- History of ideas
The history of ideas is a field of
research inhistory that deals with the expression, preservation, and change of humanidea s over time. The history of ideas is a sister-discipline to, or a particular approach within,intellectual history . Work in the history of ideas may involve interdisciplinary research in thehistory of philosophy , thehistory of science , or thehistory of literature . InSweden , the history of ideas has been a distinct university subject since the 1930s, whenJohan Nordström , a scholar of literature, was appointed professor of the new discipline atUppsala University . Today, several universities across the world provide courses in this field, usually as part of a graduate program.The Lovejoy approach
The historian
Arthur O. Lovejoy (1873–1962) coined the phrase "history of ideas" and initiated its systematic studyArthur Lovejoy: "The Great Chain of Being: A Study of the History of an Idea" (1936), ISBN 0-674-36153-9] in the early decades of thetwentieth century . For decades Lovejoy presided over the regular meetings of the "History of Ideas Club" atJohns Hopkins University , where he worked as a professor of history from 1910 to 1939. [Arthur Lovejoy, "Essays in the History of Ideas," ISBN 0-313-20504-3]Aside from his students and colleagues engaged in related projects (such as
René Wellek andLeo Spitzer , with whom Lovejoy engaged in extended debates), scholars such asIsaiah Berlin , [Isaiah Berlin, "Against the Current: Essays in the History of Ideas", ISBN 0-691-09026-2]Michel Foucault , Christopher Hill,J. G. A. Pocock and others have continued to work in a spirit close to that with which Lovejoy pursued the history of ideas. The first chapter/lecture of Lovejoy's book "The Great Chain of Being " lays out a general overview of what he intended to be the program and scope of the study of the history of ideas.Unit-ideas
Lovejoy's history of ideas takes as its basic unit of analysis the unit-idea, or the individual concept. These unit-ideas work as the building-blocks of the history of ideas: though they are relatively unchanged in themselves over the course of time, unit-ideas recombine in new patterns and gain expression in new forms in different historical eras. As Lovejoy saw it, the historian of ideas had the task of identifying such unit-ideas and of describing their historical emergence and recession in new forms and combinations.
Modern work
Quentin Skinner has been influential with his critique of Lovejoy's "unit-idea" methodology. Instead, he proposes a sensitivity to the cultural context of the texts being analysed and the ideas they contained.References
ee also
*
Anthropology
*Great Chain of Being
*Herbert Spencer
*Historiography , other approaches tohistory .
*Idea , and comparesociology of knowledge , theHistory of Consciousness ,conceptual history andintellectual history .
*Isaiah Berlin
*Mark Bevir , author of "The Logic of the History of Ideas" (ISBN 0-521-64034-2)
*James Burke and "The Day the Universe Changed "
*Marjorie Hope Nicolson , A. O. Lovejoy student and colleague (1894-1979)
*Meme
*Robert Boyle
*Peter Watson, author of "Ideas: A history of thought and invention, from fire to Freud" (2005), ISBN 978-0060935641External links
* [http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/DicHist/dict.html "Dictionary of the History of Ideas: Studies of Selected Pivotal Ideas"] . Ed. Philip P. Wiener. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1973-74. (Online edition from the
University of Virginia library's Electronic Text Center.) Studies of selected pivotal ideas. This book also appeared in Chinese- and Japanese-language editions.
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