same time I believe that the transition between the various civilisations was not abrupt and cannot be defined on the basis of one event or another. New civilisations develop within a country and grow organically as a number of trends. This usually takes place as a result of a change in the instruments of labour and technology but at the same time as a result of changes in social relations and means of government. This is the case with the Third Civilisation and the period of its greatest prosperity during the industrial revolution of the 19[th] century. Moreover, at the end of the 19[th] century and especially during the 20[th] century, there were a number of processes in world development which bore innovations of the modern age and which were entirely different from the first three civilisations. The most important characteristics of the Third Civilisation - industry, nations, nation states began to change intensively. In practice this meant the beginning of a process of the collapse of the modern age and the Third Civilisation. 2. THE BIRTH OF THE GLOBAL WORLD The industrial revolution in Europe at the beginning of the 19thcentury brought with it a rapid process of economic and political internationalisation. The borders of the nation states - the most distinguishing feature of the Third Civilisation become too limiting for the new manufacturing forces. T here is no doubt that the 19th century was a time of exceptional technological revolution. In the 1850's and 1860's Great Britain, France, Italy, Germany and Austria demonstrated significant increases in the growth of their industrial output. The invention of the steam engine in 1769 by James Watt and the locomotive by George Stephenson were of revolutionary significance for world economic development and accelerated integration. At the end of the 19th century the first experimental flights with an aeroplane were carried out by Langley (1896). Enormous progress was made between 1885 and 1897 in the development of autmobile construction. In 1837 Morse invented his communications code and in 1864 Edison improved methods of electronic transmission. In 1876 Bell gave the world its first telephones. The second half of the 19th century was a time of important discoveries in the areas of transport and weapons systems. Revolutionary developments were made in coal mining, mettalurgy and energy production resulting in the increase of iron and steel production between 1890 and 1913: in the USA from 9.3 million tons to 31.8 million, in Germany from 4.1 to 17.6, in France from 1.9 to 4.6 and in Russia from 0.95 to 4.6 million tons. Energy consumption for the same period rose: in the USA from 147 million tons of coal equivalent to 541 million tons, in Great Britain from 145 million tons to 195 million, in Germany from 71 to 187 million tons, in Germany from 71 to 187 million tons, in France from 36 to 62.5 million tons and in Russia from 10.9 to 54 million tons.[8] Energy and metal became the major factors in the rapid development of railways and armies, predetermining the development of entirely new branches of industry and science. A common feature of this process is that the industrial revolution of the 19th century interlinked the interests of the developing nations in a completely new manner. If until the 19th century, conflicts between nations were of a purely localised nature and on mainly religious or territorial grounds or for reasons of inheritance, after the developments of the industrial revolution the main factors in the emergence of conflicts were disputes for continental or world domination, cheap raw materials and colonies. These facts are perhaps sufficient to support the contention that the Global World was born at the end of the 19th century. I interpret the term "Global World" as meaning the level of development at which the majority of countries and peoples become dependent on each other and, notwithstanding their own national governments, form a common essence. If this is the case, then the end of the 19th century was just the beginning of world globalisation within the framework of the nation states of the Third Civilisation. During the same period the world began an intensive period of establishing common economic (export of capital), technological (transport, communications, science) and cultural links. At some time towards the end of the 19th century the great world powers were already unable to resolve their own conlicts in isolation. Conflicts could no longer be limited to their own borders but to the economic and political divisions already existing in the world. A new world trend began to emerge, that of imperialism. The trend towards imperialism was the first manifestation of the globalisation of the world, a qualitative new level of world integration. I consider imperialism to be a result of the intermingling of two intersecting phenomena: the strong feelings of nationalism which existed everywhere at the end of the 19th century and the objective trend towards integration as a result of the export of capital and aspirations towards the economic division of the world. In the 19th century, globalisation existed only as a direct initiative of the nation state. However, during the second half of the 19th century economic development began to transcend national borders in the form of ambitions and aspirations towards national dominance. Such belligerent nationalism within the conditions of internationalisation gave rise to what J.Hobson, R.Hilferging and V.Lenin defined as imperialism.