Historical Philosophy
(Redirected from Philosophy of History)
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A Historical Philosophy is a philosophy that examines fundamental questions through analysis of historical development, patterns, and the evolution of human thought across time periods.
- AKA: Philosophy of History, Historical Thought, Temporal Philosophy, Diachronic Philosophy.
- Context:
- It can typically analyze Historical Patterns for causal understanding.
- It can often examine Civilizational Cycles through comparative analysis.
- It can typically evaluate Progress Narratives via empirical evidence.
- It can often critique Historical Determinism through contingency analysis.
- It can range from being a Cyclical Historical Philosophy to being a Linear Historical Philosophy, depending on its temporal conception.
- It can range from being a Materialist Historical Philosophy to being an Idealist Historical Philosophy, depending on its causal emphasis.
- It can range from being a Optimistic Historical Philosophy to being a Pessimistic Historical Philosophy, depending on its progress assessment.
- It can range from being a Western Historical Philosophy to being an Eastern Historical Philosophy, depending on its cultural tradition.
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- Examples:
- Classical Historical Philosophy, such as:
- Modern Historical Philosophy, such as:
- ...
- Counter-Examples:
- Ahistorical Philosophy, which ignores temporal context.
- Presentist Philosophy, which denies historical relevance.
- Eternal Philosophy, which transcends temporal change.
- See: Philosophy, Political Philosophy, Ibn Khaldun, Augustine of Hippo, Historical Analysis, Civilizational Theory, Philosophy of Time.