IELTS
JOURNAL
140
or the Middle East—we have to look for factors that took shape earlier. Sometimes
fairly recent history will suffice to explain a major development, but often we need to
look further back to identify the causes of change. Only through studying history can
we grasp how things change; only through history can we begin to comprehend the
factors that cause change; and only through history can we understand what elements
of an institution or a society persist despite change.
The importance of history in explaining and understanding change in human behavior
is no mere abstraction. Take an important human phenomenon such as alcoholism.
Through biological experiments scientists have identified specific genes that seem to
cause a proclivity toward alcohol addiction in some individuals. This is a notable
advance. But alcoholism, as a social reality, has a history: rates of alcoholism have risen
and fallen, and they have varied from one group to the next. Attitudes and policies
about alcoholism have also changed and varied. History is indispensable to
understanding why such changes occur. And in many ways historical analysis is a more
challenging kind of exploration than genetic experimentation. Historians have in fact
greatly contributed in recent decades to our understanding of trends (or patterns of
change) in alcoholism and to our grasp of the dimensions of addiction as an evolving
social problem.
One of the leading concerns of contemporary American politics is low voter turnout,
even for major elections. A historical analysis of changes in voter turnout can help us
begin to understand the problem we face today. What were turnouts in the past?
When did the decline set in? Once we determine when the trend began, we can try to
identify which of the factors present at the time combined to set the trend in motion.
Do the same factors sustain the trend still, or are there new ingredients that have
contributed to it in more recent decades? A purely contemporary analysis may shed
some light on the problem, but a historical assessment is clearly fundamental—and
essential for anyone concerned about American political health today.
History, then, provides the only extensive materials available to study the human
condition. It also focuses attention on the complex processes of social change,
including the factors that are causing change around us today. Here, at base, are the
two related reasons many people become enthralled with the examination of the past
and why our society requires and encourages the study of history as a major subject in
the schools.
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