Thanks for pointing that out! At 41:00 the missing question is: "Looking ahead, what do you see as the future of the field? Are there any bodies of research that are desperately in need of a global history perspective that other scholars haven’t picked up on so far?"
At 25 minutes: the import of Dutch clocks to Japan. I had no idea!! in particular, making the precise European clocks more imprecise to suit Japanese sensibility of time. I'm with the early Japanese on this one. Western society has a fetish for precision and answers, relegating circadian rhythms and mysteries to the discard pile.
Thank you for this great insight. Great channel
Interesting talk! There's a bit of sound missing at around 41:00 - what is the the question that was asked?
Thanks for pointing that out! At 41:00 the missing question is: "Looking ahead, what do you see as the future of the field? Are there any bodies of research that are desperately in need of a global history perspective that other scholars haven’t picked up on so far?"
26:30 great topic
So, in a nutshell, we are talking micro V macro history down to the individual perspective relating to historical networks?
At 25 minutes: the import of Dutch clocks to Japan. I had no idea!! in particular, making the precise European clocks more imprecise to suit Japanese sensibility of time. I'm with the early Japanese on this one. Western society has a fetish for precision and answers, relegating circadian rhythms and mysteries to the discard pile.
Time as we measure it is a social construct.
So the "no, you lied" history perspective?
A refugee is not the same as an economic migrant.
Talks about the accuracy of history, then he makes generalisations.