Towards a Realist Philosophy of History
By (Author) Adam Timmins
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books/Fortress Academic
21st June 2022
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
901
Hardback
192
Width 159mm, Height 227mm, Spine 21mm
463g
Towards a Realist Philosophy of History argues for the radicalat least in contemporary historical theoryview that historians are by and large successful in their goal of providing accurate knowledge and understanding about the historical past. Adam Timmins provides a philosophical framework that supports this endeavor, as well as highlighting some of the issues with the "strong constructivist" accounts common in contemporary historical theory. Among other things, the book provides a realist construal of colligatory concepts, historiographical reference and the use of narrative, as well as examining the mechanisms of historiographical progress. The work also provides some much-needed criticism of aspects of the strong constructivist position, such as the contemporary adoption of irrealism and the idealist implications of this, that has have yet failed to make their way into the existing literature. The book proves that historical theory has not moved on from the realism-idealism debate and that realism with regards to the products of historiography is still very much a live option.
Adam Timminss book is an immensely important effort to overcome the influence of postmodernist anti-realism in the philosophy of history, typically manifested as the view that historical past did not happen and that it is merely constructed by historians. The book surveys, presents, and refutes arguments in favor of anti-realist positions about historical past and provides a comprehensive theory of historical facts. This rejection of postmodernist anti-realism has important political implications: if historical past did not happen, then past acts of oppression also did not happen, and it becomes impossible to condemn them. In opposition to such views, a realist position, such as the one advocated by Timmins, provides a solid base for a humanist perspective on history.
-- Branko Mitrovic, Norges Teknisk-Naturvitenskapelige UniversitetAt a time when many philosophers of history regard realism, truth, and objectivity as relicts from a precritical past, Adam Timmins undertakes a courageous attempt to sort out how convincing the case against realism is. In polemical, sometimes bitingly ironic prose, he identifies so many argumentative fallacies and blind spots that the reader, even if not fully convinced by all of Timmins objections, will at least be cured from the sloppy habit of assuming that realism is no longer worth defending.
-- Herman Paul, Professor of the History of the Humanities, Leiden UniversityAdam Timmins is an independent scholar. Towards a Realist Philosophy of History is his first monograph.