The history we read, though based on facts, is strictly speaking, not factual at all, but a series of accepted judgments.”
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to discover on the basis of fragmentary evidence the significant things about the past”, noting that “the history we read, though based on facts, is strictly speaking not factual at all, but a series of accepted judgements” (Barraclough, 1955). ... History concerns human actions in the past.
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It is an investigation of the events that occurred in the past, including their cause, timing, and circumstances.
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- It is an investigation into the inescapable changes in historical human affairs and how these changes impact, shape, or decide societal life-patterns.
- History is, or ought to be, an effort to reconsider the past. Studying history enables us to see and comprehend the behaviours of individuals and cultures.
- We may assess war, for instance, even when a country is at peace, by considering the past. We may establish rules or hypotheses about many facets of society using the information that history has to us.
History is the study of the past, especially its inhabitants, cultures, conflicts, and events.
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