Logic of Historical Explanation

Logic of Historical Explanation
Title Logic of Historical Explanation PDF eBook
Author Clayton Roberts
Publisher Penn State Press
Total Pages 342
Release 2010-11-01
Genre History
ISBN 9780271042992

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In this book the author provides a key to understanding the role of covering laws in historical explanation. He does so by distinguishing between their use at the macro - and micro- levels, a distinction that no other scholar has made. He then sets forth the logic of an explanatory narrative, explores the nature of rational explanation, and distinguishes the logic of historical interpretation from the logic of historical explanation.

The Philosophical Structure of Historical Explanation

The Philosophical Structure of Historical Explanation
Title The Philosophical Structure of Historical Explanation PDF eBook
Author Paul A. Roth
Publisher Northwestern University Press
Total Pages 293
Release 2019-10-15
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 0810140896

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In The Philosophical Structure of Historical Explanation, Paul A. Roth resolves disputes persisting since the nineteenth century about the scientific status of history. He does this by showing why historical explanations must take the form of a narrative, making their logic explicit, and revealing how the rational evaluation of narrative explanation becomes possible. Roth situates narrative explanations within a naturalistic framework and develops a nonrealist (irrealist) metaphysics and epistemology of history—arguing that there exists no one fixed past, but many pasts. The book includes a novel reading of Thomas S. Kuhn’s The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, showing how it offers a narrative explanation of theory change in science. This book will be of interest to researchers in historiography, philosophy of history, philosophy of science, philosophy of social science, and epistemology.

Logics of History

Logics of History
Title Logics of History PDF eBook
Author William H. Sewell Jr.
Publisher University of Chicago Press
Total Pages 425
Release 2009-07-27
Genre Social Science
ISBN 0226749193

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While social scientists and historians have been exchanging ideas for a long time, they have never developed a proper dialogue about social theory. William H. Sewell Jr. observes that on questions of theory the communication has been mostly one way: from social science to history. Logics of History argues that both history and the social sciences have something crucial to offer each other. While historians do not think of themselves as theorists, they know something social scientists do not: how to think about the temporalities of social life. On the other hand, while social scientists’ treatments of temporality are usually clumsy, their theoretical sophistication and penchant for structural accounts of social life could offer much to historians. Renowned for his work at the crossroads of history, sociology, political science, and anthropology, Sewell argues that only by combining a more sophisticated understanding of historical time with a concern for larger theoretical questions can a satisfying social theory emerge. In Logics of History, he reveals the shape such an engagement could take, some of the topics it could illuminate, and how it might affect both sides of the disciplinary divide.

The Logic of History

The Logic of History
Title The Logic of History PDF eBook
Author C. Behan McCullagh
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 223
Release 2004-03
Genre Education
ISBN 1134592949

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The Logic of History defends the practice of history as more reliable than has recently been acknowledged, arguing that historians make their accounts as fair as they can and avoid misleading their readers.

The Logic of the History of Ideas

The Logic of the History of Ideas
Title The Logic of the History of Ideas PDF eBook
Author Mark Bevir
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Total Pages 356
Release 2002-06-20
Genre History
ISBN 9780521016841

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Human cultures generate meanings, and the history of ideas, broadly conceived, is the study of these meanings. An adequate theory of culture must therefore rest on a suitable philosophical enquiry into the nature of the history of ideas. Mark Bevir's book explores the forms of reasoning appropriate to the history of ideas, enhancing our understanding by grappling with central questions such as: What is a meaning? What constitutes objective knowledge of the past? What are beliefs and traditions? How can we explain why people held the beliefs they did? The book ranges widely over issues and theorists associated with post-analytic philosophy, post-modernism, hermeneutics, literary theory, political thought, and social theory.

The Logic of Social Science

The Logic of Social Science
Title The Logic of Social Science PDF eBook
Author James Mahoney
Publisher Princeton University Press
Total Pages 410
Release 2021-08-17
Genre Political Science
ISBN 0691214956

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"Mahoney's starting point is the problem of essentialism in social science. Essentialism--the belief that the members of a category possess hidden properties ("essences") that make them members of the category and that endow them with a certain nature--is appropriate for scientific categories ("atoms", for instance) but not for human ones ("revolutions," for instance). Despite this, much social science research takes place from within an essentialist orientation; those who reject this assumption goes so far in the other direction as to reject the idea of an external reality, independent of human beings, altogether. Mahoney proposes an alternative approach that aspires to bridge this enduring rift in the social sciences between those who take a scientific approach and assume that social science categories correspond to external reality (and thus believe that the methods used in the natural sciences are generally appropriate for the social sciences) and those who take a constructivist approach and believe that because the categories used to understand the social world are humanly-constructed, they cannot possibly follow the science of the natural world. As the name suggests, scientific constructivism brings in aspects of both views and attempts to unite them. Drawing from cognitive science, it focuses on using the rational parts of our brain machinery to overcome the limitations and deeply seated biases (such as essentialism) of our evolved minds. Specifically, Mahoney puts forth a "set-theoretic analysis" that focuses on "sets" of categories as they exist in the mind that are also subject to the mathematical logic of set-theory. He spends the first four chapters of the book establishing the foundations and methods for set-theoretic analysis, the next four chapters looking and how this analysis fits with the existing tools of social science, and the final four chapters focusing on how this approach can be used to study and understand cases"--

Whig Interpretation of History

Whig Interpretation of History
Title Whig Interpretation of History PDF eBook
Author Herbert Butterfield
Publisher W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages 148
Release 1965
Genre History
ISBN 9780393003185

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Five essays on the tendency of modern historians to update other eras and on the need to recapture the concrete life of the past.