Representation : the birth of historical reality from the death of the past / Franklin Rudolf Ankersmit.

Author/creator Ankersmit, F. R. author.
Format Book
PublicationNew York : Columbia University Press, [2024]
Descriptionxiii, 311 pages ; 24 cm.
Subjects

Portion of title Birth of historical reality from the death of the past
SeriesColumbia themes in philosophy
Columbia themes in philosophy. ^A711567
Contents Introduction. A new vindication of historicism -- Premises and/or axioms -- Leibniz and historical representation : the basics -- Metaphysics, individuals, models and the PBF -- Signs, semantics, meaning and relational statements -- Historical knowledge, facts, arguments, maxima and minima -- Conclusion: Non-trivial circularity -- Epilogue. Intensionalism vs. Extensionalism : the historical period (Leibniz) and its enemies (Davidson).
Abstract "The Death of the Past argues that critical problems in the philosophy of history, such as the truth of historical texts, how texts relate to the past that they are about, and the nature of historical explanation, can be successfully investigated if we accept the claim that historical writing is historicist--perspectival (from the standpoint of the historian) rather than purporting to be like an eyewitness account (as in the first-person "presentist" views critiqued by Enzo Traverso). This approach admits all relevant evidence as subject to analysis in order to determine the widest point of view, as opposed to the biased "eyewitness" approach, which observes only partially. The link between the past itself and historical knowledge is radically broken, giving the latter the wisdom of hindsight across a broader temporal field from the events examined up to the present. The truth about the past is only accessible from a later point in time; "the past" itself is not a reality for the historian; it no longer exists. Frank Ankersmit offers a surprising foundation for the historicist notion of history: Leibniz' monadological universe, in which each monad or substance has its own point of view. There is no deeper ontology to which they owe their status--just an infinity of monads and a corresponding infinity of points of view on other monads. So with historical representations, statements about the past that can be either true or false but not depictions of the past itself. In striking contrast to Hayden White's view, Ankersmit insists that historical writing is no less rational than the sciences-- mathematical and scientific writing has its counterpart in the writing of history"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
LCCN 2023050328
ISBN9780231215916
ISBN9780231215909 hardcover
ISBN0231215908 hardcover
ISBN0231215916 trade paperback
ISBNelectronic book

Availability

Library Location Call Number Status Item Actions
Joyner Order on Demand Title Order On Demand ✔ Available Click to order this title