2005 - 48

Articles in this issue

New turns in the theory of history, or another effort at overcoming the "dialogue des sourds"

Pages: 3 - 16

Red herrings: relativism, objectivism, and other false dilemmas

Pages: 17 - 26

Can neuro-biology help us to understand history?

Pages: 27 - 37

The truth of historical theory

Pages: 38 - 48

History and the return to science

Pages: 49 - 61

Vicissitudes of historiography: maid and mistress

Pages: 62 - 72

History-writing as professional production of knowledge

Pages: 73 - 88

Why and how "history" depends on readerly narrativization. The cognitivist approach, its potential and its problems

Pages: 89 - 99

Truth in history: some conceptions and misconceptions

Pages: 100 - 111

The "New History" in China: a contrast to the West

Pages: 112 - 118

From a science-history to memory-history? The attractiveness and risks of a historiographical trend

Pages: 119 - 127

Beyond sciences in Historical theory? Critical commentary on the history/science distinction

Pages: 128 - 138