Chapter 3 History - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 3 History

Description:

Chapter 3 History Lesson 1 Introduction History as a Puzzle Questions for Discussion Why do you know what the image on your puzzle is? Does it matter if all of the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:247
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: who67
Category:
Tags: chapter | glare | history | types

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 3 History


1
Chapter 3 History
2
Lesson 1 Introduction History as a Puzzle
3
Questions for Discussion
  • Why do you know what the image on your puzzle is?
  • Does it matter if all of the pieces are there or
    not? Why or why not?
  • Will historians ever have all the pieces to the
    puzzles in history of, for example, the 14th
    century? How can they claim they know anything
    about the 14th century?

4
Questions for Discussion (contd.)
  • You most likely talked with your classmates when
    deciding how certain pieces of the puzzle fit
    together. If you agreed on an interpretation, you
    reached a consensus. How do you think consensus
    might work for real historians (just take a
    guess, consensus will be examined in more detail
    later in the chapter)?
  • How did the scientific (or hypothetical) method
    work when you were doing the puzzle (hint did
    you make and test any hypothesis regarding what
    the image was or where the pieces fit in)?

5
Lesson 2 Science and Historical Knowledge
6
Homo floresiensis and knowledge about its
classification
  • Homo floresiensis fossils of human-like
    creatures found on the Indonesian island of
    Flores in the Liang Bua Cave in 2004
  • One metre high
  • Had a brain about the size of a modern chimpanzee
  • Had intelligence and it lived in a community

Skull of Homo floresiensis (left) next to a
modern human skull.
7
Was it another human species?
  • If it was, the history of the evolution of the
    human species will have to be rewritten
  • It has been believed and taught, that Homo
    sapiens were the only human species on the planet
    from the time that the Neanderthal became extinct
  • However The fossil of Homo floresiensis is only
    18,000 years old, this means it lived many
    millennia after anything like it was supposed to
    exist

8
Or just a regular human being with Microcephaly
?
  • Microcephaly is a rare disease in which the
    person inflicted has an abnormally small head,
    and therefore also a small brain
  • This often leads to dwarfism
  • Dan Lieberman and others (2005) says it is a
    human with Microcephaly
  • Dean Falk and others (2005) says it is not

9
Why is this important?
  • Scientists from around the world are studying the
    fossil remains of Homo floresiensis and coming to
    conclusions about human history
  • They are studying the same fossils, using the
    same scientific method, but they are coming to
    totally different conclusions
  • Both sides claim to have knowledge about what
    they claim
  • But their claims contradict one another
  • Whom should we believe?

10
Historical documents and archaeological artefacts
are silent
  • This example of Homo floresiensis illustrates the
    importance of interpretation in making historical
    knowledge claims
  • Documents, artifacts, and remains like fossils
    say nothing themselves
  • Whatever it is artefacts and documents mean, it
    is we that say they mean it.
  • We interpret a meaning onto them

11
Anything that can affect our interpretation can
also affect our knowledge claims
  • Religious conviction
  • Political ideology
  • Cultural heritage
  • Educational background
  • Likes or dislikes
  • All sorts of biases

The Haerulf Runestone, Denmark
12
The Egyptians in South America???
  • As you walk down you hear the sound of the heavy
    stone door closing down behind you with a
    grinding thud
  • Gold glimmers in the walls and from small images
    carved into the elaborate patterns on the floor
    and ceiling

Down Down Down into the depths of the temple
13
Discovery
  • You look, and see, it is a small strangely shaped
    figure with red eyes that seem to glare back at
    you like a little demon
  • You hurry down the small flight of steps into a
    large circular room lit by sunlight coming from
    four channels evenly spaced around the room
  • Each of the light channels has their beam focused
    on a golden box which is perfectly placed in the
    middle of the room

Not the box in the chamber. Charles the lumphead
forgot his camera.
14
Inside the box. What is it?
How did these get there?
15
Creating knowledge of history
  • First step entails using the imagination to come
    upwith a hypothesis
  • Deduction helps in the creation of the hypothesis
  • However a hypothesis needs to be more than just
    reasonable if it is to be knowledge
  • Often proof is needed

16
Creating knowledge of history (contd).
  • Science is often involved
  • Science provides indisputable empirical data
  • This data serves as premises from which logical,
    deductive conclusions can be made
  • Knowledge often depends on having consesnus

17
However interpretation is always present
  • No data or artefact speaks for itself
  • All information must be interpreted and given a
    meaning
  • Interpretation is a subjective human process.
  • Different people will interpret similar
    information differently and subsequently make
    different knowledge claims
  • History is interpretation

18
Lesson 3 Subjectivity
Now well really get some answers!
19
Subjectivity
  • There is subjective interpretation at every level
    of history
  • The historian is not an objective observer, but
    plays an active role in the creation of the
    knowledge claims he makes
  • The historians entire personality and all of his
    knowledge, all of his morals and values are
    interconnected with how he portrays history
  • Subjectivity is a two edged sword. It helps the
    historian understand, but at the same time it
    masks him from fully understanding things from
    more perspectives than his own

