![]() ![]() Gaddis addresses the challenge of some that history lacks the reproducibility of science because it isn’t worked out in laboratories. One area of overlap is the notion of reproducibility as the key to consensus (39). Gaddis focuses on the similarities and differences between historical processes and scientific ones. In chapter 3 he discusses the “mechanism” of historical study-structure and process. In chapter 2 of The Landscape of History, John Lewis Gaddis discusses time and space, which he identifies as “the field in which history happens (35). “The Teacher, Like the Historian…” (Landscape of History Series #2)”.“The Purpose of Studying History and the Method of the Historian (Landscape of History Series #1)”.You can read the first two articles in this series at the following links: ![]()
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