"The humanities" would probably be a good choice.Well I was just looking for a term to cover "the study of subjects which only exist in the context of humanity", and couldn't think of anything better than "anthropology" to describe these.
there are plenty of theories that never lead to any practical usefulness whatsoever
Defining history as a subset of anthropology would seem to make anthropology such an absurdly large and all-encompassing "discipline" as to be a meaningless category. It's like defining chemistry as a subset of physics, instead of as a related field of study with some key principles deriving from certain physical laws and understandings of molecular behavior.
Oh, that's what you meant. I thought you mean theories that were correct but had no practical purpose. The picture can get quite complex though. Miasma theory was wrong, but its practical implication (sanitation) is useful.Pretty much any history of any science can provide plenty of examples. But to be specific, the last book I read, Sthephen Mythen's After the ice, a global human history 20,000-5,000 BC, the author indulges in imaginary timetravelling, by introducing an imaginary John Lubbock to tell his story. Which brings me to some of the earliest possible interpretations of prehistoric fossils as being 'magical' objects.
Everything is useless. No matter what you do you will die, everyone you know will die, everything you do in your life will fade away, the sun will burn out, eventually all the stars will burn out and humanity will go extinct and the universe will be a dark, cold lifeless void. You won't care because you'll be dead, which is just as good as having never been born. So of course history is useless.
JEELEN said:Ah, a purely personal interpretation. How 'useful'.
Why?Astrology.
Scientology. (Dachs should love this term, as well as the previous one.)
I never said storytelling isn't useful. But storytelling + astronomy = myths + astrology. Astrology is an interesting cultural phenomenon that has produced some great visual works of art, but it's NOT science and it's NOT history.I'm not sure why you're taking issue with such a hollow classification, unless you were trying to imply that astronomy is "useful, unlike that verdammt storytelling."
There is no working definition of useful that classifies theoretical science as useless. It is obviously of some use to someone, and given the achievements made possible by theoretical science of great use to every "practical" scientist out there.
edit: I should add that, furthermore, just because you can identify some theories that supposedly have no value in the real world, that does not mean that the entire process of formulating theories is useless by the same standards.
Why?![]()
I think we can agree here. But I don't see any reason not to define theories leading to no practical application whatsoever as anything else but 'useless'.
Kevlar. Good to see you've come to your senses.For whatever it's worth, I've changed my mind on this whole subject, but I'm not sure how to express it without getting shot at.
It's a mishmash word, not a mishmash transliteration. I couldn't give less of a damn.I was being sarcastic:
astrology - aster (Lat.), logos (Gr.)
scientology - dito.
Kevlar. Good to see you've come to your senses.
Why bother? They had their uses - it is why they exist. Just because we cannot see that usefulness now doesn't mean they never had that quality.
It's a mishmash word, not a mishmash transliteration. I couldn't give less of a damn.