The Practice of Conceptual History by Reinhart Koselleck

“In the course of nineteenth-century research, the categories of spontaneity, of historical uniqueness, and of historical forces, where were originally designed with an eye to genuine historical time, became bound up in substances such as personality, the people, class, certain states, and so on. This made possible historically naive statements at which we smile today.”

-Reinhart Kosselleck

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The Atlantic World edited by Wim Klooster and Alfred Padula

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How Nature Works by Per Bak