[9] Looking at the way in which humanity greeted the advent of the twentieth century, one is suprised by their equanimity of spirit. Upon a cursory examination of the major newspapers of France, Germany and Bulgaria published on the 1st of January 1900, I observe a remarkable similarity. Almost everywhere countries greeted the new century with fervent and malcontent nationalism. The new century was seen as a century during which individual states would satisfy their ambitions for new territory and conquer and punish their opponents. The dominant atmosphere was of nationalism and imperial aspirations and against this background, the emergence of socialist ideas. National borders had become too limiting for the expansion of industry. The Germans and the Bulgarians wanted to unite to castigate their neighbours. The British rejoiced in their colonial dominions and dreamed of an even greater Britain. The French reminded the Germans that they would not stand for any more humiliation like that suffered in 1870. Not one of the European nations or the USA are an exception. They were all overcome by some level of imperialist amnbition. This was like a contagious disease brought on by a need for raw materials and control over the railways and the sea routes but it also penetrated political, journalistic and social thought. During this period, Fichte developed his idea of the exclusive role of the Prussian state in the progress of humanity. Fichte was the greatest proponent of the way in which nationalism and the need for internationalisation becomes transformed into imperialism. But France was no different. During the decades after the destruction of the French army in 1870, French nationalism reached unseen heights. Charles Morras defined nationalism as the absolute criterion for every political action. In general at the end of the 19th century and at the beginning of the 20th European nationalism flourished. In the USA at the end of the 19th century, economic and demographic growth, albeit slower than in Europe also gave rise to a similar explosion of self-confidence and aspirations for a new role for America in the world. The idea of an international society, a common feature of American political thought during this period, was also frequently proclaimed as a right to domination and even war. It could also be said that at the beginning of the 20th century humanity was obsessed by the political paradigm typical of all world empires: nationalism combined with imperial ambitions. In other words, internationalisation and globalisation stem from the ambitions of isolated nationalism and nation states. This was also reflected in the structure of manufacturing, politics and life in general. Over a thirty-year period, between 1880 and 1910 the standing armies of the world powers increased significantly. The Russian army increased from 791,000 to 1,285,000 persons. The French army increased from 543,000 to 769,000. The Germany army increased from 426,000 to 694,000 and the British army from 246,000 to 531,000. The army of the Austro-Hungarian empire increased from 246,000 to 425,000. The Japanese army increased from 71,000 to 271,000 and the army of the United States grew from 34,000 to 127,000[10]. Stockpiles of weapons and huge amounts of human resources were ammassed in the event of war, which was soon to break out. The First World War was the first manifestation of an integrated world, the first major demonstration of world globalisation. It was proof of the growing interdependence of countries which did not allow them, apart from rare exceptions, to stay out of the conflict. Practically the entire world was sucked into the conflicts of the First World War. From this moment on the world began to manifest itself as a mutually dependent system developing within a common cycle. I consider this argument to be of particular significance and I would like to develop it further. The First World War linked the majority of the countries within a common conflict but also formed the beginning of a common economic cycle in the development of the industrial nations. What other explanation can be given for the fact that in the 1920's all the major powers witnessed, to a greater or lesser extent, advances in industrial progress? Taking 1913 as a basis (100%) the indices of industrial output growth between 1921 and 1928 were as follows: in the USA from 98 to 154.5%; Germany - from 74.7% to 118.3; Great Britain from 55.1 to 95.1%; France - from 61.4 to 134.4; Japan from 167 - 300%; Italy from 98.4 to 175.2 and the Soviet Union from 23.3 to 143.5[11]. All the developed nations, as though bound by some common umbilical cord, suffered economic collapse at the beginning of the 1930's. Only those nations such as the USSR who had isolated themselves from the world economy escaped the crisis. In 1937 Germany succumbed. This common feature of world economic development also manifested itself after the Second World War in countries with an open market economy. Despite certain divergence in terms of the stages of development, it is clear that after the 1920's the most industrialised nations of the world began to develop in a more mutually dependent manner. Today at the end of the century, this mutual dependence has attained unseen levels as expressed in the indices of the world stock exchanges and in the unconditional mutual interdependence of exchange