What is History?Macmillan Press, 1965 |
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Seite 119
... Hegel"; the other, "Chance in History, or Cleopatra's Nose." First I must say a word or two about how they come to be here. Professor Karl Popper, who in the log0's in Vienna wrote a weighty work on the new look in science, recently ...
... Hegel"; the other, "Chance in History, or Cleopatra's Nose." First I must say a word or two about how they come to be here. Professor Karl Popper, who in the log0's in Vienna wrote a weighty work on the new look in science, recently ...
Seite 162
... Hegel, have reflected most deeply on the nature of history have seen in it a synthesis of past and future. Tocqueville, who did not entirely free himself from the theological idiom of his day and gave too narrow content to his absolute ...
... Hegel, have reflected most deeply on the nature of history have seen in it a synthesis of past and future. Tocqueville, who did not entirely free himself from the theological idiom of his day and gave too narrow content to his absolute ...
Seite 181
... Hegel's equivalent for Smith's "hidden hand" was the famous "cunning of reason" which sets men to work to fulfil purposes of which they are not conscious. But Hegel was none the less the philosopher of the French revolution, the first ...
... Hegel's equivalent for Smith's "hidden hand" was the famous "cunning of reason" which sets men to work to fulfil purposes of which they are not conscious. But Hegel was none the less the philosopher of the French revolution, the first ...
Inhalt
The Historian and His Facts | 3 |
Society and the Individual | 36 |
HI History Science and Morality | 70 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
A. J. P. Taylor abstract action Acton belief Bertrand Russell British historians called Cambridge Modern History causes character civilization consciously criterion economic EDWARD HALLETT CARR Empire ence English English-speaking enquiry environment essay facts of history French revolution Freud future happened Hegel Henri Poincare historical facts human behaviour hypothesis ideas individual laws liberal liberty London man's Marx meaning mediaeval Meinecke ment moral judgments Namier Napoleon nature nineteenth century nomic objective objective laws observed outlook Oxford past perhaps period philosophers philosophy of history political prediction present problem Professor Butterfield Professor Popper progress question quoted rational reason rian role Russian revolution scientist sense significant Sir Isaiah Berlin society Soviet Soviet Union speak Stresemann theory things thought tion torian torical tory truth tween understanding University Press values view of history W. A. DWIGGINS Whig words write wrote