Article ID: CBB001553517

Drilling Down: Can Historians Operationalize Koselleck's Stratigraphical Times? (2015)

unapi

Zammito, John H. (Author)


Configurations: A Journal of Literature, Science, and Technology
Volume: 23.2
Issue: 2
Pages: 199-215


Publication Date: 2015
Edition Details: Part of a Series: Keeping Time
Language: English

According to Reinhart Koselleck, in every moment a congeries of “temporal strata” are effectively co-present, but not necessarily coherent, hence the “simultaneity of the nonsimultaneous.” Contrast this with the notion of a zeitgeist in which every aspect of a historical moment is integrated by some master principle. There are so many trajectories active in any present that it is unlikely that one might coordinate all of them, if not unwise even to believe that they are coordinated. Not only does each historical present demonstrate at best rhizomic or patchy coherences across domains, but it also registers different paces and intensities in the temporal deployment of the domains. Nevertheless, coherence remains a compelling regulative ideal. Fortunately, path-dependency---cumulation as constraint---is a discriminable feature of the several distinct “layers of time” or diachronic flows co-present in any given historical moment. Moreover, that some strata of experience remain roughly constant enables us to appraise the variation of others. If too many elements enter into simultaneous crisis, if we hit the “perfect storm,” then our capacity to comprehend (like that of our objects of inquiry) may be severely impaired. These insights from Koselleck are eminently applicable and deserve recognition and gratitude in historical epistemology.

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Citation URI
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Authors & Contributors
Boudet, Jean-Patrice
Brock, William H.
Draelants, Isabelle
Dupré, Sven
Feest, Uljana
Frohlich, Xaq
Journals
Bulletin for the History of Chemistry
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Technology and Culture
Erkenntnis: International Journal of Analytic Philosophy
Historical Studies in the Natural Sciences
History of European Ideas
Publishers
Amsterdam University Press
Duke University Press
Concepts
Historical method
Epistemology
History of science, as a discipline
Historiography
Chemistry
Interdisciplinary approach to knowledge
People
Canguilhem, Georges
Crick, Francis
Eddington, Arthur Stanley
Einstein, Albert
Franklin, Rosalind
Watson, James Dewey
Time Periods
21st century
20th century
20th century, late
Medieval
Places
Africa
France
Institutions
American Chemical Society
Science History Institute (SHI)
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