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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Steven G. Smith (Millsaps College, USA)Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Bloomsbury Academic Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.531kg ISBN: 9781474260329ISBN 10: 1474260322 Pages: 264 Publication Date: 15 December 2016 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Table of ContentsPreface Acknowledgements Introduction 1What Is Historical Meaningfulness? Toward full history: historical sense Toward fullest history: historical meaningfulness Evasions and reductions of history thinking Historical realism in practical evaluation 2How Is History Real? Archetypalism and experientialism How action sharing is real 3How Is History Interesting? Being interested in history and the historical Three modes of historical interest Three openings of historical interest The most interesting new histories, #1: Natural history The most interesting new histories, #2: Feminist history The most interesting new histories, #3: Sports history 4How Is History Important? Historical importance The totalizing and chaotic views of historical mattering: Sartre and Foucault Theses on historical importance 5How Is History Understandable? Historical insight and historical judgment Conditions of insight into shared action The practical continuum as spiritual The game model of the practical continuum Is there such a thing as good historical judgment? The classic historical judgment of Jeremiah The modern historical judgment of Hannah Arendt 6How Can History Be Made? The possibility of making history The movement ideal The problem of historical injustice The problem of totalizing Four modes of history making The universal history maker 7How Can History Have an Aim? Three historical goals: Utopia, Victory, Salvation The best world and bad outcomes Three themes of historical fulfillment: Freedom, Solidarity, Redemption History as sacred Epilogue: Difficult History Notes IndexReviewsThis book offers a startlingly original approach to the question: what are the uses and abuses of history? In clear, clean prose, Smith reveals how history informs the human project of world-making through shared action. The result illuminates the nature of history in surprising and stimulating ways. This is a must read for anyone interested in the nature of history and its role in our collective lives. Brian C. Fay, William Griffin Professor of Philosophy, Wesleyan University, USA Full History is an ambitious and important book. It is philosophy of history in the grand manner, such as we have not seen since the middle decades of the last century. Steven Smith breathes new life into the genre, which, as he demonstrates, has always been less about epistemological questioning about the past than about how to live a historically-informed life in the present, in concert with others. Smith's breathtaking erudition and ethical discernment create a new and urgent dialog with many of the major philosophical approaches to history, including those of Hegel, Sartre, Arendt, and Foucault. This capacious study is thus also a philosophical manifesto whose intuitions and proposals will reverberate for many years to come. Robert Doran, Associate Professor of French and Comparative Literature, University of Rochester, USA This book offers a startlingly original approach to the question: what are the uses and abuses of history? In clear, clean prose, Smith reveals how history informs the human project of world-making through shared action. The result illuminates the nature of history in surprising and stimulating ways. This is a must read for anyone interested in the nature of history and its role in our collective lives. * Brian C. Fay, William Griffin Professor of Philosophy, Wesleyan University, USA * Full History is an ambitious and important book. It is philosophy of history in the grand manner, such as we have not seen since the middle decades of the last century. Steven Smith breathes new life into the genre, which, as he demonstrates, has always been less about epistemological questioning about the past than about how to live a historically-informed life in the present, in concert with others. Smith's breathtaking erudition and ethical discernment create a new and urgent dialog with many of the major philosophical approaches to history, including those of Hegel, Sartre, Arendt, and Foucault. This capacious study is thus also a philosophical manifesto whose intuitions and proposals will reverberate for many years to come. * Robert Doran, Associate Professor of French and Comparative Literature, University of Rochester, USA * Smith's Full History is an ambitious and original attempt to penetrate into the deep connections between the historical past, present and future. It draws on a considerable breadth of historical examples and is informed by reasonableness and balance. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews * Smith’s book is provocative and so broad in its scope that it seems to want to exemplify the idea of full history. It forces us to think about the idea of fullness, of comprehensiveness, and of what the limitations of history actually are. It has much to tell us about historical inquiry and the historical thinking that lies behind it and leads to it. In the idea of shared action, the author has found a topic that deserves the attention he gives it. * History and Theory * This book offers a startlingly original approach to the question: what are the uses and abuses of history? In clear, clean prose, Smith reveals how history informs the human project of world-making through shared action. The result illuminates the nature of history in surprising and stimulating ways. This is a must read for anyone interested in the nature of history and its role in our collective lives. * Brian C. Fay, William Griffin Professor of Philosophy, Wesleyan University, USA * Full History is an ambitious and important book. It is philosophy of history in the grand manner, such as we have not seen since the middle decades of the last century. Steven Smith breathes new life into the genre, which, as he demonstrates, has always been less about epistemological questioning about the past than about how to live a historically-informed life in the present, in concert with others. Smith’s breathtaking erudition and ethical discernment create a new and urgent dialog with many of the major philosophical approaches to history, including those of Hegel, Sartre, Arendt, and Foucault. This capacious study is thus also a philosophical manifesto whose intuitions and proposals will reverberate for many years to come. * Robert Doran, Associate Professor of French and Comparative Literature, University of Rochester, USA * Smith's Full History is an ambitious and original attempt to penetrate into the deep connections between the historical past, present and future. It draws on a considerable breadth of historical examples and is informed by reasonableness and balance. * Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews * Author InformationSteven G. Smith is Jennie Carlisle Golding Professor of Philosophy at Millsaps College, USA and the author of The Concept of the Spiritual (1988), Gender Thinking (1992), Worth Doing (2004), and Appeal and Attitude (2005). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |