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-List Of Titles -Big history [encyclopaedia entry]

Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/108201

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Title
Big history [encyclopaedia entry]
Related
Modelski, George and Denemark, Robert A.. World system history
Related
http://greenplanet.eolss.net/EolssLogn/Mss/C04/E6-94/E6-94-03/E6-94-03-TXT.aspx#citation
Related
Encyclopedia of life support systems (EOLSS)
Publisher
Oxford, UK : UNESCO, EOLSS Publishers
Date
2007
Author/Creator
Christian, David
Description
Big history surveys the past on multiple scales, from those of world history to those of cosmology. It offers a coherent account of the past that is as all-embracing as traditional creation stories or universal histories, but it does so using the information generated by modern scientific scholarship. Though historians rejected such large-scale narratives for much of the twentieth century, new, scientific forms of big history began to appear in the last decades of the twentieth century. Modern big history attempts to unite into a single, coherent story modern understanding of the origins of the universe, the creation of stars and solar systems, the history of the earth and biosphere, the origins of human beings, and the course of human history. Big history courses are now taught at universities in the USA, Australia, the Netherlands and Russia; and there exists a small body of inter-disciplinary scholarship in the field. At the teaching level big history can help students understand the underlying unity of different historical disciplines, from cosmology to world history. As a body of scholarship, the central question of big history is whether there exist universal structures or patterns of change that can be found at many different scales and within many different disciplines. The initial answer appears to be that such structures do exist. Complex but fragile structures can be found at many scales; they all rely on significant flows of energy, and it seems that, over time, the most complex of these structures have become more complex. Limiting the potential impact of big history are the powerful conventions that separate different areas of scholarship in modern universities. However, big history has attracted considerable interest and if it thrives, it will have to do so by creating new institutional structures that encourage interdisciplinary teaching and research.
Description
1 page(s)
Subject Keyword
Big History
Subject Keyword
emergent properties
Subject Keyword
human sciences
Subject Keyword
world history
Subject Keyword
world system
Subject Keyword
global history
Subject Keyword
universal history
Subject Keyword
regimes
Subject Keyword
creation story
Subject Keyword
historical sciences
Subject Keyword
historiography
Resource Type
reference entry
Organisation
Macquarie University. Dept. of Modern History

Identifier
http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/108201
Identifier
mq-rm-2008002551
Language
eng
Save/E-mail Citation
Citation Format
E-mail Address
Subject
"World system history"
 
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