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  1. Historicism and the Rise of Historical Geology, Part 1.David Roger Oldroyd - 1979 - History of Science 17 (3):191-213.
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  • Historicism and Critique.Mark Bevir - 2015 - Philosophy of the Social Sciences 45 (2):227-245.
    This paper argues that historicism can provide substantive philosophical grounds for critical theory and various modes of critique. Unlike the developmental historicism that dominated the nineteenth century, we start from a radical historicism tied to nominalism, contingency, and contestability. This radical historicism is compatible with a commitment to truth claims, including the truth of historicism and the truth of particular genealogies and other accounts of the world. Genealogy can be viewed as radical historicism in its critical guise, denaturalizing the ideas (...)
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  • Ernst Troeltsch and the problem of the historical absolute.Michael A. Quigley - 1983 - Heythrop Journal 24 (1):19–37.
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  • Prolegomena to Any Future Historicizing: The Dilthey-Husserl Debate and Why It Matters for Critical Phenomenology.Christopher R. Myers - 2021 - Puncta 4 (2):107-126.
    For more than a century, phenomenology’s relation to history has remained a problem for phenomenological analysis. This can in part be attributed to the circumstances surrounding the beginnings of phenomenology. As Europe moved increasingly toward world war at the turn of the 20th century, a growing consciousness of the historical relativity of all values and knowledge spread throughout the continent, leading Ernst Troeltsch to speak of the “crisis of historicism” (Rand 1964, 504-5). In this same context, Edmund Husserl framed phenomenological (...)
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  • The poverty of rhetoricism: Popper, Mises and the riches of historicism.Keaney Michael - 1997 - History of the Human Sciences 10 (1):1-22.
    The attacks on historicism by radical individualists such as Popper and Mises have had lasting repercussions in the social sciences. Specifically, the term is used to connote deterministic, teleological theories of history, associated with Hegelian notions of destiny and positivist ideas of historical laws. This article argues that historicism is very different in character, in that it essentially amounts to the belief that social science and history are one and the same, whilst emphasizing the separate epis temology of natural science. (...)
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