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  1. Ideal types and historical explanation.J. W. N. Watkins - 1952 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 3 (9):22-43.
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  • The meaning of `state' in Hegel's philosophy of history.Leon J. Goldstein - 1962 - Philosophical Quarterly 12 (46):60-72.
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  • Historical realism.C. Behan McCullagh - 1980 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 40 (3):420-425.
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  • Collingwood's Theory of Historical Knowing.Leon J. Goldstein - 1970 - History and Theory 9 (1):3-36.
    Collingwood's well-known dicta about history and its practice are not expressions of a perverse idealism but are rooted in reflection on his own work as historian. The problem which informs his writings on history was to make sense of the discipline of history without opening the way to historical skepticism. The early view of his Speculum Mentis, rooted in an external philosophical stance and not in the actual practice of history, was actually skeptical. In his middle years he regarded history (...)
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  • Mr Watkins on the two theses.Leon J. Goldstein - 1959 - British Journal for the Philosophy of Science 10 (39):240-241.
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  • On explanations in history.Arthur C. Danto - 1956 - Philosophy of Science 23 (1):15-30.
    Whether or not history is, or could be, or ought to be a science, depends in part upon how the words “science” and “history” are to be used. But if one of the criteria of a science is an ability to provide explanations of large numbers of events by means of a small number of general laws, it then becomes in part a question of whether or not history does, or can, provide explanations of this sort for the phenomena which (...)
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  • Determinism in history.Ernest Nagel - 1959 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 20 (3):291-317.
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  • Theory in history.Leon J. Goldstein - 1967 - Philosophy of Science 34 (1):23-40.
    Present-day interest in history among philosophers seems largely limited to a debate over the nature of historical explanation among those who for Humean reasons insist that all explanations must rest upon general laws and history cannot be an exception to this, and those who say the historians do explain and since they do not use general laws the Humean claim is obviously mistaken. Like the latter, the present paper takes the explanations of historians seriously, but unlike the latter it is (...)
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  • Impediments to Epistemology in the Philosophy of History.Leon J. Goldstein - 1986 - History and Theory 25 (4):82.
    If history is to be taken seriously as a cognitive - not merely literary - discipline to which considerations of truth or falsity are relevant, it is because of the progress made over the course of centuries in the sharpening of the methodology of the infrastructure of history. By not attending to the way in which the historical past actually emerged in the course of work at the level of the infrastructure, philosophical writers, such as Mandelbaum, Pompa, McCullagh, and Gorman, (...)
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  • Force and the Inverted World in Dialectical Retrospection.Leon J. Goldstein - 1988 - International Studies in Philosophy 20 (3):13-28.
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  • A note on the status of historical reconstructions.Leon J. Goldstein - 1958 - Journal of Philosophy 55 (11):473-479.
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  • The "alleged" futurity of yesterday.Leon J. Goldstein - 1964 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 24 (3):417-420.
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  • Against historical realism.Leon J. Goldstein - 1980 - Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 40 (3):426-429.
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  • The alleged inadequacy of methodological individualism.J. W. N. Watkins - 1958 - Journal of Philosophy 55 (9):390-395.
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  • Evidence and events in history.Leon J. Goldstein - 1962 - Philosophy of Science 29 (2):175-194.
    The first part of the paper distinguishes between a real past which has nothing to do with historical events and an historical past made up of hypothetical events introduced for the purpose of explaining historical evidence. Attention is next paid to those so-called ancillary historical disciplines which study historical evidence, and it is noted that the historical event is brought in to explain the particular constellation of different kinds of historical evidence which are judged to belong together. The problem of (...)
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  • Categories of Historical Understanding.Wolfgang von Leyden - 1984 - History and Theory 23 (1):53-77.
    The first category of historical understanding represents the thesis of historical realism - the existence and temporal priority of the actual past. The second constitutes the doctrine of constructionism -the logical priority of historical knowledge. The third stipulates that the difference between the real past and the historical construction of the past is one of a kind and in its turn logical. The fourth states that any given piece or whole body of historical evidence contains many potential meanings and functions. (...)
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  • The inadequacy of the principle of methodological individualism.Leon J. Goldstein - 1956 - Journal of Philosophy 53 (25):801-813.
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