John Bagnell Bury Zitate

John Bagnell Bury war ein bedeutender aus Irland stammender Althistoriker, Byzantinist und Klassischer Philologe.

Bury, Sohn eines anglikanischen Geistlichen und Bruder des Altphilologen und Philosophiehistorikers Robert Gregg Bury, besuchte das Foyle College in Derry und das Trinity College in Dublin, wo er seit 1885 auch lehrte. 1893 wurde er dort Professor der modernen Geschichte, ab 1898 lehrte er auch Griechisch. 1902 wurde er an die Universität Cambridge berufen, wo er den Regius Professor of Modern History innehatte, auch wenn er sich hauptsächlich mit der Antike beschäftigte. In einer Vorlesung erklärte er dort 1903: „History is a science, no more, no less“ .

Burys Wirkungskreis umfasste ein breites Spektrum: Er gab Edward Gibbons Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire neu heraus, edierte Werke Pindars, schrieb Artikel für die Encyclopædia Britannica , war Herausgeber der ersten Auflage der Cambridge Ancient History und verfasste mehrere Standardwerke, wie etwa A History of Greece, History of the Later Roman Empire oder The Invasion of Europe by the Barbarians. Er beschäftigte sich auch mit dem Byzantinischen Reich und dem Papsttum sowie mit Geschichtsphilosophie. Besonders seine Arbeiten zur Spätantike und dem Byzantinischen Reich stellen noch heute, obwohl vom Forschungsstand her teils veraltet, einen bedeutenden Beitrag zur Erschließung dieser Epoche dar, besonders im Bereich der Ereignisgeschichte. Wikipedia  

✵ 16. Oktober 1861 – 1. Juni 1927
John Bagnell Bury Foto
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John Bagnell Bury: Zitate auf Englisch

“But what assurance have we that they will not come up against impassable barriers?”

Introduction<!-- pp. 3-4 -->
The Idea of Progress: An Inquiry Into Its Origin and Growth (1921)
Kontext: Science has been advancing without interruption during the last three of four hundred years; every new discovery has led to new problems and new methods of solution, and opened up new fields for exploration. Hitherto men of science have not been compelled to halt, they have always found ways to advance further. But what assurance have we that they will not come up against impassable barriers?... Take biology or astronomy. How can we be sure that some day progress may not come to a dead pause, not because knowledge is exhausted, but because our resources for investigation are exhausted... It is an assumption, which cannot be verified, that we shall not reach a point in our knowledge of nature beyond which the human intellect is unqualified to pass.

“It is an assumption, which cannot be verified, that we shall not reach a point in our knowledge of nature beyond which the human intellect is unqualified to pass”

Introduction<!-- pp. 3-4 -->
The Idea of Progress: An Inquiry Into Its Origin and Growth (1921)
Kontext: Science has been advancing without interruption during the last three of four hundred years; every new discovery has led to new problems and new methods of solution, and opened up new fields for exploration. Hitherto men of science have not been compelled to halt, they have always found ways to advance further. But what assurance have we that they will not come up against impassable barriers?... Take biology or astronomy. How can we be sure that some day progress may not come to a dead pause, not because knowledge is exhausted, but because our resources for investigation are exhausted... It is an assumption, which cannot be verified, that we shall not reach a point in our knowledge of nature beyond which the human intellect is unqualified to pass.

“Socrates was the greatest of the educationalists”

J. B. Bury buch A History of Freedom of Thought

p. 30 http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=uc2.ark:/13960/t71v5g25n;view=1up;seq=34
A History of Freedom of Thought (1913)
Kontext: Socrates was the greatest of the educationalists, but unlike the others he taught gratuitously, though he was a poor man. His teachings always took the form of discussion; the discussion often ended in no positive result, but had the effect of showing that some received opinion was untenable and the truth is difficult to ascertain.

“The Macedonian people and their kings were of Greek stock”

2nd ed. (1913), p. 683 http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015026609167;view=1up;seq=725
A History of Greece to the Death of Alexander the Great (1913)
Kontext: The Macedonian people and their kings were of Greek stock, as their traditions and the scanty remains of their language combine to testify.

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