rates. During the period between the two world wars a new global essence began to develop entirely independently of national governments. This began with the increasing in the level of mutual interdependence between countries and gradually gained strength from the growth in new technology, commerce and finance, transport and communications, culture and science and armaments etc. Nevertheless, the 20th century witnessed only the birth of the global world. The global revolution still only exists as a possibility. It will take many decades to achieve the gradual and problematic development of global structures within the model of the individual nation states. Globalisation is a level of international integration at which interdependence between nations and cultures exists at a planetary level. Such mutual interdependence is not a matter for one or two or a group of nations but between each individual state and the world as a whole, between individual regions of the world, between all nations and cultures simultaneously. If upon the emergence of human civilisation, the processes of integration affected only a number of individual tribes and was localised and during the Middle Ages it took on regional proportions, then since the beginning of the 20th century, it has existed within the framework of mankind as a whole. All countries and peoples are involved in a common system which is governed in a particular way and on the basis of certain principles. This system arose spontaneously, via struggles for domination, wars and violence. One should take into account the difficulties people encounter in attempting to overcome the boundaries of their own environment, religion and nation. At the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century people were little occupied by thoughts of the world as a whole or the priorities of universal human interests. Of course, there were a number of writers and businessmen, Henry Ford was a prime example, who were exceptions to this rule. However, this was not the case for the large mass of the active inhabitants of our planet, politicians and the influential owners of large amounts of wealth. The culture of the Third Civilisation is above all a culture of national thought and behaviour and the 20th century will remain entirely within its dominion notwithstanding the accelerated processes of world integration. Its militant nationalism and militiary blocs created the first models of the global world based on violence and conflicts and on the familiar struggle for national domination which existed in previous civilisations. 3. THE SEARCH FOR A MODEL FOR THE GLOBAL WORLD The first model of the global world was the colonial system. It was a product of the combination of 19th century nationalism and the acceleration of globalisation. In the middle of the 20thcentury and as a consequence of the two world wars this modelcollapsed to give way to a two-bloc political and economic model. T he first model of the global world was colonialism. During the second half of the 19th century the larger nation states, motivated by desires for empire began gradually to conquer andto divide the world. Geo-politically the world became integrated through the colonial system for the first time into a single unity. By achieving pre-eminence in the seas and oceans and possessing the largest fleet in the world, Great Britain after 1815 turned its attention to the rapid conquest of territories from Africa to India and Hong Kong. Over a period of between 50 and 70 years the British managed to create the greatest colonial empire in the world. From 1815-1865, a further 100,000 square miles was added to the territory of the British Empire. During this period France was the only other country to attempt to compete with Great Britain. It was later to be followed by Germany, Belgium, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Denmark, the USA, Russia and Japan. Starting from the basis of the nation state and moving towards globalisation, the great powers of the time began a process of the domination and re-division of the entire world into a unified world system linked through imperial centres. As can be seen from table 1, during the last quarter of the 19th century, the largest colonial powers expanded their territories by almost 200 million head of population and 2.32 million square kilometres of territory. Between 1900 and the beginning of the First World War this rate decreased as a result of the satiation of the "colonial market" Table 1 Size and population of the colonies (1875-1914) State 1875 1900 1914 sq.km. pop. sq.km. pop. sq.km. pop. Great Britain France Holland Belgium Germany USA 22.5 1.0 2.0 2.3 - 1.5 250 6 25 15 - [*] 32.7 11.0 2.0 2.3 2.6 1.9 370 50 38 15 12 9 32.7 11.0 2.0 2.4 2.9 1.0 350 54 45 12 13 10 All the most prestigious, accessible and wealthy colonies have been conquered by the beginning of the twentieth century, resulting in the establishment of the first model of the emergent global world - the colonial world. The colonial system itself gave rise to the second momentous event in the globalisation of the world. Hardly had the system become firmly established when it began to give rise to a series of almost irresolvable world conflicts: the irreconcilable struggle for the re-division of the world and the First World War in which millions lost their lives. The resulting radicalisation of public opinion in Russia, Germany and to a large extent in other