What Is History? Quotes

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What Is History? What Is History? by Edward Hallett Carr
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What Is History? Quotes Showing 1-16 of 16
“Study the historian before you begin to study the facts.”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“History is the long struggle of man, by exercise of his reason, to understand his environment and to act upon it. But the modern period has broadened the struggle in a revolutionary way. Man now seeks to understand, and act on, not only his environment, but himself; and this has added, so to speak, a new dimension to reason and a new dimension to history.”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“History consists of a corpus ascertained facts. The facts are available to the historian in documents, inscriptions and so on, like fish in the fishmonger's slab. The historian collects them, takes them home, and cooks and serves them in whatever style appeals to him.”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“I am reminded of Housman's remark that 'accuracy is a duty, not a virtue.' To praise a historian for his accuracy is like praising an architect for using well-seasoned timber or properly mixed concrete in his building. It is a necessary condition of his work, but not his essential function.”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“Good historians...have the future in their bones”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“Progress in human affairs, whether in science or in history or in society, has come mainly through the bold readiness of human beings not to confine themselves to seeking piecemeal improvements in the way things are done, but to present fundamental challenges in the name of reason to the current way of doing things and to the avowed or hidden assumptions on which it rests”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“The facts are really not at all like fish on the fishmonger’s slab. They are like fish swimming about in a vast and sometimes inaccessible ocean; and what the historian catches will depend, partly on chance, but mainly on what part of the ocean he chooses to fish in and what tackle he chooses to use – these two factors being, of course, determined by the kind of fish he wants to catch. By and large, the historian will get the kind of facts he wants.”
Edward Hallett Carr, What is History?: The George Macaulay Trevelyan Lectures Delivered in the University of Cambridge January-March 1961
“What is history?, our answer, consciously or unconsciously, reflects our own position in time, and forms part of our answer to the broader question, what view we take of the society in which we live.”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“Aprender acerca del presente a la luz del pasado quiere también decir aprender del pasado a la luz del presente. La función de la historia es la de estimular una mas profunda comprensión tanto del pasado como del presente por su comparación recíproca.”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“Amikor - és ez igen közkedvelt - úgy állítják be, mintha az egyén lázadna a társadalom ellen, a társadalom és az egyén közötti téves antitézist melegítik fel. Teljesen homogén társadalom nem létezik. A társadalom szociális konfliktusok küzdőtere, és azok az egyének, akik szembeszegülnek az adott hatalommal, legalább annyira a társadalom termékei és tükörképei, mint azok, akik fenntartják az adott társadalmat.”
Edward Hallett Carr, What Is History?
“Man’s capacity to rise above his social and historical situation seems to be conditioned by the sensitivity with which he recognizes the extent of his involvement in it.”
E.H. Carr, What Is History?
“The desire to postulate individual genius as the creative force in history is characteristic of the primitive stages of historical consciousness.”
E.H. Carr, What Is History?
“When I was very young, I was suitably impressed to learn that, appearances notwithstanding, the whale is not a fish. Nowadays these questions of classification move me less; and it does not worry me unduly when I am assured that history is not a science. This terminological question is an eccentricity of the English language. In every other European language, the equivalent word to ‘science’ includes history without hesitation.”
E.H. Carr, What Is History?
“[...] the real importance of the Darwinian revolution was that Darwin, completing what Lyell had already begun in geology, brought history into science.”
E.H. Carr, What Is History?
“History is movement; and movement implies comparison.”
E.H. Carr, What Is History?
“The other day I was shocked to come across, I think, the only remark of Bertrand Russell I have ever seen which seemed to me to betray an acute sense of class: ‘There is, on the whole, much less liberty in the world now than there was a hundred years ago.’ I have no measuring-rod for liberty, and do not know how to balance the lesser liberty of few against the greater liberty of many. But on any standard of measurement I can only regard the statement as fantastically untrue.”
E.H. Carr, What Is History?