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53 - Method in the Historical Sciences

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 October 2009

Neil Gross
Affiliation:
Harvard University, Massachusetts
Robert Alun Jones
Affiliation:
University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign
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Summary

The goal of history is to recount the past and return it to life. Where philosophy and the positive sciences study laws in the abstract, the aim of history is to show how laws play out in particular times and places. The other sciences try to draw out the resemblances between things, but history is more concerned with highlighting their differences. History shows how little two periods of time might resemble one another. Why does history focus on the particular? History's goal, as we've said, is to bring the past back to life, and what is general and abstract is dead. Life lies in the particular. Having analyzed the difference between two periods, however, history must then explain how one developed out of the other.

The material of history is furnished by three sources – each of them a form of testimony. These are legends, monuments, and documents.

  1. Legends. Legends are stories that are passed down orally – typically within a single family. Yet stories might still be considered legends if they're written down, for while written stories aren't recounted by eyewitnesses, they remain legends. Their only proof lies in the oral tales on which they're based.

  2. […]

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Information
Durkheim's Philosophy Lectures
Notes from the Lycée de Sens Course, 1883–1884
, pp. 218 - 220
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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