Great Books of the Western World is a series of books originally published in the United States in 1952, by Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc., to present the great books in a 54-volume set.
The original editors had three criteria for including a book in the series drawn from Western Civilization: the book must have been relevant to contemporary matters, and not only important in its historical context; it must be rewarding to re-read repeatedly with respect to liberal education; and it must be a part of "the great conversation about the great ideas", relevant to at least 25 of the 102 "Great Ideas" as identified by the editor of the series's comprehensive index, what they dubbed the "Syntopicon", to which they belonged. The books were not chosen on the basis of ethnic and cultural inclusiveness, (historical influence being seen as sufficient by itself to be included), nor on whether the editors agreed with the views expressed by the authors.
A second edition was published in 1990 in 60 volumes. Some translations were updated, some works were removed, and there were significant additions from the 20th century located in six new, separate volumes.
The project for the Great Books of the Western World began at the University of Chicago, where the president, Robert Hutchins, collaborated with Mortimer Adler to develop a course there of a type which had been originated by John Erskine at Columbia University in 1921 with the innovation of a "round table"-type approach to reading and discussing great books among professors and undergraduates.—generally aimed at businessmen. The purposes they had in mind were for filling the gaps in their liberal education (notably including Hutchins' own self-confessed gaps) and to render the reader as an intellectually-rounded man or woman familiar with the Great Books of the Western canon and knowledgeable of the Great Ideas visited in the "Great Conversation" over the course of three millennia.
From Wikipedia "Great Books of the Western World"
Vol. 1: The Great Conversation
Vol. 2: The Great Ideas I
Vol. 3: The Great Ideas II
Vol. 4: Homer
Vol. 5: Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Aristophanes
Vol. 6: Herodotus, Thucydides
Vol. 7: Plato
Vol. 8: Aristotle I
Vol. 9: Aristotle II
Vol. 10: Hippocrates, Galen
Vol. 11: Euclid, Archimedes, Apollonius, Nicomachus
Vol. 12: Lucretius, Epictetus, Marcus Aurelius
Vol. 13: Virgil
Vol. 14: Plutarch
Vol. 15: Tacitus
Vol. 16: Ptolemy, Copernicus, Kepler
Vol. 17: Plotinus
Vol. 18: Augustine
Vol. 19: Thomas Aquinas I
Vol. 20: Thomas Aquinas II
Vol. 21: Dante
Vol. 22: Chaucer
Vol. 23: Machiavelli, Hobbes
Vol. 24: Rabelais
Vol. 25: Montaigne
Vol. 26: Shakespeare I
Vol. 27: Shakespeare II
Vol. 28: Gilbert, Galileo, Harvey
Vol. 29: Cervantes
Vol. 30: Francis Bacon
Vol. 31: Descartes, Spinoza
Vol. 32: Milton
Vol. 33: Pascal
Vol. 34: Newton, Huygens
Vol. 35: Locke, Berkeley, Hume
Vol. 36: Swift, Sterne
Vol. 37: Fielding
Vol. 38: Montesquieu, Rousseau
Vol. 39: Adam Smith
Vol. 40: Gibbon I
Vol. 41: Gibbon II
Vol. 42: Kant
Vol. 43: American State Papers, The Federalist, J. S. Mill
Vol. 44: Boswell
Vol. 45: Lavoisier, Fourier, Faraday
Vol. 46: Hegel
Vol. 47: Goethe
Vol. 48: Melville
Vol. 49: Darwin
Vol. 50: Marx
Vol. 51: Tolstoy
Vol. 52: Dostoevsky
Vol. 53: William James
Vol. 54: Freud