objectivity in history
history basics 101
history basics 102
objectivity trivia craze
100

ethical standards of history writing 

if the historian has observed all ethical standards of history writing 

100

what is there instead of truth in history ..

truthfulness- an honest attempt of the historian to stay as close as possible to what they believe is the truth 

100

perspective 

a point of view that has a defined vantage point 
100

correspondance to facts ( problems) 

facts are theory laden 

already have elements of interpretations 

-history = not neutral trivia but causation and significance 

200

objectively existing phenomena in history 

must have: the fact that is fact that is with on perspective/ observable and or registered objectively 

"trivia" in history

200

theory-laden

historical facts are statements about the past that already contain an element of interpretation in them

200

opinion 

a point of view with no definition of a vantage point

300

rival interpretations (six criteria) 

-an "objective fact" in history = an interpretation we currently find more acceptable than existing rival interpretations 

- better theory comes we abandon old theory and replace it 

300

historical interpretation

the subjectivity that comes with different interpretations of history 

-allows us to understand the past rather than having a long list of trivia

300
heteroglossia

creative of co-existence of varying & conflicting perspectives 

300

truth,perspecitve, & bias in heteroglossia

no truth only dialogue of perspectives 

truth requires many incommensurable perspectives no singleton's truth 

truth = dialogue of multiple perspectives on equal footing 

bias= perspectives 

400

correspondence to facts 

"true to facts" 

if historical interpretations correspond to known facts = seen as objective facts 

400

incommensurability of facts

as a paradigm shifts, facts also change. 

facts can't be fully relied on since facts are not fixed 

400

cons & pros of ethical standards of history writing 

cons: historian can lie/ not easy to tell if the historian was truly following ethical code 

implicit and explicit bias 

pros: no theory laden facts 

intentions of historians

500

what are the six criteria with a short summary of each one

accuracy: facts support the interpretation 

comprehensiveness: wide range of facts with few exceptions 

openness: clearly formulated claims that invite criticism 

progressiveness: resounds to criticism positively 

fruitfulness: revisions enable new perspectives & reinterpretations of existing history 

500

elements of historical interpretation

selecting evidence 

inferring causal claims 

identifying historical significance 

(HEC)

500

ethical standards of history writing by who and what are they?

Arthur Assis

-not present something untrue as true

avoid partiality lead them to distort truth 

-not omit inconvenient facts from their accounting of the past 

-tell what they believe to be the truth at all times 

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