Action as History
The Historical Thought of R.G. Collingwood
Stein Helgeby
R.G. Collingwood's philosophy of history reflected both his historical
practices and his moral philosophy. Reflection on historical practice
provided Collingwood with a theory of knowledge; his moral philosophy
provided a theory of the object of history. Moral philosophy animated
Collingwood's philosophy of history with a purpose: the philosophy of
history was to provide the grounds for a rational faith in the
possibility of solving human problems. The relevance of Collingwood's
thought to contemporary understandings of history and action lies in his
desire to restore and deepen modern faith in reason, progress, civility
and the malleability of human institutions. This study shows how
Collingwood's concepts of action and history developed together, and how
they illuminate his understanding of modern historical consciousness and
civilization.
Table of Contents
Activity and Philosophy
The World as Process
Thought and Logic
The Logic of Question and Answer
Moral Philosophy and History
Duty and Individuality
The Historical Object
Knowing the Historical Object
Historical Self-Consciousness
Historical Civilisation
Bibliography of works cited in the text
Index
· ISBN 0-907845-57-6 · Published February 2004 by Imprint Academic · Cloth · 250 pages · $49.90 ·
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