The Idea of HistoryOxford University Press, 1956 - 339 Seiten "The Idea of History is the best-known work of the great Oxford philosopher, historian, and archaeologist R.G. Collingwood. This important work examines how the idea of history has evolved from the time of Herodotus to the twentieth century, and offers Collingwood's own view of what history is. This revised edition has a substantial new introduction which discusses how scholars have responded to Collingwood's classic over the last fifty years."--Publisher's site. |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-3 von 10
Seite 289
... re - enacted in another's . But this does not prove the possibility of history . For that , we must be able not only to re- enact another's thought but also to know that the thought we are re - enacting is his . But so far as we re - enact ...
... re - enacted in another's . But this does not prove the possibility of history . For that , we must be able not only to re- enact another's thought but also to know that the thought we are re - enacting is his . But so far as we re - enact ...
Seite 293
... re- enacted , perhaps in order that , doing it over again under my own critical inspection , I may detect in it false steps of which critics have accused me . In thus re - thinking my past thought I am not merely remembering it . I am ...
... re- enacted , perhaps in order that , doing it over again under my own critical inspection , I may detect in it false steps of which critics have accused me . In thus re - thinking my past thought I am not merely remembering it . I am ...
Seite 302
... re - enacted in the thinking about it . In so far as we think about its particular details , we are remembering experiences of our own or entering with sym- pathy and imagination into those of others ; but in such cases we do not re - enact ...
... re - enacted in the thinking about it . In so far as we think about its particular details , we are remembering experiences of our own or entering with sym- pathy and imagination into those of others ; but in such cases we do not re - enact ...
Inhalt
The Philosophy of History | 1 |
Historys Nature Object Method and Value | 7 |
GRECOROMAN HISTORIOGRAPHY | 14 |
9 weitere Abschnitte werden nicht angezeigt.
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
act of thought activity actually answer authorities become believe called century character civilization Collingwood conceived conception of history consciousness construct critical Croce Descartes discover distinction doctrine eighteenth Essay evidence example existence Fichte Greek happened Hegel Herodotus historian historical facts historical knowledge historical method historical process historical thinking historical thought historiography human nature idea of history immediate experience implies individual judgement Kant kind laws living Livy logical means ment merely metaphysical mind modern moral natural process natural science never object particular past peculiar person philo philosophy of history Plato point of view political Polybius positivism positivistic possible present principle problem progress question R. G. COLLINGWOOD rational re-enacted reality reason relation Roman scepticism scientific history scientist scissors-and-paste history sense society sophy spirit statements Tacitus testimony theory things thinker Thucydides tion true truth understand universal Vico Voltaire