The American Historical Review, Volume 9John Franklin Jameson, Henry Eldridge Bourne, Robert Livingston Schuyler American Historical Association, 1904 - History American Historical Review is the oldest scholarly journal of history in the United States and the largest in the world. Published by the American Historical Association, it covers all areas of historical research. |
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Page 1
... whole and ascertain the way in which they are connected with each other . In all the other great fields of inquiry the necessity of generalization is universally admitted , and noble efforts are being made to rise from particular facts ...
... whole and ascertain the way in which they are connected with each other . In all the other great fields of inquiry the necessity of generalization is universally admitted , and noble efforts are being made to rise from particular facts ...
Page 15
... whole . The Protestant Reformation is intelligible only when treated as a part of that larger whole that embraces the entire reform movement in the Latin church in the fourteenth , fifteenth , and sixteenth centuries ; again , the ...
... whole . The Protestant Reformation is intelligible only when treated as a part of that larger whole that embraces the entire reform movement in the Latin church in the fourteenth , fifteenth , and sixteenth centuries ; again , the ...
Page 16
... whole . What Luther has in common with other Germans might be important for the sociol- ogist ; it would not be for historians . It was just the thing that was unique in Luther , that distinguished him from other Germans , that rendered ...
... whole . What Luther has in common with other Germans might be important for the sociol- ogist ; it would not be for historians . It was just the thing that was unique in Luther , that distinguished him from other Germans , that rendered ...
Page 18
... whole that he is treating , and selects the features of the object that render it impor- tant for the whole group ; the natural scientist selects the features that are common to all the members of a group . The historian combines his ...
... whole that he is treating , and selects the features of the object that render it impor- tant for the whole group ; the natural scientist selects the features that are common to all the members of a group . The historian combines his ...
Page 25
... tries count not for , but against the side that makes them . To the whole dramatic episode of the contest for the imperial crown Armstrong devotes 66 little over a page , on the plea that Charles Two Lives of the Emperor Charles V. 25.
... tries count not for , but against the side that makes them . To the whole dramatic episode of the contest for the imperial crown Armstrong devotes 66 little over a page , on the plea that Charles Two Lives of the Emperor Charles V. 25.
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Popular passages
Page 320 - ... a Single Person. to be chosen by the National Legislature. for the term of Seven years. with power to carry into execution the National Laws. to appoint to Offices in cases not otherwise provided for to be ineligible a second time, and to be removable on impeachment and conviction of mal practice or neglect of duty.