What is History?: The George Macaulay Trevelyan Lectures Delivered in the University of Cambridge January-March 1961Macmillan, 1986 - 154 Seiten |
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Seite xxxix
... become increasingly unfashionable . Descent into the depths of despair has sometimes been a trifle premature : ' Karl Kraus celebrated the collapse of the Austro - Hungarian Empire with a dramatic extravaganza called The Last Days of ...
... become increasingly unfashionable . Descent into the depths of despair has sometimes been a trifle premature : ' Karl Kraus celebrated the collapse of the Austro - Hungarian Empire with a dramatic extravaganza called The Last Days of ...
Seite 60
... become the unconscious apologist of a static society . Sociology , if it is to become a fruitful field of study , must , like history , concern itself with the relation between the unique and the general . But it must also become ...
... become the unconscious apologist of a static society . Sociology , if it is to become a fruitful field of study , must , like history , concern itself with the relation between the unique and the general . But it must also become ...
Seite 130
... become fully conscious of the world around him and of its laws . They were no longer the mysterious decrees of an inscrutable provi- dence , but laws accessible to reason . But they were laws to which man was subject , and not laws of ...
... become fully conscious of the world around him and of its laws . They were no longer the mysterious decrees of an inscrutable provi- dence , but laws accessible to reason . But they were laws to which man was subject , and not laws of ...
Inhalt
Introductory Note | ix |
Notes towards a Second | xvii |
xi | xlvi |
Urheberrecht | |
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What is History?: The George Macaulay Trevelyan Lectures Delivered in the ... Edward Hallett Carr Keine Leseprobe verfügbar - 1990 |
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A. J. P. Taylor A. L. Rowse abstract accident in history action advance become believe British historians Butterfield called Cambridge Modern History Carr Carr's causes century character civilization conception consciously criterion cult E. H. CARR economic Empire empiricism English enquiry environment essay facts of history French revolution Freud future Gibbon happened Hegel historical facts hypothesis ideas individual intellectuals J. B. Bury laws lecture Lenin liberal Marx Marxism meaning mediaeval Meinecke moral judgments Namier Napoleon nature nineteenth nineteenth-century objective observed past perhaps period philosophy of history political prediction present problem Professor Popper progress question quoted rational reason remark role Russian revolution scientific scientist sense significant Sir Isaiah Berlin social sciences society sociology Soviet speak Stalin Stresemann T. S. Eliot theory things thought tion unconscious understanding universal values view of history western words write wrote
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