Herodotus wrote down a list of things that happened in the past. On the other hand he didn’t have a sense of history that’s about society progressing.
The Roman did value accounts of the ancients and the value of the knowledge of the ancients. They feared that their society declined. That’s very different from the modern idea of history where societies progress. That notion is often attributed to Hegel.
Yes, but the Romans also had a guy talking about ‘a new order of the ages,’ bringing back the Golden Age. Christianity had the idea of Christ returning once the Gospel had reached everywhere. Both Descartes and Bacon made sweeping claims about the benefits of secular investigation.
Bringing back the Golden Age, assumes that you could just go back. That’s very different from the modern notion of history as something that progresses.
I’m pretty sure you need to go back to at least Herodotus to get that title.
Herodotus wrote down a list of things that happened in the past. On the other hand he didn’t have a sense of history that’s about society progressing.
The Roman did value accounts of the ancients and the value of the knowledge of the ancients. They feared that their society declined. That’s very different from the modern idea of history where societies progress. That notion is often attributed to Hegel.
Yes, but the Romans also had a guy talking about ‘a new order of the ages,’ bringing back the Golden Age. Christianity had the idea of Christ returning once the Gospel had reached everywhere. Both Descartes and Bacon made sweeping claims about the benefits of secular investigation.
Bringing back the Golden Age, assumes that you could just go back. That’s very different from the modern notion of history as something that progresses.