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Number of results: 12
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Abstract

The category of “Supreme Peace” (taiping) is one of the core concepts of Chinese historical thinking. The following article analyses the development of this idea from its earliest Daoist and Confucian articulations up to Gong Zizhen, at the threshold of the Taiping Rebellion. It is shown that the evolution of the Chinese philosophy of history could to some extent be observed through the prism of the transformations of the concept of taiping. Importantly, the paper argues that it was the notion of Supreme Peace itself that transformed Chinese thought into openly linear and progressive positions and therefore opened it up for a constructive and critical engagement with modern Western historical thinking.
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Bibliography

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Borei, Dorothy. Decline and Reform: A Study of the Statecraft Essays of Kung Tzu‑chen. PhD thesis. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1977.
Brusadelli, Federico. Confucian Concord. Reform, Utopia, and Global Teleology in Kang Youwei’s Datong Shu. Leiden: Brill, 2020.
Chen Guying. The Philosophy of Life. A New Reading of the Zhuangzi. Leiden: Brill, 2016.
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Authors and Affiliations

Dawid Rogacz
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
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Abstract

Jolanta Kolbuszewska: Some words about the most recent russian textbook of theory and methodology of history. The article is a presentation of two russian textbook published in Moskwa.
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Authors and Affiliations

Jolanta Kolbuszewska
ORCID: ORCID
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Abstract

The article is a review of the book: Koneczny. Teoria cywilizacji edited by Jan Skoczyński.
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Authors and Affiliations

Jolanta Kolbuszewska
ORCID: ORCID
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Abstract

In this interview, Kalle Pihlainen discusses the challenges which academic historical writing meets from other ways of using history. The proliferation of these contexts seems to offer numerous new opportunities, but they need to be responded to with advance theoretical reflec-tion. It is important to not fall under the illusion of direct access to reality (historical reality included). Hence, mastery of the constructivist perspective is still needed for doing reliable historical research and theoretical reflection on history. Representation still proves to be one of the most important questions. Pihlainen stands firmly for the narrativist philosophy of history, although one of his main concerns are materiality and embodiment.
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Authors and Affiliations

Tomasz Wiśniewski
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
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Abstract

This paper discusses particular traits of historical thinking, including the role of the historian’s mentality in the perception of history.

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Authors and Affiliations

Maciej Dymkowski
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Abstract

In the paper I try to demonstrate that interactive concept of metaphor, in particular, that proposed by Ricoeur – contrary to what Wrzosek preaches – has a very limited use in the study of thought processes leading to the formulation of the metaphors used by the science.
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Authors and Affiliations

Artur Dobosz
1

  1. Politechnika Poznańska (emeritus)
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Abstract

The horror fiction of the Romantic Age differs considerably from its contemporary descendants. While generally associated with scary entertainment (‘playing with fear’), the Romantic Gothic often enough crossed the line to explore the depths of genuine epistemological, existential or political fears. This would not have been possible without developing its own poetics which drew its strength from a variety of sources. One of them was the speculative philosophy of history in its pessimistic and optimistic variants. They both fed the sense of horror and its literary transpositions. Moreover, they formed a positive feedback loop: anxiety over the course of history led to the use of the devices and registers of the poetics of horror, which in turn led to the amplification of the effects of the historical vision on the reader.
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Authors and Affiliations

Kamil Barski
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Wydział Filologii Polskiej i Klasycznej, Uniwersytet im. Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu (Szkoła Doktorska Nauk o Języku i Literaturze)
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Abstract

In this interview, Professor Estêvão de Rezende Martins, an emeritus professor at the University of Brasilia, discusses his intellectual journey and research interests in the theory, philosophy, and methodology of history and historiography. The conversation delves into the development of historical thinking and consciousness, exploring how human existence is inherently historical and how individuals relate to their experiences through cognitive operations and historical culture. Moreover, the interview explores the evolution of the theory of history in Brazil, emphasising the shift from the speculative reflections of the philosophy of history to the meth-odological rigour of the theory of history or epistemology of history. The role of academic historiography in the face of contemporary challenges, such as the recognition of non‑human or post‑human planetary agencies, is also addressed. Martins discusses the diversification of his-toriography and its autonomy in exploring previously neglected topics, along with the need for historical education to empower individuals to think independently and critically in our border-less, globalised world. Ultimately, the interview sheds light on the ongoing theoretical experi-mentation in the field of history and the potential impact on historiographical practice in the future.
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Authors and Affiliations

Hugo R. Merlo
1
ORCID: ORCID

  1. Uniwersytet Adama Mickiewicza w Poznaniu
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Abstract

Analytic philosophy is sometimes understood in opposition to continental tradition. In this article, I would like to show that a Lviv‑Warsaw School shared many fundamental traits with analytic orientation. In afterwar Poland, this tradition clashed with the dialectical materialism that lacks strong scientific tradition but had the full support of the communist party. This situation produced a unique scenario in which the methodology of science could strive as a mainstream area. A crucial role was attributed to the theory of history.
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Authors and Affiliations

Piotr Kowalewski Jahromi
1

  1. Silesian University, Katowice
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Abstract

The Author presents philosophical commentaries to the Polish translation of Wilhelm Dilthey's Formation ofthe Historical World in the Humanities.
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Authors and Affiliations

Izabela Szyroka
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Abstract

The author presents main tendencies in the Polish republicanism of the 18th century from the perspective of its philosophy of history and philosophy of politics presented by Dunin-Karwicki. The author tries to make a critical comparison of two contradictory interpretations of the reality understood as the creation of God or the people and the infl uences of these two interpretations on social changes and differences in the perception of the reality.
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Authors and Affiliations

Czesław Wróbel
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Abstract

This article examines the analogies, and more specifically the historical 'theatre of the imagination', between Tytus Czyżewski's Robespierre/Rhapsody (1927) and Stanisław Wyspiański's poetic dramas Rhapsodies (Kazimierz the Great and Bolesław the Bold). Each of those poems foregrounds its principal historical character. Wyspiański's dramatic poems, commonly known as Rhapsodies, focus on Kazimierz the Great, Bolesław the Bold, and Piast. kings of pivotal significance in his vision of Poland's historical destiny. Twenty years later Tytus Czyżewski, an acclaimed avant-garde painter and poet, composed a poetic-essayistic salmagundi, in which he sought to render in a similarly elevated style and condensed dialogue the drama of the leaders of the French Revolution, Robespierre and Danton. While Robespierre has to face, apart from some common people, God, the Spirit and Judges that sit in judgment on him, the final section of Rhapsody evokes Juliusz Słowacki. A monologue, mimicking his lofty verse, establishes a metaphorical common thread in Polish history – from the days of mail-clad knights to the wretched everyday life in the trenches – set against a broad background of wars, destruction and the French Revolution. For Czyżewski the French Revolution was a ground-breaking event, the first act of a great historical process that ushered in the Modern Age with its ideas of progress, reason, freedom, social justice, the elimination of poverty. It continues to inspire mankind with the hope that even a most ambitious change is possible. For Wyspiański, on the other hand, the grand project of human emancipation does give rise to doubts whether a wholesale obliteration of the Old is justified and to questions about God, free will, theodicy and destiny, and the 'tyranny of reason'. The differences between the two philosophies of history – Wyspiański's, from the turn of the 19th century, and Czyżewski's, representative of the artistic and intellectual climate of the late 1920s – are no doubt profound, and yet, what both of them seem to share is a deep concern with the relevance of history for the present and for designing the future.

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Authors and Affiliations

Barbara Sienkiewicz

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