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Replicating History
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Replicating History

Anton Howes on Invention, History's Replication Crisis (?), and Open History

Originally published on March 10, 2025 (Episode 399)

Introduction

Every hundred episodes or so, I like to pause and think about what this podcast is really about—or supposed to be about. For Episode 399, I sat down with Anton Howes to reflect on history itself: how we write it, how we test it, and whether history has its own version of a replication crisis.

Our conversation explores three of Anton’s essays—Cort Case, Does History Have a Replication Crisis?, and Open History—and along the way touches on invention, methodology, and what it might mean to practice “open history” in our current moment.


About the Guest

Anton Howes is official historian at the Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce. He is the author of Arts and Minds: How the Royal Society of Arts Changed a Nation (Princeton, 2020). His widely read Substack newsletter, Age of Invention, explores innovation, industry, and the history of ideas.


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