Talk:History: Difference between revisions

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imported>André Carus
(Reorganization)
imported>Ori Redler
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Shouldn't this entire entry be scrapped and re-conceived from the ground up?  There is no generally recognized 'historical method'.  There are people who think that there is a continuous tradition of historical 'thought' (such as Donald Kelley), but they essentially disregard economic history or other efforts to make history more continuous with the sciences.  [[User:André Carus|André Carus]] 02:50, 18 November 2006 (CST)
Shouldn't this entire entry be scrapped and re-conceived from the ground up?  There is no generally recognized 'historical method'.  There are people who think that there is a continuous tradition of historical 'thought' (such as Donald Kelley), but they essentially disregard economic history or other efforts to make history more continuous with the sciences.  [[User:André Carus|André Carus]] 02:50, 18 November 2006 (CST)
We should, because this is really bad article. I rewrote the opening paragraph to avoid it being re-imported. I'll suggest that a rewrite follow some sort of a plan. E.g.
#(Short) Etymology
#Materials used by historians (types of sources)
#Methods of analysing sources
#Types of historical descriptions (subject matter, scope, holistic and historicist approaches versus subject matter driven, etc.)
#Methods of relying the "narrative" (following a course of events, or following a development of some idea or approach)
#Approaches to valuing historical descriptions
[[User:Ori Redler|Ori Redler]] 10:32, 18 November 2006 (CST)

Revision as of 11:32, 18 November 2006

Are you planning to discuss other methods with the satisfying depth combined with concision you showed for Ibn Khaldun? Or do you propose him as the general model.DavidGoodman 20:56, 2 November 2006 (CST)

Reorganization

Shouldn't this entire entry be scrapped and re-conceived from the ground up? There is no generally recognized 'historical method'. There are people who think that there is a continuous tradition of historical 'thought' (such as Donald Kelley), but they essentially disregard economic history or other efforts to make history more continuous with the sciences. André Carus 02:50, 18 November 2006 (CST)


We should, because this is really bad article. I rewrote the opening paragraph to avoid it being re-imported. I'll suggest that a rewrite follow some sort of a plan. E.g.

  1. (Short) Etymology
  2. Materials used by historians (types of sources)
  3. Methods of analysing sources
  4. Types of historical descriptions (subject matter, scope, holistic and historicist approaches versus subject matter driven, etc.)
  5. Methods of relying the "narrative" (following a course of events, or following a development of some idea or approach)
  6. Approaches to valuing historical descriptions

Ori Redler 10:32, 18 November 2006 (CST)