Challenging Certainty: The Utility and History of Counterfactualism
History and Theory, Vol. 49, No. 1, Pg. 38-57, 2010.
Simon T. Kaye
Counterfactualism is a useful process for historians as a
thought-experiment because it offers grounds to challenge an
unfortunate contemporary historical mindset of assumed, deterministic
certainty. This article suggests that the methodological value of
counterfactualism may be understood in terms of the three categories of
common ahistorical errors that it may help to prevent: the assumptions
of indispensability, causality, and inevitability.
To support this claim, I survey a series of key counterfactual works
and reflections on counterfactualism, arguing that the practice of
counterfactualism evolved as both cause and product of an evolving
popular assumption of the plasticity of history and the importance of
human agency within it. For these reasons, counterfactualism is of
particular importance both historically and politically. I conclude
that it is time for a methodological re-assessment of the uses of such
thought-experiments in history, particularly in light of
counterfactualism's developmental relatedness to cultural,
technological, and analytical modernity.
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