Essays in the Philosophy of HistoryUniversity of Texas Press, 1965 - 160 Seiten |
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Seite 37
... period of history the more clearly one sees it as a whole whose parts mutually condition one another , the antecedents being necessary if the consequents are to exist , and the consequents necessary if the antecedents are to be ...
... period of history the more clearly one sees it as a whole whose parts mutually condition one another , the antecedents being necessary if the consequents are to exist , and the consequents necessary if the antecedents are to be ...
Seite 88
... period with which we are tolerably acquainted , each period which we understand well enough to appreciate the problems and motives of its agents , stands out as something luminous , intelligible , rational , and therefore admirable ...
... period with which we are tolerably acquainted , each period which we understand well enough to appreciate the problems and motives of its agents , stands out as something luminous , intelligible , rational , and therefore admirable ...
Seite 112
... period of darkness and barbarism after all , but a period of remarkable progress and achievement . This discovery was crucial for the theory of progress ; for it was now possible to say that the whole of recorded history revealed an ...
... period of darkness and barbarism after all , but a period of remarkable progress and achievement . This discovery was crucial for the theory of progress ; for it was now possible to say that the whole of recorded history revealed an ...
Inhalt
Croces Philosophy of History | 3 |
Are History and Science Different Kinds | 23 |
V3 The Nature and Aims of a Philosophy of History | 34 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abstract act of thought actual ancient annals answer architecture Aristotelian Society assert attempt battle of Hastings called century classical Collingwood conception critical Croce culture discover distinction doubt dualism egocentric predicament error essays evidence exist fundamental generalisation Gothic happened Hegel historian Historical Cycles historical events historical fact historical knowledge historical research historical scepticism historical thinking historical thought human Ibid Idea of History ideal imagination individual fact interpretation Julius Caesar kind live logic Magian means ment merely mind modern monotheism naturalistic never object Oswald Spengler Oxford particular past perception period phase philosophy of history Plato plot point of view political present principle problem progress question R. G. Collingwood recognised Roman Roman Britain scientific scientist sense simply sources Spengler statement Theory of Historical things tion torian torical tory transcendent transcendent theory true truth understand universal history Vico view of history whole wholly world of fact
Verweise auf dieses Buch
The Useful Cobbler: Edmund Burke and the Politics of Progress James Conniff Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1994 |