Sunday, April 27, 2008

Why Study History?

History is arrogantly selective and deliberately parochial in its study. First, because it only chronicles the accounts of selected few individuals, whose "decorated" stories are deemed worthy, appealing and meaningful compared to others. Two, because it grossly leaves out many details, even in the accounts for the selected few, and chooses to tell a limited perspective and supposedly "main" ideas. As a consequence, most of our stories, despite their potential life-changing impacts on ourselves and on others, go unpublished as they are alleged of being too personal, too emotional, too dramatic and more.

After all, it is this personal touch, this emotional encounter, and this dramatic enactment that drive the passage of our lives as we largely depend on how we feel and what our personal takes are on a particular issue, rather than pure cold logic, to make our decisions. If life were pure cold logic, this would be a dull and selfish world indeed. Dull, because the chain of occuring events is highly predictable given that it follows the flow of logic. Selfish, because altruism and love will perish, replaced by the overt display of self-preservation and cold-heartedness that are increasing evident in the modern society.

As such, history in its grand attempt to tell the story of mankind ("history" is "his" story, right?) falls short in achieving its purpose due to its philosophy of high selectivity and parochial reporting. No wonder, history has failed to impress on the younger generation the same fascination that the latter has for story books and movies.

6 comments:

Cy Azhar said...

The reason why anyone ever records history is because the person himself has a personal agenda - please add me on MSN, because I don't have your MSN e-mail- - and hence, the reason why any event is recorded is because it bears a (mostly positive) significance to the recordee. Therefore, History is inherently biased.

Aurelius said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Aurelius said...

Dear Zachary, we know from our secondary four textbooks that history is always veered towards one side depending on who is writing it down. However, what I am examining here is whether history is worth reading, not whether it is worth writing. Anyway, feel free to add my e-mail: ryanisboredletstalk@hotmail.com

Cy Azhar said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Cy Azhar said...

That is the most apt e-mail address I've seen in my life... and what is that between our comments? Anyway, actually, the earlier point is that History is not worth reading is because the we're always getting only one party's view of history... which is contradictory to the idea of history i.e. providing the most objective version of the past... So, yeah, there's no point reading something that pretends to be accurate.

PS: I don't always veer off topic in the middle of a paragraph... in case you wondered

Aurelius said...

A thousand apologies if I have intepreted your comment in way against that which you intended. Nonetheless, each human mind is conceived and shaped uniquely so one has to give allowance to the variety of intepretations that arises fronm the examination of a single issue. Initially, you sounded more like cursing historical authors (hyperbolic expression) than discouraging historical readers. Anyway, I see your point. Thanks for sharing your view.