Comparative Practices in Britain’s Long Eighteenth Century

M. Hartner, N. Böhm-Schnitker
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Abstract

Comparing is one the most fundamental intellectual operations. The ability to relate different objects, for example in terms of similarity and difference, is an essential part of human cognitive architecture. It is part of “the way we think” (Fauconnier/Turner 2002), and, as a result, it seems unavoidable to engage in comparative acts “when trying to cope with our everyday experience” (Eggers 2019: 33). But while the mental ability to compare may be an anthropological constant across times and cultures, the specific forms, functions, and contents of comparative acts can change in many ways. This has been painfully illustrated by the global events of the past year during which most of this book was composed. The COVID-19 pandemic (still going strong while we are writing this introduction) has served as a powerful reminder of both the omnipresence and the historical situatedness of comparative practices. It has shown, on the one hand, that we continue to live in “an age of comparison” (Nietzsche (1996 [1871] 24), i.e., in a time in which contemporary (Western) science and culture are marked by an extraordinary profusion of comparisons; and, on the other hand, that comparisons as a social practice have a historical and political dimension.
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英国漫长的18世纪的比较实践
比较是最基本的智力活动之一。将不同事物联系起来的能力,例如相似性和差异性,是人类认知结构的重要组成部分。它是“我们思考方式”的一部分(Fauconnier/Turner 2002),因此,“在试图应对我们的日常经验时”,参与比较行为似乎是不可避免的(Eggers 2019: 33)。但是,虽然心理比较能力可能是跨越时代和文化的人类学常数,但比较行为的具体形式、功能和内容可以在许多方面发生变化。过去一年的全球事件痛苦地说明了这一点,而本书的大部分内容就是在这一年里写成的。2019冠状病毒病大流行(在我们撰写这篇导言时仍在肆虐)有力地提醒我们,比较实践无所不在,且具有历史情境性。它表明,一方面,我们继续生活在“比较的时代”(尼采(1996[1871]24),即当代(西方)科学和文化以异常丰富的比较为标志的时代;另一方面,比较作为一种社会实践有其历史和政治层面。
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