Cosmopolitanism is an idea that all humans belong to a single community based on shared values and ethics, transcending national boundaries. In the context of modernity, cosmopolitanism emphasizes the interconnectedness of people across the globe and the need for cooperation and understanding in a rapidly changing world. It challenges traditional boundaries and identities, promoting a more inclusive and interconnected view of humanity.
humanity in relation ships
Maria Rovisco has written: 'The Ashgate research companion to cosmopolitanism' -- subject(s): Cosmopolitanism
Garrett Wallace Brown has written: 'The cosmopolitanism reader' -- subject(s): Cosmopolitanism
Roland H. M. Pierik has written: 'Cosmopolitanism in context' -- subject(s): Cosmopolitanism
Marianna Papastephanou has written: 'Thinking differently about cosmopolitanism' -- subject(s): Cosmopolitanism, Political aspects, Globalization
Stan van Hooft has written: 'Caring' -- subject(s): Caring, Ethics 'Questioning cosmopolitanism' -- subject(s): Internationalism, Cosmopolitanism, Congresses
Peter Geschiere has written: 'The perils of belonging' -- subject(s): Cosmopolitanism, Group identity, Ethnicity 'The modernity of witchcraft' -- subject(s): Maka (African people), Social conditions, Politics and government, Religion, Witchcraft 'Village communities and the state' -- subject(s): Politics and government, Maka (African people)
distinguish between modernization and modernity?
You could argue that the Holocaust was the start of the modernity.
The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity was created in 1985.
How can the Renaissance be used as a springboard for defining modernity
Inseparably connected, if you mean by modernity the current state of society.