Nations and other political entities are inadequate bases for
studying the human past, because the other aspects of human life
are not organized along the same lines as these political entities.
All communities, including local ones, are amoeba-like, changing
size and shape as we observe and probe them. Historians can improve
the way they generalize about the past by tailoring their
conclusions to the actual evidence they use. By using an array of
historical questions of interest to scholars in all of the
humanistically oriented disciplines, historians can offer more
profound interpretations of their subjects, rather than confining
themselves to an explanation of how and why human life evolves or
persists through time and space. By doing so, historians can also
significantly extend their influence among the general
population.
General
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