‘It would be a dull reader that failed to be stimulated either by the questions it raises or by the answers it gives to all sorts of questions that one would never have thought of asking’
Noel Malcolm, Sunday Telegraph
‘In Ideas: A History from Fire to Freud, Watson gives us an astonishing overview of human intellectual development . . . For him, human thought develops as much in response to changes in the natural environment – such as shifts in climate and the appearance of new diseases – as from any internal dynamism of its own. This overarching perspective informs and unifies the book, and the result is a masterpiece of historical writing’
John Gray, New Statesman
‘This is a grand book . . . The history of ideas deserves treatment on this scale’
Felipe Fernández-Armesto, Evening Standard
‘A book like this one is to be highly valued and thoroughly read. Watson is an authoritative but unintrusive guide, gently pointing towards where the future of ideas may go, namely to the unravelling of the misconception of the “inner” self’
Glasgow Herald
‘This is a magnificently constructed book, so well indexed that it will be a valuable reference resource for years . . . Ideas is as remarkable an achievement as the progress it documents’
Brian Morton, Sunday Herald
‘Watson transmits tricky things in a palatable way’
Harry Mount, Spectator
‘Is it naïf of me to be extremely impressed, and often educated, by this cursive encyclopaedia of the growth of human genius? Watson’s book weighs a ton, but is easy to read. Anyone who has nothing to learn from it must be graced with omniscience’
Frederic Raphael, TLS Books of the Year
‘Ambitious’
New York Times
‘As one reads this thought-provoking book . . . one cannot help being impressed by so comprehensive, incisive, and stimulating a guide . . . this hugely readable, information-packed tome is better than a bargain’
Christian Science Monitor
‘It’s all here, intellectual history on a grand and gaudy scale’
Houston Chronicle
‘Watson enfolds changing conceptions of the objecive, material world, and of the subjective world of the human psyche in a confident, accessible presentation’
American Library Association