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With respect to Gunning's two points in his posting of today:
1. Historians of the rise of the nation state understand and,
perhaps, define the nation state as a concept. This does not make them
political scientists, nationalists, or sociologists. They are historians.
I concur in the point that one can hardly do the history of
economics without a knowledge of, and even considerable training in,
economics [I recommend the PhD.], just as one cannot do the history of
science, or the philosophy of science, without a knowledge of science; but
historians of economics or science remain intellectual historians, not
economists or scientists. It is conceivable that one might be both, and
function on different levels in the hierarchy of knowledge, at different
times, or in different aspects of one's work; but history is not theory.
2. The first sentence of Gunning's second point contradicts his
first point.
Consider the distinction between an historical thesis and an
economic theory. A theory has application to all items of a certain class
or kind [q = f(p) [cet. par.], for any individual consumer.], without
reference to a particular time in history. (Ah! You see the point.). A
thesis has application to only one set of events in some particular time
and place.
Further, the term "rhetoric" is used in a pejorative sense by
Gunning, so we have here a rhetorical use of the term "rhetoric" [as the
term "rhetoric" is used by Gunning].
Yet further, I concur that Von Mises has an interesting view of
history, perhaps even a Whig view, with respect to a certain aspect of
Whig history. The Whig view, along with all the others, has its place.
It is the assertion, if anyone is making it, that Whig history is the
objective truth, that is intellectually arrogant, because truth is a
product of the mind, and so cannot be objective.
Robin Neill
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