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#21
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#22
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Chapman billy wrote in message m...
In article , says... (snipped) Tim Hanke is not a historian, and I don't take him seriously as a writer on history. What I write about history is not altered by whatever he writes. Tim Hanke certainly isn't a historian, but he does appear to have read a fair bit.... 'Historians are not accountable for the difficulty of learning to read.' --Jane Austen (Northanger Abbey) Dear Simon, Someone who might have read many popular books on health care does not become professionally qualified to practise medicine in a hospital. One can find something in print to support nearly every conceivable view of history (for instance, from Daniel Goldhagen to David Irving on German history 1933-1945). Any really interesting historical subject tends to involve considering some incomplete, inconsistent, or conflicting evidence. Yet not every source in print is of comparable reliability or value, and professional historians are generally better than amateurs at separating the wheat from the chaff. "For my part I've gone back and forth on the A-bomb decision so many times I can't have much confidence in hard conclusions." --Stephen Ambrose (28 January 1993, letter to Gar Alperovitz, on the United States's atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945) 'History is never a trustworthy guide to the thinker. It is, at the best, only a staff, and a most unreliable one at that.' --Albion Tourgee (Murvale Eastman) --Nick |
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#24
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#25
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Nick wrote:
Dear Simon, I hope to reply to your interesting comments when I have some more time. Best wishes. --Nick Chapman billy wrote in message m... In article , says... Someone who might have read many popular books on health care does not become professionally qualified to practise medicine in a hospital. One can find something in print to support nearly every conceivable view of history (for instance, from Daniel Goldhagen to David Irving on German history 1933-1945). Dear Nick, I may as well be hung for a sheep as for a lamb :-) Can I toss the following from the "professional historian" the late Barbara Tuchman into the battle? it really is egregious. From page 174 of "The First Salute": 'The Seven Years War, fought mainly between France and Britain in rivalry for sovereignty of the seas and for colonial dominion in America and to a lesser extent in India, was the central war of the century. In America it was known as the French and Indian War. With hindsight later historians have seen it as the first real World War because of its subsidiary conflicts in Europe in the web of territorial and dynastic disputes and tangled alliances centering around the duel of Prussia and Austria for dominance. France on Prussia's side was opposed to England allied with Austria, with Sweden, Spain, and the United Provinces variously involved.' No wonder Rossbach was such a shock! Regards (yes I know I'm cheating), Simon. |
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#26
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chapman Billy wrote in message ...
Nick wrote: Dear Simon, I hope to reply to your interesting comments when I have some more time. Best wishes. --Nick Chapman billy wrote in message m... In article , says... Someone who might have read many popular books on health care does not become professionally qualified to practise medicine in a hospital. One can find something in print to support nearly every conceivable view of history (for instance, from Daniel Goldhagen to David Irving on German history 1933-1945). Dear Nick, I may as well be hung for a sheep as for a lamb :-) Can I toss the following from the "professional historian" the late Barbara Tuchman into the battle? it really is egregious. From page 174 of "The First Salute": 'The Seven Years War, fought mainly between France and Britain in rivalry for sovereignty of the seas and for colonial dominion in America and to a lesser extent in India, was the central war of the century. In America it was known as the French and Indian War. With hindsight later historians have seen it as the first real World War because of its subsidiary conflicts in Europe in the web of territorial and dynastic disputes and tangled alliances centering around the duel of Prussia and Austria for dominance. France on Prussia's side was opposed to England allied with Austria, with Sweden, Spain, and the United Provinces variously involved.' No wonder Rossbach was such a shock! Regards (yes I know I'm cheating), Simon. Hehe. Nice post, Simon :-) |
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