An Ethnologist's View of History / An Address Before the Annual Meeting of the New Jersey Historical Society, at Trenton, New Jersey, January 28, 1896
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About This Book
The address frames the proliferation of historical study and asks what the aim of history should be. It reviews three prevailing approaches: history as mere accurate chronicle, history as advocacy or teleologic proof of preexisting beliefs, and history as the exposition of fixed evolutionary laws. It critiques the insufficiency of pure annals and the deductive bias of polemical and deterministic interpretations, urging historians to adopt an inductive, scientific method while also shaping narrative with artistic unity. Ethnological perspective is used to caution against simplistic mechanical evolution and to recommend extracting general laws from collected facts.
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