Theory Of History example essay topic
He thus departed from previous systems of writing history either as the biographies of great men, or as the development of God's will. Opposing the anti historical elements of the prevailing Cartesianism (see Descartes, Ren'e), he asserted that history is a valid object of human knowledge because man himself created history. Vico urged the study of language, mythology, and tradition as techniques for the investigation of history. As a philosopher, Vico believed that every period in history had a distinct character, and that similar periods recur throughout history in the same order. He departed from the old cyclical theories of history, however, in asserting that these periods do not recur in exactly the same form, but are subject to the modifications that new circumstances and developments impose. Thus the historian can never be a prophet.
Vico also wrote on law, affirming an innate human sense of justice and natural law. Vico's major theories were developed in his New Science (1725), which he revised completely (1730; 1744). Vico's work was little known in his own time, and his importance was not recognized until the 19th cent.
Bibliography
See his autobiography (tr. by M.H. Finch and T.G. Bergin, 1944);
G. Tagliacozzo and H.V. White, ed., Giambattista Vico (1969);
H.P. Adams, The Life and Writings of Giambattista Vico (1935, repr.
1970);
B. Croce, The Philosophy of Giovanni Battista Vico (1913, repr.
F. Vaughan, The Political Philosophy of Giambattista Vico (1972);
L. Vico: A Study of the New Science (1975);
C.L. Stephenson, Giambattista Vico and the Foundations of a Science of the Philosophy of History (1982);
P. Burke, Vico (1985).