IchabodPlain
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 24, 2007
- Messages
- 1,252
Maybe this has been brought up before,
Is it just me - or does anyone else bothered by this kind of deterministic, cause and effect look at history? The idea that ONE single event caused another. As far as I've ever been able to reason with anyone who is knowledgeable about history (as and example beyond a someone who is a teacher, I have a friend who is very well-versed in WW1 & WW2 era politics and military history, especially in Germany), no one can back this point. There are always least two or more factors that play into every event in history.
Don't get me wrong, the ToV played a role, but it is not the sole deciding factor.
I wasn't sure whether to put this is the Philosophy sub-forum, but I am more concerned about the simplified, superficial view of history that seems to permeate in both school, and everyday conversations.
Is it just me - or does anyone else bothered by this kind of deterministic, cause and effect look at history? The idea that ONE single event caused another. As far as I've ever been able to reason with anyone who is knowledgeable about history (as and example beyond a someone who is a teacher, I have a friend who is very well-versed in WW1 & WW2 era politics and military history, especially in Germany), no one can back this point. There are always least two or more factors that play into every event in history.
Don't get me wrong, the ToV played a role, but it is not the sole deciding factor.
I wasn't sure whether to put this is the Philosophy sub-forum, but I am more concerned about the simplified, superficial view of history that seems to permeate in both school, and everyday conversations.
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