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  1. The function of general laws in history.Carl Gustav Hempel - 1942 - Journal of Philosophy 39 (2):35-48.
    The classic logical positivist account of historical explanation, putting forward what is variously called the "regularity interpretation" (#Gardiner, The Nature of Historical Explanation), the "covering law model" (#Dray, Laws and Explanation in History), or the "deductive model" (Michael #Scriven, "Truisms as Grounds for Historical Explanations"). See also #Danto, Narration and Knowledge, for further criticisms of the model. Hempel formalizes historical explanation as involving (a) statements of determining (initial and boundary) conditions for the event to be explained, and (b) statements of (...)
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  • Historical Explanation: The Popper-Hempel Theory Reconsidered.Alan Donagan - 1964 - History and Theory 4 (1):3-26.
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  • Historical Explanation: The Problem of 'Covering Laws'.Maurice Mandelbaum - 1961 - History and Theory 1 (3):229-242.
    Laws through which we explain particular events need not be laws which describe uniform sequences of events; they may be laws stating uniform connections between two types of factor contained within a complex event. Hempel's apparent insistence that laws state the conditions invariably accompanying a type of complex event, that the event be an instance of the laws "covering" it, results from the Humean analysis in which causation obtains between types of events and "the cause" means necessary conditions. But historians (...)
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  • New issues in the logic of explanation.Michael Scriven - 1963 - In Sidney Hook (ed.), Philosophy and history. [New York]: New York University Press.
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  • On the Uses of Psychology: Conflict and Conciliation in Benjamin Franklin.Richard L. Bushman - 1966 - History and Theory 5 (3):227-240.
    The difficulties of applying psychology to historiography are considerable, and historians have been reluctant to make the effort. Psychologists seem to work with scanty and dubious evidence and often merely provide new names for familiar facts. Psychology cannot provide a reference point from which men's personalities are automatically diagnosed, but it can enhance the historian's sensitivity to patterns of character. As an extended case study, Franklin's Autobiography exhibits patterns of concern for getting supplies , fear of being hurt in seeking (...)
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