Chapter 1: The Horizons of Cultures: The Geography of Logoi
Chapter 2: Deconstructing Eurocentrism
Chapter 3: Defining Civilizations
Chapter 4: The Topography of Geosophy
Part II: Theories of Civilizations: Criteria, Concepts, Correspondences
Chapter 5: Proclus
Chapter 6: Joachim de Flore
Chapter 7: Giambattista Vico
Chapter 8: Johann Gottfried Herder
Chapter 9: Friedrich von Schelling
Chapter 10: Georg Hegel
Chapter 11: Nikolai Yakovlevich Danilevsky
Chapter 12: Johann Bachofen
Chapter 13: Friedrich Ratzel
Chapter 14: Halford Mackinder
Chapter 15: Carl Schmitt
Chapter 16: Robert Graebner and Wilhelm Schmidt
Chapter 17: Moritz Lazarus, Wilhelm Wundt, and Alfred Vierkandt
Chapter 18: Franz Boas
Chapter 19: Oswald Spengler
Chapter 20: Richard Thurnwald
Chapter 21: Leo Frobenius
Chapter 22: Herman Wirth
Chapter 23: Marija Gimbutas
Chapter 24: Robert Graves
Chapter 25: Károly Kerényi
Chapter 26: Sigmund Freud
Chapter 27: Carl Gustav Jung
Chapter 28: Johan Huizinga
Chapter 29: René Guénon
Chapter 30: Julius Evola
Chapter 31: Mircea Eliade
Chapter 32: Ioan Culianu
Chapter 33: Georges Dumézil
Chapter 34: Pitirim Sorokin
Chapter 35: Gilbert Durand
Chapter 36: Nikolai Trubetzkoy
Chapter 37: Petr Savitsky
Chapter 38: Lev Gumilev
Chapter 39: Arnold Toynbee
Chapter 40: Fernand Braudel
Chapter 41: Samuel Huntington
Chapter 42: A Common Nomenclature of Basic Terminologies
Part III: Pluriversum: Geosophy and its Zones
Chapter 43: A Nomenclature of Horizons and the Plans of Greater Noomakhia
Chapter 44: The Logos of Europe: A History of Rise and Fall
Chapter 45: The Semitic Horizon
Chapter 46: The Horizons of the Two Americas
Chapter 47: The Eurasian Horizon
Chapter 48: The Iranian Logos
Chapter 49: The Indian Logos
Chapter 50: Chinese Civilization
Chapter 51: Japan and its Logos
Chapter 52: African Horizons
Chapter 53: The Horizons of the Pacific
Conclusion