20
Three types of subjectivity
  • Subjectivity of the historian writing today
  • Subjectivity of the primary source
  • Subjectivity of secondary sources

Why were the Dead Sea scrolls written?
21
Bias affects
  • Primary sources
  • Secondary sources
  • All historians who have written about history

The Siege of Antioch, from a medieval painting
22
When accounts of history contridict one another
who do we believe?
  • The answer depends very much upon the bias one
    has
  • Subsequently any knowledge known depends also
    on this bias
  • We can assume that the same has held true through
    the ages. This affects what we know about the
    past.
  • Understanding of the truth is a subjective
    understanding. There are many truths.

The Massacre of Antioch. Gustav Doré.
23
Lesson 4 Induction and Deduction
Machu Piccu
24
Induction
  • Induction is making predictions or assumptions
    about future events based on past experiences
  • Induction is crucial in the development of a
    hypothesis that historians later try to develop
    support for

How do we know the slaves pictured in this
painting were not willingly enslaved?
25
Induction (contd.)
  • Induction is an invaluable tool for the
    historian, but at the same time induction carries
    with it a significant risk
  • The historian runs the risk of basing her
    assumptions about one historical phenomenon on
    the causes of another which she is familiar with
  • This will affect knowledge claims

26
Deduction
  • Deduction is making conclusions based on premises
    we know to be true
  • Deduction is a very effective tool for knowing as
    long as premises are known to be true
  • However, deduction can cause knowledge problems
    is conclusions are made using premises a
    historian only believes to be true

27
Lesson 5 Faith and History
The Death of Harold. Image from the Bayeux
Tapastery.
28
Knowledge in history is of a unique type
  • Knowledge is gained even though no one has
    actually experienced the events and eras that we
    claim to know so much about
  • In all the other areas of knowledge, the
    knowledge gained is by some sort of hands-on or
    minds-on experience
  • History itself can not be tested in a scientific
    sense, and it takes more than simply pondering on
    it to know it
  • There is no way to be 100 percent sure that the
    beliefs we have about historic events are correct
    or complete

29
Much historical knowledge comes from putting
faith in the claims
  • The word faith sould not be defined as meaning
    religious conviction
  • Faith here is defined as a particularly
    unshakable form of belief, based upon ideas,
    teachings, and reported historical events which
    to the individual seems conclusive. David
    Fontana Psychology, Religion, and Spirituality.
    (2003).

30
Faith in historical knowledge claims
  • When we consider history how do we come up with
    our knowledge?
  • If we can only rely on what other people have
    told us, or base our conclusions on documents
    other people have written then what else is there
    except for faith in claiming knowledge in
    history?

31
Three types of faith
  • Faith in the authenticity of the claims made by
    past documents and artefacts
  • Faith in our own and previous interpretations of
    events or documents
  • Faith in the authority of the history books and
    the ones making historical knowledge claims.

32
Faith in authenticity
  • Historians put faith in the authenticity of the
    documenats they read to make their knowledge
    claims
  • Often there are only singular sources from which
    information is taken
  • Even if there are collaborating documents, they
    make the assumption more feasible. It is
    impossible to be completely sure
  • Faith is simply a necessary element on the part
    of the historian

Hadrians Wall. Great Britian
33
Faith on ones own interpretations
  • The historian needs to have faith in her
    hypothesis when doing research
  • When making claims and presenting work to peers,
    the historian must have faith that the work she
    has done is reflective of reality
  • However, even the greatest level of conviction
    does not make ones claims true
  • Faith also brings with it the risk of fooling
    oneself into seeing things incorrectly

34
Faith in the authority of the history books
  • We put faith in the claims made by historians in
    history books
  • Historians and history books are powerful
    authorities in our minds
  • There is no practical way for us to know for sure
    if the claims made in the books are true or not.
    We must simply believe them.

35
Lesson 6 Authority and Consensus
36
Authority
Who controls the past, ran the Party slogan,
controls the future who controls the present
controls the past. George Orwell. 1984
  • Knowledge in history is malleable and authority
    has the means to shape historical knowledge in
    any way that seems fit
  • What reasons are there for learning the history
    we do learn and not any other?
  • In many countries around the world, the portrayal
    of history is a highly political and very
    sensitive issue

37
Consensus
  • Knowledge in history is created via consensus
  • To tackle the problem with subjective
    interpretations, a system of peer review has been
    developed in the field of history
  • If a claim is to be considered knowledge, it must
    be accepted by the greater community of
    historians

38
Consensus (contd).
  • The information in history books is fact
    because enough people believe that the
    interpretations made are good interpretations
  • A larger group is not at such risk for being
    blinded by subjectivity
  • However, just because a group of people agrees
    upon an interpretation, it does not mean that the
    interpretation is correct.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com