What is History?Macmillan Press, 1965 |
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Seite 33
... writing go on simultaneously. The writing is added to, subtracted from, re-shaped, cancelled, as I go on reading. The reading is guided and directed and made fruitful by the writing: the more I write, the more I know what I am looking ...
... writing go on simultaneously. The writing is added to, subtracted from, re-shaped, cancelled, as I go on reading. The reading is guided and directed and made fruitful by the writing: the more I write, the more I know what I am looking ...
Seite 53
... writes or fails to write. Geyl, the Dutch historian, in his fascinating monograph translated into English under the title Napoleon: For and Against, shows how the successive judgments of French nineteenth-century historians on Napoleon ...
... writes or fails to write. Geyl, the Dutch historian, in his fascinating monograph translated into English under the title Napoleon: For and Against, shows how the successive judgments of French nineteenth-century historians on Napoleon ...
Seite 181
... writes that men, "in the very act of realizing it, make it the occasion of satisfying their desire, whose import is ... write the arithmetic into Hegel's algebraical equations. * The quotations are from Hegel's Philosophy of History. A ...
... writes that men, "in the very act of realizing it, make it the occasion of satisfying their desire, whose import is ... write the arithmetic into Hegel's algebraical equations. * The quotations are from Hegel's Philosophy of History. A ...
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