Why history of ideas at all?

History of European Ideas 28 (1):33-41 (2002)
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Abstract

This article suggests that the enterprise of Mark Bevir's book (The Logic of the History of Ideas, Cambridge, 1999), is the reverse of what his title implies. Bevir seeks not to delineate the peculiar logic of a specialised subfield of history called the ‘history of ideas’, but rather the logic which underlies historical pursuit considered in general as the ‘explanation of belief’. If this is so, then the relationship between belief, meaning, and speech act in intellectual texts, and the task and method of the intellectual historian, must be reinterpreted along lines closer to those of Quentin Skinner than Bevir would allow. Indeed, Bevir's criticism of Skinner, which hinges on his own account of malapropism, is shown here to fail. The article concludes with brief reflections on the purpose and nature of studying the ‘history of ideas’.

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Melissa Lane
Princeton University

References found in this work

An autobiography.R. G. Collingwood - 1939 - New York, etc.]: Oxford University Press.
Saint Foucault: towards a gay hagiography.David M. Halperin - 1995 - New York: Oxford University Press.
The Logic of the History of Ideas.Mark Bevir - 1999 - Cambridge University Press.
The Logic of the History of Ideas.Mark Bevir - 2001 - Mind 110 (437):163-168.

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