parts of the world stimulated the growth in anti-imperialist attitudes and provided an opportunity for the growth of the radical ideas of socialist revolution. These events in themselves gave rise to the second model of the emergent global world - the model of the two systems which began with the October revolution in 1917 and continued until 1989-91. Almost the entire period of the twentieth century passed within conditions of the two opposing systems and the existence of the bi-polar global model. During this period the existence of the two systems was explained basically as the opposition of two ideologies, the ideologies of the rich and the poor, socialism and capitalism. This was also the view of Marxism-Leninism. After the collapse of the Eastern European political regimes the existence of the communist world was presented as an historical mistake, as the consequence of the profound delusions of huge masses of people and the tyranny of dictatorship etc.. This was of the view put forward by Z.Bzezinski[12], but I find these ideas be simplistic and far too easy. In actual fact the processes were much more complex and contradictory. During the period of its mutually dependent development, the world began to subordinate itself to a greater extent to the principle of equilibrium, a principle which is based on the laws of nature. The lack of social equilibrium leads sooner or later to serious conflicts and delayed development. In the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th within the process of accelerating industrialisation and rising imperialism two global imbalances formed: the first - between the rich metropolitan countries and the second - between the rich, ruling classes of the imperialist bourgeoisie and the enormous masses of the poor proletariate. These large imbalances were particularly developed in the poorer countries and the countries who found themselves on the losing side in the First World War. In general terms, in the 19th century and the first 50-60 years of the twentieth century, class differences became much more marked and the ensuing class struggle was a direct consequence. It was these class conflicts and international disproportions which gave rise to the radical revolutions in Russia, Germany and Hungary and a series of other countries between 1917 and 1923. This also goes some way to explaining the development of dominant political doctrines such as in the USSR, Italy, Germany and a number of other countries. To take the example of the USSR, the guiding aim of the Soviet economy in the 1920's and in particular the 1930's was to overcome its backwardness and to undertake a programme of rapid, accelerated industrialisation and to create a stable armaments industry. Its initial ambition to achieve a balance with the rest of the capitalist world and subsequently to overtake it was the dominant strategy of Stalin in the 1930's and 1940's. This economic policy, while defensible, can in no way justify the violence and historical absurdity of totalitarianism. I am merely attempting to explain its roots. All my academic research and my direct observations of the Soviet totalitarian system show that millions of people were aware of the violence of the system but that they accepted it as something inevitable, as a lesser evil than poverty and misery. The illusions and the crimes perpetrated during the regimes of Stalin, Hitler and Mao and the other violent regimes of the 20th century are indisputable. These crimes were stimulated by the vicissitudes of history, by the ambition to create an alternative model of social progress. Are Robespierre or Danton or the British colonisers, or the Russian conquerors of Central Asia any less culpable? The deeply rooted reasons for these crimes need to be explained before they can be resolved. There is no doubt that at the root of Stalin's violence initially against the rural population and subsequently against the whole of Soviet society after 1929 lay his ambition to achieve rapid industrialisation. The strategy of rapid industrialisation and anti-colonial conflicts in a number of less-developed countries should be viewed as a reaction against emergent global imbalances. That which was considered by many to be the struggle of the repressed nations for the freedom of the proletariate was actually a struggle against economic backwardness, against imperialism and the monopolies of most developed nations and the struggle for national supremacy. In the 20th century, the poorer nations had no other option to defend themselves against colonialism other than to concentrate their force and might through powerful state structures. Slogans such as the "welfare of the proletariate", "care for people" were always associated with the power of the state. Poverty always generates Utopias. Communism was one of them. During the first half of the twentieth century the world had continued to develop on the basis of liberal market doctrines and it persisted in being a world of rich and poor peoples, metropolises and colonies and profound class differences. When markets are free but imbalanced, the strong easily swallow up the weak. Such imbalanced historical development allows those countries with more rapid development to become dominant. Sooner or later this was bound to lead to social revolutions. This, I feel, is the explanation for the division of the world into two opposing blocs as an alternative to the existing colonial model. After the two world wars and the economic crisis of 1929-33, the liberal idea underwent a crisis and opened the way for the radicalisation of the world and its division. By 1925, two countries had yielded to "state socialism" - the USSR and Mongolia - with a total population of over 150 million. 