ABSTRACT

Most interesting of all is the individual unrelated to any group, the man, the girl, or the old woman alone in the city, the person who eats alone, though in company, who lives in a furnished room, who receives no mail, who has no visible occupation, and who spends much time wandering the streets. In history, intellectual debate can so often be a cover for over-simplification, lack of experience, insufficient culture, lack of involvement and of sympathy, and the impetus to compare and to generalize in cases where comparisons and generalizations are either irrelevant or positively misleading. It is possible to write history that is in no way human. Many economic historians and some diplomatic ones have demonstrated how this can be done. It is no doubt a necessary kind of history, as important as any other.