Book Description
Five essays on the tendency of modern historians to update other eras and on the need to recapture the concrete life of the past.
Author : Herbert Butterfield
Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company
Page : 148 pages
File Size : 24,28 MB
Release : 1965
Category : History
ISBN : 9780393003185
Five essays on the tendency of modern historians to update other eras and on the need to recapture the concrete life of the past.
Author : Herbert Butterfield
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 255 pages
File Size : 22,52 MB
Release : 2016-03-31
Category : History
ISBN : 1317284380
A distillation of the thought and research to which Herbert Butterfield devoted the last twenty years of his life to, this book, originally published in 1981, traces how differently people understood the relevance of their past and its connection with their religion. It examines ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia; the political perceptiveness of the Hittites; the Jewish sense of God in history, of promise and fulfilment; the classical achievement of scientific history; and the unique Chinese tradition of historical writing. The author explains the problems of the early Christians in relating their traditions of Jesus to their life and faith and the emergence, when Christianity became the religion of the Roman Empire, of a new historical understanding. The book then charts the gradual growth of a sceptical approach to recorded authority in Islam and Western Europe, the reconstruction of the past by deductive analysis of the surviving evidence and the secularisation of the eighteenth century.
Author : Herbert Butterfield
Publisher : CUP Archive
Page : 164 pages
File Size : 46,45 MB
Release : 1944
Category : Great Britain
ISBN :
Author : Geoffrey B. Riddehough
Publisher :
Page : 16 pages
File Size : 33,1 MB
Release : 1926
Category : Canadian poetry
ISBN :
Author : Kenneth McIntyre
Publisher : Open Road Media
Page : 244 pages
File Size : 30,34 MB
Release : 2014-04-08
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 1497636310
“The most original historian of his generation” That is how the celebrated British academic Noel Annan described Herbert Butterfield (1900–1979), a profound and prolific writer who made important contributions as both a public and academic historian. In this authoritative and accessible intellectual biography, Kenneth B. McIntyre explores the extraordinary range of Butterfield’s work. He shows why the small book The Whig Interpretation of History (1931) achieved such large influence; Butterfield, he demonstrates, has profoundly shaped American and European historiography by highlighting the distortions that occur when historians interpret the past merely as steps along the way toward the glorious present. But McIntyre delves much deeper, examining everything from Butterfield’s lectures on history, historiography, and Christianity, to his warnings about the dangers of hubris in international affairs, to his essays on the origins of modern science, which basically created the modern discipline of the history of science. This latest volume in ISI Books’ acclaimed Library of Modern Thinkers helps us understand a prescient and insightful thinker who challenged dominant currents in history, historiography, international relations, and politics.
Author : Michael Bentley
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 399 pages
File Size : 10,12 MB
Release : 2011-04-21
Category : History
ISBN : 1139502859
Once recalled only for The Whig Interpretation of History (1931) and Christianity and History (1949), Sir Herbert Butterfield's contribution to western culture has undergone an astonishing revaluation over the past twenty years. What has been left out of this reappraisal is the man himself. Yet the force of Butterfield's writings is weakened without some knowledge of the man behind them: his temperament, contexts and personal torments. Previous authors have been unable to supply a rounded portrait for lack of available material, particularly a dearth of sources for the crucial period before the outbreak of war in 1939. Michael Bentley's original, startling 2011 biography draws on sources never seen before. They enable him to present a new Butterfield, one deeply troubled by self-doubt, driven by an urgent sexuality and plagued by an unending tension between history, science and God in a mind as hard and cynical as it was loving and charitable.
Author : Herbert Butterfield
Publisher : CUP Archive
Page : 270 pages
File Size : 44,8 MB
Release : 1960
Category : Historiography
ISBN :
Author : Hendrikus Berkhof
Publisher : Wipf and Stock Publishers
Page : 225 pages
File Size : 14,32 MB
Release : 2004-04-02
Category : Religion
ISBN : 1592446388
The core of the Bible, Berkhof argues, is the belief that the Kingdom of God is coming with power. This is the belief that the cross and resurrection are an analogy of the Christ-Event which is being realized throughout the world. Berkhof addresses non-theologians as well as fellow scholars. He is sure that the message of the Church is able to liberate and humanize.
Author : K. Sewell
Publisher : Springer
Page : 290 pages
File Size : 19,47 MB
Release : 2005-01-13
Category : History
ISBN : 0230000932
This book examines successive stages in the development of the thought of Sir Herbert Butterfield in relation to fundamental issues in the science of history. In a carefully nuanced way it lays bare the unspoken motivations and hidden tensions in Butterfield's debate with himself and with a host of contemporary historians in the period between 1924-79.
Author : Christopher R. Rossi
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 283 pages
File Size : 14,34 MB
Release : 2019-03-25
Category : Law
ISBN : 9004379517
International law’s turn to history in the Americas receives invigorated refreshment with Christopher Rossi’s adaptation of the insightful and inter-disciplinary teachings of the English School and Cambridge contextualists to problems of hemispheric methodology and historiography. Rossi sheds new light on abridgments of history and the propensity to construct and legitimize whiggish understandings of international law based on simplified tropes of liberal and postcolonial treatments of the Monroe Doctrine. Central to his story is the retelling of the Monroe Doctrine by its supreme early twentieth century interlocutor, Elihu Root and other like-minded internationalists. Rossi’s revival of whiggish international law cautions against the contemporary tendency to re-read history with both eyes cast on the ideological present as a justification for misperceived historical sequencing.