I don't agree with historians using psychological analysis without emphasing that it is speculation. — Andrew4Handel
There are lots of debates about the causes of WW1 and who was responsible. I was surprised to find that there are apparently thousands of books on this topic. That suggests to me not only that there is no no consensus but that the evidence is ambiguous. Also causal claims seem unprovable to a some degree including looking at problems of causal regress. There is chaos theory tom contend with also.
Even with a well documented recent event like 9/11 the question of what "caused" it is controversial including value judgements (American foreign policy? Islamic extremism?) — Andrew4Handel
Not all mental states can be inferred all the time.I am not sure peoples motives are that easy to pin down. — Andrew4Handel
Writing and speaking are actions. Thinking is also an action. As far as history is concerned, the difference between corporeal and mental action is one of evidence as it varies on a continuum between strong and weak.Are we going to judge history on peoples actions or do we have to also invoke their words and mental states? — Andrew4Handel
Knowing how a person or social group has acted in the past provides a degree of predictability about their future actions in similar situations....maybe history is somewhat predictable or mechanistic. — Andrew4Handel
History is a social science which reduces to (can be explained in terms of) sociology, and sociology reduces to psychology, however; psychology doesn't reduce to physiology.I suppose the closest to science would be a behaviourist analysis of history. A series of stimuli-response events. — Andrew4Handel
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