25 years later this political system had spread into more than 20 countries and accounted for more than half the population of the world. After the victory over Germany in 1945 the power and the authority of the USSR grew immensely. Under the auspices of its power the national patriotic forces of a number of countries threw off the colonial domination of Britain, France, Belgium, Portugal, Holland and other countries. At the beginning of the 1960's, with certain exceptions the colonial model ceased to exist and was replaced by the two-polar model. At the end of the 1950's the two world systems embraced populations of about 1-1.5 billion people and possessed military parity. Without achieving full economic parity or high levels of productivity, the USSR managed to undermine the monopoly of the USA in strategic military areas. Two basic centres of power became established in the world - Moscow and Washington accompanied by other satellites with varying degrees of power. Since the Second World War the world has witnessed a number of local conflicts. There have been armed struggles in the Near East, North and Equatorial Africa, Indo-China, India and Pakistan, Chile, Bolivia, Cuba and tens of other regions and countries. All these countries were directly or indirectly linked with the two superpowers and their opposition. On the other hand the achievement of nuclear parity between the USSR and the USA in the 1950's brought an end to the trend towards ultra-imperialism[13] and the possibility of the world becoming subordinated to a single world power centre. Beneath the nuclear umbrellas of the two super powers and carefully balanced between them, the countries of Western Europe, Japan and a number of other Asian and Latin American countries achieved great success. I believe the achievement of nuclear parity to be a phenomenon with key significance for world development. Napoleon with his ambitions for an empire from "Paris to India" , Hitler with his "World Order" and Stalin with his aspirations for the "victory of world communism" all longed for a unified world empire. This was also the view of a number of other politicians and thinkers who seeing a trend towards world integration and the expansion of manufacturing came to the conclusion that a future world would be a world of monopolistic unity, a unified manufactory for workers and peasants (Lenin), ultra-imperialism (Kautski), permanent revolution (Trotski) and so on. To this extent the bi-polar model is a higher level of development than the model of colonial empires. On the other hand, the bi-polar model is only a stage in the formation of the global world and the actual peak of the crisis of the Third Civilisation. I defend the thesis that the two bloc system has to be seen as a transitional stage from the point of view of the development of the global world and the transition between the Third and the Fourth Civilisation. Until the end of the 19th century, researchers analysed world changes through the prism of national thinking and the nation state. After 1917 and especially after the Second World War, the main object of research was the two world systems - socialism (communism) and capitalism, their competition and the struggle for domination. This was a reflection of the realities in a world which had overpowered the minds of billions of people. Henceforth, however, any analysis of the structural changes within the world cannot be based on the confrontational bi-polar model. Only the global, civilisation approach is capable of providing the correct response to questions and to reveal the common and, consequently, the local trends of human development. 4. THE COMMON CRISIS AND THE COLLAPSE OF THE THIRD CIVILISATION The 1970's saw the Suez crisis, the increase in the price of oil (1973-5) and the end of the Brent Woods system[14]. Everyone began to speak of the crisis of world capitalism. At the end of the 1980's everyone began to speak of the crisis of world communism. In actual fact, the entire world had been overcome by a profound crisis. T he ideologues and politicians of the two superpowers always maintained that the system of their opponents was in crisis. In the communist countries students attended lectures about the "common crisis of capitalism" while in the West Kremlinologists talked of the "crisis of world communism". In 1960-2 Nikita Krushchev frequently was heard to say that the "collapse of the colonial system is an historical victory over imperialism". In 1989-90 the victory of world capitalims over communism was declared. Was this really the case? I have come to a different conclusion. I believe that the problem cannot be reduced merely to the collapse of one system and the victory of another. In actual fact during the second half of the twentieth century, it was not only the communist system which was in a state of crisis but the whole of the two bloc political system in the world, the entire structure of the Third Civilisation. Industrial technologies, nation states and their alliances, the culture of violence against the individual and nature suffered serious repercussions. What was the world like before the 1980's? There