ABSTRACT

This treatise of historical methodology, originally published in 1950 is based upon a liberal conception of history which excludes no narrator of past events from the ranks of historians. It defines history as the accurate story which preserves the memory of the past experiences of human societies. The functionof history determines its method and provides the answer to the question: how secure is our knowledge of the past? In the author’s view, history is empirical and its results are for ever provisional. The relative merits of dogmatism and scepticism are examined and several interpretations among English historians are scrutinized.

part |74 pages

What is History?

chapter |20 pages

The Story that must be told

chapter |46 pages

Nothing but a Story

chapter |6 pages

The Past Itself?

part |81 pages

The Detection of Events

chapter |19 pages

Events and their Traces

chapter |13 pages

Detecting the Traces

chapter |9 pages

From Trace to Event

chapter |11 pages

Our Knowledge of Events

part |90 pages

Telling the Story

chapter |10 pages

Relevance and Serialization

chapter |16 pages

Human Behaviour

chapter |23 pages

The “Laws” of History

chapter |5 pages

History as an Art

chapter |8 pages

Historians