Proceedings of the British Academy, Volume 6British Academy, 1976 - Humanities |
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Page 142
... method . Besides , in all alike , the defective teaching of history in the secondary schools imposes on the professors and their assistants an excessive amount of lecturing , and hinders advanced instruction of any kind . In the older ...
... method . Besides , in all alike , the defective teaching of history in the secondary schools imposes on the professors and their assistants an excessive amount of lecturing , and hinders advanced instruction of any kind . In the older ...
Page 147
... method , and a very slow method . A calendar such as that of the Letters and Papers of Henry VIII , which includes all the known State papers of a particular reign where- ever they are , is a great boon to the historians of that reign ...
... method , and a very slow method . A calendar such as that of the Letters and Papers of Henry VIII , which includes all the known State papers of a particular reign where- ever they are , is a great boon to the historians of that reign ...
Page 510
... method on the one hand and with the empirical method on the other . The characteristic feature of the transcendental method had been , he urged , to postulate the existence of causal agency in the subject , an agency or activity whose ...
... method on the one hand and with the empirical method on the other . The characteristic feature of the transcendental method had been , he urged , to postulate the existence of causal agency in the subject , an agency or activity whose ...
Contents
PAGE | 23 |
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS | 113 |
THE STUDY OF MODERN HISTORY IN GREAT BRITAIN CONSIDERed | 139 |
Copyright | |
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