User:Conservative/history
Contents
- 1 Principles of evaluating historical claims and evidence
- 2 Western civilization and Christianity
- 3 Christian history
- 4 American history classics
- 5 American history documentaries
- 6 American history and immigration
- 7 Israeli historian Martin van Creveld on military strategy/nation-states/etc.
- 8 Books and essays relating to politics and/or history
- 9 World history
- 10 Pre-Christian
- 11 Colonial America
- 12 Historiography
Principles of evaluating historical claims and evidence
Western civilization and Christianity
Christian history
History of the Christian Church - From The 1st To The 20th Century (All 8 Volumes) by Philip Schaff
American history classics
American history documentaries
WWII: War in the Pacific
American history and immigration
- Immigration and Our Founding Fathers' Values by Michelle Malkin
Israeli historian Martin van Creveld on military strategy/nation-states/etc.
- Equality: The Impossible Quest, Helsinki, Castalia House, 2015.
- The Rise and Decline of the State, Cambridge University Press
- The Art of War: War and Military Thought, London : Cassell, 2000,
Books and essays relating to politics and/or history
Conservatism:
- A PHILOSOPHICAL INQUIRY INTO THE ORIGIN OF OUR IDEAS OF THE SUBLIME AND BEAUTIFUL WITH AN INTRODUCTORY DISCOURSE CONCERNING TASTE, AND SEVERAL OTHER ADDITIONS by Edmund Burke
Liberalism:
- How Liberalism lost its way, review of Inventing the Individual: the Origins of Western Liberalism by Larry Siedentop
Warfare:
- Transformation of War by Martin Van Creveld Nov 24, 2009
World history
Pre-Christian
- The History of the Peloponnesian War by Thucydides
Colonial America
Colonial America and immigration
Historiography
See also: Historiography
"Fischer, David Hackett, Historians’ Fallacies: Toward a Logic of Historical Thought (New York: Harper Collins, 1970). In only approximately 300 pages, Fischer surveys an immense amount of background historical literature to point out a comprehensive variety of analytical errors that many, if not most, historians commit. Fischer points out specific examples of faulty or sloppy reasoning in the work of even the most prominent historians, making it a useful book for beginning students of history. While this book presumably did not make Fischer popular with many of his peers, it should be noted that his contributions as a historian have not been limited simply to criticizing the work of others; since 1976, he has published a number of well-received books on other historical topics."[1]
Fischer's 7 habits of sound historiography
Fischer's 7 rules for historians taken from Josh McDowell's book The New Evidence that Demands a Verdict:
(1) The burden of proof for a historical claim is always upon the one making the assertion.
(2) Historical evidence must be an answer to the question asked and not to any other question.
(3) "An historian must not merely provide good evidence, but the best evidence. And the best evidence, all other things being equal, is the evidence which is most nearly immediate to the event itself."
(4) Evidence must always be affirmative. Negative evidence is no evidence at all. In other words, Fischer is saying that an absence of evidence is not necessarily evidence of absence.
(5) The meaning of any historical evidence is dependent upon the context from which it is obtained from.
(6) "An empirical statement must not be more precise than its evidence warrants."
(7) "All inferences from historical evidence are probabilistic."
Josh McDowell's Evidence that Demands a Verdict, page 674, 1999, Mark MCGarry, Texas Type and Book Works, Dallas, TX, ISBN 0-7852-4219-8)